Part of my training involves preparing and delivering sermons; to give you an idea of my 'preaching style' I thought I'd put one up here (comments always welcome):
Sermon-for the service on
the 3rd Sunday of Easter
(@Saint Michael-in-the-City, Liverpool, 21st
April 2013)
[Acts 9:36-43,
Jn. 10:22-30]
Grace
to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen (Rom. 1:7 et.al.)
So this is our scene:
Its winter in Jerusalem, and it can get cold there,
even snow a little in the hillside. Its the period of the Festival of
Dedication, or Festival of Lights (khanukah),
a Jewish celebration marking triumph over foreign invaders centuries earlier. Jesus is walking in the Portico of
Solomon, on the eastern side of the Temple
He is walking in His Fathers house.
And something very peculiar
Jesus seems to be on His own, there is no mention
of His disciples.
Then
the Jews corner Him and surround Him.
--We should be careful with this notion of the Jews
in St Johns Gospel which by no means reflects on the Jewish nation as a whole,
not then and not now!--
Imagine, though, youre walking home alone, one
winters evening, when suddenly youre being surrounded and questioned
relentlessly, perhaps even verbally abused. What do you do? Certainly no try
baffling them with subtle theology!
How long, Jesus assailants demand, will you keep
us in suspense?; literally the Greek reads hold our soul (tèn phychèn hèmon). Tell us the plain truth!. Jesus keeps His
composure and repeats what He has said before, that He is the Good Shepherd.
Now, we could go on for days
if not weeks about how interesting our Gospel passage is for theologians; about
the doctrine of the Holy Trinity, about Jesus as both God and man; about the
councils of the Early Church; about the implications this text has in our
relations with Judaism and Islam.
And of course our passage does reveal something for us
about the nature of the relationship between the Father and the Son in the
Godhead, but rather than emphasise the doctrinal or technical, we could explore
a bit more the inherent intimacy this text today seems to carry with it.
This very close relationship, this cooperation if you
will, between the Father and the Son is summarised when Jesus states very
plainly that He and the Father are one. I and the Father are one., He
concludes, or more literally in the Greek I and the Father, one we are. (ego kai ho patros en esmen)
Now this notion of such a proximity to the divine was
unheard off to Jewish religious sensitivities and understandings of God, and
had Jesus not escaped, they would have stoned Him to death. To Jews the
one-ness of God doesnt allow for a mere human to intrude on this.
To us as Christians however, this intense bond between
the Father and the Son goes deeper than doctrinal statements of faith; they are
a model for our own relations to God. Jesus literally says that He knows
us, just like He knows His Father! We are be no means strangers to God and
neither should He be a stranger to us! When we look at Jesus we see God the
Creator of all, and when Jesus is looking at us, the divine is looking back at
us.
The
result of this intimacy can only be an eternal life in the Resurrection!
Thats why the story of the Book of Acts today ties in so wonderfully, because
the story of Peter and Tabitha/Dorcas obviously mirrors the events of Jesus
Himself with Lazarus (incidentally in John 11, the passage following our
text today!), and that of Talitha Kumi (Mk. 5)... resurrection stories!
The promise of eternal life when we follow the Risen
Lord isnt one of arrogance or of self-righteousness, but one of the plain
truth that because the Father knows the Son intimately and closely- and the
Son knows us intimately and closely- we too may know the Father in the same
way.
Jesus takes this task, this responsibility greater
than all these entrusted to Him by the Father very seriously. Jesus knows that
the Father carries and testifies to this mission and to the works; His
opponents are just too stubborn to believe it.
How
do we then respond to this amazing promise? How do we reply to this wonderful
call to eternity, of an existence beyond time in the presence of the divine?
Often like bleating sheep
truth be told! Treading
along with the other masses of sheep.
But what if we were to listen more carefully and
listen out for that one calm voice amidst a screaming nervous crowd? What if we
were to look out for that one man, seemingly surrounded, and yet perfectly in
control and powerful in His humble way? What would happen if we were to say
yes to Jesus call to all His sheep, His children, His followers, and enter
into that relationship offered to us, that same relationship the Father has
with His beloved Son?
What if as followers of the Shepherd we are also
called to witness to this intimacy, this closeness from and with God: in
prayer, in worship, in fellowship with others. If the Father testifies of the
Son, we ourselves are called to testify of the Son in return.
Jesus is calling us to be
His sheep; not that that means we should be a bunch of mindless, submissive
creatures, but that we should accept that as far as God is concerned we are all
equal and equally important, and He is our Good Shepherd, we dont
shepherd ourselves.
Jesus is calling out to us, not screaming or
commanding, but in an intimate, knowing, manner, calling out for us to
believe and follow Him, through a life close to Him and close to the Father,
close to others, all the way to an eternal life of Resurrection.
And the peace of God,
which surpasses all understanding, guard your hearts and your minds in Christ
Jesus. Amen (Phil. 4:7)
12-07-2014, 14:25 geschreven door jojanv 
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