Sunday 10th December 2023 ~ Rev Dugald Wilson

Isaiah chapters 1-39 in a nutshell….

The book of Isaiah is often read in church during the Advent season.  I think it is because there are references to a messiah, and new leader sent by God who will bring about the great hope and dream of an earth that is a place of peace and harmony for all life.  Indeed the early Christians often turned to Isaiah as they reflected on the life of Jesus.  Jesus was this messiah, the prince of Peace, the Holy Light of God shining in the darkness to lead us to shape a better society and a better earth.

I want to dig a little deeper this morning.  Isaiah was a prophet.  That means he had a hot line into the heart and mind of God.  He clearly believed God had a hand in shaping human history and in the events that we would call world news.  He also believed that God’s chosen people, the descendants of Abraham, had a unique role in being representatives of God, people who would exemplify God’s truth.  They would show other nations what true and good  life looked like.

In Isaiah 6 we read of Isaiah’s call to speak for God, which is clearly dated in the reigns of King Uzziah.  We can date this to 738 BCE.  We sing of Isaiah’s call in the song “Here I am Lord” in which we are challenged to follow in Isaiah’s footsteps and be the voice and presence of God. 

Isaiah though had some hard messages from God.  He spoke of judgment.  The people of God had turned from God and lost their way.  “Oxen and donkeys know who owns them and feeds them, but my people have forgotten their God”, he laments.   Isaiah is a master of using poetic images to tell the truth.  In another painful image paints a shocking picture of the society he was part of……”From the sole of the foot and even to the head there is no soundness of body,  but there are bruises and sores and bleeding wounds that have not been washed or bound up or treated with healing oil.”  Isaiah saw a nation in ruins for even the natural environment was being laid waste with fire destroying cities, no doubt referring to the presence of foreign powers invading the land, but in our time might refer to the effects of climate change. 

It seems God’s chosen people continued to offer worship, but Isaiah proclaims their sacrifices and worship are meaningless.  And why?  Because there is no moral integrity.  ‘Jerusalem’, says Isaiah, ‘you are like an unfaithful wife.  Once your judges were honest, and your people lived right;  now you are a city full of people who show no respect for others.  You deal in dishonesty, your rules are only interested in money, and widows and orphans never get a fair trial.’  It seems there was a rich elite who lived in multi million dollar homes and paraded around in their fine clothes, full of themselves and the latest crazes, but caring little for the greater good of all. …  Again Isaiah observes…“The women of Jerusalem are proud and strut around winking shamelessly.  They wear fancy jewellery that jingles and says look at me!“   And there lies the nub of the problem…. Look at ‘me’.  The sense of being a collective with responsibilities to care for others had gone, sunk in a mess of liberal individualism, and what’s in it for ‘me’ culture.

And the consequences… Isaiah prophesied.  Unless there was change there would be ….Doom…  Destruction… Desolation.    I cant help drawing parallels with our own time.  Chief executives of city councils and their henchmen need to have their salaries sliced massively because the job isn’t about money but public service.  Likewise the salaries of executives in the business world. For the sake of the planet economies needed to be focused not on growth and more consumption, but on sustainability for all.  People need to understand they are accountable to something bigger than themselves, and for good communities to be nurtured personal and community morality and responsibility matters.  Personal freedom needs to be balanced with consideration for the wellbeing of all.

Of course no-one really listened to Isaiah  the inevitable happened.  Doom….Destruction…. Desolation….The  Assyrian Empire overran the northern kingdom of Israel with the capital Samaria falling in 722 BCE and the southern kingdom of Judah became a client state. Worse was to follow when the Babylonian Empire laid siege to Jerusalem about 120 years later and in 597 BCE large numbers of Jews were taken in captivity to Babylon in what is known as the Exile.  The core of the Jewish faith, The Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed, and the people were left bereft.  All that they believed in and stood for seemed to have been reduced to ashes.  Their homes reduced to rubble, loved ones killed, their sense of nationhood gone as many were taken as slaves.  A bleak future dawned for the Hebrew people. Even God had seemed to have deserted them as their lives lay in ruins. We know something of this as we look at our own Christian presence in a post religion world.  Churches are now a powerless remnant in a society that worships other gods.  The plight of the Hebrew people was recorded in Psalm 137…and made popular by BoneyM…and it rings true for us.

By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down
Yeah, we wept, when we remembered Zion
By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down
Yeah, we wept, when we remembered Zion

There the wicked
Carried us away in captivity
Required from us a song
Now how shall we sing the Lord’s song in a strange land?

Isaiah though always made it clear that God’s door was always open if the people truly desired to find life, were prepared to let go of what was, and seek a new future with God.

And so he could prophesy, “When the Spirit is given to us from heaven, deserts will become orchards thick as fertile forests.  Honesty and justice will flourish there, and justice will produce lasting peace and security”   I wish the current leaders of Israel could understand this…. Bombs may win the battle but the war will not be won, and peace will not be found, without justice for the oppressed Palestinian people.  But I digress…

In Exile the people of God did turn to God again.  In the strange land they discovered God was not confined to a Temple or even a particular land, but out of their sense of hopelessness they found new hope and meaning.  Just how that happened we don’t know, although I suspect there were many many discussions, much searching and questioning, and very open honest conversations.  In desolation they turned to one another.   They were humbled and brought low and from the ashes of defeat new life as a community emerged and they understood afresh that God had a role for them in the ongoing history of humanity.   The haughty women of Jerusalem who were concerned only for themselves found new hope in actually shaping a new community of people who genuinely cared for each other.

Isaiah Chapter 40

At the 40th chapter of Isaiah the tone changes.  Instead of Doom and Destruction Isaiah is told to speak of comfort.  Addressing the people who are now in Exlie he speaks of hope.   Scholars think it is now disciples of the original Isaiah that speak.  Let’s listen to these words…

Isaiah 40:1-11
40:1 Comfort, O comfort my people, says your God.
40:2 Speak tenderly to Jerusalem, and cry to her that she has served her term, that her penalty is paid, that she has received from the Lord’s hand double for all her sins.
40:3 A voice cries out: “In the wilderness prepare the way of the LORD, make straight in the desert a highway for our God.
40:4 Every valley shall be lifted up, and every mountain and hill be made low; the uneven ground shall become level, and the rough places a plain.
40:5 Then the glory of the LORD shall be revealed, and all people shall see it together, for the mouth of the LORD has spoken.”
40:6 A voice says, “Cry out!” And I said, “What shall I cry?” All people are grass, their constancy is like the flower of the field.
40:7 The grass withers, the flower fades, when the breath of the LORD blows upon it; surely the people are grass.
40:8 The grass withers, the flower fades; but the word of our God will stand forever.
40:9 Get you up to a high mountain, O Zion, herald of good tidings; lift up your voice with strength, O Jerusalem, herald of good tidings, lift it up, do not fear; say to the cities of Judah, “Here is your God!”
40:10 See, the Lord GOD comes with might, and his arm rules for him; his reward is with him, and his recompense before him.
40:11 He will feed his flock like a shepherd; he will gather the lambs in his arms, and carry them in his bosom, and gently lead the mother sheep.

The voice of Isaiah is telling the people in Exile they are going home.  They have rediscovered each other, rediscovered God, and the promise of the voice of Isaiah is that God will lead as a shepherd leads his sheep back across the desert to begin again.  The people have regained their senses and a truer picture of how they need to treat each other, and their place before God.  Isaiah reminds them they are like grass, created, not gods.   God was announcing that a new chapter of life was about to begin.  And we know this is actually what happened.  Cyrus a new ruler in Babylon adopted a new policy of respect for other religions and set the Hebrew people free to return to Jerusalem to continue to rebuild their faith.  New leaders like Ezra and Nehemiah were raised up to bring the people back into communion with God and each other and indeed Jerusalem was rebuilt.  The Hebrew nation was again to shine with the light of God, a beacon of hope for all people.

Mark 1:1-8

When Mark began writing his gospel about Jesus, Isaiah was in his brain.  The time was now when a repeat of Isaiah 40 was about to happen.   There were no birth stories for Mark, just a launching straight into the guts of things.  ‘See’, he said ‘God is doing a new thing, making a new path across the desert to lead people into the way of true life’. Wake up, take note, God is about to act. Let go of life as it is, take a new direction, make a new path through the desert away from destruction and doom, God is leading us home again.

Mark 1:1-8

John the Baptizer

1-3 The good news of Jesus Christ—the Message!—begins here, following to the letter the scroll of the prophet Isaiah.

Watch closely: I’m sending my preacher ahead of you;
He’ll make the road smooth for you.
Thunder in the desert!
Prepare for God’s arrival!
Make the road smooth and straight!

4-6 John the Baptizer appeared in the wild, preaching a baptism of life-change that leads to forgiveness of sins. People thronged to him from Judea and Jerusalem and, as they confessed their sins, were baptized by him in the Jordan River into a changed life. John wore a camel-hair habit, tied at the waist with a leather belt. He ate locusts and wild field honey.

7-8 As he preached he said, “The real action comes next: The star in this drama, to whom I’m a mere stagehand, will change your life. I’m baptizing you here in the river, turning your old life in for a kingdom life. His baptism—a holy baptism by the Holy Spirit—will change you from the inside out.”

I guess most of you have heard the passage many times before, but this Advent I think it’s particularly poignant.   The Middle East is poised to explode over the Israeli brutality in Gaza and the West Bank.  Climate Change is happening with increasing severity and we continue to shrug it off.  Growth economics with demands for increased consumerism is leading the world into destruction.  Locally we see the politics of individualism being played out as demands for the freedom of the individual take precedence.  Restrictive laws about smoking are repealed because the individual must be free to make their own choices and I guess because the government needs quick money. 

The words from Mark that I have been wrestling with over this last week are the words about making straight the path through the desert.  What does that look like for us?  How do we move along the road towards the home that God seeks to establish on this earth?

The simple religious answer is of course Jesus.  We need to elevate Jesus in our lives and in our life together as a Christian community.  We need more conversation about Jesus and the abundant life he promises.  I believe this.  As Christians we do not utter the word Jesus often enough, we do not discuss and what Jesus means for us, we do not seek to discern the way of Jesus in 2023… other than we should be nice to each other.  We may be a ‘do good’ community, but we should be a Jesus community. 

How often do you seek the way of Jesus each day?   When you map out your day or make a decision about using your resources and gifts, or purchasing something does Jesus influence this?  How strongly does Jesus and the new kingdom he talked about really influence your life/our life together?  Do we have a strong sense of being a disciples and followes of Jesus…the body of Christ in this place? 

The more nuanced answer about the road is to offer a word from the Spirit.  And that word is simply the need,, like the people of Jerusalem in the time of Isaiah, to recapture a sense of ‘We’.  When Covid struck ‘we’ became important.  People looked out for one another especially the vulnerable.  Neighbours actually met neighbours.  There was time to converse with each other.  Suddenly there was a revolution of priority.  For a few months we lived out what William Wordsworth called ‘the best portion of a good mans life, his little nameless unremembered, acts, of kindness and love.’  And we discovered as is always the case that though lifting others we ourselves are lifted.  How quickly this has dissipated and we have returned with vengeance to the blinkered world of ‘what’s in it for me?’  Electronic media with its faceless contact is partly to blame as Donna Miles reminded us in her excellent article in Monday’s Press.  Put simply she was saying we have to seek out people who have differing views to ours and engage in dialogue.  It has to be face to face.  It doesn’t mean we have to agree but we do need to engage and respect.  This will involve sacrifice.  Jesus called this the way of peacemaking.   On a wider scale the sacrifice is understanding that my freedom will be curtailed by the greater collective wisdom.  This wisdom will often be expressed in rules and regulations.  We need rules to play a game of footy, or to drive on the road.  Without them our activity becomes chaos.  But can you imagine we could manage a country wide lock down for the good of all ever again.   The sense of pulling together has been replaced with a chorus of competing interests in the name of individual freedom.   We wither and die like grass in the field?…. I don’t think so…. We like to think we are much more important than that, and we certainly don’t warm to the idea that we are responsible to something beyond ‘me’!

True liberal democratic freedom is collective and depends on self restraint.  A society in which everyone feels free to do what they want is not a free society at all.  It is anarchy.  Watch this space.

We have something very special contained within this community.  A sense of togetherness and a sense of compassion and caring.  We understand the importance of ‘we’.  Our understanding is far from perfect, and we are still poor at handling the inevitable conflicts, or welcoming the stranger who is different, or as I said earlier including the active challenging presence of Jesus.  But we are on that road through the desert.  I encourage you to keep walking on this road together…for your own good, but also for the good of the wider community and all the earth.   The light of Jesus that guides us is a light that moves us from a ‘me’ centred life to a ‘we’ centred life.  It is a light that has grown dim…. So we need to shine like a beacon, a lighthouse, as God’s people to help a lost world find a way home.  WE…. a beacon of hope and peace.

Sunday 17 December 2023

Here’s our Zoom link –

Topic: St Martin’s Sunday Worship. To Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81508696154?pwd=cnErZFM5VG5OQVhsZkxYc0dxOHdvUT09

Meeting ID: 815 0869 6154
Passcode: 712158

NOTICES:

A very warm welcome to all who worship with us this morning. Many thanks to Dr Anne Shave for leading our service today. Next Sunday we have a service of Nine Lessons & Carols.

MOVIE NIGHT: 23rd December – ‘Home for Christmas’ Two hours of beautiful Christmas melodies with Andre Rieu and his orchestra. 5.15pm – bring your fish and chips or ‘whatever’ to nibble on before the film at 6.15pm. Tea and coffee provided.

WALTHAM COTTAGE closes for the year on Wednesday 20th December and will re-open on Monday 22nd January 2024. Thank you to everyone who brings groceries along to support the Cottage – the next collection will be on Sunday 28th January.

THE PARISH OFFICE CLOSES at 12 noon on Friday 22nd December and will re-open on Thursday 25th January 2024.

THIS WEEK AT ST MARTINS                                              

Tuesday 10am              South Elder Care (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Tuesday 7.15pm           Meditation Group (lounge) Dugald 021 161 7007

Wednesday 10am         Scottish Country Dancing (lounge) Irene 332 7306

CHRISTMAS & JANUARY SERVICES

Sunday 31st Dec 10am HERE with Beckenham Methodist folk joining us

Sundays 7th & 14th January 10am @ Beckenham Methodist

Sunday 21st January @ Opawa Methodist

Sunday 10th December 2023

Here’s our Zoom link –

Topic: St Martin’s Sunday Worship. To Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81508696154?pwd=cnErZFM5VG5OQVhsZkxYc0dxOHdvUT09

Meeting ID: 815 0869 6154
Passcode: 712158

A very warm welcome to all who worship with us this morning. Many thanks to Rev Dugald Wilson for leading our service today. Dr Anne Shave will be with us next Sunday.

GIFTS FOR WALTHAM COTTAGE: Today is your last opportunity to bring gifts along. Thank you to everyone who has donated items.

MOVIE NIGHT: 23rd December – ‘Home for Christmas’ Two hours of beautiful Christmas melodies with Andre Rieu and his orchestra. 5.15pm – bring your fish and chips or ‘whatever’ to nibble on before the film at 6.15pm. Tea and coffee provided.

Community Carols with Steadfast Brass at Opawa Community Church cnr Opawa Rd & Aynsley Tce on Friday 15th December 6pm. Wet or fine. All are welcome.

THIS WEEK AT ST MARTINS                                              

Monday 1-4pm              Foot Clinic (lounge) Janette 021 161 1178

Monday 5pm                  MenzShed Dinner (lounge)

Tuesday 10am              South Elder Care (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Tuesday 7.15pm           Meditation Group (lounge) Dugald 021 161 7007

Wednesday                   Walking Group lunch

Wednesday 10am         Scottish Country Dancing (lounge) Irene 332 7306

Thursday 10am            Crafty Crafters (lounge) Sally 332 4730

Friday 9.30am               Sing & Sign (lounge) Becky 022 086 2211

CHRISTMAS & JANUARY SERVICES

Sunday 24th December 10am Carol Service

Sunday 24th December Christmas Midnight Service @ St Mark’s Opawa  11pm (with Carol Singing from 10.45pm)

Monday 25th December Christmas Day Communion @ St Mark’s Opawa 9am

Sunday 31st December 10am HERE with Beckenham Methodist folk joining us

Sundays 7th & 14th January 10am @ Beckenham Methodist

Sunday 21st January @ Opawa Methodist

Sunday 3rd December 2023

Here’s our Zoom link –

Topic: St Martin’s Sunday Worship. To Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81508696154?pwd=cnErZFM5VG5OQVhsZkxYc0dxOHdvUT09

Meeting ID: 815 0869 6154
Passcode: 712158

NOTICES: A very warm welcome to all who worship with us this morning. Many thanks to Rev Sheena Dickson for leading our service today. Rev Dugald Wilson will be with us next Sunday.

COVID: With the continual numbers of COVID emerging in all areas of the world in which we live, it is absolutely vital that if you show any symptoms –PLEASE STAY HOME! Some of you will be aware of several of our members having health issues and it is really important that we do not in any way jeopardise their continuing treatment and/or good health. Thank you if you have stayed away from church when you were unwell – your care and thoughtfulness protects everyone. Irene Gray, Parish Clerk

MOVIE NIGHTS: To celebrate this very special time of year, we offer two films to enjoy. 5.15pm – bring your fish and chips or ‘whatever’ to nibble on before the film at 6.15pm. Tea and coffee provided. 9th December – ‘A Christmas Wish’ A heartwarming classic about a family who are down on their luck at Christmas time. Shortly before Christmas, they move into an apartment where Rupert the squirrel lives in the attic rafters and acts as the family’s guardian angel not only saving Christmas but changing their lives forever.

23rd December – ‘Home for Christmas’ Two hours of beautiful Christmas melodies with Andre Rieu and his orchestra.

Wednesday Walkers 6th December: Meet 9.30am at the bus exchange. We will explore the area between Colombo and Madras Street looking at murals. Coffee at Unknown Chapter, 254 St Asaph Street. All welcome. Sue 960 7657.

GIFTS FOR WALTHAM COTTAGE: We invite you to bring along Christmas gifts for Waltham Cottage to distribute to people in need. Last day to contribute is next Sunday 10th December.

THIS WEEK AT ST MARTINS                                              

Tuesday 10am              South Elder Care (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Tuesday 7.15pm           Meditation Group (lounge) Dugald 021 161 7007

Wednesday 9.30am      Walking Group: City Sue 960 7657

Wednesday 9.30am      Port Hills U3A (whole complex) Joy 337 2393

Wednesday 7.30pm      Parish Council meeting (lounge)

Thursday 10am            Crafty Crafters (lounge) Sally 332 4730

Thursday 1.30pm          Final Sit & Be Fit(church) Anneke 021 077 4065

Friday 9.30am               Sing & Sign (lounge) Becky 022 086 2211

Friday 5-7pm                 Christmas Market @ St Mark’s Opawa

Saturday 5.15pm           Movie Night (lounge) Irene 332 7306

CHRISTMAS & JANUARY SERVICES

Sunday 24th December 10am Carol Service

Sunday 24th December Christmas Midnight Service @ St Mark’s Opawa  11pm (with Carol Singing from 10.45pm)

Monday 25th December Christmas Day Communion @ St Mark’s Opawa 9am

Sunday 31st December 10am HERE with Beckenham Methodist folk joining us

Sundays 7th & 14th January 10am @ Beckenham Methodist

Sunday 21st January @ Opawa Methodist

Sunday 26th November – Rev Hugh Perry

In the first chapter of Mark’s Gospel the reader is told: ‘Now after John was arrested, Jesus came to Galilee proclaiming the good news of God and saying: ‘The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent, and believe in the good news.’(Mark 1:14,15)

What does that mean as we consider the two readings from Ezekiel and Matthew this morning.  Are we as Christians preparing for the return of Christ or should we believe that the time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has not just come near but is continually coming into being as we live as Christ to others.

Does the resurrection of Christ mean as the chorus of Bill Wallace’s hymn ‘We are an Easter people’ suggests,

‘Christ is risen, Christ is risen, risen in our lives’.

As a teenager I was lured into the Levin Baptist church through their harrier club by a very well executed bit of friendship evangelism.  What dulled its effectiveness was that every time I attended the obligatory church parade I was warned about the fires of hell and the sudden return of Christ to sort out the sheep from the goats.  By contrast I read in Baden Powells Scouting For Boys, the essential manual for boy scouts, that you should always leave a campsite better than you found it.  Likewise, you should live life the same way.

Nevertheless, both fear and hope of a final judgement has been used as an evangelical tool and the reassurance of the dispossessed throughout the history of the church.

In his novel Their Faces Were Shining Tim Wilson describes a girl’s frantic phone call to her mother to tell her about the kids floating up through the roof during a calculus class. ‘Mom, it’s the Rapture’[1] She cries.

That’s an image you could certainly draw from both our readings.  But I believe it is not the image we should anticipate for the return of Christ.  Nevertheless, having a superhero to sort out the world is very tempting when faced with the realities of pandemics and ram raids.

During the recent election campaign, I met a number of people who were not just frustrated with the government but totally disillusioned with democracy.

Most of them were not obviously religious so they were not expecting the Rapture or Christ’s return.  I did however meet a couple of people who enthusiastically told me they didn’t vote because choosing the government was up to God. 

That yearning for a divine ruler is expressed in this Sunday being designated as Christ the King Sunday or, the more politically correct term, Reign of Christ.

We now have a king, but he is a constitutional monarch.  The king in the term ‘Christ the King’ comes from an era where a king was an absolute ruler, chief justice and supreme commander of the armed forces.  Nevertheless, if we accept that Christ is king then we do not except anybody else as ultimate ruler. That indeed would be enough to move Pilate to crucify Jesus.  

But many people see a returned Christ fulfilling that sort the would out, all powerful and judgemental role.  The opening verse of today’s reading backs up that hope.

When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, then he will sit on the throne of his glory, (Matthew 25:31)    

To a certain extent this echoes verse twenty in our Ezekiel reading.  ‘Therefore, thus says the Lord GOD to them: ‘I myself will judge between the fat sheep and the lean sheep’ (Ezekiel 34: 20). 

This is not an advertisement for Weightwatchers and as we read on, we find that the fat sheep ‘pushed with flank and shoulder, and butted at all the weak animals with your horns until you scattered them far and wide’.   (Ezekiel 34: 21)

The recipients of the metaphorical judgement are the wealthy powerful kings, corporate executives, the independent wealthy, and even pastors who increase their wealth by exploiting the vulnerable poor.  

It is a seemingly ageless issue and, the desire that unscrupulous despots get what they deserve, is timeless.  Unfortunately, that very seldom happens and even when a despot is deposed it is usually by another despot.  Even when a seemingly well motivated revolutionary deposes a despot, they quickly become a despot to protect their new position.  

So, throughout time humanity has a vision of an end time or after death judgment where despots get their comeuppance.

Unfortunately, religions have also used that vision to exploit vulnerable people and the church is no exception.  The issue of indulgences that divided the church into Catholic and Reformed is a classic example, with the prosperity gospel running a close second. 

Furthermore, absolute rulers from Constantine onward have kept order by suggesting that they rule on God’s behalf.   Verse twenty-three of our Ezekiel reading tends to support that notion.  ‘I will set up over them one shepherd, my servant David, and he shall feed them and be their shepherd. ((Ezekiel 34: 23)  

That is David the warrior king who had one of his soldiers murdered to cover up the fact that David had raped the solder’s wife.   

Yet despite the tarnished Davidic image many Christians see Jesus as the descendant of David who will return in his glory, and all the angels with him. Return to sort out the world. 

We can perhaps hope he will sort out the horizontal infrastructure in our major cities and even get the Christchurch sports complex finished.

However, it’s not just the divine we hope will sort out the world and Robert Jewett and John Shelton Lawrence have written a very informative book called Captain America and the Crusade against Evil.

Jewett and Lawrence suggest that the comic hero Captain America appeared during the frustration many Americans felt at their nations refusal to enter the second world war. 

Reading that book was my first introduction to Captain America but in the superman comics I kept under the bed as a boy I had learned that Superman stood for ‘truth, justice and the American way’. 

But as a teenager I read all Ian Flemming’s James Bond novels.  On reflection I can imagine Bond as a very British way of having a superhero that sorts out the world, without questions in the house or disturbing the royal corgis.  However, the Queen did send James Bond to open the London Olympics. 

With those memories in my mind, I was intrigued to read recently a comment from spy novelist John le Carré suggesting that everybody wanted to be like Ian Flemming’s hero. But his readers hoped they weren’t like Le Carré’s heroes.  Those heroes lived in the complicated world where it is very hard to separate the good guys from the bad guys, and bureaucracy seeks a multiplicity of goals through procrastination.

But I did read an autobiographical book that was life changing for me.  In amongst the tangles and scandals of The Spy Who Came In From the Cold and the cartoonists comment on the first industrial espionage in New Zealand which occurred at a cheese factory.  ‘The Spy Who Came In For The Mould,’  

In amongst all that imaginative high drama I read Ernest Gordon’s book Miracle on The River Kwai.  

The superhero in that book is a Scottish Sargent, a confessed Christian and probably a Presbyterian, who transforms the community of a prison camp.  In amongst the sick and dying officers he simply cared for those prisoners who could no longer work.  Soldiers who were left to die.  Because he cared others began to also care and many of the sick, including the author recovered.  

That miracle was spelled out in in Matthew’s Gospel long before World War Two.

‘For I was hungry, and you gave me food, I was thirsty, and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked, and you gave me clothing, I was sick, and you took care of me, I was in prison, and you visited me’.  (Matthew 26:36)

Being Christ to others is a way of living the divine realm into reality.  The Kingdom of God comes near as we live as Christ to others.  

Christ comes into the world in each of us who live as Christ to others.  Christ comes into the world as we see Christ in those we meet along the way.

The Matthew reading tells us there are always sheep and goats and there are always Ezekiel’s fat sheep and thin sheep.  Certainly, the Ezekiel reading is a warning to the greedy and leaders who make a goat of themselves.

But in suggesting how we might be judged in the everyday moments of our lives the Matthew reading calls us to a self-discipline of caring for others in every moment of our lives.

Like so many gospel texts, this story talks about how people become part of the kingdom of God.  The opening verse may well invoke images of entering a heavenly throne room with a divine monarch surrounded by heavenly bureaucrats.  But that is imagery of a divine realm that wraps around and inspires us rather than fact about the next life. 

If the kingdom of God or the realm of God is at hand then we should understand it as being within reach, within our reach.  Matthew lists of judgment criteria are suggestions of the ways we can make God’s realm real. Real in our time and our world.

Christ in all possible divine glory does not suddenly come into our world as a divine ruler with a heavenly prosecutor trailing a wheeled suitcase filled with evidence files. 

Neither are children lifted through the roof during calculous. 

The ruling Christ comes into our world as the least among us.  Our world is transformed as we care for those less fortunate than ourselves.  

The realm of Christ comes into our world when both ordinary people, and extra ordinary people live as Christ to others.


[1] Tim Wilson, Their Faces Were Shining (Wellington: Victoria University Press, 2010) p.60