Wednesday, 30 November 2011

30th November (Feast of St Andrew) - Advent day 4

 A shot of Alter Bridge on stage last night at Wembly Arena.
'...On this day I see clearly everything has come to life
A bitter place and a broken dream
And we'll leave it all behind.

On this day its so real to me
Everything has come to life
Another chance to chase a dream
Another chance to feel
Chance to feel alive...'


The lyrics above are from the Alter Bridge's song 'Metalingus.' Members of the band have been influenced by the teaching of Jesus over the years and, for me at least, this song sums up God's longing and ours made present, raw and real in this season of Advent...

It may not be your cup of tea but it is mine, and here's a live version...




Tuesday, 29 November 2011

November 29th - Advent day 3

I was re-reading an interview in the New York Times by Arthur Lubow with the Estonian composer Arvo Pärt. It got me thinking...

'...Emigrating from the Soviet Union to the West in January 1980 with his wife, Nora, and their two small sons, the Estonian composer Arvo Pärt was stopped by border police at the Brest railroad station for a luggage search. “We had only seven suitcases, full of my scores, records and tapes,” he recalled recently. “They said, ‘Let’s listen.’ It was a big station. No one else was there. We took my record player and played ‘Cantus.’ It was like liturgy. Then they played another record, ‘Missa Syllabica.’ They were so friendly to us. I think it is the first time in the history of the Soviet Union that the police are friendly.” He was joking, but not entirely. Later, when I asked Nora about that strange scene at the border, she said, “I saw the power of music to transform people.”...'

 Elsewhere in the interview, Pärt talks about how for him there is no distinction between religion and life. His music is, and our lives should be, a response, an outpouring to God. And yet, what lies behind religion, the life of faith, in his case his music, opens a door and allows the Divine to encounter us and us to encounter the Divine.

'...“There is a good rule in spiritual life, which we all forget continually,” he said, “that you must see more of your own sins than other people’s.” He remarked that the sum of human sin has been growing since Adam’s time, and we all share some of the blame. “So I think everyone must say to himself, ‘We must change our thinking.’ We cannot see what is in the heart of another person. Maybe he is a holy man, and I can see only that he is wearing a wrong jacket."...'

Advent is a gift. A God given opportunity to stop and reflect. I found myself moved by a sermon a friend, Angi Nutt, preached last Sunday. Her opening words are from John 1 and then she went on to say...

'...The Word Became Flesh and Dwelt among us
Quite literally, “ pitched his tent” among us,
Some translations use “ made his home”
 
The key is presence –God, made man, not on the edges, not watching, but fully present, camped out with us, making his presence known and felt.

Sometimes that presence was welcome, and at other times, less so…
 
I’ve been closely following the Occupy London Stock Exchange protest at St Pauls Cathedral – a protest of presence –tents pitched, people. Making their voice heard, living among those to whom they speak, camped at the banks, at the Stock Exchange. Present. There.

Sometimes this presence has been welcomed by some. At other times they have been clearly unwelcome. Perhaps because of the message, or the way they are. Ragbag tents and canvas universities are not how democracy works here? Or is it?
 
Over the last few weeks we’ve been hearing in the Gospel readings about the Kingdom of God, what the kingdom is like, Jesus’s idea of the Kingdom of God turns things on their heads,
His Kingdom is not about power and pomp and ceremony, it’s not about wealth and majesty.
 

Jesus taught about a Kingdom where God’s love matters, where things are turned on their heads, where the last shall be first and the little children welcomed.
It’s about changed lives, restored relationship...'


Advent is about restoration and renewing. It is a season of hope.

In the days that lie ahead, the church tells afresh of the God who pitches his tent among us, present with us, coaxing, quietly challenging us to change, to live, to love. Advent is about self examination, but only to the end that, we can ensure that our hearts and lives are a place fit to recognise the One who is already amongst us.  It is an opportunity to long for transformation and to know that, in God in Christ, it does, it will come.

Monday, 28 November 2011

November 28th - Advent day 2

I think this just about sums up the season...

Sunday, 27 November 2011

Advent Sunday: Podcast

Here is this morning's sermon for Advent Sunday...


Come

Here is the first of a few images made available via 12 Baskets from Traces of Advent .

To use it you will need to use the Aurasma app on your iPhone of Android smartphone. To learn more click here

Advent Sunday 2011

In the hills of northern Spain stands an old church with a very unusual statue of Mary in it.  Down in the crypt she stands - La Madona de la O - the O Madonna or Advent Madonna.  She stands in late pregnancy, heavy with child and full of hope for the future.  Her pregnant fullness quietly announces God’s love for the world.

It is this Mary, blooming in late pregnancy, that also represents the church as she enters Advent.  We like Mary are anticipatingly awaiting the arrival of her Son.  We, like her, are filled with hope because of the child she will bear.  The Advent church, with Mary, long for justice for the world, through this child whose name means ‘saviour.’  We, like Mary, know that with God this sense of hope and longing has a personal edge that affects us - it brings us into the searing light of God’s judgement, it calls us to change, and yet fills us with pregnant joy that the fulfilled hopes of God and us rest in this unborn child.  As we prepare to greet the Christ child - how should I be?

Hopeful.  Advent is the season where we long for God’s coming to us.  For centuries faithful men and women throughout the Old Testament had watched and waited for God to come and liberate his people - freeing them from oppression, slavery, and occupation.   With the angel’s words to her, Mary knew that generations of waiting were soon to be over.  In this holy season as we anticipate remembering God coming to our world bringing justice and judegement, we need to be hopeful that God has moved the constant battle with evil and suffering, into it’s endgame. 

The coming Christ is the one who can open the gateway closed by God at Eden because of sin and who stands at the door open in heaven inviting us in.  In Advent, Christ is called the Key of David - a symbol of authority at the palace of Jerusalem - and it’s bearer had the authority to admit people into the royal presence.  The key in question was a cumbersome affair carried on the shoulders, and the analogy between key and cross cannot be downplayed.

With the coming of God comes wild hope, but not a crazy utopian dream.  Peace in nations begins with peace in people.  Free nations begins with free people.  Liberation of lands and political systems begins with liberating the human heart.  Advent people are hopeful people, people who know that it is only the coming Christ child who can unlock the doorway to God and the doorway to humanity as God created it to be.

Trusting.  Mary’s words to the angel. “Let it be to me according to your word.’ show a radical obedience to the will of God.  In this holy season, as we anticipate remembering God coming into our world - restoring, healing - we too need to become people who trust God.  As God entrusts himself to his creation in the vulnerability of a helpless baby, so we need to entrust ourselves to his will.  In advent, Mary reminds us that her trust is not a blind acceptance.  All that she had been told would happen had happened.

We need to trust God, as incredulous and unlikely as that might seem.  God is trustworthy and true and does not revoke his promises.  In Christ, all God’s promises already in place.  His first coming at the Incarnation confirmed the reliability of all the Old testament prophesies.  The enduring presence of of the Holy Spirit in his church, by which the endgame has begun, assures us that he will return again.  God’s future has begun, here, now. 

With the coming of God comes a need to trust him, but not a crazy utopian dream.  What Mary knew, we must know.  God has consistently proved himself to be faithful through the pages of scripture and the lives of men and women over the ages, all that Mary heard from the angel she saw fulfilled.  Advent people are trusting people, people who have come to know that trusting God is not a last resort when all else fails, but the place to start. 

Proclaiming.  Mary’s words ‘My soul magnifies the Lord!’ remind that Advent’s purpose is to proclaim God in a world that largely ignores him.  As a tiny baby, that is to say so unobtrusive in his humility, he needs to be magnified to been seen.  In a world that ignores him and yet needs him more and more - the we need to sing the Magnificat in our live all the more loudly.  In a world that gives status dependent on wealth, on body image, on clothing, yet longs for love, forgiveness, healing and hope, we need to proclaim him all the more.

Advent longs for coming of God to us, but it also is the time to remind us that God waits for our coming to him.  At the incarnation he comes to us and will come again at the end of time, in the meantime he watches out like the father of the prodigal son -  waiting to embrace us in eternal love.

Advent calls us to hear the hope of God, to trust Him and proclaim that hope - that things in our world and in our lives will not only be restored, but that God will do a new thing in us and amongst us personally and globally. Advent must be time to cry to God about the injustice of war, of debt, of a climate change, but also to expect, with sure hope, that God will bring a new spring shoot of faithfulness to grow in us, so that through us our world and our lives together can be transformed. Friends I still hope that the world would be a better place and that my life would and could be better - in Advent God reminds me that it will be. That’s not wild hope. That’s certain hope. Amen