Tuesday, July 4, 2023

scapels not swords,

 

Sermon for July 2nd 2023 


Parish of the South Coast



This picture is from an old building on the coastal path. What do you see here?

Matthew 10:34 ‘Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth; I have not come to bring peace, but a sword’ (NRSV)

What is this sword of which Jesus speaks?  Is it sword of revenge, of execution or assassination? Is it sword of maiming and disfiguring? Is the sword of war ready to deter, to destroy, to defend?

Why is peace withheld and why the promise of hostility? The Greek verb which we translate as ‘set against’ means to make hostile. If this was not enough the enemy is within and the preceding verses speak of whispers in darkness and those who come to kill.

Let me move to another sword metaphor in the Letter to the Hebrews 4:11. The logos ton theo, the word of God ‘is something alive and active: it cuts more incisively than any two-edge sword: it can seek out the place where soul is divided from spirit, or joints from the marrow; it can pass judgement on secret thoughts and intentions of the heart.  No created thing is hidden from him’ (New Jerusalem Bible translation)

Jesus is the compassionate High Priest described as sharper than sharp, the two mouthed who is called here the word of God. Christ is the Word of God.

So then how do we approach the words of Jesus in Matthew’s Gospel? ‘Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth; I have not come to bring peace, but a sword’

In responding we must acknowledge that the predominant image of God in the western Church is that of God as the judge in the law court.  French Protestant monastic theologian Daniel Bourguet says:

‘for our contemporaries, before anything else, and almost solely, God is a judge; one whose time is spent condemning, or should the case prove better, forgiving: but always as judge’ (p37 Spiritual Maladies)

Yet Jesus in the Gospel is the healer, the word ‘save’ means to heal and to make whole. So when Matthew moves from describing healings to this passage about the sword we can understand that the sword, an instrument of death is here the scalpel held by the great Physician. The Risen Crucified one continues to heal our inner self as doctors, medical professionals and psychologists help in the healing of mind and body.  The false peace is the hidden disease, the long-held resentment, the unacknowledged addictions, the hurt, shame of the past or perhaps a secret betrayal that we hate ourselves for. If we turn back to today’s Gospel, we can remind ourselves of the hostility and indeed violence in human relationships including all too often in families.  Church communities too can be places where people are bullied or hurt in other ways.

Pastor Daniel Bourguet noting the atrophy and abstraction of much of western theology reminds us how much stronger in eastern Christian theology the theme of Christ the physician is.  For so many Christ is the stern judge of the law court or worse still the angry, punishing God whose wrath falls on Jesus rather than on us much more reflects our hostility and inner conflict. For so many Christ imprisons us in our shame and hurt rather than setting us free to live in the joy and generosity that willingly assists us to discern the right way to offer the 'cup of cool water'

That is not to exclude appropriate judgement, but the judgement becomes the discriminating skill of the specialist in diagnosis, facing the patient with the truth and where necessary operating, cutting away or amputating a diseased limb or excising a cancer. Then assisting with the often painful and confronting journey of rehabilitation.  The power of the sharp scalpel blade may indeed hurt but it is necessary if we are to recover from our spiritual illness.

Our two other readings today also speak of God as our healer.  A woman is healed of her infertility through the prayer of the prophet. Infertility in the ancient world was always the shameful fault of the woman. Here in response to her hospitality her body becomes a place of hospitality for a new life, one for whom she had longed and prayed. Her yearning had not made her bitter, she made a space for the prophet of God. Paul writes of God’s hospitality in Baptism and the renewal we have through the healing work of the Spirit seeking to be born through the labour pains of our desires and our hopes. 

Our passage today is set within a series of sayings about the hospitality of God which we are called to reflect. Gospel communities become places of welcome and true healing. Former Archbishop Rowan Williams writes: “we feel the edge, the ache in human anger and human suffering. And we recognise it can be taken into Christ and into the heart of the Father. It can be healed. It can be transfigured” ((Being Human page 93)

Let us place ourselves wholeheartedly into the care of God who calls us into the fullness of life. Christ calls us to truthfulness and through grace generosity and compassion are in evidence.  May our little community be a place of true healing and hope where joy is present as we seek to be healed and to heal.

liturgy on the margins curated by Sister Elizabeth Young

https://liturgyonthemargins.org/2023/05/11/handing-down-the-ministry/comment-page-1/ Sister Elizabeth interviewed me last year. This intervi...