Posts

Sunday Sermon 22nd Nov 2020

 Matt 2:1-12 The Epiphany – CCM I can remember a TV advertisement which the hardware store Bunnings showed after Christmas a few years ago. In fact I think it began on Boxing Day. It showed a little man sweeping away all the Christmas decorations and saying something like “Now that Christmas is over for another year…..” The implication being that we should pack away both the decorations and all the good feelings which Christmas engenders, and immediately get back to our normal routines. If that is your thinking, then Christmas must seem like a great deal of effort just for 24 hours. And I believe that the hot cross buns are already in the shops in anticipation of Easter. For Christians, the celebrations of Christmas go on, and today we celebrate the feast of the Epiphany, commemorating the arrival of the wise men, and the giving of the gifts to the baby Jesus. We know very little about these men –perhaps they were kings. It’s possible that they were Zoroastrian astrologers, and it ...

Sunday Sermon 1st Nov 2020

 MATTHEW 5: 1:12 JOHN 3 REV 7 CCM Today in the church we commemorate All Saints Day. In fact, our readings this morning seem to have little in common, from the sermon on the mount, to the letter of John, to the book of revelation, but what they do have in common is the assurance that God knows his own children. And that is all those believers who have gone before and we here this morning. I wonder if you had any visitors last night, trick or treating. Local shops in town have had scary masks and witches hats in their windows for weeks. I had never heard of trick or treating when I was a child, but it is based on an ancient church tradition, that have nothing to do with witches. In the middle ages, poor people in the community begged for soul cakes, and would promise to pray for departed souls if they received them. And if, for example, you knew that your uncle Fred had led a sinful life here on earth, you would give out soul cakes and pay these people to pray for the soul of uncle ...

Sunday Sermon 18th Oct 2020

 OCT 18 MATT 22:15-33 CCM The Pharisees don’t have a very good reputation as far as most of us are concerned. They always seem to be either in conflict with Jesus or trying to catch him out in some way. But they opposed the Roman occupation of Israel, unlike the sadducees. These groups were actually bitter enemies, but they were united in their opposition to Jesus. They had a foolproof plan: ask Jesus what he thinks about paying taxes to the Roman authorities. If Jesus said pay the taxes, the Pharisees would say that he was opposed to the God of Israel, the only King they recognised. If Jesus said that taxes should not be paid, then he could be handed over to the Romans on a charge of rebellion. The plan could not fail, could it? Jesus is not fooled by their flattery, but he does agree to answer the question. But first, he reframes the issue subtly by asking to see the coin used to pay the tax. The tax the Israelites were forced to pay actually funded their occupation by the Romans...

Sunday Sermon 11th Oct 2020

 Exodus 32/matt22 In our reading from the Hebrew Scripture last week, we heard God give the Ten Commandments to Moses. They were the rules of guidance from a loving God to his people, to keep them holy and to set them apart from other nations. The people of Israel are still in the wilderness and Moses again goes up the mountain to commune with God. And while he is away, the Israelites develop selective amnesia, forgetting all that God has done for them. They decide that an animal which they fashion from gold will be their leader and protector. These are the people who have been freed from slavery in Egypt, they have witnessed the promises and power of God through the plagues on the Egyptians, and they have crossed the Red Sea on foot and seen the pursuing Egyptians drowned. Now they are in the desert, they are given water to drink and food to eat, and they still don’t get it. When I read this passage from Exodus, I have to ask myself – what on earth were the people thinking? What m...

Sunday Sermon 30th Aug 2020

 MATTHEW 16:13-20 RAAFA MANDURAH This is a wonderful Gospel passage. A passage which makes us think that suddenly something has changed for the disciples. Do they finally get it? It’s also a very significant event for Peter, because for the first time he understands exactly who Jesus is. Jesus is the messiah, son of the living God. And Peter is anointed as the rock on which the church is built. This is the same Peter who tried to walk on the water and failed, Peter who runs away when Jesus is arrested. But for all his failings, Peter has finally realized who Jesus is. Thankfully, just who becomes a disciple of the church does not depend on human considerations, rather on God’s divine intervention. It is God who looks into the heart. I find it a great comfort that Jesus never lost faith in his disciples even when they appeared to have let him down. So, if as I were to ask you who you believe Jesus to be, what would you say? Sometimes we are called to give an account of our faith and...

Sunday Sermon 23rd Aug 2020

 MATTHEW 16:13-20 RAAFA MANDURAH This is a wonderful Gospel passage. A passage which makes us think that suddenly something has changed for the disciples. Do they finally get it? It’s also a very significant event for Peter, because for the first time he understands exactly who Jesus is. Jesus is the messiah, son of the living God. And Peter is anointed as the rock on which the church is built. This is the same Peter who tried to walk on the water and failed, Peter who runs away when Jesus is arrested. But for all his failings, Peter has finally realized who Jesus is. Thankfully, just who becomes a disciple of the church does not depend on human considerations, rather on God’s divine intervention. It is God who looks into the heart. I find it a great comfort that Jesus never lost faith in his disciples even when they appeared to have let him down. So, if as I were to ask you who you believe Jesus to be, what would you say? Sometimes we are called to give an account of our faith and...

Sunday Sermon 16th Aug 2020

 Matt 15: 21-28 16 August 2020 There are some stories which are common to each of the Gospels but there are some events which we may only find in one Gospel. To understand why, we need to understand first of all why the Gospels were written and for whom. Matthew’s Gospel was written for a community of Jewish Christians who were struggling with their new faith and identity. They were a small community within a larger Jewish community, so any messages relating to the status of non- Jews was of special importance to them. The Jewish people had been waiting for the promised Messiah, and Matthew’s Gospel shouts that Jesus is the Messiah. That is one of the reasons why Matthew’s Gospel begins with the long and quite frankly tedious lineage of Jesus. Matthew wants everyone to understand that the Messiah is here. I must say that when I saw the Gospel passage for today, I think I groaned. For this is one of those passages which has us wondering exactly what is going on. Could Jesus really h...