Monday, February 25, 2019

TRANSFIGURATION SUNDAY 2019

Bellini -- The Transfiguration
That strange New Testament episode known as ‘The Transfiguration’ is unique in the Church Calendar. It is the only event in the life of Christ that is observed twice – on the traditional ‘Feast of the Transfiguration’ (Aug 6th) and on the Sunday before Lent, now widely referred to as ‘Transfiguration Sunday’. The lessons for this year are unusually integrated. The Old Testament tells the story of Moses on Sinai that Paul then refers to in the Epistle. It is the very same story that occurs immediately to the disciples, when they see what happens to Jesus on the mountain top.
 
It was on Mount Sinai that Moses received the Ten Commandments from God. When he descends his face is shining with a brightness so unnatural that it unnerves the Israelites. And so, after subsequent visits to the Holy of Holies, he covers his face with a veil. The message, Paul tells us, is that the Israelites were unprepared or unwilling to encounter God’s glory. Now, thanks to Christ, we are enabled to do so. But our ability to do so does not arise from the Transfiguration that Peter, James and John witness. Rather, that experience prepares them to witness the Resurrection. It removes the veil that would otherwise prevent them from seeing God in a crucified criminal. 
 
   
Transfiguration - Fra Angelica (1440)
The season of Lent just approaching is an opportunity to put aside the various ‘veils’ of selfishness and sin that can hide Easter. Despite the familiarity of the phrase, very few people can expect to have ‘mountain top’ experiences. Yet something much less dramatic can serve the same end. In his hymn ‘Spirit of God, descend upon my heart’ the 19th century Irish Anglican priest George Croly (1780-1860) beautifully encapsulated this thought.
 
        I ask no dream, no prophet ecstasies,
        No sudden rending of the veil of clay
        No angel visitant, no opening skies.
        But take the dimness of my soul away

Tuesday, February 19, 2019

EPIPHANY VII 2019

Jesus -- James Tissot
This week's Gospel continues Luke's record of Jesus' 'Sermon on the Plain'. In this extract, Jesus endorses the 'Golden Rule'  -- "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you", a moral principle that Christianity holds in  common with most ethical systems. The distinctively Christian element, however, goes far beyond this: "Love your enemies; do good to those who hate you; bless those who curse you; pray for those who treat you spitefully". The underlying rationale for these instructions is twofold. First, real moral aspiration demands more than simply loving other people; even sinners love those who love them. Secondly, it is when we act over and above the normal that we truly become "children of the Most High". That is because God himself "is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked". The clear implication is: "Be compassionate, as your Father is compassionate".


St Paul -- Jan van Lieven
All this is very edifying, yet it does not take much familiarity with the history and practice of the Church to see how far short of this ideal Christians have always fallen, sometimes spectacularly so. The ethics of Jesus, it is tempting to conclude, is a council of perfection, too idealistic ever to be lived out by imperfect people.

This is true, but not as deflationary as we might think. Christians believe that human beings have, so to speak, a triple nature. While we are deeply flawed, we are also redeemed, and consequently have the capacity to set out on a trajectory of moral growth and development. The Christian path is one that takes us from an earthly to a heavenly orientation. This is the central theme of the Epistle for this Sunday. "It is not the spiritual that is first", Paul tells the Christians at Corinth, "but the physical, and then the spiritual. The first man was from the earth, a man of dust; the second man is from heaven". 

It follows that Christian lives have to be lived out in a spirit of transition, acknowledging both our 'feet of clay' and our fittedness for life in heavenly places. The Psalm for this Sunday beautifully captures the appropriate attitude of faithful acceptance that should accompany this acknowledgement. "Be still before the LORD, and wait patiently for him; do not fret over those who prosper in their way, over those who carry out evil devices. Refrain from anger, and forsake wrath. Do not fret--it leads only to evil".

Monday, February 11, 2019

EPIPHANY VI 2019

Lazarus at the Rich Man's Gate
'Blessed are the poor' is the opening line in a list of 'Beatitudes' (or 'Blessings') that are commonly identified with Jesus' "Sermon on the Mount" in Matthew's Gospel. In this week's readings, however, the passage is taken is from Luke's 'Sermon on the Plain'. The difference between the two Gospels is not simply geographical location. Luke's Sermon is much shorter than Matthew's, just 26 verses compared to 3 chapters. Matthew lists nine Blessings, Luke repeats only four of these, worded a little differently, and then he adds a list of 'Woes'. While the Blessings offer consolation to the poor, the Woes issue stern warnings to the rich. Luke thus presents Jesus as preaching a complete reversal of values. The things that usually lead us to pity other people --  poverty, hunger, grief and ignominy -- have positive value, and the things that lead is to congratulate others -- wealth, health and social status -- are dangers.

St Francis Renounces Worldly Goods
How are we to understand this reversal? Can we really believe it? The contemporary world is one built on economic growth, and our lives are structured around prosperity and accomplishment. These are the goals we encourage in our children. Is this wrong?
The answer is 'Yes and No'. The Gospel echoes the Old Testament passage set for this Sunday. in which Jeremiah also contrasts those who are 'blessed' and those who are 'cursed'. But a key addition is 'trust'. The cursed are not those who are rich and powerful, but those who place their trust in their wealth and power. The difference is emphasized later in Luke's Gospel, when Jesus expressly says that 'where your treasure is, there will your heart be also'. The distinction is crucial, but in practice not so easily drawn. One of the great temptations we face in a rich society such as ours is to believe that we can control wealth and power, when the reality is that they control us. Better to stay poor, St Francis and many others have thought, in affirmation of truth at the heart of the Beatitudes.

Monday, February 4, 2019

EPIPHANY V 2019

The Prophet Isaiah -- Marc Chagall

The readings for this week have greater thematic unity than is true most weeks. They are all about being called to the service of God. Yet within this unity there is also an important diversity.
In the Old Testament passage,  the prophet Isaiah recounts an extraordinary vision in which the majesty of the Divine is powerfully revealed to him. The seraphim cry "holy, holy, holy is the LORD of hosts" with such intensity, that "the pivots on the thresholds shook . . . and the house filled with smoke". This famous vision strikingly captures the double-sided  nature of the sacred -- its ability to alarm and attract, at one and the same time. Isaiah's "woe is me" is quickly followed by "here am I, send me.

The Epistle is taken from Paul's first letter to the Corinthians. Its main concern is with preserving the heart of the Gospel, but this leads Paul to mention his own call -- a highly dramatic experience on the road to Damascus.  Jesus Christ, having appeared to all the apostles,  then "appeared also to me". But he did so  "as to one untimely born", which is to say, against Paul's every inclination as he vigorously pursued the persecution of Christ's own church.

Finally Luke's Gospel recounts the call to Simon Peter, James and John. Once again, the double nature of an encounter with the Divine is made evident. Peter cries, "Go away from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man!". Yet, once he and his partners "had brought their boats to shore, they left everything and followed him".

Calling the Disciples -- Domenico Ghirlando
There are three important lessons to be drawn from all this. First, a true call to discipleship runs counter to our wishes and preferences; it must alarm us, while at the same time proving irresistible.  Christian discipleship is not an easy way of life, and when it seems to be, something has gone wrong. Secondly, while a powerful, supernatural vision such as Isaiah experienced is vouchsafed to some, the call may just as readily come, as it did to the first disciples, in the context of ordinary working life. Third, some who are called may, like Isaiah, become enduringly significant as prophets of the Most High. But the vast majority should be content to echo the words of Paul "by the grace of God I am what I am". And in fulfilling their call, they will be content to pray that "his grace toward me has not been in vain".






ASH WEDNESDAY 2019

Joel 2:1-2, 12-17 or Isaiah 58:1-12   •  Psalm 51:1-17   •  2 Corinthians 5:20b-6:10   • Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21 Ash Wednesday - Car...