Monthly Archives: June 2015

14 June – Give us a king!

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Sunday 10
14/6/2015

1 Samuel 8:1-21
Psalm 138
Mark 4:26-34


In modern western societies which still concern themselves with kings and queens, the principle function of royalty seems to be to have babies, in order to increase magazine sales from the supermarket check-out aisle.

This being the case, it is not straightforward for us today to appreciate what is going on in Israel’s request for a king, and the shock this creates in Samuel and in God. There is a failure of some kind taking place here. But the nature of the failure is rather less clear than the simple fact of it suggests, and this is not least because the kingship becomes such an important part of the way in which God relates to his people.

But before we get to that, it is worth thinking a bit more about what is taking place in the request for a king itself. Why the request for a king, and what exactly is being rejected? Most fundamentally, the request for a king is a request for a kind of security which has been lacking in Israel up until now. Since the time of their arrival in Canaan, the Israelites have basically been a loose confederation of tribes with not much binding them together other than some common beliefs, stories, practices and language. From time to time, when there have been crises, certain figures known as “judges” were raised up to respond to particular issues, and then disappeared again from view. Samuel is effectively the last of these judges. In the face of harassment from local warlords and more organised groups such as the Philistines, the sense that Israel needed something more substantial and reliable than the occasional strong leader was a natural one. They first looked to Samuel’s sons, but saw that they were not up to the task. The prospect of a kind of dynasty of prophets or judges not being realistic, the request for a king is the natural next step.

When the request is made, the first things we hear are Samuel’s lament, and God’s – both feeling rejected by this request. The warnings are given to Israel – effectively, “be careful what you pray for” – but the request is, somewhat surprisingly, granted, and God already has in mind the man he wants to do the job.

While it is clear, then, that the Israelites are seeking some political security in their request for a king, what exactly is the theological crisis this creates? What is wrong with this? God claims that his own kingship is being rejected – which we have to take at his word. But in what way could God be in any helpful sense “king”? The language of God as king, or King Jesus, is familiar enough – it is right through our hymns this morning – but what it actually means is much less easy to say than it is common to say it. Something of what the people are rejecting is suggested in what they expect the king to do: the king is to “govern us and go out before us and fight our battles” (v20). Gods are not particularly reliable when it comes to these practical matters. Who today would want “God” running the economy, directing the troops, or setting social policy? Even if we did like the idea we would not be likely to agree that God’s “helpers” in these matters were doing what God required, and therefore not be likely to agree that God is actually in charge.

It seems, then, that the people bring to Samuel a necessary but impossible request. Good order is necessary for the well-being of the people, and they seek such good order and security, but it is impossible that good order flow from something other than God.

And yet God grants the people a king. Why? Because God is able to work without a king, or with one.

We get a sense from the text that God is almost indifferent to the mode of government the Israelites ask for themselves. The failure of the people is not so much their request for a king but the naïve belief that life under a king would be any better than life as they have already known it (vv10-18). The rejection of life under the judges and prophets is thought by the people to be the choice of a better life under a monarchy – a centralised governance, rather than a co-operative one; an established political order rather than one which needs constantly to be re-negotiated by tribal leaders.

The stories told in the books of Samuel, Kings and Chronicles, of course, relate just how unhelpful a monarchy can be. Life for the people of Israel doesn’t seem to be any better under the kings than under the judges. But this is not the end of the story. For even though God begrudgingly grants the people’s request, the kingship becomes one of the central motifs of the Scriptural story. God chooses the first kings – Saul, who is soon rejected, and then David, to whom God promises an eternal future. On account of this promise, the language of kingship becomes part of the theological language and expectations of Israel. And so the kingdom – or kingship, reign – of God comes to central to the preaching of Jesus, a thousand years later. The identification of Jesus as Son of God, Christ and Messiah is a use of royal language from the kingship tradition to identify what it is Jesus embodies and represents (re‑presents): to say that Jesus is “Son of God” is not so much to say that God is his “Father” as it is to say that Jesus is king.

The request for a king is a catastrophe because it rejects the order of things up to that point, understood to have been ordered in that way by God. In this sense, God is rejected. But perhaps even more catastrophic is the imagining that a different ordering would be more godly, more likely to give us what we think we need, just because it is a different ordering. The mistake is not simply failing to trust God but putting too much trust in our own sense of what we need – thinking that we need only to imagine a different future, and that our imagining makes it righteous.

As we noted at the beginning this morning, kings and queens are not much to us these days. But deciding for a better future does matter to us: having it better, as “the world” seems to, being safer, more comfortable, these are constantly on our minds.

As we reflect as a Synod on the future of the church we are, in a sense, seeking a “king, like the nations”. Once the review is done, we will be better placed to move forward, stand on firmer ground, be safer. Perhaps we will. The point is simply that “strategy” and “sustainability” are supremely kingly concepts.

 

As we reflect as a congregation on our future accommodations, how best to use the resources we have, we are doing the same thing: seeking stability, security. We are seeking sustainability by strategy in the same way as the Synod, only on a smaller scale.

It is not that we must not do this. Created in God’s image, we do as God did: we create, we shift things around, we change our world. The point is, though, that to decide – to choose one way of being rather than another – is not to make ourselves more righteous; it is to throw ourselves on the mercy of God. That is, to decide is to ask that God make good the work of our hands, whether the demand for a king or the development of a new risk management regime.

The form of our life before God is much less important than the God himself before whom we live. With a king, or without a king, with clear strategy or living wholly (holy?) unsustainably, the question of God’s relationship to us and ours to God does not change, only the form in which the question is put.

For this God will take whatever shape we give ourselves and make of it both a means of judgement and of grace. It is for us simply to receive that judgement and that grace, to confess and to give thanks, and so to give glory to the God whose ways are not our ways, and whose very difference from us is the possibility that we might be blessed with more than we could have expected.

This is the God we worship – the God who loves us as we are, that we might become so much more. For this God’s love and devotion to us, despite all our twistings and turnings, all thanks and praise be given. Amen.

7 June – When God comes

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Sunday 10
7/6/2015

1 Samuel 1:1-2:10
Psalm 16
Mark 3:20-27


We have noted before that in history there are no true beginnings. Everything always happens in the messy middle of the unfolding of the complex human story. When we seek to tell a story we have to choose where to start, to limit how far back we will go in declaring “it all began when…” The best place to start is one which sets the tone we think appropriate to make sense of the story which is to follow. It will tell us how to read the story, who is most important, and what kinds of things we might expect as the story unfolds.

Our lectionary over the next few months traces the establishment of the kingship in Israel. It is, in large part, the story of David. Yet David’s story is preceded by that of the prophet Samuel. Samuel is the last of the great “judges” of Israel, those figures like Deborah and Gideon and Samson who rose up at certain times in Israel after the conquest of Canaan to meet some occasional need of the people. Samuel is a complex figure. He can grieve at the rejection by God of Israel’s first king, Saul, and he can remove the head from the shoulders of some foreign king who was bested by Israel’s forces. His is both a sensitive and a “muscular” faith. We will hear more of Samuel over the months to come.

But the prelude to Samuel himself is the story of his mother, which we have heard in this morning. The telling of the story of the kingship of Israel begins with a woman who, on account of her being childless, is tormented by her “sister wife”. This torment Hannah suffers in silence. She grieves; she weeps, and cannot express what is wrong to her husband. She begins to find voice as she turns in prayer to God. She is blessed by a fumbling priest, and is finally surprised to find herself pregnant. In the course of this unfolding of events Hannah moves from need, to trust, to submission and, finally, to gratitude. She moves from suffering silence to full voice in her final songful prayer:

2There is no Holy One like the Lord, none besides you;
there is no Rock like our God…
7The Lord makes poor and makes rich;
he brings low, he also exults.
8He raises the poor from the dust;
he lifts the needy from the ash heap,
to make them sit with princes
and inherit a seat of honour.

Hannah has nothing more to say in the story after this; there is nothing more to say so far as the purpose of the telling the story is concerned. She has experienced, and now spoken, what happens when the God of Israel comes. And so she has spoken of what will happen in the establishment of the monarchy Israel: a lifting up and a humbling of humble and arrogant people. God is the principal protagonist in this story, and once Hannah has described this God and his ways in her song her part in the telling of the story ends.

This story, then, is not about how God might bless us if we are downtrodden enough or pray hard enough. Hannah’s story is not one we can repeat ourselves. There is here no formula for contriving the blessing of God, as if to be poor and to be oppressed is to be able to force God’s hand. There is no promise of a happy ending for us here and now.

Hannah’s story is simply an account of what happens when this God comes. It is the story of what happened for Hannah when God heard her prayer, and remembered, and blessed. In a different way it is a story of what will happen for David and the kingship, and so what happened for Israel, when God acquiesced to Israel’s demand for a king.

The good news, and what needs to be heard at the beginning of the story of David, is the announcement of the rule not of a king but of God godself. True beginnings happen in history when the kingdom of God becomes manifest. In relation to the stories of the kings, the kingdom of God is one which challenges our fascination with the personalities and the powers of our political processes. Despite our sense of the dismal state of contemporary political debate and process, we continue to remain captivated by it, as if it were – under the right circumstances – capable of delivering something new, fresh and finally life-giving. But the importance of celebrity and influence is relativised by Hannah’s fragility and surprise and faithfulness. The presence of the kingdom of God and the possibility of something new is cannot be “read off” the world around us. A childless woman is no promise of the coming of an extraordinary king like David, any more than a girl who was to sing again Hannah’s song 1000 years later was herself a promise of the coming Christ. (Mary’s song – the Magnificat [Luke 1.46-55] – is based on Hannah’s song).

In her final prayer Hannah sings of herself as one exalted and raised from the dust, made to “sit with princes”. And she anticipates what David himself will eventually have to suffer: a bringing low, even as God gives strength to his king. Whether we are David or Hannah, what is most important for us to know is that this is the kind of God who is working through our stories in the messy middle to lift us up or to humble us, to bring us to voice or to silence. All of this is that we might know what truly is life and power and a true beginning, and that we might be brought with Hannah and David to sing as they did their enjoyment and praise of God. By the grace of this God may we, his people, also be blessed with such faith and hope as had David and Hannah in the one who “gives voice to a silent woman, who empties a full king, who hears and answers.” (Brueggemann*), discovering in God our true beginning, and end. Amen.

 

*In W Brueggemann and P D Miller (1992). Old Testament theology : essays on structure, theme, and text. Minneapolis, Fortress Press, p.233. Brueggemann’s essay in this volume, “1 Samuel 1 – a sense of a beginning” has provided much of the material for this sermon.

31 May – Trinity – Excerpts used in Worship

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Trinity
31/5/2015

Various readings


THE SPIRIT

“The Holy Spirit, in making real the Christ-event in history, makes real at the same time Christ’s personal existence as a body or community. Christ does not exist first as truth and then as communion; He is both at once….” (p.111)

“So we can say without risk of exaggeration that Christ exists only pneumatologically, whether in His distinct personal particularity or in His capacity as the body of the church and the recapitulation of all things. Such is the great mystery of Christology, that the Christ-event is not an event defined in itself—it cannot be defined in itself for a single instant even theoretically—but is an integral part of the economy of the Holy Trinity. To speak of Christ means speaking at the same time of the Father and the Holy Spirit. For the Incarnation, as we have just seen, is formed by the work of the Spirit, and is nothing else than the expression and realization of the will of the Father.” (p.111f)

John Zizioulas (1985), Being as communion: studies in personhood and the church. New York, St Vladimir’s Seminary Press.

 

THE SON

“The Father appears in biblical narrative of God’s life with us as the ‘whence’ of divine events, as the Given from which they come or to which they return…” (p.194)

“Correspondingly, the Spirit appears as the ‘whither’ of God’s life. Through the biblical story, the Spirit is God as the ‘Power of the future’… The Spirit is God coming from the future to break the present open to himself… The ‘whither’ of divine events is not their passive aiming point, but their emergence and activation from the future.” (p.194)

“If the Father and the Spirit are [such whence- and whither-] poles of the divine eternity, it is then the life of the Son… in which these rhyme, in which the unity of the divine life is accomplished. Death is time’s ultimate act; that God transcends time must finally mean that God transcends death. Normal gods transcend death by immunity to it or by being identical with it. The way in which the triune God transcends death is by within himself triumphing over it: by the Son’s dying and the Father’s raising him again. The whence and the wither of the divine life are one, and so the triune God is eternal, in the event of Jesus’ resurrection.” (p.195)

Robert Jenson (1995), Essays in theology of culture. Grand Rapids, Eerdmans.


 

THE FATHER

“Christ refers all homage from himself to the one who “sent” him, his “Father”, just so accomplishing our salvation and appearing as the Son. This God is the Father only as the one so addressed by the Son, and at his central appearance in the story he turns over divine rule to the Son and indeed ‘abandons’ his role as God, leaving the Son to suffer the consequences of godhead by himself. And the Spirit as God glorifies and testifies to, only the Father or the Son, just so enabling the proposition ‘God is Spirit’ ”. (192f)

“…if God is triune, then created time must be the accommodation God makes in his own life for persons other than the three he himself is. For in the biblical story of the divine life, the whence of the divine life is the whence also of creation, and the whither of the divine life is the outcome and end of creation. We creatures appear within that narrative whose agents—Father, Son and Spirit—between them enact God’s life. We inhabit the story that is the story of God. God is indeed the one ‘in whom we live and move and have our being’ ”. (199)

Robert Jenson (1995), Essays in theology of culture. Grand Rapids, Eerdmans.


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