14.3.10

The Rector writes (and notices) - 14th March 2010

The Rector writes .. .. ..


Mid-Lent Sunday brings with it an element of refreshment as we pause in our Lenten journey before intensifying our pilgrimage with Christ into Holy Week and the celebration of the Paschal Mystery. St Clement of Rome (1st century AD) writes: “Let us fix our eyes on Christ’s blood and understand how precious it is to his Father, for, poured out for our salvation, it has brought to the whole world the grace of repentance”. As the Saviour dies on the cross, the Church sees in the water and the blood that flows from his broken heart the effective source of sacramental life: water symbolising the cleansing achieved through Baptism: blood pointing to the sustenance we draw from the Eucharist.

The Christian understanding of what happened on Calvary can be summed up in the word “atonement” – the belief that through his own self-sacrifice, through literally putting his own body in the chasm which had opened up between the Creator and what his children had become, a bridge has been opened up. Christ enables us to live “at one” with the Father: “by his wounds you have been healed” (I Peter 2:24).

The problem for all of us is that although the human condition has been put back on course, each of us is still prone to sin – that these are the end days of evil does not make its ability to damage any less devastating. Lent is a time of conversion: the season of the year when we take a long, hard look at ourselves in the light of the Gospel. It is our belief that Jesus has given us the means of conversion, a way to allow his healing touch to become as effective in our lives today as ever it was in the crowds who flocked around him 2,000 years ago. St Leo the Great (5th century) says: “What was visible in our Saviour has passed over into his mysteries”.

In the Sacrament of Penance we have the promise that whenever we recognise failure in ourselves, are genuinely sorry for it, and intend to try to do better in the future, we can have the assurance of God’s forgiveness. The words of absolution spoken by a priest lift the burden of past sin, restore the Christian to the life of grace and enable fresh graces to work in our lives. So much on offer, but relatively few avail themselves of this gentle sacramental act of Christ’s compassion. The Church expects all those who are conscious of serious sin to make their confession before receiving Holy Communion during the Easter period – this is the minimum requirement for Catholic practise. But the bare minimum should not be enough for anyone who really wants to grow into Christ. Let us use these remaining Lenten days to prepare for a good Easter confession.

The fourth of the Lenten talks will be given this Wednesday (17th March) at 7pm. This week we have the opportunity to hear about the life and work of the Little Sisters of the Poor whose special charism is the care of the elderly. Founded by St Jeanne Jugan (who was canonised last year) the Little Sisters have two houses in London at Vauxhall and Stoke Newington. The speaker will be the Superior of the Manchester home, Little Sister Caroline: she is making a long journey to be with us for the evening, so please do all you can to come along to hear her. St James is very special to the Community as their first English vocation, Caroline Sheppard (1823-1884) loved to pray in our church.


NOTICES

There are two feast days this week: St Patrick on Wednesday (17th) and St Joseph on Friday (19th). Friday’s Masses will be celebrated at St Joseph’s Altar

We offer our prayers and condolences to the families of two of the congregation who have died. Patricia Gibson had been frail for a long time and died in her own home on Friday 5th, aged 90. Her body will be brought into church on Wednesday at 5pm and her Funeral Mass will be offered at 12.30pm this Thursday. Margaret Hudson died in hospital on Tuesday (9th) aged 92, and her Funeral Service will also take place here on Thursday at 4pm. RIP
There will be a Requiem offered in the Lady Chapel (in the Extraordinary Form) at 6.30pm on Tuesday for the repose of David Helm: our prayers are with his widow, Linda.

There is much concern among people of all faiths (and none) at the Children, Schools and Families Bill which is due for consideration by the House of Lords. The non-denominational Family Education Trust is asking individuals to support a letter to be published in the press expressing reservations. If you would like to be associated with their letter you will find copies for signature on the table at the back of the church – they need to be posted to the Trust to arrive by this Thursday (18th)

The Stations of the Cross
will be made after the 6pm Mass on the Fridays of Lent.

One of the boxes at the back of the church (near the door) has been designated Lenten alms – this year the savings we make will be divided between the St John Southworth Fund (to help the needy in London) and the Thai Children’s Trust.

There is a group to studying Gregorian chant which meets in the Lady Chapel each Sunday 5.45pm-6.45pm. Anyone interested in learning the Chant is welcome. 30 people were present at the first meeting so this is clearly an idea which is hitting the right note!

Holy Year in Santiago de Compostella. A number of people have shown interest in the possibility of making the pilgrimage this year. Plans have been firmed up and the suggestion is that beginning on 2nd October we make an eight-day (or it could be shortened to six days to save on costs) visit to St James in Spain by way of our Lady’s Shrine at Fatima and a journey north through Portugal. Details of the projected itinerary are available from the Rectory. We need to make a definite decision about a pilgrimage by the end of March.

Lenten Sermons 2010

Lent 4 - 14th March, 2010

Although this sounds like a rather tall story, it is in fact true. An Anglican bishop in a country diocese in this country inaugurated a series of parish visitations. Each weekend he would go to what were mainly small villages and try to get to know the parishioners. After one of these visitations, which he felt had gone very constructively, he was surprised to receive a letter of complaint. Immediately he had left the village those who had heard him preach had called a meeting and passed a motion of censure on the bishop. When he had stood in their pulpit he had said that they were all sinners and this was quite unacceptable. St John says: “If we say that we have no sin in us we are deceiving ourselves and refusing to admit the truth”.
Those burghers of middle England who wanted to censure their bishop were not perhaps as unrepresentative as we might think. All too easily, sin can become something other people do. The organs of society today, the media, lawyers, medics, police social services, government itself, all seem to combine to analyse and find fault, in such a way, that they are exonerated from responsibility. It is always others’ fault. We are surrounded by a blame culture which is as insidious as it is widespread. Look only this past week at the combined failure of the so-called care agencies to protect a vulnerable family in Sheffield over a 30 year period. A whole panel of executive officers were turned out before the press to explain that the mistakes were systemic and that no individuals would be taking responsibility for what had happened. “If we say that we have no sin in us we are deceiving ourselves and refusing to admit the truth”.

The whole point of the parable Jesus offers in today’s Gospel is that someone – the Prodigal Son – is prepared finally to take responsibility for his own actions. He has behaved atrociously – he has traded on his father’s love - he has squandered everything he has on a questionable lifestyle – he has fallen to the margins of society – and it is there, in the midst of rejection and starvation, that he comes to his senses – he takes a long, hard look at himself and, instead of blaming others, he recognises where he has failed – he admits to himself his own selfishness, his bad judgement, his wrong choices. There is genuine contrition. No excuse – no pretence. Having faced up to himself squarely and honestly, he now determines to do something about it – to seek reconciliation, to own up to his sin, to apologise, to try to make amends. The acceptance and admission of the truth leads to new life. “It is right that we should celebrate and rejoice, because your brother here was dead and has come to life: he was lost and is found”.

Of course, Jesus’ parable is only a parable, but as with all the great stories of the Gospel it is timeless in its application. The original context was a challenge to the self-righteousness of the religious establishment of the time. Jesus is criticised for keeping company with the riff-raff, those who had obviously fallen below the mark, with sinners. It is no accident that we are faced with the Prodigal Son at this halfway point through Lent. These 40 days and 40 nights are supposed to be for us, as they were for Jesus, a time for facing up to ourselves, an honest and sincere looking into the mirror, and recognising how far we have come on the human and Christian journey and how much further we have to go. This is not introspection, or an exercise in self-improvement – we should be measuring ourselves against the standards, not of this world, with all its therapies and techniques for self-help, but of Christ and his Gospel. And in so doing, the sacrament of reconciliation is of inestimable value: the objectivity of grace is crucial.

We know, as Catholics, that if we fall into serious sin we must seek the way of penitence, we must go to confession. But most of our sin does not fall into that category – it is lower level, more difficult to identity, not as apparently destructive of who we are – too easily excused. As one of the early Fathers says: “When there is rust on a mirror, our face cannot be seen in it: so also where there is sin in us, we cannot see God”. We should go to confession regularly and frequently with the desire to form a Christian conscience and that we may have increasingly in us “that mind that is in Christ Jesus”. Cardinal Newman says “return to your conscience, question it ... turn inward, brethren, and in everything you do, see God as your witness”.

Forgiveness has been won for us at such a high price. In St Paul’s incredible phrase: “For our sake God made the sinless one into sin, so that in him we might become the goodness of God”. The arms of mercy are ever open. With the Prodigal Son, all we have to say is: “Father, I have sinned against heaven and against you”, and absolution is ours. This absolution, in its turn, sets off a chain of reactions, as Pope John Paul II reminds us: “Reconciliation with God leads to other reconciliations, which repair the other breaches caused by sin. The forgiven penitent is reconciled with himself in his inmost being, where he regains his innermost truth. He is reconciled with his brethren whom he has in some way offended and wounded. He is reconciled with the Church, he is reconciled with all creation”.

Let none of us neglect this sacrament of reconciliation, the sacrament of penance, the sacrament of healing, this Easter. “If we say that we have no sin we are deceiving ourselves and refusing to admit the truth – but if we acknowledge our sins then God who is faithful and just will forgive our sins and purify us from everything that is wrong”. May it be so …


Lent 3 - 7th March , 2010
“You are great O Lord, and greatly to be praised: great is your power, and your wisdom is without measure. And man, so small a part of your creation, wants to praise you”. In those words, St Augustine sums up the human desire to understand something of God, and to worship him. The Catechism of the Catholic Church builds on that desire when it says: “By natural reason we can know God with certainty on the basis of his works. But there is another order of knowledge, which we cannot possibly arrive at by our own powers, the order of divine Revelation. Through an utterly free decision, God has revealed himself and given himself to us. This he does by revealing the mystery, his plan of loving goodness, formed from all eternity in Christ”.

The first reading we heard records one of those supreme moments of Divine self-revelation after which we can say truly that things can never again be the same. Moses is in exile, far from the traditions of his own people, when he is attracted by the phenomenon of a burning bush, or rather by something which is on fire, but not being consumed. It is Moses’ moment of annunciation. God is about to reveal the vocation which has been prepared for him. He is being called away from shepherding flocks of animals to lead the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt towards a land of their own.

Moses is called by name. And that is significant. For people in the East, to know someone’s name is to establish a relationship, to give a certain influence and power, to understand their identity, who they are, where they come from. God already has this relationship with Moses, but now Moses in his turn wants to know who it is who is calling to him. In offering the expression “I Am who I Am”, or to put it another way “He who Is”, the Creator is making himself intelligible to his creature, allowing himself to be approached, holding out the potential for a genuine dialogue.

What is revealed in the Burning Bush is a God who is prepared to intervene – who is not prepared to stand at a distance and watch. God shows himself as someone who can be named and who is intimately concerned in the circumstances of the lives he has made. But there is a downside to all this. While God remains at a distance, while he is utterly unknowable and intangible, while the mystery surrounding him cannot be pierced, he can be held at arm’s length: he can be viewed with a certain indifference. But once he reveals himself, once his nature ceases to be complete mystery, once a relationship is begun, then demands are made on human beings – if God is a Person then he must be respected as such. “Ignorance is bliss”, we say, but understanding involves potential discomfort and challenge. To know God is, necessarily, to have to conform one’s way of behaving to what is commensurate with that Being. “I Am who I Am”. As Moses soon found out, an inescapable moral dimension has been introduced. The Burning Bush is the precursor to the Ten Commandments.

Israel may have been the chosen nation, but its relationship to God was never easy. There were times of faithfulness and there were also long periods of alienation summed up in the words from the second reading (St Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians): “most of them failed to please God and their corpses littered the desert”. It is a theme taken up by Jesus in the Gospel reading. Like any good teacher, he earths his message in contemporary events. He talks of two recent tragedies and then goes on to communicate, as he did so often, through a parable. The meaning is crystal clear. Its first audience would have been left in no doubt what was being said. “By their fruit you will know them”. Where there is no fruit there is, literally, a waste of space. Destroy the fig tree, cut it down, dig it out. But no, a gentler, more merciful judgement prevails; give it another chance, spare it for another season, treat it tenderly, and perhaps, just perhaps, fruit will appear at last.

It is so important that we recognise Scripture as being a living Word. Yes, of course, what Jesus says is designed to convict the people of his own day, to challenge them to offer to God the fruit which their ancestors failed to produce, to fulfil their destiny and to become a holy people, but, as St Paul reminds us: “All this happened to them as a warning, and it was written down to be a lesson for us who are living at the end of the age”. Old Israel was given so much – but the New Israel has been given so much more. Much was asked of them; so much more is being asked of us. God revealed himself to Moses in the Burning Bush: he reveals himself to us in the life of the sacraments, most particularly in the Mass, in an intensity of incarnated love, which past ages could never have imagined. “O world invisible, we view thee, O world intangible, we touch thee, O world unknowable, we know thee, inapprehensible, we clutch thee”. (Francis Thompson)

The problem being addressed by today’s readings is one of complacency. Because we achieve the minimum we think we have become righteous. It was on that rock that the Old Covenant was broken. We come to church, we fulfil our obligations, we are conscious of the assurance of being within the Catholic fold – but where is the generosity, where is the yearning, where is the love that speaks heart to heart, where are the fruits of the Spirit? The words written to the Christians at Corinth 2,000 years ago are as much for us as they ever were for them: “The man who thinks he is safe must be careful that he does not fall”. We must never take God for granted. We can never afford to assume our salvation. The call to conversion will not go away: let us heed that call in these Lenten days.



Lent 2 - 28th February, 2010


Abraham was a dinosaur. By that, obviously, I do not mean that he was one of those creatures we see rampaging across our TV screens – but he was a primeval figure, tough, uneducated, the sort who would kill his own son because he thought God demanded this sacrifice of him – and yet this is the one human being to whom the three major world religions, Judaism Christianity and Islam all trace themselves. Abraham, “our father in faith” – the one to whom God reveals himself in a radically new way. Abraham’s act of faith – his “yes” to God – sets in motion a long process which leads gradually, through the centuries, towards the birth of Jesus. Starting with Abraham, bit by bit, God tells us more and more about himself, until that final moment of self-revelation when his Son enters human history.

In a very real way, the 12 disciples called by Jesus are the natural successors to Abraham. They, too, are marked out and asked to make their own act of faith. It is significant that, having called the disciples to give up everything to follow him, Jesus never explains who he is – he keeps them close to him – they share his daily life – but they are left to draw their own conclusions. Only towards the end of the three years of his public life does Jesus ask his friends whether they yet understand his true identity. It is Peter, speaking in the name of the others, who declares for the very first time – you are “the Christ of God”. Once the words have been spoken, Jesus is free to reveal more of himself and his mission to the Twelve.

First he talks to them of what will happen in Holy Week – of how he knows great suffering awaits him – he will be rejected and killed. His disciples cannot accept what is being said, but, as if to prepare them for the trials ahead, as if to reassure them that their act of faith is well-founded, Jesus takes Peter and James and John onto a mountainside, and there something of incredible power and overwhelming beauty takes place.

Jesus, their friend, the one with whom they eat and talk on a daily basis, the man they have come to know so well, is changed, transfigured, before their eyes. It is the Jesus they know, but now he radiates glory – they witness a reality which they will recognise again on Easter Day – humanity transformed by the light and power of Divinity. There are no words to express what is happening. The three of them are taken out of themselves – they are, literally, overcome with fear. They have never seen anything like this before. Their instinct is to bow down and worship. Like Abraham all those years before, Peter and James and John are awe-struck in the presence of God.

What does this have to say to us? For Abraham as for Peter, James and John, the ground on which God chose to reveal himself was holy ground. Our place of meeting, our holy ground, is this building, this altar, this tabernacle. Is this truly holy ground for us? Do we sense something special when we come inside this building? Can we feel that God is here, waiting to reveal himself to us? There used to be a time when if you went inside a Catholic church you felt immediately a sense of the holy. Generations of Catholics were formed not so much by what was said to them, but by what they experienced, what they imbibed, from the devotion of others around them. It is a cliché, perhaps, but it happens to be true, that “faith is caught, not taught". I am not sure that this is true any longer of our own generation. We seem to have lost much of the reverence of previous times.

Here at Spanish Place, thank God, we are fortunate that good priests and faithful lay people have held onto a sense of awe – the realisation of the holiness and wonder and beauty of God. It is that sense we need to preserve and enhance. In doing so, it is the simple things that matter. Genuflecting to the tabernacle when we come into church and when we leave. Dipping our finger into the holy water to remind us of our Baptism. Praying quietly before and after Mass. Doing all that we can by our own example to preserve the stillness of the church. Recognising that the atmosphere of this building matters. All this adds up to a culture of worship. Let us pray that this building will continue to provide a context where people can feel, instinctively, that they want to worship: where, on this particular piece of holy ground, here in the centre of London, they can join with angels and archangels and the whole company of heaven.

If the Transfiguration speaks to us of holy ground, it also demonstrates how, in a moment, the ordinary can be transformed – that the things of heaven and earth have only a hair’s breadth separating them, that glory is only just below the surface of our daily living. There are some lines from Francis Thompson’s poem "In No Strange Land" which encapsulate this understanding: "The angels keep their ancient places, turn but a stone and start a wing! ‘Tis ye, ‘tis your estranged faces, that miss the many-splendour’d thing”. When Peter and James and John were invited to join Jesus for a time of prayer, it must have been an experience they had shared many times before – nothing out of the ordinary here – but in a moment the veil separating earth from heaven had been lifted, they were witnesses to dialogue where their Friend was talking on equal terms with the greatest figures of their history, Moses and Elijah. “Master, it is wonderful for us to be here”.

As those who believe that Jesus Christ is the Alpha and Omega, the creative Word through whom all things have being, the Transfiguration demonstrates that we should live each day expecting the unexpected – prepared to be surprised by God in the ordinary events of our existence. What happened to Peter and James and John shows just how close to the things of heaven we really are. “Turn but a stone and start a wing”. The sadness is that we have so little sense of all this – that our sensitivity to the things of God is dulled, our perception coarsened, our vision limited, by the secular environment which permeates all that we are. That is why our Lenten exercises are so important: in these six weeks we have the chance to raise our eyes, to comprehend the ordinary as the potential for the extraordinary. Let us pray for ourselves, and for one another, that this Lent will help us to perceive “the many-splendour’d thing”.



Lent 1 - 21st February, 2010
The number forty occupied a unique hold over the imagination of the people of Israel. That was the number of years they had spent on the journey from slavery in Egypt to the freedom of the Promised Land. The Exodus and its aftermath was the formative experience for the Jews – during their long and difficult pilgrimage their understanding of God was refined, and from a number of disparate tribes they were welded together into a single nation. The first reading, from the Book of Deuteronomy, acted as a sort of Creed which would be recited as the people gave thanks for the harvest and called to mind all that God had provided for them throughout their history. “A chosen race, holy nation, a people set apart to sing the praises of God”.

It is a common experience to view one’s personal history through rose-tinted spectacles. As we look back we tend to highlight the good bits and airbrush those which were unpleasant. It was the same with the Israelites. The forty years in the wilderness had had an incredibly positive outcome, but the journey had, also, been very painful. Not only did they have to overcome the opposition of the other tribes and nations they were supplanting, but time and time again they were tempted to apostasise - to follow other gods – to assimilate the religious practises of those they met on the journey. The wilderness was a place of temptation – and, again and again, Israel opted for short-term gain, for immediate indulgence, and reaped the bitter consequences.

When the Gospel writers record Jesus immediately after his Baptism, retreating into the desert, the length of his stay there is no accident. “Jesus left the Jordan and was led by the Spirit through the wilderness, being tempted here by the devil for forty days”. Just as the forty years had formed Israel, so these forty days and forty nights will form the human consciousness of Jesus and prepare him for what has to be. But, as with Israel, so with Jesus: this was to be a time of hardship and struggle. Truly formative experiences are rarely comfortable.
As presented to us in the Gospels, the temptations which Jesus endured had an objective reality – they were not just demons of his own imagining. There is a truth being demonstrated here which is of fundamental importance to us. In a world where analysis and forms of therapy can address the healing of the human psyche we are tempted to play down the naked and brutal reality of evil. But there are forces at work in us and around us which are destructive: the ancient Serpent still roams the earth, beguiling, dressing sin in the cloak of human freedom - something the Catechism describes as “a seductive voice opposed to God”. That this power is limited, that nothing can, ultimately, separate us from the love of God made visible in Christ Jesus is our act of faith - in the end, the strongest force at work in the universe will be shown to be love, the Divine love, and everything contrary to that love has only a limited life span. We know that – but our future hope must not blind us to present reality. Evil exists – it is corrosive and corrupting. If it rarely presents itself in other than an ambiguous way, then it is the more dangerous in its subtlety - undermining truth, presenting compromise as the only response for mature people.
Jesus knew it all. The three temptations recorded for us in Scripture are only headings, summing up an enervating and confusing time with the voices battering him. “Do it your own way – be yourself – follow your own logic – you know it makes sense – why look for answers outside yourself”. On and on it went day and night. But the power of evil is finite and, in that telling phrase, “having exhausted all these ways of tempting him, the devil left him, to return at the appointed time”. Jesus had withstood all that was thrown at him. He had come to a new dependence on his Father - to the understanding that the only agenda for the coming three years had to be that already set by Heaven. His was not to be a kingdom of this world – glory would only be achieved through a cross.

The point being made by St Luke is that Jesus did withstand the tactics of the devil, that he did not give in to the tempter. The English form of the Lord’s Prayer which we use sometimes raises difficulty: “and lead us not into temptation”. St James makes it clear that: “God cannot be tempted by evil and he himself tempts no-one”. A more accurate translation should be “do not allow us to enter into temptation" or “do not let us yield to temptation”. Jesus demonstrates that we do not have to surrender to evil – where there is temptation there is also an increase of grace. The First letter to the Corinthians says: “No testing has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your strength, but with the temptation will also provide the way of escape, so that you may be able to endure it”. But grace always perfects nature, nature cannot be overthrown by it. The strength we need is never absent, but God does not force himself upon us – we have to ask for his help, to put ourselves in the way of grace. That is why our penitential practices during Lent are so important. By prayer, fasting and almsgiving we are to strengthen our inner resolve to opt for the things of God. Like Jesus, with Jesus, in facing up to our human choices we are to be confirmed in the path of life. Let us be truly generous with God in these 40 days and 40 nights and let us pray for one another, and for this parish, that, together, we will make a good Lent and become, as never before, his holy people.
“Deliver us, O Lord, from every evil and grant us peace in our day. In your mercy keep us free from sin and protect us from all anxiety, as we wait in joyful hope for the coming of our Saviour, Jesus Christ. For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours, now and for ever. Amen”.

sermon at Midnight Mass 2009

Elizabeth Anne Seton has the distinction of being the first native-born citizen of the USA to have been canonised. Mother Seton, as she was usually called, did heroic work bringing education to the poorest of the poor at the beginning of the 19th century but she was not born a Catholic. Her family background was Episcopalian, what we would now term Anglican, and it was only when she went to Italy to try to prolong the life of her ailing husband that she was immersed in a different culture. The story is told of how Mother Seton was taken to Mass one Sunday – it was all very strange to her and she felt quite lost. Behind her were two of her countrywoman who spent the whole time making disparaging remarks – when it came to the words of consecration and the priest lifted up the Host, one the American woman said in a loud stage whisper: “they think that this is God”. For St Elizabeth Seton this was her moment of conversion, every bit as sudden as for St Paul outside Damascus. In a flash of insight, she knew that Christ was immediately present to her in the Eucharist, a reality she never doubted from then on, and a truth which was to underpin her love of God and neighbour ever after.


“They think that this is God”. In our own times, it seems that there is a new aggression in society against the claims of faith. On the one hand, political correctness seems to go to any lengths to undermine religious distinctiveness, while an intellectually vacuous relativism promotes any idea as having the same worth as any other – and the likes of the Pullmans and the Hitchins and the Dawkins of this world never miss an opportunity to push their God-less agenda. The balance in the public domain is pushing heavily against the claims of religion in general and Christianity in particular. Like T S Eliot’s Magi, believers, too, have “a cold coming of it”.

But we have are here together at this midnight hour to attest our belief “that this is God”. Christian faith centres on the identity of the One lying in the manger. He is, for us, the human face of the eternal God: the tangible expression, at a particular place and at an identifiable time, of the most profound mystery of all – love incarnate, the total and complete self-revelation of the Divine. An early Christian writer (St Hippolytus) expresses the significance of Mary’s Child in this way: “The Word was God and was invisible to the created world, but God made him visible. He spoke, as he had done before, and begetting light from light, he sent forth his own mind to the world as its Lord. The Word is the mind of God: he came into the world and was shown forth as Son of God”.

St Paul in writing to the Christians at Corinth claims that “we are those who have the mind of Christ” and then in the Letter to the Philippians he can pray: “have in you that mind that is in Christ Jesus”. We really do believe that Christ is God’s definitive Word spoken for all time to the creation he loves, and that each human being, created in the image and likeness of the Creator, can have their own share in the mind of Christ: in other words, God can be known and experienced within the human heart and soul. But does this kind of theorising make any difference, or is it just a kind of play on language?

Whenever I have the privilege of baptising a child, I say the same thing to its parents and Godparents – bring up this child to be afraid of nothing. I am not being naïve in saying that because I know the state of this world as well as they do. But, as Scripture says, “perfect love casts out fear”, and our belief, our conviction, is that, once God has entered our world in the form of the Babe of Bethlehem, we have proof positive that the strongest force in this world - despite every sign to the contrary - is love, love so amazing, so divine. Ultimately, everything that is not loving, that is negative & life denying, & sad and just plain bad, will be consumed in the fire of that love which beats in the heart of the Godhead.
“They think that this is God”. As for Mother Seton, so for us. It is here in the context of the Eucharist that theory and practice come together, that God is earthed, rooted in the things of this life, that He becomes knowable, touchable, real to those with the eyes to see, the hearts open to love. I do not know what the New Year will bring. Probably like 2009 it bring its share of pain – the economy will continue to threaten the stability of so many families, Afghanistan will continue to claim its toll of young lives – but what Christmas tells me is that it will not always be so – that, beginning from that stable in a Palestinian backwater 2,000 years ago, the world is being renewed, that love alone endures, that love ultimately, will have its vindication. The Christ Child holds out his arms to you, and to me. Will we accept him for what he is – the mind of God - love incarnate? If we will, then we shall share in that peace which passes all understanding, which defies human logic – and that peace is my Christmas prayer for you.

Sermon for 4th Sunday of Advent

Talking to middle-aged man on Friday - asked as everyone does at his time of year what he was doing for Christmas. He said that he was going to spend Christmas Day at home quietly because his mother died a couple of months ago and the sense of loss is just beginning to hit home. Those of us whose mothers have already died will have been through that same experience. There is something utterly special and irreplaceable about the relationship we have with the person who gave us life, from whom, literally, we established our human identity. And, of course, what we owe to our mothers is not just biological. They are the ones who have formed us emotionally, who have helped to create our values – it is from them that, instinctively, we have our first understandings of the nature of love.


As Christians, we believe that when the time came for God’s own Son to share our humanity, to become one flesh with us, he, too, experienced that unique bond, which a child has with its mother and vice versa. And that that relationship is moral as well as biological, emotional as well as physical.

On this 4th Sunday in Advent the focus changes. The first three Sundays have very much been taken up with the witness of John the Baptist, with his cry to prepare a way for the coming of the Lord – today, the arrival of the Messiah is imminent, and we hear St Luke’s account of how that plan, conceived in the Father’s heart, and worked out through so many generations, comes to its fruition in the angel's annunciation to Mary and the Visitation to her cousin, Elizabeth. St Bernard reflects on Mary’s freedom to choose in a famous passage. “Answer, O Virgin”, he says, “answer the angel speedily; rather, through the angel, answer your Lord. Speak the word, and receive the Word; offer what is yours, and conceive what is of God; give what is temporal, & embrace what is eternal”.

For 2,000 years, Mary has been a source of fascination to believer and non-believer alike. This woman who stands at the centre point of history, about whom so little is known. The Second Eve, the Mother of Jesus who is God incarnate. Painters, writers, poets, musicians, sculptors – all have tried to capture something of what one of them has called “our tainted nature’s solitary boast”. “Blessed”, indeed “is she how believed that the promise made her by the Lord would be fulfilled”.

Perhaps, in our own times, we have deeper insights to offer as our understanding of the human psyche explains that we are, to a very large extent, for good or ill, what our parents have made us. If we want to know Mary, all we need to do is reflect on the humanity of her Son as revealed in the Gospels. Everything he is and everything he does, and says, reveals the lessons first learned at his Mother’s knee, the ethics imbibed in the home at Nazareth.

As Catholic Christians we are heirs to a long tradition of not just respecting Mary for what she did, but of loving her for what she is. We see in that symbolic handing over of Mary to St John at the Cross, a gesture that embraces all humanity. It is the will of God that Mary’s maternal care for her Son should be extended to every one of his brothers and sisters. In a profoundly spiritual sense, she is our Mother too, and she watches over us, as she watched over Jesus, with such gentleness and such devotion, with so much sensitivity and so much concern.

Some non-Catholics worry lest the love given to the Mother in some way compromises the uniqueness of love which belongs to Jesus. But that, surely, is to fail to understand how a family works. The love given to one member overflows to the rest – each is loveable in their own way – the love that a mother feels for her husband, and vice versa, the love that their children have for their parents and for one another – none of this can be measured out, it just is – a part of the given-ness of who we are & how we function.

In four days it will be Christmas Eve and, once again, we will wonder with Mary at the God made Man, the fruit of her own body. She is central to this mystery of love, which we call the Incarnation. The Mother holding her Child – that fundamental human and Christian icon. Let us ask her to stand close to us and our families through these coming days. Let us ask her to give us fresh insight into the humanity of the Child she was privileged to nurture.

Mary the Dawn – but Christ the Perfect Day
Mary the Gate – but Christ the heavenly Way
Mary the Temple – but Christ the Temple’s Lord
Mary the Shrine – but Christ the God adored
Mary the Beacon – but Christ the haven's rest
Mary the Mirror – but Christ the Vision Blest.

Sermon for Advent 3

One person dominates the two middle Sundays of Advent. That is John the Baptist. He is a compelling figure – dynamic, larger than life – the sort who would always stand out in a crowd. From birth, he was marked out as someone special, unlike anyone else. As an adult, he lived out in the wilderness, shunning society – but the crowds flocked to him to hear what he had to say. And what he said was disturbing and uncomfortable: he told them to change their ways, to repent: “get ready, something is about the happen”. But John was clear that he was only the messenger. His spectacular ministry was pointing away from himself, towards Someone else, “I baptise with water, but there stands among you – unknown to you – the One who is coming after me, and I am not fit to undo the strap of his sandals”.


John is important for what he says: also important because he is the link between the O & N Testaments. He brings the one to an end, while marking the beginning of the other. There was a tradition among the pious people of John’s day that before Messiah arrived in Israel, Elijah the greatest of the prophets, would return to this earth to proclaim the nearness of his coming. Some people thought that John the Baptist might be Elijah, but, while he declares openly that he is not Elijah, the Prophet’s own mantle does fall on his shoulders. John is the immediate forerunner of Christ – it is he who must announce to Israel that Jesus, his own cousin, is the longed-for One, the human face of God. He is not the light itself, but he comes to speak up for the light.

“To speak up for the light”. That phrase could well define the role of a prophet. When others are living in darkness, or their eyes are blinkered so they cannot, or will not, see. God raises up individual men and women, and gives them a vision to share with others. When the night seems darkest, a voice speaks out to reveal the way ahead.

For many in today’s world the late Pope, John Paul, fulfilled the role of a prophet. Wherever he could, whenever he could, he spoke of the innate, God-given dignity of each human person. To a world which is corporate and consumerist, used to global communications and strategies that involve hemispheres, John Paul proclaimed that God’s love is individual and unique, that no single person, no matter how poor, no matter how limited, no matter how apparently insignificant, can be passed over. Until his last breath the late Pope spoke up for the light – he provided a voice for those to whom no one else would listen.

In the end, JB became too hot to handle. Respectable people, the establishment, the royal family, the priests, all were lashed by his tongue: sin was sin, wherever it chose to hide, or in whatever disguise it tried to pass itself off. He was imprisoned. He was murdered. True prophecy is never welcome. There is always a cost attached. The prophet is ridiculed, sidelined, persecuted. Undermine the messenger and you can afford to forget the message. But the poor and the dispossessed, and the old and the handicapped, and those without adequate education and healthcare, recognise that the Gospel message is always light in darkness. “The Lord has anointed me. He has sent me to bring good news to the poor, to bind up hearts that are broken, to proclaim liberty to captives, freedom to those in prison, to proclaim a year of favour from the Lord”.

Each of the readings at Mass today is prophetic. Zephaniah speaks of what will be in the Day of the Lord. St Paul talks of the peace whih will be ofudn in Christ’s presence. St Luke defines prophecy in terms of JB. But prophecy is not just something for the great figures of human and Christian history. In a very real sense, each of us is called to share in this prophetic vocation. To be a prophet is “to speak up for the light”. You and I do that whenever we provide a sympathetic ear for someone who is having a bad time: whenever we speak gently to someone who is upset and angry: whenever we are prepared to share something of what we believe with another human being.

God will always raise up the John the Baptists and the Pope John Pauls to speak to the bigger picture. Where you and I come in is in those individual human encounters where the word of encouragement, the expression of personal faith, is needed. This week, as in every week, there will be many opportunities for each of us to prophesy in the simplest and subtlest of ways “to speak up for the light”, to illuminate the darkness around us. A quiet word, a smile, the fact that someone’s need has been noticed. That is all it takes. Pray God that we are sensitive to the opportunities he creates for us in these coming days. As the first letter to the Thessalonians has it: “God has called you, and he will not fail you”.

Sermon for Advent 2

Towards the end of a long life the eminent biologist Sir Alistair Hardy began to research spiritual phenomena. As a scientist, Sir Alistair wanted to bring his own discipline to the analysis of religious experience. St Joseph of Cupertino must have been high on his list. The 17th century Franciscan would levitate at the most embarrassing moments, so much so that his brethren banned him from eating or praying with them for 35 years.


When one hears of dreams and vision and states of union with God, for most of us anyway, it is a far cry from our own Christian lives. How good it would be if we could be sure, that some of our questions would find an answer, that we could see clearly – but for most of us faith is just that – unilluminated by any special gifts. I do not think that I have ever had any particular spiritual experience, except perhaps once when I was a child. I had just received HC and was kneeling on a marble step – the coldness of the marble impinged on my consciousness, and I put down a hand to touch the stone. As I did so, I was filled with a sense that the God I had just received in HC was as physically real to as the marble I was touching. The cold stone earthing the Eucharistic Presence. Without my realising it, God was introducing a sacramental understanding into my early consciousness, for although he is Spirit, the Creator chooses to reveal himself within the fabric of his own Creation: he who has made the world, makes himself intelligible through it.

Without this notion of physicality, we cannot make sense of the Incarnation and Christmas. It is the same notion which the prophet Baruch, and Jesus himself, use when they want to express the truth about the Day of Judgment and the completion of the Kingdom. The images offered in these two passages from Scripture are rooted, earthy. Jerusalem, the holy city which has suffered so much, and has had to mourn so often, will be dressed up and crowned. The city will find vindication as those driven into exile discover their way home. The hills will be flattened, the valleys filled in.

For the people of the Old Covenant – and we have to remember that the humanity of Jesus was formed within the tradition of that Covenant – there was the certainty that judgment would come and that Israel would be restored. For Baruch, writing some six hundred years before the birth of Jesus, salvation is bound up with the integrity of one nation. By the time of St Luke’s Gospel, the realisation has grown that God’s visitation, given through Israel, is not for the benefit of a single people, but for every nation, for all people. “And all mankind shall see the salvation of God”.

It is far from fashionable today to see God's hand at work in the circumstances of history, making moral demands of his creation. The idea of Natural Law is all but dead. But when St Luke wants to begin his narrative he does so by anchoring it in a particular time. We are left in no doubt as to the context in which the Baptist begins his mission. We are told where and when and how. John is rooted and the basic images of his preaching are strongly physical. The Lord is coming as he has promised – everyone must make the paths straight. The whole universe is going to be changed by what is about to take place. “A voice cries in the wilderness”.

For St Paul writing to the Philippians, there is this same earthing in the reality of the moment. He looks forward to the final Day of Christ, when all will be brought to perfection, but he is clear that the way in which we prepare for judgement is by the way we treat one another on a day-to-day basis. St Paul is often portrayed as something of a cold fish, but in our second reading he brims over with affection. He says he misses those who have laboured with him in spreading the Gospel message – he writes that he is filled with joy when he thinks about them – and he prays that “your love for each other may increase more and more and never stop improving your knowledge and deepening your perception so that you can always recognise what is best”. True religion is to be gauged more by the way we act than the correctness of our expression. On the day of judgement, we shall be justified by faith which has shown its authenticity in terms of our works. “By their fruits, you will know them”.

And so we find ourselves at the 2nd Sunday in Advent. Baruch proclaims “Peace through integrity, honour through devotedness”. In the short term we are preparing to celebrate the physicality of the Incarnation. In three weeks time we shall wonder again at the God who assumes flesh – who comes among us as an embryo, a foetus, in the fullness of our own being. A God who is warm to the touch, who can be embraced and talked with. In the longer term it is that same God who will one day confront each of us in his glorified humanity – the ultimate challenge to who we are and what we have become. “The night is far spent the day is at hand”. These Advent days are a gift of grace, the chance to get some fresh perspective on our lives, to retrieve some order, as we come nearer and nearer to our ultimate encounter with God. Let us make these the acceptable days, preparing a straight path for the coming of our God. That he is coming is certain. In the day of his coming may he find us a holy people characterised by our concern, our love, for one another. “Love will come to perfection in us when we can face the day of judgement without fear, because even in this world we have become as he is”.






























































Towards the end of a long life the eminent biologist Sir Alistair Hardy began to research spiritual phenomena. As a scientist, Sir Alistair wanted to bring his own discipline to the analysis of religious experience. St Joseph of Cupertino must have been high on his list. The 17th century Franciscan would levitate at the most embarrassing moments, so much so that his brethren banned him from eating or praying with them for 35 years.




When one hears of dreams and vision and states of union with God, for most of us anyway, it is a far cry from our own Christian lives. How good it would be if we could be sure, that some of our questions would find an answer, that we could see clearly – but for most of us faith is just that – unilluminated by any special gifts. I do not think that I have ever had any particular spiritual experience, except perhaps once when I was a child. I had just received HC and was kneeling on a marble step – the coldness of the marble impinged on my consciousness, and I put down a hand to touch the stone. As I did so, I was filled with a sense that the God I had just received in HC was as physically real to as the marble I was touching. The cold stone earthing the Eucharistic Presence. Without my realising it, God was introducing a sacramental understanding into my early consciousness, for although he is Spirit, the Creator chooses to reveal himself within the fabric of his own Creation: he who has made the world, makes himself intelligible through it.



Without this notion of physicality, we cannot make sense of the Incarnation and Christmas. It is the same notion which the prophet Baruch, and Jesus himself, use when they want to express the truth about the Day of Judgment and the completion of the Kingdom. The images offered in these two passages from Scripture are rooted, earthy. Jerusalem, the holy city which has suffered so much, and has had to mourn so often, will be dressed up and crowned. The city will find vindication as those driven into exile discover their way home. The hills will be flattened, the valleys filled in.



For the people of the Old Covenant – and we have to remember that the humanity of Jesus was formed within the tradition of that Covenant – there was the certainty that judgment would come and that Israel would be restored. For Baruch, writing some six hundred years before the birth of Jesus, salvation is bound up with the integrity of one nation. By the time of St Luke’s Gospel, the realisation has grown that God’s visitation, given through Israel, is not for the benefit of a single people, but for every nation, for all people. “And all mankind shall see the salvation of God”.



It is far from fashionable today to see God's hand at work in the circumstances of history, making moral demands of his creation. The idea of Natural Law is all but dead. But when St Luke wants to begin his narrative he does so by anchoring it in a particular time. We are left in no doubt as to the context in which the Baptist begins his mission. We are told where and when and how. John is rooted and the basic images of his preaching are strongly physical. The Lord is coming as he has promised – everyone must make the paths straight. The whole universe is going to be changed by what is about to take place. “A voice cries in the wilderness”.



For St Paul writing to the Philippians, there is this same earthing in the reality of the moment. He looks forward to the final Day of Christ, when all will be brought to perfection, but he is clear that the way in which we prepare for judgement is by the way we treat one another on a day-to-day basis. St Paul is often portrayed as something of a cold fish, but in our second reading he brims over with affection. He says he misses those who have laboured with him in spreading the Gospel message – he writes that he is filled with joy when he thinks about them – and he prays that “your love for each other may increase more and more and never stop improving your knowledge and deepening your perception so that you can always recognise what is best”. True religion is to be gauged more by the way we act than the correctness of our expression. On the day of judgement, we shall be justified by faith which has shown its authenticity in terms of our works. “By their fruits, you will know them”.



And so we find ourselves at the 2nd Sunday in Advent. Baruch proclaims “Peace through integrity, honour through devotedness”. In the short term we are preparing to celebrate the physicality of the Incarnation. In three weeks time we shall wonder again at the God who assumes flesh – who comes among us as an embryo, a foetus, in the fullness of our own being. A God who is warm to the touch, who can be embraced and talked with. In the longer term it is that same God who will one day confront each of us in his glorified humanity – the ultimate challenge to who we are and what we have become. “The night is far spent the day is at hand”. These Advent days are a gift of grace, the chance to get some fresh perspective on our lives, to retrieve some order, as we come nearer and nearer to our ultimate encounter with God. Let us make these the acceptable days, preparing a straight path for the coming of our God. That he is coming is certain. In the day of his coming may he find us a holy people characterised by our concern, our love, for one another. “Love will come to perfection in us when we can face the day of judgement without fear, because even in this world we have become as he is”.

Sermon for Advent Sunday

As Christians, we are committed to the belief that there will be a last day and a final judgement. At some definite moment, this world will be brought to its consummation, and Christ will come again in his glory. As Jeremiah says: “See the days are coming – it is the Lord who speaks – when I am going to fulfil the promise I made to the House of Israel”.


So are these the last days? Is our own age destined to be the final one? Is God preparing his ultimate act through the human chaos of our own times? In one sense, the answer has to be “yes”. Every day, every hour, that passes brings us nearer to the completion of history. We will be nearer to the last judgement this evening than we are this morning. The Scriptures tell us to read the signs of the times, and, it may well be, that the concentration of inhumanity and cruelty unleashed in our own generation does indicate the ultimate showdown between good and evil. It would be a brave person who denied that the judgement is close. We do not yet know. We must wait to see.

Today is the first Sunday of Advent. Traditionally, the weeks leading up to Christmas are the time to think of the Four Last Things – Death, Judgement, Heaven and Hell. In what he said to his disciples, Jesus made it clear that no-one will know the day or the hour of his Second Coming. In the last book of the Bible, St John has a vision of what will happen on that final day. In his Apocalypse, the images are vivid and they are clearly imprinted on the Christian imagination. Whether the reality will be anything like that, we cannot tell – but what is not open to question is the certainty of judgement. Jesus is utterly clear about that. There will come a moment when each of us will come face to face with God and, for the first time, we shall see our life’s actions, our choices, our stewardship of the resources committed to us, everything we have become. The record will be there, and, finally, we shall have to answer for what we are, and what we are not.

But surely none of us has anything to fear from judgement? The nature of God is love, and the pettiness of our sins will be lost in the immensity of his concern for us? In the final analysis, our weakness is as nothing compared with the divine generosity. While we would like this to be so, it is clear that Jesus not only accepted the inevitability of judgement, but the possibility of hell as well.

Throughout our human journey, God seeks our co-operation. At every turn, he comes to meet us yearning for us to say “Yes” to him. But, by the very nature of creation, God refuses to clone his children – we are programmed for total freedom, and that means that the Creator had made an irrevocable decision to accept the choices his creatures make. The consequence of this essential and unlimited freedom must be that even God’s love may not constrain some to say other than “no” in their final decision. Having turned away consistently from grace on this earth, we cannot say with absolute certainty that some – perhaps even ourselves – will not persist in their wrong choices, Jesus talked of the “sin against the Holy Spirit”, that ultimate, unbreakable, pride which even God’s warmth cannot melt.

So should we believe in the existence of hell? We would be re-writing the Gospel if we did not at least allow for the possibility that Hell can be a reality. God will never condemn us – but in our personal sovereignty, we have enough space to condemn ourselves. When Pope John Paul was asked whether he believed in Hell he replied that as someone brought up, literally, in the shadow of Auschwitz, he could not but believe that there were some actions so terrible that their perpetrators could cut themselves off from God into eternity. Not that the outcome can ever be certain – but that the possibility must exist.

Living as we do in such a secular environment, it is all too easy to adopt a “take it, or leave it” attitude to Christianity. Religion can become a hobby – a way of spending a reassuring hour on a Sunday, as innocuous as the golf club or the cinema. The Gospel can be taken for granted – tamed by familiarity. But the Kingdom of God, as revealed by Jesus, is a matter of life or death, a double-edged sword hanging over us. Christian faith is about making crucial choices. It is about leading a moral life which is consistent with the revealed will of God – it is about holiness - about becoming those who share the mind of Christ.

On this Advent Sunday, Jesus is saying to each of us: “Watch yourselves, or your hearts will be coarsened with the cares of life. Stay awake, praying at all times for the strength to survive all that is going to happen, and to stand with confidence before the Son of Man”.