To you is born this day a Saviour, Christ the Lord!Due to unsafe weather conditions on Tuesday, our Parish had to postpone our Christmas Eve service of Lessons, Carols, and Communion until today (Sunday December 29). As such, our In-Person service this week will closely follow the At-Home Christmas Eve & Day service posted earlier this week, and found here: For those seeking additional At-Home worship resources this week, you can find a Morning Prayer service for the First Sunday After Christmas, Songs to go along with this service, our Weekly Bulletin, and a Christmas message from Archbishop David Edwards below:
0 Comments
Scripture Readings: Isaiah 62:6–12 | Psalm 97 | Titus 3:4–7 | Luke 2:1–20
“But the angel said to them, ‘Do not be afraid; for see—I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord.’” (Luke 2:10-11). Merry Christmas everyone! Jesus Christ is born. Heaven’s glory has entered into Earth’s dark night, in the tiny body of Mary’s boy. Today we celebrate the birth of our Saviour. The first breaths of the One who has come to be our Saviour… and the Saviour of our world. Of course, we still have so many reminders all around us that our world is still longing to be set free. To be delivered from the darkness and selfishness and sin that continues to wreak havoc among us. In many ways, our world ignores the Good News we celebrate this day. But we who believe that in Jesus, who is God Himself right here with us, in the flesh… we celebrate despite the darkness, because we know that the Saviour has come… that at the cross, He has won… and in Him, our world’s deliverance is forever assured. In our Gospel reading today, we hear of the shepherds, out in the fields late at night. Everyday people, just going about their lives, with no sense that anything strange and wonderful was in the works. They were people living far from comfort… sleeping rough out in the fields with their sheep… living in a troubled corner of the world, far from the centres of power and influence… mostly preoccupied with simply making it through to another day… perhaps with a sense of longing for the ancient promises of God to be fulfilled. And then, there in the darkness, God’s brilliant and terrifying glory suddenly bursts into their little world! Angels announce the Good News that the Christ has been born… that God has given to us a Saviour at last… and then the heavenly choir bursts into song, praising the Lord , and proclaiming peace on earth. Imagine the shepherd’s sudden excitement! The hope that was suddenly lit within them… the promise of peace at last for their troubled and oppressed people… the joyful realization that the Living God was at work in their little corner of the world… that this Good News was for them to share in… and that God’s faithful love was reaching out to rescue and to embrace those sitting in darkness. “the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid; for see—I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord.” (Luke 2:10-11). Good News of great joy for all the people: a Saviour has been born this day. The Child King of God’s eternal Kingdom has come to set them free. To set us all free. And so they go. They hurry off to see the One all this Good News of great joy is about. And they see Him. And they believe. And along with Mary and Joseph, and maybe a few animals, these unknown shepherds are the only ones on earth who celebrate the very first Christmas… humble witnesses of the Son of God beginning His saving work. And then they go again. As wonderful as that moment was, they could not stay in that stable forever. They have to go back to their sheep, and their fields, and their everyday lives, carrying the Good News of the Saviour’s birth with them. And this Christmas, as we celebrate the Good News of Christ’s birth, so many centuries later, and in our own quiet little corner of the world… we too must soon go back to our lives. But we need not go back unchanged. Untouched by the Good News we celebrate this day. Because the Good News of Christmas is the Good News of Christ: the Saviour who came to set us free. Who gave His life at the cross, and rose again from the dead to deliver us all from the powers of darkness, in all of its forms… and to bring God’s glorious light and eternal life to us forever. So may we go with the Good News of Christmas always: with our hopes rekindled… with God’s peace calming our troubled hearts… with joyful expectation… and with full assurance of God’s faithful love… carrying the story of Jesus, God’s Son and Saviour of our world… and may we share this blessed story with all those around us. Amen. At-Home Service for Christmas Eve & Christmas Day - Lessons & Carols - December 24 & 25, 202412/23/2024 In this sacred night we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, who is Himself God-With-Us, wherever we may be. May this service of Lessons & Carols stir up within us the Hope, Peace, Joy, and Love that God offers to us all through Jesus His Son. Our service of Lessons & Carols can be found here: Here are some links to the Carols listed in our service, found on Youtube: Christmas Day SermonHere is our Christmas Day sermon,
inviting us to carry the Good News of Christmas with us always. Scripture Readings: Micah 5:2–5a | Psalm 80:1–7 | Hebrews 10:5–10 | Luke 1:39–55
“And blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her by the Lord.” (Luke 1:45). What does love look like? The Christmas season is full of things that our society associates with love: gifts are offered and received. Time is spent together with friends and family. People share in special meals, and take part in all sorts of traditions, and celebrations. And all of these practices are seen to affirm our affections, and strengthen the bonds between us. But even though Christmas is just one short season of the year… these practices are intended to point towards a deeper reality that we hope exists year-round. In short, we’re not only loved during Christmas, but always… even without all the gifts. Even when we are far away from our family and friends. Even when we find ourselves hungry, or a bit lost, or burdened by sadness or grief. Our outward experiences… be they gifts, get-togethers, or celebrations… can help us remember that we are loved… but we can be and are loved even without them. But in order for that love to take root and shape us inside and out… day in and day out… whether we feel it or not… whether our circumstances confirm it or not… we have to actually believe it. We have to trust that we are loved. As we know, throughout the four weeks of Advent, we are called to contemplate and to share in four important themes that are all central to the Christian life: Hope, Peace, Joy, and Love. And while we all have our own ideas about what these things are, and how they fit into our lives… Advent asks for our attention… for our openness to new ways of understanding… and participating in the Christian story. And so, while we all have our own ideas about what love is, and how we share in it, this Sunday we are reminded that the Christian story points us in a particular direction when it comes to love… inviting us to reevaluate all our ideas about love from this starting point… to learn to trust… to believe in this kind of love, so that we can then begin to put it into practice. In our reading this morning, from St. Luke’s Gospel, we heard about a joyous family reunion: Mary, the soon to be mother of our Lord meets up with her cousin Elizabeth. Right before our reading today, St. Luke tells of how the angel Gabriel had visited Mary, and announced that the Lord had chosen her to give birth to the Messiah, the long awaited the Saviour King sent to set His people free. And while Mary was trying to wrap her head around what this all means… and how this could even be possible… Gabriel assures her that she won’t have to believe this wonderous news all on her own: he tells Mary that her cousin Elizabeth has also received a miracle child. Like Abraham and Sarah, their people’s ancestors, God was giving Zechariah and Elizabeth a son who would share in the story of God’s great rescue mission… even though they were both quite old, and well past the years of natural parenting. And Gabriel says that this is a sign for Mary, to remember that nothing is impossible with the Living God. And so Mary races off to Zechariah’s house, where she is greeted by her very pregnant cousin Elizabeth, who joyfully confirms the gift that God had given to Mary. Luke 1:41-45, “When Elizabeth heard Mary’s greeting, the child leaped in her womb. And Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit and exclaimed with a loud cry, ‘Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb. And why has this happened to me, that the mother of my Lord comes to me? For as soon as I heard the sound of your greeting, the child in my womb leaped for joy. And blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her by the Lord.” “Blessed is the one who believed… that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her by the Lord.” Mary trusted God’s word to her, and her life was changed forever. St. Luke goes on to tell us how Mary responds to this greeting: with some powerful words of her own. Echoing the prophetic hopes and convictions of God’s people throughout the centuries, Mary starts to speak of the great things God has done, and will do to set things right at last. Luke 1:50-51, “His mercy is for those who fear him from generation to generation. He has shown strength with his arm; he has scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts. He has brought down the powerful from their thrones, and lifted up the lowly; he has filled the hungry with good things, and sent the rich away empty. He has helped his servant Israel, in remembrance of his mercy, according to the promise he made to our ancestors, to Abraham and to his descendants forever.” A lot can be said about Mary’s words, and the hope, and peace, and joy that they inspire. But today, I want us to think about how these words help us to understand God’s love… how God has committed to put His love into action in our world. Mary believes that the Living God has drawn her into the story of His great rescue mission: acting to end the oppression of His covenant people, by overthrowing the unjust tyrants of the world, and rescuing those in dire need. She speaks of mercy, strength, and faithfulness shown to the lowly, the hungry, and the lost… lifting up the humble to new heights they had never dreamed of. And she speaks of God scattering the proud… bringing down those in power… and sending away those who are rich with nothing… completely turning the tables on those who use their positions and possessions to abuse others. And Mary was right. This is what the Lord was up to, and would do through this Child that Mary carried within her. But Mary would not get to see all this take place… at least, not in the ways that she first imagined. She had to share in this story by faith… by believing what the Lord had told her… trusting Him to be true to His word, and that He would truly bring to a good end all that He had begun in her womb. For her son Jesus would come to overthrow not the powerful sinners who were ruling in the world, but rather striking at the powers of sin itself at the source, disarming them once and for all. And He would come to bring down the greatest foes that hold people everywhere in fear and bondage… the enemies of death and the demonic rebels that seek to ruin God’s good world. And Jesus came to send away all that is in us… the self-centredness, and greed, that keeps us from walking in God’s holy ways… in order to lift up those who are lost… to reach out and embrace the broken, and the broken-hearted… to share His saving love not just with Israel… but with His whole world. This is of course, the Good News of God’s Kingdom. The Good News of God’s King, Christ Jesus our Lord… that “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life.” (John 3:16). Advent calls us to remember that God’s love is a Christ-shaped love. That Jesus is Himself the love of God in the flesh. And that, if we want to know what God’s love looks like… if we want it to transform our lives, inside and out, than we must look to Jesus, and believe. To believe in Him: in God’s Son, who laid down His life at the cross to give us sinners the gift of forgiveness, and who rose again to give us God’s blessed New Life. We are to believe in what He is doing: gathering together a new world-wide family, the Church… who, despite our differences, and struggles, are bound together in Jesus as God’s own sons and daughters… drawn together by His grace to care for each other… comfort each other... challenge each other… and encourage each other. We are to draw near with faith to Christ’s table, and sharing in the sacred meal of Christ’s own body and blood… saying yes to all that He has done for us, and longs to do within us… taking part week after week, in this meal shared with generations of believers… and celebrating God’s great saving love for us, and for everyone. In Jesus Christ, God’s love has truly come among us… raising up all that is lowly within us… and bringing down all those areas of our lives that still stand against His holy, life-giving ways. And God’s love is at work in and through us Christ’s people today, drawing us into the story of His saving love, not just for our own sake, but for our world… challenging oppression, injustice, and evil… reaching out to bring help to the hurting, the hungry, and all those that God puts in our path… learning what real love looks like, so that we can share it with everyone around us. Our part is to believe, to trust in what Jesus’s story tell us… to believe the story of God’s self-giving love… and to live it out along with our Christian sisters and brothers… especially when we’re tempted to listen to all of those other stories being told around us: Stories that tell us that we’re unloved. Stories that try to get us to turn against our neighbours. Stories that would have us fixated on our circumstances, fears, and doubts… and forget Jesus, our Saviour King and everything that He has done for us… especially at the cross. And so, as Christians we look to the cross, and see there what God’s love truly looks like. We look to the cross, and remember the wonderous lengths Jesus went to embrace us and to heal our broken world. We look to the cross, and we can believe that no matter what may come, nothing “will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.” (Romans 8:39). And so as Advent draws to a close, and the season of Christmas draws near, how can we help one another to believe… to truly trust in the story of God’s saving love? Not just as an abstract idea, but as our lived reality… as the story that shapes our minds, and hearts, and all that we say and do? And how might we then help those around us to hear and hopefully believe this story too? How can we help them to come to know that they are loved by the Living God? And that Jesus Christ gave His life to rescue them? To forgive them? And to set them free? How can we bring down the obstacles that keep our friends and neighbours from understanding the Good News? How can we help lift them up in their times of need so they can experience God’s love at work in their lives? However we might respond to these questions this Advent and Christmas season, may the Holy Spirit of God guard our hearts and minds, and guide our words and actions… and fill us with the life-changing love of Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. Today we celebrate the fourth Sunday of Advent: a season of anticipation and preparation for the coming of Jesus Christ, both in His birth at Christmas, and in His future return to reign forever over a renewed creation. Each week in Advent, we reflect on an important aspect of the Christian life as we wait faithfully for our Saviour, and serve His kingdom even now. The fourth Sunday of Advent, we reflect on the theme of Love. Our service of Morning Prayer, Bulletin, and Sermon can be found here: And our Songs for this week can be found here: Scripture Readings: Zephaniah 3:14–20 | Isaiah 12:2–6 | Philippians 4:4–7 | Luke 3:7–18
“Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice.” (Philippians 4:4). Well here we are already: the Third Sunday of Advent. More than halfway through the season of preparation for the coming of Jesus Christ. And this Sunday we take time to reflect on the theme of Joy in connection with Christ and His coming Kingdom. And while Joy itself is a big part of the New Life of God, and the Good News of Jesus Christ, and even though it is something that most people in our world are longing for in one form or another… I personally find that Joy is one of the hardest Advent themes to discuss… to clearly define what it is, and how we can prepare to experience it. I think that at least part of the reason this is so hard is because we tend to confuse Joy with Happiness. The two are of course, deeply related, and yet there remain some important differences. And so before we go too much further, I’d like to suggest the following distinction between Happiness and Joy that I hope will be helpful: Happiness we could say is a feeling of positivity that depends on the ‘close up’ story… on our present, immediate circumstances. We feel happy when we experience moments or seasons of comfort, security, pleasure, satisfaction, fun, and so on. These are all good things… but in this life, they are also all temporary. And so because feelings of happiness are closely bound up with the experiences of the moment, they can be easily lost when our circumstances suddenly change… when we come face to face with serious conflicts, challenges, or loss. But if happiness is the experience of the close-up moment, Joy has more to do with living in the ‘big picture’ story… the uplifting feeling that comes when we are deeply connected, not just to our current circumstances, but when we are able to take everything into account, and start to experience our place in a much wider context. If we think of it like a movie: happiness is what we feel when we’re watching a positive scene… but joy is what we feel when we can see that the whole film is heading towards a positive ending. Even if the current scene may be difficult to watch, we can still experience joy when we recognize that the story’s far from over. This may sound fairly simple at some level, but joy can be hard to hold onto at times, especially as our lives become more complicated, and challenging. Generally speaking, we could say that children tend to experience joy a bit more easily, in part because their world is smaller: their perspective on life doesn’t need to be as comprehensive or detailed as adults… who are easily caught up in other concerns… and juggling lots of pressing matters. The more we see about our world, and the more problems we seem to encounter… the more people tend to feel overwhelmed and disheartened by the story of our world. This is why some people attempt to find joy by trying to shrink their world… by ignoring or downplaying all of the negative or challenging parts of life, and pretending they have no part to play in their stories. Of course, the problem with this kind of denial is that reality always finds us sooner or later. The truth is: there are lots of moments or seasons of life that are far from happy. And this is why joy is so important… and so needed these days. But Christian joy is not about living in denial, or trying to shrink our world… trying to mimic a childlike innocence that is largely ignorant of the big problems we all must face. No, in fact Christian joy is actually about getting an even bigger perspective… it’s about seeing how all of our hopes and fears… all of our lives fit within the Good Story of God’s saving love… and responding to this wonderful reality with how we live everyday. In our first Scripture reading today from Zephaniah, and in our responsive reading from the book of Isaiah, we heard two of Israel’s prophets calling for God’s people to rejoice: to respond to the great works of the Living God by lifting up their hearts in joyful praise. “Sing aloud, O daughter Zion; shout, O Israel! Rejoice and exult with all your heart, O daughter Jerusalem!” (Zephaniah 3:14). “Sing the praises of the Lord, for he has done great things, and this is known in all the world. Cry aloud, inhabitants of Zion, ring out your joy, for the great one in the midst of you is the Holy One of Israel.” (Isaiah 12:5-6). Now neither of these prophets could be accused of being oblivious to the real world issues of their day… they were witnesses to Israel’s deep struggles, and anticipated the world-changing issues God’s people would have to face. And yet, even as they warned God’s people of the great perils to come because of their unfaithfulness to the Living God, their messages also gave Israel reasons to rejoice… to remember that what they could see around them in any given moment was not all that there is to consider. To remember that the One who was with them through it all, and who would still see them through, if they would only trust in Him, was stronger than any adversary they could face, and that one day His good Kingdom would be victorious. The prophets call us to remember what the Living God has already done… the mighty acts of His saving love, and they also point us forward to what He will do in days to come. Turning now to our Gospel reading for today, and the challenging words of St. John the Baptist, as he fulfills his ministry preparing the way for Jesus the Messiah. Like the Old Testament prophets before him, John is well aware of the complexities and challenges of life in general. But here in Luke Chapter 3, we see him delves straight into the complicated realities facing the individuals around him. And a key part of his message… his ministry, preparing the way for Jesus, was to call God’s people to repent… to change and turning around… not just in mind and heart, but also in their actions… choices… and all of daily life. Of course, this is an important lesson for all of us today: Joy does not simply fall from the sky. It is a gift, but one that comes to us along with lives shaped by faith… as we believe the Good News of God’s saving love, and take action according to those beliefs. In other words, joy is a byproduct of the life of faith. Real joy can’t be manufactured… it flows from our trust in the Good News, and our trust in the One the Good News calls us to follow… trust that reshapes all that we say and do as we seek to live within the story of God’s saving love in Jesus Christ. Of course, this isn’t always easy. Sometimes the troubles we face really shake our faith, and the choices we’re called to make as Christians can at times feel overwhelming. Where do we turn when we can’t seem to see a way forward anymore, or when the Lord’s saving love feels far away? How can we experience joy in the midst of our struggles? Joy is not based on, or limited by our circumstances… it is a result of our connection to the Living God. And so, as St. Paul reminds us in our second reading today from the Letter to the Philippians, when we’re struggling, and our faith is shaken, we are able to turn to God Himself to help us remember and trust in the Big Story of God’s saving love: the Good News of Jesus and all He has done for all of us. Philippians 4:4-7, “Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice. Let your gentleness be known to everyone. The Lord is near. Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” In prayer and supplication, we are always invited to turn to the Lord with all that is a burden to us. We are invited to believe in His great compassion and infinite mercy, and to go to Him with all that is on our hearts and minds. Trusting that, no matter what we might face, and even if we must go through the valley of the shadow of death, as Psalm 23 puts it… the Lord is near. He is with us… and He will turn all of our sadness into joy. And we can believe this because of Jesus. Because He already upended the powers of death and darkness, and sin and “who for the sake of the joy that was set before him endured the cross, disregarding its shame, and has taken his seat at the right hand of the throne of God.” (Hebrews 12:2). Jesus endured the cross because He knew the ending of the story of God’s saving love. And because of His resurrection from the dead, so do we! In Him, we can have joy even now… knowing that God’s love is even stronger than the grave. That His life-giving power can turn the worst failures into truly world-changing victories. We can have joy knowing that we are invited to be a part of Christ’s story… turning darkness to light… despair to hope… and brokenness to peace. But as Christians, our joy is to be a Christ-shaped joy… joy that flows from being faithful to the Living God… joy that is the fruit of God’s Holy Spirit at work in us, reshaping our lives to share in Jesus’ own life… walking in His ways. If we seek the joy that comes from being connected to the big picture of God’s saving love… the story of Jesus Christ, and the Good News of what He has done… then by God’s grace, our lives really must become a part of that story… sharing in and shaped by the life of our Saviour King. Turning back to our Gospel reading again: How did John invite the people he baptized to get ready for the Messiah? How were they as individuals meant to prepare to share in the story of the Christ and His coming Kingdom? What does John tell the people to do? Those who have more than enough should share with those who don’t. Tax collectors should not try to cheat their neighbours, and soldiers should not use their power to extort others either. Essentially, John tells the people to stop being so selfish! Stop being self-centred, and instead turn to their neighbours with compassion and self-giving love. And this is how we too are to live within the Big Story of God’s saving love: by loving those around us. By sharing God’s holy, self-giving love with the people in our lives. If we want to experience real joy today, to be shaped by the big story of God’s saving love freely given to our world in Jesus Christ… then we must step into this story, and choose again and again to stay in this story. We must choose to believe, to trust in what Jesus has done for us, and why: that is, God’s saving love… and let this reality sink in, and shape the ways we relate to the Lord Himself, to those around us, and even to ourselves. We can rejoice always because we know that Jesus loves us, and He invites us to let Him rearrange our lives around God’s saving love. We can rejoice, even when things are bad, because we know that we aren’t facing these challenges alone… and we can always turn to our Heavenly Father and bring all of our burdens to Him. We can rejoice with one another, sharing in the fellowship of God’s family, united forever as sisters and brothers by God’s Holy Spirit. So let us rejoice always, as especially as we celebrate Advent, sharing in the joy of our Saviour King, as we prepare for His return. Amen. Today we celebrate the third Sunday of Advent: a season of anticipation and preparation for the coming of Jesus Christ, both in His birth at Christmas, and in His future return to reign forever over a renewed creation. Each week in Advent, we reflect on an important aspect of the Christian life as we wait faithfully for our Saviour, and serve His kingdom even now. The third Sunday of Advent, we reflect on the theme of Joy. Our service of Morning Prayer, Bulletin, and Sermon can be found here: And our Songs for this week can be found here: Scripture Readings: Malachi 3:1–4 | Luke 1:68–79 | Philippians 1:3–11 | Luke 3:1–6
“By the tender mercy of our God, the dawn from on high will break upon us, to give light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace.” (Luke 1:78-79) Peace is a precious thing… and it always comes with a price. In the ancient world, the price of peace for one people or tribe was usually the use of violence against another rival group. This kind of ‘peace’ was won by the sword, and would only last as long as your tribe managed to stay on top… kind of like that old game called “king of the hill”, where kids try to push their way to the top of snowbanks, and then fend off all challengers to win. The Roman Empire was famous for this approach to peace. The Pax Romana, the “Peace of Rome” was praised as a great gift to the nations they conquered… there was stability within the boundaries… protection for those who went along with the Empire’s interests… that is until the occasional rebellion started, or a neighbour invaded, or a civil war broke out… then the legions were summoned to crush and to crucify anyone who stood in the way. Looking around today, in many ways our world still seems stuck in that same mindset: only envisioning peace to be possible once all who get in our way are gone… brought low underneath the feet of our side in the conflicts we face. This week saw yet another wave of violence, as Syrian rebels rapidly advance towards the capital city of Damascus, hoping to overthrow the oppressive government they have been fighting against for more than a decade. We witnessed the attempt to institute martial law… military rule in South Korea, as a means of resolving the political conflicts among those in power. Over and over, and all over the world, we humans keep using force and the threat of violence try and establish stability and security… thinking that the sword or the gun… or the bomb… is the only way to bring about the peace we all really need. But the season of Advent invites us to reflect on… and to practice another kind of peace. A peace that’s not won through violent force, but which also comes with a price. In our Gospel reading today, for the second week of Advent, we hear about the ministry of St. John the Baptist… the son of Zechariah the priest, and Elizabeth, and the cousin of Jesus our Lord. John’s whole life was set apart for a particular mission: to prepare the way for God’s coming Messiah… serving as a kind of prophetic herald, calling God’s people to get ready for their King. At his naming ceremony, St. Luke tells us that John’s father Zechariah prophesied over his child, and the role he would play in God’s great rescue mission: Luke 1:76-79, “And you, child, will be called the prophet of the Most High; for you will go before the Lord to prepare his ways, to give knowledge of salvation to his people by the forgiveness of their sins. By the tender mercy of our God, the dawn from on high will break upon us, to give light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace.” But this high calling also came with a high price. Like most of the prophets before him, John was not your typical religious leader. He was an outsider. Literally. He lived outside… in the desert on Israel’s border region… far from the cities and centres of power… dressed as one at home in the wilds… and seen as a bit radical and extreme. And John’s message was not exactly a comfortable one either. He was sent to call his people to get ready for God’s Chosen One! Calling them to repent… to turn around and leave behind the ways of life that had taken them down the road of sin… and calling them to start again as God’s people. To remember God’s faithfulness and gracious deliverance in the past… and to walk in His ways again… humbling themselves, admitting their brokenness, and seeking God’s forgiveness… not in the Temple in Jerusalem… but at the Jordan River, where Israel first stepped foot in the Promised Land… symbolically starting again from the very beginning, to get ready for God’s coming Messiah. Of course, John’s message and ministry was not well received by many of those among the leadership of Israel at that time… the priests and scribes based at the Temple, and the strict Pharisees, who saw themselves and their practices as the best way to be faithful to God. And he was not popular with those who had aligned themselves with the Roman Empires’ way of doing things either… with people like Herod Antipas, and his followers, who profited greatly from close ties with Rome. But far from playing it safe, and trying to appease those in power, John’s ministry completely rocked the boat… he was upsetting the status quo… shaking up a complacent and compromised community by calling them to change… to do something different… to repent, restart, and get ready for real. And many flocked to his message, upsetting and radical as it was. Why? Because they believed… they believed that John was right, and they knew that they needed peace. Real peace, not simply the absence of discomfort, or conflict… but peace in the deepest biblical sense: Peace that comes from completeness… from wholeness… from holiness… from having their lives realigned and in sync with the good will of the One who had created them, and loved them, and longs for them to experience the fullness of life… a peace that the world around us promises us constantly… but which it can never deliver. John’s listeners knew that their lives were off base, broken, and incomplete. They knew that their communities were needing to be realigned and set right again. They knew there were many proud mountains that needed to be brought low… as well as many lowly valleys that needed raising. And so, they responded to John’s call to repent by being baptized… submerged in the Jordan River, seeking the forgiveness and faithful love of the Lord, and trusting in His divine mercy to bring about His peace among them. And as John would remind them, this peace would not be painless, or easy. But it would be well worth it! Turning our lives around and walking in God’s holy ways takes work, and will involve real struggles, and ask us to say no to ourselves again and again. But the peace we need is only possible through God’s cleansing hand at work in our lives. AS we heard in our first reading today from the prophet Micah (3:2-4), “But who can endure the day of his coming, and who can stand when he appears? For he is like a refiner’s fire and like fullers’ soap; he will sit as a refiner and purifier of silver, and he will purify the descendants of Levi and refine them like gold and silver, until they present offerings to the Lord in righteousness. Then the offering of Judah and Jerusalem will be pleasing to the Lord as in the days of old and as in former years.” John was calling his people to get ready for God’s coming King by seeking God’s peace… God’s own gracious cleansing, purifying, sanctifying power, to set their lives back on track so they could fully participate in His coming Kingdom. And this invitation is not just meant for those who stood by the Jordan River in John’s day… but for us as well… for those of us who know we need God’s peace at work in our lives. How might John’s call to repentance apply to us as a Church community? Here at St. Luke’s? As a Diocese? As the Anglican Church, and as a part of the whole body of Christ? Are there ways we as believers have gotten off track, and are in need of cleansing and new beginnings? Perhaps John’s message is connecting with us in a more personal way this morning. For those of us who may still be exploring the Christian story… John’s calling might offer us an opportunity to respond to the invitation to be baptized… to offer our lives in faith to Christ Jesus, God’s Son, and to receive the gift of forgiveness and new life in His name. And for those of us who have already been baptized, but who may have walked away from God for a time, and are now sensing the deep need for our lives to be set right again, John’s calling might offer us an opportunity to formally renew our baptismal vows… to reaffirm our faith in Jesus, and our need for Christ’s peace to rule in our lives. If you’d like to explore either of these invitations to baptism, or to reaffirm your baptism, please let me know, and I would be happy to meet with you, to pray with you, and to walk with you through this process. But even if that’s not where you are this morning, John’s message is truly for all of us. Wherever we are in our walk with God, we are to get ready for the Messiah… remembering that God’s true and lasting peace also came with a high price. This peace was not won through force or violence… or through unjust compromises, or by avoiding conflicts, or through anything else that our world has to offer… but through the work of Someone even more radical and world changing than John himself was prepared for… through Jesus Christ, God’s Chosen King… the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. Throughout His ministry, Jesus disrupted the status quo… not only bringing low the proud mountains… challenging those who thought they were on the right track, but had in truth abandoned God’s good ways… He also lifted up the lowly valleys… reaching out to the hurting, and the desperate… and preaching God’s peace to sinners… to people whose choices and compromises had set them apart from their neighbours, marking them as outsiders in their communities… but not beyond the bounds of God’s love. And Jesus practiced peace among deeply divided communities… pulling together people of all walks of life, and making them one, united to one another by their devotion and connection to Him. Jesus Christ practiced God’s peace… even when it would require the highest cost. He refused to play the world’s game… to rally armed forces to Himself, to bring about His Kingdom by force. No, in self-giving love Christ Jesus surrendered Himself to those who would crush, curse, and crucify Him… pleading for their forgiveness, even as they called for His death… and paying for the sins of the whole world through His blood shed at the cross. But far from ending in utter defeat, we know that the cross became the sign of God’s great victory… breaking the power of guilt and shame by cleansing us of sin… disarming the threat of death, which all tyrants depend on… and assuring us that we no longer need to be estranged from the Living God, or from our neighbours created in His image. In rising again from the grave, Jesus has shown the world that His death for our sake has paid the price once and for all for our peace… and through His Spirit at work in us, we can now put this peace into practice. As Christians, our peace must be a Christ-shaped peace… a peace that is willing to stand out, and shake up the status quo… not by using force to get our own way, or by compromising with injustice and evil, but by trusting that no matter what others might do, they cannot shake or take away the new life that Jesus Christ has share with us, and longs for us to share with one another as we await His return to set our whole world right again. Christ Jesus has paid the high price for God’s true peace to break into our broken world even now, and as His people today we are to practice His peace… to live God’s way here and now, no matter what it might cost us… which we can do with hopefulness and joy because we know that it will be well worth it! In time, St. John too would experience the high price of seeking God’s peace. His ministry would set him at odds powerful people in the world, who would eventually call for his head. We don’t know what it might cost us to devote our lives to the way of God’s peace today. We might risk losing friendships and relationships. We might experience great disappointments or pain. We might even end up losing our lives, as many of our sisters and brothers still do around the world. But whatever the price may be, in Jesus Christ the Risen Lord, we know that the reward is well worth it all. Our Lord has already paid the ultimate price for our peace, not just for a short season of life… but to share the blessed life and love of the Living God with us forever. So may the peace of Christ rule in our hearts this Advent season, and beyond. May we not simply seek to stay comfortable, but to be made complete and holy in Him. May we trust that what He did for us all at the cross is powerful enough to put an end to all that keeps us cut off from God, and from our neighbours. And with the Spirit’s help, may we seek ways to practice God’s peace in our daily lives, and with those all around us. Amen. Today we celebrate the second Sunday of Advent: a season of anticipation and preparation for the coming of Jesus Christ, both in His birth at Christmas, and in His future return to reign forever over a renewed creation. Each week in Advent, we reflect on an important aspect of the Christian life as we wait faithfully for our Saviour, and serve His kingdom even now. The second Sunday of Advent, we reflect on the theme of Peace. Our service of Morning Prayer, Bulletin, and Sermon can be found here: And our Songs for this week can be found here: |
Rev. RObRev. Rob serves as the Priest-in-Charge at St. Luke's Gondola Point, and as the School Chaplain at Rothesay Netherwood School Archives
December 2024
Categories
All
|