19th Sunday after Pentecost - The Joy in Persevering

We are continuing to look into this marvellous letter from Paul to the Philippians, but first let’s recap where we’ve been so far.

We began with Paul rejoicing in the steadfast faith of the church he’d planted in Philippi and urging them to live their lives worthy of the gospel of Christ.  Last week, in chap. 2, Paul narrowed and tightened this focus by impressing on the Philippians to look at the very nature of Christ, the humble servant King, and to imitate Jesus in humility and service.

Today in ch.3, Paul is warning the church that if we take our eyes off tying to imitate Christ, we will start to have confidence in the flesh, and end up destroying the joy that is found in this new life imitating Christ’s humility and servanthood.

17th Sunday after Pentecost - All joy and peace

oday we are looking at our reading from Paul’s wonderful and unique letter to the Philippians. It is often called the book of joy, as the word occurs fifteen or so times in four short chapters.

Philippi is in Northeast Greece, about 100 kms south of the Bulgarian border and the church there supported and loved the apostle Paul, which is why this letter is filled with warm affection and love. (If you would like to know more about how Paul went to Philippi and what he did there, open up the book of Acts at chapter 16 and start reading.)

16th Sunday after Pentecost - The difficulty of forgiveness

Many of you would have heard of the Dutch WW2 heroine Corrie Ten Boom, or read her account of the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands.  As well as being a family of watchmakers, the Ten Booms were devout Christians and lived in a large house above their shop. 

As the war progressed and the true nature of the Nazi’s plans for the Jews started to become apparent, Corrie and her family started to hide Jewish families in the attic of their large home to save them from being transported to what later were revealed to be death camps.

15th Sunday after Pentecost - The Sheep Who Strayed

Today we look at the well-known parable of the sheep who went astray. It paints a picture so easy to understand and so beautiful to ponder. Now when Luke tells the story, it is in his chapter on the lost things; the lost sheep, the lost coin, and the lost or prodigal son (Luke 15). Here the focus is on the lost being found.

Matthew doesn’t use the word ‘lost’ but ‘strayed.’ So today we are looking less at the evangelistic side of this parable – how the lost are saved; but the pastoral – how those who have strayed are sought out, cared for and loved.

14th Sunday after Pentecost - The Rugged Cross

This week’s gospel follows directly on from last week and for the last few weeks we have been looking at how Jesus has been teaching the disciples. When Peter confessed Jesus as Messiah in the passage we heard last week, Jesus calls him blessed because only God can reveal God. The great triumphant hope of Israel has come, and yet his last words to the disciples were not to tell anyone that he is the Messiah.

Today we get to understand why they weren’t to tell anyone, because they did not yet understand what this triumphant Messiah would look like.

13th Sunday after Pentecost - Binding and Loosing

In Matthew, Mark and Luke, Peter’s confession of Christ is a major turning point in Jesus’ ministry – from here on he starts to make his way to Jerusalem and his death. So what happened here in Caesarea Philippi? Over the last month or so we have seen various ways that Jesus has been teaching and training his disciples. That, out of time in the presence of God the Father, we can be filled with the same compassion that Jesus has in order to take our part in the great outpouring of God’s perfect will. Today, the training is starting to pay off.

12th Sunday after Pentecost - Living in Communion

Today we are going to talk about something that is so easy to miss or to misunderstand, that we might not see how fundamentally important it is in our lives of faith, and the source of all the ways God blesses our parish.  We mention it often though and proclaim it in every service, ‘We are the body of Christ.’

I am talking about unity, oneness of hearts and minds, becoming and being the body of the person of Jesus Christ. The very same oneness, and unified in the same way, that Father, Son and Holy Spirt is one – that is some unity!

11th Sunday after Pentecost - Walking on water

This morning’s gospel continues on directly from last week. The disciples have just finished cleaning up after the great and compassionate feeding by Jesus of the 5,000 as distributed by the disciples, when today’s passage begins. I’d ask you to see it as all part of the same extraordinary twenty-four-hour period in the life of Jesus and today is part two of last week, where we saw that the great purpose of the miraculous feeding was to bring glory to the Father (above all), feed the wandering and burdened lost sheep of Israel, and to teach his disciples.

10th Sunday after Pentecost - The feeding of the 5,000

Our gospel this morning begins with “Now when Jesus heard this, he withdrew from there in a boat to a deserted place by himself” (Matt 14:13). What Jesus had just heard, was what had happened to John the Baptist, murdered by Herod Antipas in fulfilment of a vain promise made to his step-daughter Salome; anything she asked for was hers. With the connivance of her mother Herodias, she asked for the head of John the Baptist on a platter and got it (Mat 14:1-2).

I think that when Jesus heard, he would have been greatly saddened and grieved. A man who was not only a blood relation but a man whom Jesus had described as the greatest of all the prophets sent by God, had been foully murdered.

9th Sunday after Pentecost

For the last three weeks, all of chapter 13 of Matthew, we have been listening to the parables of Jesus that begin: “the kingdom of heaven is like…”.  One after another they have wafted into our ears and over and over again Jesus says, "whoever has ears, let them hear” (NIV).

Today we are taking a different sort of perspective and focussing on just one parable. But firstly I think it could be helpful to go back to what was happening at the end of ch.12, just before Jesus started telling these parables, so we see who these people gathered around and about to hear all these parables are.

8th Sunday after Pentecost - Lord you have searched me

It can be easy to read the Old Testament and think that there are somehow two Gods; the Old Testament God of judgement who suddenly changes his spots and becomes the God of Love in the New Testament.

 This is not so, God is same yesterday, today, and forever, and today’s Psalm (from the Old Testament) is one of the great “love” passages of all the bible. Part of the nature of our Rock of Ages, who doesn’t change is to be all all-present (omnipresent), all-knowing (omniscient), and all-powerful (omnipotent).

4th Sunday after Penticost - I See You

When God ‘sees’ us - it is our eyes that are opened. Last Sunday we heard the Lord’s wonderful promise to Abraham and Sarah that Sarah would give and give birth to a son, despite their very advanced years.  The Lord promised that Abraham’s descendants would be as numerous as grains of sand on the beach and the whole land of Canaan would be his inheritance. Today we enter this story before all that happened, when the promised child, Isaac is a very young boy.

3rd Sunday after Pentecost 2023 - Is anything too wonderful for the Lord?

Last week we looked at how it is faith alone that, through the great gift at Pentecost of the Holy Spirit, that allows the Lord to use us in the bringing about in the world, the great work of God, as commissioned by Jesus; to go and make disciples, baptising them and teaching them to obey all that Jesus commanded.  Our passage from Matthew begins today with the focus firmly on Jesus himself (vv. 35-36).  “He saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd” (v.36).

Trinity Sunday 2023

Trinity Sunday is the most difficult Sunday to preach without sounding really academic and doctrinal and theological, which I won’t do because I end up confusing myself, let alone everyone else.  I could have avoided it altogether and preached on the wonderful psalm 8 we heard this morning.  But we have been talking about the Trinity in some way or another ever since Easter, so this morning I will avoid doctrine and try to talk about the trinity in a very practical way.

Pentecost 2023 - Humble Gifts

Happy Birthday everyone!  Pentecost is often seen as when the Christian Church was born.  The apostle Peter says in today’s reading from Acts 2 (v.17), quoting the prophet Joel, “in the last days it will be, God declares, that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh.”  In the New Testament, the phrase ‘last days’ refers to the time between when Jesus ascended to the Father and when he returns in the fulfillment of the Kingdom of God.  All flesh, that is all human beings, now have access to the Holy Spirit.  God pours the Holy Spirit into us when we come to faith and are baptised, in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.  So thus, the Church was born at Pentecost.