Living faith seriously... Challenge and uplifting...
This week many young people have received A
Level results – for some it will have been a tremendously uplifting time
following some real challenges along the way. Others will perhaps be faced with
a further challenge as they try and plan their futures…
So much life is about challenges, but often
uplifting moments as well…
And today's readings manage to be both
challenging and uplifting…
The gospel (Luke 13:10-17) gives us the
account of the woman healed on the sabbath. We are told that she had been ill
for 18 years, and when Jesus saw her, he immediately healed her. Jesus always
seems to have been moved when he saw people in pain, but I wonder if on this
occasion if he was, as well as offering healing, deliberately setting up a
conflict with the synagogue leader.
Here he seems to have acted quickly- he
didn't wait to be asked to offer healing, he didn't wait to see anything about
her faith, he didn't look at her background, although he may of course have
known something about her anyway... But he healed her.
And he knew that in this act, he would upset
some. The sabbath was and is a tremendously important day and the rules about
what can be done are very strict. But as with so many rules and laws they were
put in place to make things better for people, not to stifle people. And that
is what Jesus was offering as a challenge here.
In the Old Testament reading from Isaiah
(58:9-14) we hear some incredibly uplifting words – about the Lord guiding us
continually, about how, if we take the Sabbath seriously then we will make time
to delight in the Lord who will make us, and I love this phrase, ‘ride upon the
heights of the earth…’
But there is a challenge in there as well,
because we’re asked to call on the Lord who will immediately answer our call,
and our call involves actions as well – removing the pointed finger and the speaking
of evil….
And then in the letter to the Hebrews
(12:18-25) we are given the rather frightening picture of that earthly mountain
- a mountain of laws which can never be fully followed. A mountain which has
become unapproachable and terrifying. As long as we keep making more and more
rules to do things the more distant the hopes of achieving those things become.
In the church we can be guilty of making
rituals and practices which were well intentioned to begin with but can often
get in the way of what we are trying to achieve.
Laws follow a similar pattern - when laws
exist to benefit people they are invaluable, however when they exist just to
preserve laws then they become rather less so... Laws point us to things that
are wrong but they don't provide the remedy.
The Evangelist Fred Brown used three images
to describe the purpose of the law. First he likened it to a dentist's little
mirror, which he sticks into the patient's mouth. With the mirror he can detect
any cavities. But he doesn't drill with it or use it to pull teeth. It can show
him the decayed area or other abnormality, but it can't provide the solution.
Brown then drew another analogy. He said that
the law is also like a torch. If suddenly at night the lights go out, you use
it to guide you down the darkened basement stairs to the fuse box. When you
point it toward the fuses, it helps you see the one that is burned out. But
after you've removed the bad fuse, you don't try to insert the torch in its
place. You put in a new fuse to restore the electricity.
In his third image, Brown likened the law to
a plumbline. When a builder wants to check his work, he uses a weighted string
to see if it's true to the vertical. But if he finds that he has made a
mistake, he doesn't use the plumbline to correct it. He gets out his hammer and
saw. The law points out the problem of sin; it doesn't provide a solution.
That solution is revealed in our gospel
reading in the form of Jesus. Into a situation where the woman had been in pain
for 18 years, Jesus brought compassion and healing.
I'm very pleased to say I haven't suffered
greatly from any prolonged periods of pain – but in any sort of pain what we
want as quickly as possible is a resolution to it…
There really is no wrong time to ease
someone's pain, and Jesus knew that. The boundaries of the law about the
sabbath were irrelevant to him. And as important as the sabbath is, the
technical points of the law should always be secondary to doing what is right and
good and compassionate...
Jesus' command to love God and love one
another superseded all others....
Jesus had set up a situation or used a
situation to ensure that he could point people to the stupidity of some of the
laws that people were keeping. And of course this seriously undermined the
leader of the synagogue and he was angry. His position of superiority was
completely upstaged.
He could talk about laws, he could discuss
scripture, he could rule on all kinds of things in the community, but what he
hadn't done was provide healing for this woman. And that's what she needed and
that's what people saw was needed, and that’s what Jesus did.
And so often what is crucial in the world and
in our own lives is not a reliance on the law or ritual or tradition but a
dependence on God who is sufficient to supply all our needs. God is love and
into situations of pain or darkness, into our struggles in life, into our
worries or disappointments, God offers comfort and peace.
When times are difficult in our lives, we can
trust God. It almost seems glib but I love the saying by, I think, Billy
Graham, who said, 'don't worry, it's all going to be ok - I've read the end of
the book'...
Going back to the letter to the Hebrews there
we are painted that dreadful and terrifying picture of the consequences of
failing to draw near to God, but we are also given that wonderful picture of
what is described as Mount Zion and the city of the living God.
There we have innumerable angels praising God
and celebrating; there we have people made perfect in God's kingdom - there we
have Jesus the mediator or bringer of the new covenant - a new world created by
love, full of grace and mercy and peace... Available for us all to enjoy...
Life takes us on many journeys - some good
and some bad, but in those situations we develop and learn... Some challenging
situations and some uplifting situations, and we have a choice of how to handle
our situations - whether to think everything is against us and let our lives
fall apart, or whether to trust God and recognise that whilst we may not
understand why we end up in some situations, we are there with God at our
side...
A Catholic writer, F H Drinkwater, wrote
about a persecution in China of a young Christian called Paul Moy. The local
authorities arrested him and tried to get him to renounce his Christian faith.
Eventually they tried bribery. They offered a purse of silver which was
declined as Paul Moy said that is not enough. So gold was offered and again the
authorities were told it was not enough.
And so he was asked what he did want in order
to renounce his faith - and he replied, 'in order to ask me to renounce my
faith, you will have to give me enough to buy a new soul.'
Paul Moy was executed, but he went to his
death as a glorious witness to the reality of a new and better life, a life
lived even more closely with God...
This life has so much for us to achieve - as
Jesus offered us the example of doing right in all situations so we are
reminded of the need to put love and compassion above anything else in all that
we do.... Mark Twain wrote, 'always do right. This will gratify some people and
astonish the rest...'
We've heard today of the strength of God, and
the fact he never leaves us. We've heard of the invitation to draw close to him
and feel his welcoming, cleansing and healing presence and we've seen Jesus at
work, challenging wrongdoing and bringing comfort and healing from pain...
That's what Jesus can do... NT Wright, the
former Bishop of Durham, wrote about this gospel reading, 'ponder what you have
seen and heard. Would you go up to Jerusalem
following this man? It might be risky... It might be unpredictable...
But where else would you go ?' Amen
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