The True Meaning Of Christmas

I’ve had a mailshot from Boots (it’s a large chemist/pharmacy chain, for those reading outside the UK). It’s connected with my loyalty card. Don’t you love this?

Dear Reverend Faulkner,

There are so many things to enjoy over Christmas: the parties, the presents and making yourself gorgeous for the big day itself. Well, we want to make sure that you look and feel a million dollars as well as help you enjoy the season for less. …

… Why not treat yourself to something gorgeous this Christmas? Go on, you know you deserve it.

I hope you enjoy Christmas like never before!

Rebecca Pearson
Advantage Card Manager

Well, now I know. I wouldn’t have guessed before. Yes, it’s the usual crass commercialism. Their mail-merge hasn’t noticed I’m a ‘Reverend’. Much of the language in the entire letter assumes I’m female. So much for personalisation. I am not a cherished individual, just a wallet. No, probably a purse in this case.

And it would of course take more than a million dollars to make me look gorgeous! Which is something I deserve, apparently – so they know I’ve been good, do they? As usual our culture has little room for grace. It’s like politicians speaking of state benefits that people deserve. And that becomes a gospel problem for the church today: how do we speak of grace and mercy when people are continually being told they deserve this, that and everything else?

Happy Christmas, Ms Pearson. I’m sending a friend of mine, Mr Scrooge, to your store. I’m sure he’ll fit your customer profile perfectly. I expect he’ll want a makeover, just as soon as the cosmetics team is back from colouring a new mother beautiful by the side of a manger.

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Firefox 2.0

The final version of the Firefox 2.0 browser is coming at 1:00 am tonight UK time:

BBC NEWS | Technology | Firefox browser for web 2.0 age

Microsoft tried to play catch-up with Internet Explorer 7 last week but they were still way behind. Is there any serious reason to stay with Internet Explorer? Apart from my Microsoft Updates I don’t know one, especially since my online banking now works with FIrefox.

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links for 2006-10-22

Tomorrow’s Sermon, Mark 10:35-45: The Problem Of Status

Mark 10:35-45

1. Status
It was the Bunfight at the OK Corral. Well, no, it was tea
and cakes in the church hall after the official reopening of Broomfield’s premises in March, after our
refurbishment. The President of Conference met and greeted people like any
ordinary minister. Simon Burns MP mingled quietly and warmly with the crowd. So
did the Mayor – who was down-to-earth, and not in the slightest bit
self-important, despite the impression we had feared after the Mayor’s Parlour
had contacted us with all their demands for how his visit should be handled.

Quite different was one of the local councillors. I can’t
remember his name, and I’m glad about that. He buttonholed me for longer than I
would have wanted and proceeded to talk almost entirely about himself. His
particular beef was this: he and the Mayor had years ago been pupils at the
same school. But the Mayor this year had scheduled a dinner for the end of his
year in office on the same night as the annual old boys’ dinner at the school.
Being new here at the time I thought it must have been lauded public school – Felsted, maybe. But no. It was KEGS. Grammar school, yes, but not
the public school this buffer made it out to be.

We detest this sense of self-importance and pomposity in
politics. But we are not immune to it in the church. If you knew the tortured
discussions before the Broomfield
reopening about who should be on the platform for the service. It all seemed to
be about who was important enough to be up the front. I think people wanted to
honour the so-called ‘important’ people and were sincerely trying to avoid
causing offence. But I wonder whether we slipped into a worldly preoccupation
with status.

And likewise I once attended a concert given by a Christian
singer called Ian
White
. Local ministers were invited to have a meal beforehand with him and
the pastor of the church where the concert was being held. I was the only one
who turned up – well, I was single at the time and it meant not having to cook!
Afterwards, I went into the worship area for the concert and found friends from
one of my churches arriving. I sat with them – at the back. At the end of the
concert the pastor couldn’t understand why I hadn’t gone with him and sat at
the front, in a prominent position. It had never occurred to me. And would it
surprise you if I told you that five or six years later that pastor fell from
grace? Money, sex and power were all allegedly involved.

So the world has a problem with the lust for power. And so
does the Church. Perhaps we shouldn’t be so shocked to read Mark 10 and find
James and John wanting the places of glory in the kingdom of God.
You might think they’d got the message about things being different in the
kingdom of God, given that we have just had the incident with the rich young
ruler (10:17-31) and Jesus has then warned them again about his own impending
rejection and suffering (10:32-34).

So we may well read the story and be horrified. But we are
reading back in retrospect, with a bigger picture of who Jesus is. We are also
reading it with blind spots, because it’s about the darkness in our hearts,
too.

Take me, for example. The other day I visited a lady who
asked me at the end of the conversation whether I preferred to be addressed as
‘reverend’, ‘minister’ or something else. ‘Try David,’ I said. (Well, Dave,
really, but I thought that would be too much for her.) And that is what I
believe. I don’t like titles. But I have to admit that when I fill in a form
and it asks for my title, I get a bit grumpy if ‘Reverend’ isn’t an option. I’d
like to tell you it’s just about our world not recognising the religious
dimension, but I fear my thoughts are less worthy than that.

And therefore this story is one to probe our own
hypocrisies. Where are we more interested in status, power and authority? Is
there some part of us that is a little too keen to have people look up to us
and admire us, rather than getting on with being Christlike? And what would
Jesus say to us?

2. Service
Jesus sees things quite differently. In fact implicitly he
points up the hypocrisy of his disciples. ‘You know that among the Gentiles
those whom they recognize as their rulers lord it over them, and their great
ones are tyrants over them,’ he tells them in verse 42. In other words, look,
you don’t like what you see of these other rulers. You see them and what their
desire for status and power does to them. They become the kind of people you
despise. Don’t you see that if you have your own way, this is how you would end
up? You will become the kind of person you hate.

And, he says, I don’t want you to become like that. You need
to take an alternative route. ‘But it is not so among you; but whoever wishes
to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wishes to be first
among you must be slave of all. For the Son of Man came not to be served but to
serve,’ he tells them (verses 43-45a).

The call is to be a servant, or slave. The word ‘minister’
means ‘servant’, and one explanation for the origin of the clerical collar is
that it mimicked the collar worn by slaves – painfully ironic as we prepare to
mark next year the bicentenary of the
abolition of slavery in Britain
and continue to campaign against people-trafficking.
And of course if the minister is a servant, we are all servants, according to
Jesus here. So if we are going to wear ‘dog collars’, either every Christian
should wear them or no-one should!

And this has as much application to politics as it does to
Church. I have observed before that is ‘minister’ means ‘servant’ then ‘Prime
Minister’ means ‘first servant’ – something worth bearing in mind when the next
General Election happens. For as well as assessing the policies put before us,
Christians might well want to ask an even more difficult question: which party
leader looks most likely to act as a servant?

But it’s not just the politicians or the church leaders,
it’s all of us. The call to serve comes from Jesus without discrimination. It
is what he came to do. It is what he calls us all to do. Our daily prayer needs
to be, ‘Lord, who can I bless in your name today? Where and how can I serve
you, and serve you by serving others?’

At one level that’s quite an easy prayer to say. But there
is a test for it. Someone has observed that the test of a true servant is how
they behave when they are treated like one. Many of us long to do heroic, even
sacrificial things for the kingdom
of God. But what if we
were to do them and receive no recognition? We’d like even our humble good works
to be noted. We want to be appreciated. But what if we aren’t? Jesus calls us
to serve without regard for things like that. It is noted and appreciated in
heaven. Recognition will come from the Father. But that may not be something we
experience here and now. Do we really want to serve, or do we have a darker
motive – one that would even manipulate acts of service into an inflation of
our personal status?

3. Suffering
The other day I learned that at an ecumenical Remembrance
Sunday service this year I have to preach on John 15:13, ‘No one has greater
love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.’ I know it’s the
traditional text, but I was uncomfortable. Surely that text is about Jesus’
sacrificial death, not about general human willingness to suffer? Don’t we make
‘the fallen’ of our wars virtually on a par with Jesus by using this text?

And that leads me into the last part of what Jesus says as a
corrective to the lust for status. ‘For the Son of Man came not to be served
but to serve … and to give his life a
ransom for many
.’ (verse 45, my emphasis)

We just get further and further away from the lust for
status. Not only are we called to be servants as the sign of true greatness and
trustworthy leadership in the kingdom
of God, Jesus goes beyond
that – from service to suffering. Not only did he come to serve, he came to
give his life.

And before he tells this to all the disciples, he confronts
James and John with this. ‘You do not know what you are asking. Are you able to
drink the cup that I drink, or be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized
with?’ he asks them (verse 38). Although they answer that they can, Jesus’
question really expects the answer, ‘No’. For sharing someone’s cup was to
share their suffering and in the Old Testament it was to do with God’s judgment
upon sin. And the image of baptism may not just be about being submerged in
suffering but refer back to his baptism by his cousin John where he identified
with human repentance. Put these two images of the cup and baptism together,
then, and it seems as if Jesus is saying to James and John, ‘Can you suffer for
human sin as I am going to?’ No wonder he thinks their answer should be ‘No’. [William
Lane,
The Gospel Of Mark, pp 379-381.]

So there is a suffering that Jesus, who is entitled more
than any other human being to pull rank and claim status, will go through. He
will suffer for human sin. He will do so as a ‘ransom’ (verse 45) – in some
sense his suffering ‘pays’ to release others (although it’s dangerous to push
this image too far). He is a ‘substitute’, then (again, we shouldn’t push the
image too much), dying in place of others to set them free. Only Jesus, truly
God and truly human, can do this.

So was I right to be nervous about the Remembrance Sunday
text? I think I was.

But while Jesus suffers in a unique way for the sins of the
world, there is still a way in which we, his disciples, suffer too. For
although Jesus expects James and John to admit they can’t suffer for the sins
of the world he still tells them they will drink his cup and be baptised like
him (verse 39). Jesus is saying to them, you think that by following me you
will get to share in my status and glory. Don’t even think about that. If you
follow me, remember what I said not long ago to you: that if you want to be my
disciple, you need to deny yourself, take up your cross and follow me (8:34).

And it remains the call of Jesus’ disciples today. If we
follow him it is just as likely that the world will take the same dislike to us
as it took to him. To seek to live a pure, self-controlled life in a world
given up to its lusts is a prophetic statement. So too is to question a
consumer society that values people by the amount of money or possessions they
have. Sometimes prophets like Mother Teresa get Nobel Prizes in our world;
sometimes prophets like Martin Luther King and Dietrich Bonhoeffer get killed
for their troubles.

Yet we follow the Son of Man who took on human flesh in
great humility, the Messiah who died for our sins. We serve the Son of God who
conquered death in the resurrection, and who gives his Spirit without measure
from the right hand of the Father. It’s about being absolutely captivated by
this Jesus. And when we are, we give up status, we learn to serve and we risk
suffering for his name out of sheer love and devotion. We willingly make
sacrifices for ordinary mortals whom we love. How much more for our Lord?

And when we do that, we have the assurance that although
following Jesus may cost us as it cost him, it comes with the same rewards and
vindication. For his resurrection will be our resurrection. No status in the
world can buy that.

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Tomorrow’s Sermon, Mark 10:35-45: The Problem Of Status

Mark 10:35-45

1. Status
It was the Bunfight at the OK Corral. Well, no, it was tea
and cakes in the church hall after the official reopening of Broomfield’s premises in March, after our
refurbishment. The President of Conference met and greeted people like any
ordinary minister. Simon Burns MP mingled quietly and warmly with the crowd. So
did the Mayor – who was down-to-earth, and not in the slightest bit
self-important, despite the impression we had feared after the Mayor’s Parlour
had contacted us with all their demands for how his visit should be handled.

Quite different was one of the local councillors. I can’t
remember his name, and I’m glad about that. He buttonholed me for longer than I
would have wanted and proceeded to talk almost entirely about himself. His
particular beef was this: he and the Mayor had years ago been pupils at the
same school. But the Mayor this year had scheduled a dinner for the end of his
year in office on the same night as the annual old boys’ dinner at the school.
Being new here at the time I thought it must have been lauded public school – Felsted, maybe. But no. It was KEGS. Grammar school, yes, but not
the public school this buffer made it out to be.

We detest this sense of self-importance and pomposity in
politics. But we are not immune to it in the church. If you knew the tortured
discussions before the Broomfield
reopening about who should be on the platform for the service. It all seemed to
be about who was important enough to be up the front. I think people wanted to
honour the so-called ‘important’ people and were sincerely trying to avoid
causing offence. But I wonder whether we slipped into a worldly preoccupation
with status.

And likewise I once attended a concert given by a Christian
singer called Ian
White
. Local ministers were invited to have a meal beforehand with him and
the pastor of the church where the concert was being held. I was the only one
who turned up – well, I was single at the time and it meant not having to cook!
Afterwards, I went into the worship area for the concert and found friends from
one of my churches arriving. I sat with them – at the back. At the end of the
concert the pastor couldn’t understand why I hadn’t gone with him and sat at
the front, in a prominent position. It had never occurred to me. And would it
surprise you if I told you that five or six years later that pastor fell from
grace? Money, sex and power were all allegedly involved.

So the world has a problem with the lust for power. And so
does the Church. Perhaps we shouldn’t be so shocked to read Mark 10 and find
James and John wanting the places of glory in the kingdom of God.
You might think they’d got the message about things being different in the
kingdom of God, given that we have just had the incident with the rich young
ruler (10:17-31) and Jesus has then warned them again about his own impending
rejection and suffering (10:32-34).

So we may well read the story and be horrified. But we are
reading back in retrospect, with a bigger picture of who Jesus is. We are also
reading it with blind spots, because it’s about the darkness in our hearts,
too.

Take me, for example. The other day I visited a lady who
asked me at the end of the conversation whether I preferred to be addressed as
‘reverend’, ‘minister’ or something else. ‘Try David,’ I said. (Well, Dave,
really, but I thought that would be too much for her.) And that is what I
believe. I don’t like titles. But I have to admit that when I fill in a form
and it asks for my title, I get a bit grumpy if ‘Reverend’ isn’t an option. I’d
like to tell you it’s just about our world not recognising the religious
dimension, but I fear my thoughts are less worthy than that.

And therefore this story is one to probe our own
hypocrisies. Where are we more interested in status, power and authority? Is
there some part of us that is a little too keen to have people look up to us
and admire us, rather than getting on with being Christlike? And what would
Jesus say to us?

2. Service
Jesus sees things quite differently. In fact implicitly he
points up the hypocrisy of his disciples. ‘You know that among the Gentiles
those whom they recognize as their rulers lord it over them, and their great
ones are tyrants over them,’ he tells them in verse 42. In other words, look,
you don’t like what you see of these other rulers. You see them and what their
desire for status and power does to them. They become the kind of people you
despise. Don’t you see that if you have your own way, this is how you would end
up? You will become the kind of person you hate.

And, he says, I don’t want you to become like that. You need
to take an alternative route. ‘But it is not so among you; but whoever wishes
to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wishes to be first
among you must be slave of all. For the Son of Man came not to be served but to
serve,’ he tells them (verses 43-45a).

The call is to be a servant, or slave. The word ‘minister’
means ‘servant’, and one explanation for the origin of the clerical collar is
that it mimicked the collar worn by slaves – painfully ironic as we prepare to
mark next year the bicentenary of the
abolition of slavery in Britain
and continue to campaign against people-trafficking.
And of course if the minister is a servant, we are all servants, according to
Jesus here. So if we are going to wear ‘dog collars’, either every Christian
should wear them or no-one should!

And this has as much application to politics as it does to
Church. I have observed before that is ‘minister’ means ‘servant’ then ‘Prime
Minister’ means ‘first servant’ – something worth bearing in mind when the next
General Election happens. For as well as assessing the policies put before us,
Christians might well want to ask an even more difficult question: which party
leader looks most likely to act as a servant?

But it’s not just the politicians or the church leaders,
it’s all of us. The call to serve comes from Jesus without discrimination. It
is what he came to do. It is what he calls us all to do. Our daily prayer needs
to be, ‘Lord, who can I bless in your name today? Where and how can I serve
you, and serve you by serving others?’

At one level that’s quite an easy prayer to say. But there
is a test for it. Someone has observed that the test of a true servant is how
they behave when they are treated like one. Many of us long to do heroic, even
sacrificial things for the kingdom
of God. But what if we
were to do them and receive no recognition? We’d like even our humble good works
to be noted. We want to be appreciated. But what if we aren’t? Jesus calls us
to serve without regard for things like that. It is noted and appreciated in
heaven. Recognition will come from the Father. But that may not be something we
experience here and now. Do we really want to serve, or do we have a darker
motive – one that would even manipulate acts of service into an inflation of
our personal status?

3. Suffering
The other day I learned that at an ecumenical Remembrance
Sunday service this year I have to preach on John 15:13, ‘No one has greater
love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.’ I know it’s the
traditional text, but I was uncomfortable. Surely that text is about Jesus’
sacrificial death, not about general human willingness to suffer? Don’t we make
‘the fallen’ of our wars virtually on a par with Jesus by using this text?

And that leads me into the last part of what Jesus says as a
corrective to the lust for status. ‘For the Son of Man came not to be served
but to serve … and to give his life a
ransom for many
.’ (verse 45, my emphasis)

We just get further and further away from the lust for
status. Not only are we called to be servants as the sign of true greatness and
trustworthy leadership in the kingdom
of God, Jesus goes beyond
that – from service to suffering. Not only did he come to serve, he came to
give his life.

And before he tells this to all the disciples, he confronts
James and John with this. ‘You do not know what you are asking. Are you able to
drink the cup that I drink, or be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized
with?’ he asks them (verse 38). Although they answer that they can, Jesus’
question really expects the answer, ‘No’. For sharing someone’s cup was to
share their suffering and in the Old Testament it was to do with God’s judgment
upon sin. And the image of baptism may not just be about being submerged in
suffering but refer back to his baptism by his cousin John where he identified
with human repentance. Put these two images of the cup and baptism together,
then, and it seems as if Jesus is saying to James and John, ‘Can you suffer for
human sin as I am going to?’ No wonder he thinks their answer should be ‘No’. [William
Lane,
The Gospel Of Mark, pp 379-381.]

So there is a suffering that Jesus, who is entitled more
than any other human being to pull rank and claim status, will go through. He
will suffer for human sin. He will do so as a ‘ransom’ (verse 45) – in some
sense his suffering ‘pays’ to release others (although it’s dangerous to push
this image too far). He is a ‘substitute’, then (again, we shouldn’t push the
image too much), dying in place of others to set them free. Only Jesus, truly
God and truly human, can do this.

So was I right to be nervous about the Remembrance Sunday
text? I think I was.

But while Jesus suffers in a unique way for the sins of the
world, there is still a way in which we, his disciples, suffer too. For
although Jesus expects James and John to admit they can’t suffer for the sins
of the world he still tells them they will drink his cup and be baptised like
him (verse 39). Jesus is saying to them, you think that by following me you
will get to share in my status and glory. Don’t even think about that. If you
follow me, remember what I said not long ago to you: that if you want to be my
disciple, you need to deny yourself, take up your cross and follow me (8:34).

And it remains the call of Jesus’ disciples today. If we
follow him it is just as likely that the world will take the same dislike to us
as it took to him. To seek to live a pure, self-controlled life in a world
given up to its lusts is a prophetic statement. So too is to question a
consumer society that values people by the amount of money or possessions they
have. Sometimes prophets like Mother Teresa get Nobel Prizes in our world;
sometimes prophets like Martin Luther King and Dietrich Bonhoeffer get killed
for their troubles.

Yet we follow the Son of Man who took on human flesh in
great humility, the Messiah who died for our sins. We serve the Son of God who
conquered death in the resurrection, and who gives his Spirit without measure
from the right hand of the Father. It’s about being absolutely captivated by
this Jesus. And when we are, we give up status, we learn to serve and we risk
suffering for his name out of sheer love and devotion. We willingly make
sacrifices for ordinary mortals whom we love. How much more for our Lord?

And when we do that, we have the assurance that although
following Jesus may cost us as it cost him, it comes with the same rewards and
vindication. For his resurrection will be our resurrection. No status in the
world can buy that.

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A Busy Week

How do these ministers who blog daily manage it? I can’t say I know how. Ian McKenzie recommends scheduling a regular time, daily or weekly. That doesn’t work for me. This week has been mad. We’ve had knock-on effects from my wife’s car being hit a week ago, some urgent personal financial advice, delayed pastoral visits to rearrange (most of the people I visited last week weren’t in – how inconsiderate!), numerous meetings because no-one wants to meet next week (it’s half-term).

We have also had Internet problems. Our ISP has had technical problems, and we have had an ongoing broadband problem ever since moving here: the connection keeps dropping. It now appears that there is slightly too much ‘noise’ on our phone line for the speed of connection. It could be that our modem is too sensitive to this. I’ve just borrowed a church member’s spare modem, but it refuses even to install properly! Or it could be our phone line. Or – worst case scenario – BT might reduce our broadband speed or even discontinue supplying it. In which case we would have to move phone and Internet connection to cable – with all sorts of implications. Yuck! (as our daughter would say).

But some interesting stuff has come up: I’ve been invited to join the Board of the journal Ministry Today. I don’t know whether I’ll accept: it appeals, but I only want to do it for the right motive. I’m meeting the Chairman, Paul Beasley-Murray, next Wednesday, to discuss this further. And I’ve become Methodism’s advocate in Essex for Fresh Expressions. Exactly what that involves may need some further teasing out: initially it will just be to log Methodist experiments in new ways of doing church in the county – something of which I have had experience in every circuit where I have served. And there was good news on Monday night, when my Church Council at Broomfield agreed both to affiliate to the Family Friendly Churches Trust and to alter our Sunday morning pattern over the next twelve months to something that will include breakfast together (we’re already doing that), Christian learning for all ages, and worship that includes contemporary, all-age and traditional. It’s a big undertaking, and that’s why we’re going to take it in a series of small steps rather than a big bang.

So if I’ve been rather quiet on the blog this week, now you know why. It’s been for good reasons.

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Sunday’s Sermon, The Rich Young Ruler

Here is Sunday’s sermon:

Mark 10:17-31

Introduction
The Lectionary seems to be doing a good job of throwing
challenging passages our way as we progress through Mark’s Gospel. Last week it
was Jesus’ teaching on marriage and divorce. I know some preachers who majored
on the verses at the end of that passage about welcoming children rather than
tackle the issue of divorce. And one told me she was glad to have a harvest
festival to take instead!

But we’re hardly let off the hook this week with the
familiar but worrying story that is traditionally known as ‘The Rich Young
Ruler’. Well, there is a big part of that would rather not tackle this passage.
But we have to confront these stories – or, better, let them confront us.

Clearly it’s a story about true and false discipleship. Let
me share with you some of the challenges and insights that have come to me this
week in preparation, with the prayer that we may be built up and built together
as Christ’s disciples.

1. Rules
Years ago as a Local Preacher I remember taking a service
where I must have preached quite forthrightly about the ills of society.
Afterwards one dear old lady came up to me and said, ‘If we only brought back
the Ten Commandments and lived by them we would be all right.’

Well, the rich man of this story was a ‘Ten Commandments’
man. Ever since his youth – his bar mitzvah,
when he became morally responsible according to Jewish tradition, he has obeyed
them. He hasn’t murdered or committed adultery; he has not stolen or borne
false witness; he has neither defrauded nor dishonoured his parents (verses
19-20). He’s an upright member of society. If only we had more people like him
in our world, it would surely be a better place. He would certainly have
pleased the elderly lady who heard my sermon over twenty years ago.

But Jesus’ devastating reply is, ‘One thing you lack.’ He
hasn’t done enough! What more could it be? In a few minutes we’ll see that the
‘one thing’ is not another rule to keep. At this point it’s enough to note that
Jesus is saying to this sincere enquirer after eternal life that keeping the
rules will not get him what he wants.

In the Old Testament keeping the Ten Commandments didn’t of
themselves bring salvation. They were given after
salvation. Before God ever spoke the first commandment – ‘You shall have no
other gods before me’ (Exodus 20:3) – he said, ‘I am the LORD your God, who
brought you out of the land
of Egypt, out of the
house of slavery’ (Exodus 20:2). Salvation has already happened. Now obey in
response to salvation. Following the commandments – keeping the rules – rightly
done is a sign of gratitude for salvation, not the means of opening the door.

I guess Jesus knew the heart of the sincere young man. He so
wanted to be accepted by God that he – yes, religiously
– did his spiritual duty with meticulous care. You can be good, says Jesus, and
still miss the boat. You can be religious, he says, and not find eternal life.
And at other times this controversial rabbi was welcoming tax collectors and
prostitutes into his Father’s kingdom, not devout people.

He still does that. How many are the good and worthy people
in our churches, pillars of society, who haven’t found Christ and the kingdom
he proclaims? Their moral conduct is impeccable. Their ethics are beyond
reproach. Yet, as one of my most perceptive members at Broomfield pointed out the other morning at a
Bible study, they may never have made a commitment to Christ.

What’s the problem with a ‘keeping the rules’ approach to
faith? It leaves no room for the grace of God. And that is what we desperately
need. However good we are, none of us can match the standards of God. There is
a painful beauty in Jesus’ response to the rich young man, and it isn’t just in
the words:

Jesus, looking at him, loved him and
said, ‘You lack one thing …’
(verse 21)

He loved him. And
the young man has no room for receiving the love of God in Christ. Why should
he need the love of God if he is already good enough?

So what is the one thing he lacks?

2. Surrender
Jesus says,

‘You lack one thing; go, sell what you
own, and give the money to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; then
come, follow me.’
(verse 21)

So the one thing he lacks is to sell everything and give to
the poor in order to follow Jesus. Is this what is required of us all? Is this
how we must all respond, rather than just keeping the rules? In the late 1970s,
Ronald Sider, the Canadian
Christian who wrote the ground-breaking book ‘Rich
Christians In An Age Of Hunger’
, said that what ninety-nine percent of
western Christians needed to hear ninety-nine percent of the time was, ‘Sell
what you own, and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; then
come, follow me.’

It’s certainly the kind of prophetic challenge a money-mad
consumerist society needs to hear. And sadly, we Christians allow ourselves to
get infected by it. So Ronald Sider has a point.

But at the same time there is not a unanimous call for
disciples to sell all their possessions in Scripture. Sometimes wealth is seen
as a blessing from God (although it’s not an infallible sign – sometimes wealth
is the consequence of exploitation). Jesus had wealthy women in his circle of
followers who helped fund his mission (Luke 8:3).

The problem with making renunciation of possessions an
infallible guide to discipleship is that again we are reducing the life of
faith to a list of rules. What Jesus requires is our surrender to him. The call
to discipleship is a call to enter into a covenant with him. For his part he
gives salvation, eternal life, entry into the kingdom of God.
For our part, we promise, as indeed the Methodist Covenant Service says, to
live no longer for ourselves but for him.

And that, as I see it, is the problem the rich young man
wasn’t prepared to address. He lived a good, upright, sincere life. But he
wasn’t prepared to surrender. He would not cede control of his life to Christ.
I once heard someone say, ‘God is a capitalist: he only believes in takeovers.’
The young man wasn’t willing to be taken over by Christ.

The Gospel of Jesus Christ is the Gospel of the kingdom. On
the one hand the kingdom
of God means freedom from
sin in terms of forgiveness, growing holiness and the ultimate conquest of all
sin. It means healing, and it means purpose in life. But at the same time
living in the kingdom is a call to live under the reign of God.

So this story might make us review our own commitment. Are
we people who have surrendered our lives to Jesus Christ? If we have not yet
said, ‘Lord, your will not mine in my life,’ then we have not yet become a true
disciple. We are like the rich young man who would not accept terms of
surrender.

We might also be people who have made that basic commitment,
but we then find there are certain areas of our lives where we are struggling
to accept the reign of God. The story doesn’t compromise the need for surrender
but we do hear the heart of Jesus as he calls us to turn over the control of
our lives to him: ‘Jesus, looking at him, loving
him
, said …’ It is with a tone of love that he makes the same call to us.
He is not here to exploit us or demean us, but he calls us to surrender out of
love. It delivers us from self-centredness to the higher cause of the kingdom.
Is there some issue today where Jesus is telling us he needs the final say in
our lives?

3. Rewards
The rich man goes away in shock, but the disciples stay.
Jesus tells them it is hard for the rich to enter the kingdom of God,
but what is humanly impossible is possible for God (verses 23-27).

But this confuses Peter. He’s seen Jesus challenge the rich
man. Jesus has said how hard it is for the rich to enter the kingdom, but that
it is possible with God. ‘Look, we have left everything and followed you,’ he
complains (verse 28). He seems to be saying, ‘What’s in it for us? We’re not
the rich, and we answered your call to surrender. We’ve done it to the extent
of leaving our loved ones behind and going wherever you go.

Jesus replies in kingdom
of God terms – partly in
terms of the current age, in which the kingdom has partially come but still
faces evil, and partly in terms of the age to come, when God will reign without
opposition.

In the current age, he says, there will be both blessing and
trouble: blessing in terms of people and places (‘houses, brothers and sisters,
mothers and children, and fields verse 30) and trouble (‘persecutions’, verse
30). In the age to come there will be the unadulterated blessing of eternal
life (verse 30).

Yes, says Jesus, you have suffered loss for me and you will
also suffer opposition in this life for being my disciples. I’m not going to
disguise or water down what following me will cost you. But you will be
blessed: you’ve left family and their property, and you will be blessed with
the new family of the kingdom.

So there’s a frightening thought: you are sitting in the
midst of Jesus’ blessing to you – the church, the fellowship of God’s people.
You may not always feel they are much of a blessing! But Jesus intends us as a
community to be a blessing to one another. He has given us to each other as the
kingdom community. It is central to our calling to live out together so rich a
common life that we are ‘brothers and sisters, mothers and children’ to each
other. We cannot be a religious club. We cannot be spiritual billiard balls,
just bouncing off each other from time to time.

No, we are to be as family to each other. Christ rewards us
not only directly with the blessings of eternal life; he also rewards us
through others – through our brother and sister members of his family. One of
our regular prayers needs to be, ‘How can I be a blessing to others today?’ And
we must equally be willing to receive blessing from others. We are not
self-sufficient islands; we have been made to be dependant upon God and
inter-dependant with each other.

And how important this is when we face pressures and even
persecution for naming the name of Christ. But that means it is too important
to be left to the time of trouble. Right now we need to cultivate a culture in
the church of mutual support, encouragement and edification. The kinds of
church programmes where we are unable to develop deep relationships with one
another are seriously destructive to the call Christ issues to his church.

If you want a serious positive example of a Christian
community that has intentionally built itself together and then found that a
strength in a time of terrible trials, then look no further than the Amish
community in Pennsylvania that suffered the shootings of some schoolgirls the
week before last by the milk truck driver. As one of the few non-Amish who was
allowed to attend the funerals observed,
they have taken seriously Jesus’ command not to resist the evil person (Matthew
5:39), knowing this left them vulnerable. But in the face of the wicked
tragedy, one bereaved grandfather said, ‘It is
important to teach our children not to think evil of the man who did this.’ In
their weeping they have looked for reasons to be thankful. Their families and
intimate relationships have been infused with prayer and love, and so one
grieving mother, tending the body of her daughter in an open coffin, told the
other children through tears, ‘See, she’s with God in heaven now.’ And they
immediately offered forgiveness to the family of Charles Roberts, the murderer,
and invited them to the funerals. One of the Amish leaders said, ‘God has
offered us forgiveness for our sins in the work of Christ on the Cross, but we
must accept that gift to enjoy it. Once we’ve accepted it, then we can share it
in small measure with others.’

It is not for us to give the blessing of eternal life in the
fulness of the kingdom. But in the present kingdom where we co-exist with the
kingdom of darkness it has to be a priority that we so live out church that it
will be said of us as it was said of those early Christians: ‘See how they love
one another.’ Could it be said of us?

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