Sermon 18th June 2023: “No Laughing Matter” Genesis 18:1-15 – Rev Stephen Dewdney

In 2004 Adidas launched a very successful advertising campaign with the byline  “Impossible is nothing”.   If you think about it, you may well think “what a load of mumbo jumbo”, really “impossible is nothing”?   But it didn’t stop Adidas making a lot of money as millions of people bought their products.  Nor did it stop them relaunching the slogan in 2021.   “Impossible is nothing”.   Perhaps part of the success of Adidas’ campaign is that we love the story of the impossible becoming possible.   And that is very much the story we focus on today as we again turn our attention to Abraham and Sarah.

Last week we saw that God told Abram to leave Haran, to leave his people and his father’s household, and to go to a land God would show him.   And God made a promise, “I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you, and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing.  I will bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you I will curse; and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed”. Well Abram obeyed, for we read that Abram left, as the Lord had told him, and they arrived in the land of Canaan. But there’s a problem.   How do you make a great nation out of a childless couple, especially as Abram was 75 and Sarai 66 when God made the promise.  And that’s where we left things last week. 

Today we pick up the story in Genesis 17 and 18, and we find the problem has become even more impossible. 25 years have gone by and not a single child has come from Abraham and his wife, Sarah.   God had said I’m going to make a great nation from you.   But there’s no child, not a single one.   Surely God’s left it a bit late for this now 100-year-old and his 90-year-old wife.   It’s now way beyond the impossible.   

Of course, 13 years before Abraham and Sarah took matters into their own hands.  They agreed to a plan where Sarah would give over her maidservant Hagar and Abraham would visit her in the middle of the night so Hagar could become a surrogate mother.    And it worked, Ishmael was born but, and there’s always a but, this was not how God intended to fulfil his promise.   So when you get to Genesis 17, the whole thing starts turning into a comedy.    God repeats his promise “I will bless Sarah, and moreover I will give you a son by her.  I will bless her, and she shall give rise to nations; kings of peoples shall come from her.” And what’s Abraham’s reaction? Well, he falls flat on his face laughing and saying to himself “Can a child be born to a man who is a hundred years old? Can Sarah, who is ninety years old, bear a child?”  And when he finally stops laughing he says to God, “O that Ishmael might live in your sight!”. Hey God, Ishmael’s thirteen, use him to produce the kings and peoples and nations.  It’s a much more sensible plan.  At least by using Ishmael there’s a chance of success. But God replied “No, but your wife Sarah shall bear you a son, and you shall name him Isaac.”  And it seems that something clicks, that Abraham finally gets it.  He starts to believe that despite the problem of age he will have a son through Sarah.  And he goes away and the first thing he does, is to get circumcised as a sign that he believes God’s promise.

Sometime later we read that the Lord appeared again to Abraham, this time by the oaks of Mamre.   For Abraham it’s just another hot day and he’s probably thinking about his midday nap.  Yet something makes him look up and he sees three men standing nearby.   Well there goes the nap, he’s suddenly wide awake and running round at top speed.    He hurries from the entrance of his tent to meet his visitors and bows low to the ground by way of a greeting and says  “If I have found favour in the eyes of my Lord, don’t pass by”.   I’ll bring some water and wash your feet.   

Then he offers to get a little bread so they can be refreshed and go on their way.  They accept his hospitality so he runs back to the tent to find his wife Sarah, and tells her, “Quick, Sarah.   Bake some bread.   Get on with it.”   And then he runs again, and he goes to the herd, which are presumably chewing the cud out the back somewhere.   He finds the best calf and he takes it quickly to the servant who hurries to prepare it.   Everything’s at speed for this very old man, where it should be very, very slow.   He’s desperate to be the best host he possibly can.  And did you notice how he’s just offers a little bit.   “I’ll get you little water for your feet”, “Let me bring a little bread”.   Just a mouthful, a morsel.   And then what does he do?   3 measures of the best flour, that’s almost 12 kilograms of flour.   That’s at least 25 loaves of bread.   And it’s not just a mouthful of something.   It’s a whole calf.   No wonder everyone’s hurrying.   It’s going to take all afternoon to get this feast cooked.   And all the time this 100 year old is dashing around, serving his visitors curds and milk, where did they come from?   He serves them and then just stands there and watches them eat.   It’s a strange little scene carried out at a frenetic pace.

So, what’s going on?  There’s a clue in verse 3, “If I have found favour in your eyes, my Lord, do not pass your servant by”.   If you’ve been reading Genesis from the beginning, you may have noticed that this it’s said of Noah, that he “found favour in the eyes of the Lord.”  But there’s a difference here.   Noah obeyed God by building the ark and rescuing his family and the animals, but Noah’s heart at the end of the story is no different to his heart at the beginning.   Abraham is going to be different.   He will be an utterly new creation.   Where once life was impossible, for Sarah cannot conceive, life will be possible.   And that’s why it could not be through Ishmael, for that would be taking matters into their own hands.   It has to be the way of a gift, Isaac will be the impossible being made possible.   And Abraham it seems has got it. “If I have found favour in your eyes, my Lord, do not pass your servant by”.  

But what about Sarah?   Abraham must have told her about the encounter he had with God in Genesis 17.  She must have noticed the circumcision of Abraham and all the males in their household.   But we’re to see the contrast between her and Abraham.   Verse 9 is a turning point.  The chairs are pushed back after their rather big meal.   And Abraham is asked, “Where is your wife, Sarah?”.   And he replies “There, in the tent”.  And suddenly we go from being under the tree with Abraham and his three visitors, to in the tent with Sarah.   And notice everything towards the end is towards, and about Sarah who is behind Abraham listening at the tent door. 

The promise is made, “I will surely return to you in due season, and your wife Sarah will have a son” a promise repeated four verses later “At the set time I will return to you, in due season, and Sarah will have a son”.   And in between the promises it’s all about laughter.   And Sarah’s laughter is understandable, isn’t it?   It’s not laughter of mocking.   It’s a laughter of hopelessness.   Life has taught her not to clutch at straws.   She’s in her 90s.   She’s given up hope of ever having a child herself.   It’s laughter that’s filled with human realism of pain.   Age and experience and disappointment can do that to you.   And we’re supposed to see and understand, Sarah.   We’re supposed to empathise with her.  That’s why verse 11 reminds us that “Abraham and Sarah were old, advanced in age; it had ceased to be with Sarah after the manner of women” a rather polite way of saying that she’s well past  the age of childbearing.  It’s laughable that Sarah should have a child.   But while we’re supposed to empathise, we’re not supposed to agree with her laughter. 

The scene ends strangely.   “Then the Lord said to Abraham, Why did Sarah laugh and say, ‘Shall I indeed bear a child now that I’m old?’   Is anything too wonderful for the Lord.   At the set time I will return to you, in due season, and Sarah will have a son”.      Then we read “Sarah was afraid”.   So, she lied and said, “I didn’t laugh”.   But he said.   “Oh, yes, you did laugh.”   And the story abruptly stops there and you find yourself in the story of Sodom and Gomorrah, then the incident with King Abimalech, only resuming in chapter 21.

So you are lft with questions.  Does Sarah believe it or not?  Does it happen, will she have a son?  But it also leaves us with a challenge.  What about you?   What about me?   What do we think about verse 14 , about the question God poses “Is anything too wonderful for the Lord?”   Are we going to be like Abraham, who welcomes the impossible?  Or are you going to be like Sarah, who laughs in the face of the impossible.   And if you think about it there are echoes of the Garden of Eden for, we’re under a tree again.   And under the tree we have Abraham doing what Adam should have done, which was to serve and to welcome God.   And we have Sarah who’s hiding, she’s lying and did you notice, she’s afraid.   Which way are we’re going to go?  Are we going to go with this new creation way, which is through God, or are we going to stick with the old and try and sort it out ourselves.

Lets jump ahead, to when the people of Israel retold the story of Abraham and Sarah and told their children “That’s great, great, great, great, great, great grandad Abraham and look, that’s great, great, great, great, great great grandma Sarah,” and the children are asking “why doesn’t she believe?  She’s crazy.   We’re all here.   We’re all listening to the story of it.   We’re the decedents of Abraham and Sarah. Why doesn’t she believe?”  And no doubt the parents chipped in that it’s not just Abraham and Sarah who couldn’t have children but then had Isaac.   But Isaac married Rebecca, and she couldn’t have children either.   But they did have Jacob.   And then Jacob got married to Rachel.   And you know what?  She couldn’t have children either.   And there’s a whole tribe of us lot, in fact twelve of them.   God has kept his promise.   With God the impossible becomes possible, with God the impossible is nothing.   You might say that God has got form here.   Of breathing life into what was once dead.   You see God is making it clear in the very opening pages of the bible a principle that will run all the way through and all the way through today.   

Jump back to chapter 17, to when Abraham manages to control his laughter and ask “O that Ishmael might live in your sight” What if God had said yes, all right, let’s do it your way, through Ishmael.   If that had been the case, it would have allowed some human means to bring about his promise of blessing.   And it wouldn’t have dealt with the problem of the human heart, which is the centre of the problem.   It’s that default position, which means that we grab Gods throne.  My life, my way.   And the opening chapters of Genesis are filled with human examples of taking matters into our own hands, Cain literally took life into his own hands by murdering his brother Abel.   The citizens of Babel said we can do it ourselves, we can make ourselves great.   Ishmael himself, will be a wild donkey of a man.   It’s going to end in ruin.   That is the way of the human heart and it’s the way of insecurity.   In all of our human efforts, to bring about blessing when is it ever enough?  We are slaves to personal improvement.   And it doesn’t match up all the efforts we make, what do we do?  We hide away.   We pretend it’s better than it really is.   We lie due to shame.   We’re in a culture of progress and targets.   We’ve tried capitalism, we’ve tried communism.   We’ve tried individualism.   We’ve tried pretty much any other “ism” that you can possibly think of.   Yes we think that the possibilities are limitless, but that’s a lie.  The reality is that we are limited, we are limited in our abilities, we are limited in our understanding, we’re limited in our time.   But what we do is crazy.   We try to limit God by our own experience of limitation.   But God is God.   He is the only one who’s without limit.   Is anything too hard for God?   You see, if God creates a divine roadblock to Ishmael, he creates a highway for Isaac.   If Ishmael is a way of insecurity and dashed expectations, the way of Isaac is a way of certainty and hope.   If God can breathe life into the barren womb of Sarah, he can breathe life into an empty tomb.   He can breathe life into your heart and mine, no matter what you are like or what you have done in the past   Is anything too hard God?  When it comes to God’s promise that he will change me and he wants me to be more be more like his son, is anything too hard for God?   What about this church as it struggles to nurture life and build connection with the people living around us. It’s all too hard, too much of a struggle, but is anything too hard for God.   And when it comes to God’s promise on a global scale that he will reach every tribe and tongue and nation with his grace and favour through Jesus Christ, is anything too hard for God?   

Abraham learned.   Sarah is learning.   What about us?   You see we long for the impossible to be made possible.  Will we go God’s way for God is in the business of fulfilling his promises, because for him actually, impossible is nothing.   

I want to quickly finish by jumping to chapter 21 where we read:-

The Lord dealt with Sarah as he had said, and the LORD did for Sarah as he had promised.  Sarah conceived and bore Abraham a son in his old age, at the time of which God had spoken to him.  Abraham gave the name Isaac to his son whom Sarah bore him.  Abraham was a hundred years old when his son Isaac was born to him.  Now Sarah said, “God has brought laughter for me; everyone who hears will laugh with me.  And she said, “Who would ever have said to Abraham that Sarah would nurse children? Yet I have borne him a son in his old age.”

Sunday 18th June 2023

NOTICES:

A very warm welcome to all who worship with us this morning. Many thanks to Rev Stephen Dewdney for leading our service again today. Rev Hugh Perry will be with us next Sunday.

  • If you remain uncomfortable about being in church where masks are no longer required, use @church via Zoom until you feel confident enough to be in church with or without a mask.
  • If you’re unwell please stay at home, and use @ Church via Zoom.

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

Wednesday Walkers 21st June: Meet 9.30am at South Library for a stroll around the area (weather permitting). Coffee at Vily’s Café. Sonya 027 253 3397.

Articles are now required for the next ‘Messenger’ – please email any contributions to Sally & Charlotte (hooty@xtra.co.nz). Deadline is Sunday 25 June. Thank you.

Reminder  – this month’s scheduled Parish Council meeting has been postponed until 19th July.

MOVIE NIGHT: ‘The Quiet Man’ – THIS Saturday June 24th 5.15pm. BYO takeaways for tea. Hot drinks provided.

Sean Thornton (John Wayne) is an American who swears off boxing after accidentally killing an opponent. Returning to the Irish town of his birth, he finds happiness when he falls in love with the fiery Mary Kate (Maureen O’Hara). Though he is sorely tempted to pick up the gloves against her brother, the town bully, Sean is determined not to use his fists. Mary Kate and Sean wed but her brother refuses to pay the dowry. Sean would rather walk away than accept this challenge. Even when his new wife accuses him of cowardice Sean stands firm. But when she boards a train to leave, he is finally ready to take matters in to his own hands. The resulting fist fight erupts into the longest brawl ever filmed followed by one of the most memorable reconciliations in motion picture history!

Any queries, please talk to Irene 332 7306.

God, make me a blessing to someone today

THIS WEEK AT ST MARTINS                                              

Monday 1-4pm              Foot Clinic (lounge) Janette 021 075 6780

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

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

Wednesday 9.30am      Walking Group: South Library Sonya 027 253 3397

Thursday 10am             Crafty Crafters (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

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

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

Saturday 5.15pm           Movie Night (lounge) Irene 332 7306

Sermon: “Called to be a Blessing” Rev Stephen Dewdney Sunday 11 June 2023

Over the last thirty or so years researching family history has become one of New Zealand’s fastest growing hobbies.   It comes complete with the excitement of discovering you are related to an amazing celebrity or that you have some juicy scandal in your past.    My father got into genealogy when he heard the suggestion that his great, great, great grandfather was the illegitimate son of Napoleon Bonaparte.   Much to his disappointment he quickly discovered that was untrue, and further research showed that he, and hence I, am disappointingly not related to any famous people and have a boring set of ancestors that appears totally lacking any skeletons in the closet.    

Having said that, I want to suggest this morning that if we are Christians, we have a surprise scandal in our family tree.   For right near its beginning is a moon worshipper who twice passed his wife off as his sister to save his own skin, had extra marital relations with his slave which resulted in a child, and later attempted child sacrifice.    I’m sure you’ve guessed that this outrageous ancestor is Abraham.   And if you’re thinking that Abraham is far too distant a figure to be of any significance to us as Christians, who are after all Jesus people not Abraham people, take a deep breath, for this once moon worshipper provides the essential starting point for every Christian’s family tree, he is the essential foundation for every Christian storyline.   So let me try and put the story of Abraham into its context, and hopefully we’ll see why Abraham matters and what he says to us today.   

Let’s start with some very familiar words of Jesus from John 3 : 16, “God so loved the world”.   But you only have to go a few pages into the first book of the Bible, and you could easily forgive God for not loving the world.   The Bible begins, as I’m sure you all know, with a description of God’s wonderful creation with human beings as the pinnacle of it all, and the placing of a man and a woman in the amazing garden of Eden.   But that man and that woman were not satisfied, they wanted more than God had given them, they wanted to take over and play God themselves.   Not surprisingly this rebellion provoked both God’s displeasure and judgement, bringing the curse that affects all of life even today, from work to family relationships, from the environment to spiritual warfare.   And it leaves Adam and Eve banished and barred from the garden, desperately clinging to a promise that one day, one day, a descendant of theirs would crush the evil one and undo the curse.   “God so loved the world?”  Well, maybe.   

Meanwhile, sin infected the world and it spread at a speed that makes a global pandemic, even COVID 19 seem sluggish in comparison.   And soon all God could think of was to wipe everything out and start all over again.  God sent a flood that makes the recent Cyclone Gabrielle look like a tiddly little puddle.   But even as God’s flood swept everything away, the love God still had for the world was shown in the provision of an ark for Noah, his family, and the animals, so that even in this terrible destruction there could still be a future.   But even that doesn’t look very bright when Noah celebrates his rescue in a drunken naked stupor.   “God so loved the world?” 

The world remained an ugly place, and in Genesis 11, ambition and pride rear their ugly heads.   The people of the world are determined to make a name for themselves, and they plan to build a city with a tower that reached to the heavens so that they would be on an equal footing with God.   Well, not surprisingly, this triggers God’s judgement and displeasure all over again, and he scatters the people all across the world in a confusion of speaking many different languages and unable to understand each other.   “God so loved the world?” 

And as Genesis 11 works itself out, there’s no sign yet of any love, any grace, or any hope after the latest coup attempt.   It was as if God’s patience, God’s love, has finally run out, and if the story had stopped there, you could forgive current day atheists saying that everything is the result of chaos, that life is meaningless, that it’s all down to the survival of the fittest.   

But then at the end of Genesis 11 we get a tiny inkling that God hasn’t finished with the world yet, a faint hint that God’s heart of love is still beating.   And chapter 12 begins, “The Lord had said to Abram”.   Amazingly another storyline is starting.   God is still bothering with us.   His love isn’t exhausted.   God so loved the world, and I’m sure we all know how that sentence goes on, “That he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish, but have eternal life.”  And that is true, but the story starts way, way back in Genesis 12.   God so loved the world that he called Abram.   And this is the story that undoes the curse, unravels the chaos, outlasts the despair.   God called Abram.   

But back up for a moment to the end of chapter 11.   Look more closely.   See, in this world, contaminated by the sin virus, reeling from the effects of God’s judgement, the curse, the chaos, the confusion.   But as you look you will see families are on the move, including a man called Terah and his family.   They leave the ancient city of Ur and they head for Canaan which will become the promised land.   But they don’t get there, they make a start, but then they stop.   Terah and his family settle in Haran which is way short of Canaan.   And we are told that Terah had a son called Abram, but Abram is not some sort of spiritual goody two shoes.   You know, a shining, glossy Yahweh believer.   We’re told that he and his family worshipped other gods.   And both the cities of Ur and Haran were major centres of moon god worship.   It looks as if they set out on their journey, found Haran and settled there, at home with the familiar moon worship.   But God’s love reaches down to the unlikeliest of people, to call them to himself.   And that’s what happened to Abram.   Genesis 12 begins, “The Lord had said to Abram”.   When?  When they were still in Ur, possibly.   After they settled in Haran? more likely.   But at some point, the Lord had said to Abram, “Leave your country, your people, and your father’s household and go to the land I will show you.”

And it’s into this setting that the love of God speaks extraordinary words of grace.   Out of the blue, so to speak, God said to Abram.   “I will bless you”.   And then, maybe even more remarkably, “you will be a blessing”.   Promise after promise declares that God hasn’t given up on the world.   His plans are plans for welfare, not for evil.   Even in this darkest of starting places there is a future, and all this love and purpose and grace is poured out onto Abram.   But it’s not restricted to him alone.   Look at these promises a little more carefully.   There’s the promise of a people.   Verse two, “I will make you into a great nation”.   Surely an easy promise to come up with, but hang on, Abram is 75 years old when this is said to him.   And if you think that isn’t a particularly insurmountable problem, his wife Sarai was childless because she wasn’t able to conceive and at 66, she’s not much younger that Abraham and way past childbearing age.    “I will make you into a great nation” – Yeah right. 

God promises a people, but there is more for he promises a people with a place.   If you belong, you need somewhere to call home and when you don’t have that, it’s amazing how rootless people can feel.   Well, look at verse one, “go to the land I will show you”.   There is a promised land for the promised people.   I mean, rootless and banished from their original home that God made for them in the Garden of Eden, now they discover there’s a promise of a new place and a new home ahead.   And there is still more promised.   There’s protection on the journey.   “I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse.”  Blessing God’s people will bring unexpected rewards.   Opposing them will bring unexpected costs, promises God.   And there’s nothing small scale about the vision, about what God is going to do.   “All peoples on earth – will be blessed through you”.   Did you spot the irony.   In the chapter before these promises, proud rebels set about building a city with the Tower of Babel reaching to the heavens.   For in their words, they wanted to “make a name for ourselves”.   It must have been a remarkable bit of architecture.   But we’re not told, and no one knows the name of a single person who designed the Tower of Babel or worked on it.   Now Abram is told to go, to go away from home and family and anything that will give him identity and God promise, “I will make your name great”.   Today Abram whom God later renamed Abraham is known right across the world.   And this story, isn’t the story for Jewish people alone.   “God so loved the world” that he called Abraham to bless us.   You see, Jesus is there in Abraham’s family tree.   He’s one of the descendants.   He’s the one who makes these promises come true.   

And we find our place in the family tree in the remarkable storyline because of Jesus Christ.   Our reading from Romans 4 tells us this.   It says that if you belong to Christ then through faith you are Abraham’s seed and heirs according to the promise.   If you’re Christ’s man, if you’re Christ’s woman, these promises are for you.   The New Testament tells me I don’t work out the Abraham family tree by following from father to son to grandson.   No, no.   I do it by following the faith line.   Abraham had faith in God’s promises, relied on them, lived his life trusting them.    Those who have faith in Jesus Christ, who rely on him, who live our lives trusting him, we make them true for we find ourselves on Abraham’s family tree of blessing.   

But there’s more from the New Testament understand that those who have faith are children of Abraham.   For those who rely on faith are blessed along with Abraham, the man of faith, and we’re included in the blessing.   “God so loved the world” he called Abraham to bless us.   His story is our story.   These are our blessings.   This is the story that undoes the curse, and as Christians we’re part of it.   And when it eventually reaches its climax, there will be a home.   Not a fluffy cloud and a harp to strum for eternity, but something far more earthy than that.   A new heaven and a new earth and nothing of the curse will stain it.   Gone will be all evil and sin, gone will be tears and pain, gone will be all sickness and death, they’ll all be gone.   And the people gathered to enjoy it will be from every nation, every tribe, every people, every language.   They will all be there as God promised.   All peoples on earth will be blessed through you.   “God so loved the world” he called Abraham.   To bless you.   So, this is the story to keep your eyes on.   This is the one to never lose track of, to make sure it’s on your playlist when you’re asking the question of how you make sense of life.   

And it’s a storyline that makes us look outwards.   We who are Christians often speak of the Great Commission, and we think of Jesus’s words at the end of Matthews Gospel.   You remember them, “Go and make disciples of all nations”.   But the idea doesn’t begin there.   It begins here.   In Genesis 12, all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.   If you’ve got a place on this faith family tree, then you can bring blessing to the world.   Blessing is God’s happiness.   Blessing is living in relationship with God.   Blessing is living under his favour.   And blessing is something we share with others, for like Abraham we are blessed that we may be a blessing.

Here’s something practical you can do in response.   Tomorrow morning when you wake up, wake up with a simple prayer, “God make me a blessing to someone today.”  It’s a great daily prayer to have.   It’s a great way to start the day and every day.   It’s a great way to live.   It’s being one of the family.   “God make me a blessing to someone today”.   You see, God so loved the world that he called Abraham to bless us, so that we bless others.   

God said “Go” and Abram went.   We read in verse 4 “So Abram left, as the Lord had told him.”  Verse 5 They set out for the land of Canaan, and they arrived there.” And he went, did you notice, he built altars to the living God in the heart of Canaanite territory, in the land of Canaanite gods, as if he’s marking out the territory for the future.   Faith obeys.   Even when it doesn’t know just how things will turnout.  Next week we will pick up the story again almost 25 long years later.   Lots of altars have been built, lots of land has been explored, but there’s a massive problem for Abraham and Sarah are childless.   Is God going to keep his promise even when it’s way beyond possibility?  Find out next week.

Sunday 11th June 2023

NOTICES:

A very warm welcome to all who worship with us this morning. Many thanks to Rev Stephen Dewdney for leading our service today. He will be with us again next Sunday.

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

Wednesday Walkers 14th June: Meet 9.30am in Stourbridge Street near Therese Street for a walk around Spreydon.  Coffee at Oderings.  All welcome. Janette 021 075 6780.

Articles are now required for the next ‘Messenger’ – please email any contributions to Sally & Charlotte (hooty@xtra.co.nz). Deadline is Sunday 25 June. Thank you.

QUIET DAY “Faith in Midlife” with Dr Anne Shave: Saturday 17th June 9am-3pm at St Mark’s Opawa. All are welcome. Suggested koha $10, shared lunch. If you’re interested, contact Anna in the Office.

MOVIE NIGHT: The next film will be ‘The Quiet Man’ – Saturday June 24th 2023 5.15pm. Sean Thornton (John Wayne) is an American who swears off boxing after accidentally killing an opponent. Returning to the Irish town of his birth, he finds happiness when he falls in love with the fiery Mary Kate (Maureen O’Hara). Though he is sorely tempted to pick up the gloves against her brother, the town bully, Sean is determined not to use his fists. Mary Kate and Sean wed but her brother refuses to pay the dowry. Sean would rather walk away than accept this challenge. Even when his new wife accuses him of cowardice Sean stands firm. But when she boards a train to leave, he is finally ready to take matters into his own hands. The resulting fist fight erupts into the longest brawl ever filmed followed by one of the most memorable reconciliations in motion picture history!

THIS WEEK AT ST MARTINS                                              

Monday 12noon            Fireside lunch @ Allison’s

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

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

Wednesday 9.30am      Walking Group: Spreydon Janette 021 075 6780

Thursday 10am             Crafty Crafters (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

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

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

Trinity Sunday 4 June 2023 – Rev Chris Elliot

REFLECTION:  God of Many Names

We call God by many names partly because we recognize the limits of our human language  No one name can capture God’s fullness. 

But the conclusion of  this morning’s story reassures us that all the individual voices ultimately come together to call God One. Composer Brian Wren has a similar theme in his hymn, Bring Many Names. We’re not singing it as there is no substitute tune for its unusual metre.  However, the lyrics speak of: Strong mother Godworking night and day, planning all the wonders of creation; Warm father Godhugging every child, feeling all the strains of human living”; Old, aching Godwiser than despair; Young, growing Godeager, on the move, crying out for justice, and, finally, in the last verse, Great, living Godnever fully known, joyful darkness far beyond our seeing, closer yet than breathing….    

So on this Trinity Sunday we bring many names for God, but, as the story reminds us, we also call God One. In dialogue with our Jewish and Muslim sisters and brothers, we can affirm our belief that God is one.  But, within Christianity, we believe that God is three-in-one.  Over time this idea came to be known as the Doctrine of the Trinity, traditionally celebrated on the Sunday after Pentecost.

This morning let’s look at how the doctrine of the Trinity developed.  Theologian Elizabeth Johnson traces the origin of Trinitarian thinking to early Christians experiencing God as beyond them, with them, and within them: as utterly transcendent, as present, historically in the person of Jesus, as present in the Spirit within their communities.  These were all encounters with only one God.  Out of their experience they sought a way to express this, leading them to talk about God in a threefold way. Early Christian writings are filled with this threefold understanding,  appearing in hymns, confessions of faith, liturgical formulas and doxologies. In the process, the view of God as One, flexed to incorporate Jesus and the Holy Spirit. And so their language expanded creatively to accommodate their religious experience.

As Elizabeth Johnson wrote, while early Christians still believed in one God, they also experienced God in at least three particular ways: beyond them, with them, and within them.

Experiencing  God beyond them, recognized that the fullness of God is beyond human language, knowledge, experience.  Of course the understanding of an utterly transcendent God was historically ancient.  God with them, was the recounted experience of the actual person of Jesus, who embodied the ways of God in his life.  Overtime, because followers saw the ways of God so clearly in him, Jesus of Nazareth became known as Jesus the Christ. And, at the same time that early Christians experienced God as beyond them and with them, they also experienced God as within them, as present in the outworking of the Spirit in their communities.

So, although there was a transcendent aspect of God that would always be beyond their experience, and even after Jesus was no longer physically with them, early Christians still experienced the closeness of God, that is, as Brian Wren writes, closer yet than breathing. The Early Church called this aspect of God Spirit.

As Christians continued to experience God in these three ways, they also wrote about God in a threefold way.  We see an example of this in the apostle Paul’s second letter to the Church at Corinth, written around the mid-50s of the first century, so more than twenty years after Jesus’ death. In the very last sentence of chapter 13,  Paul offered a three-part benediction, one we know well, namely  The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit be with all of you.

However, we still need to remember that the New Testament does not contain a doctrine of the Trinity, nor does the word Trinity ever appear. It was almost 200 years after Paul’s second letter to the Corinthians that scholarly writings in the early 3rd century attempted  to apply the Greek word Trinity to Christian thought.  And the Doctrine of the Trinity was still a further 100 years away, formulated at the Councils of Nicea in 325 and Constantinople in 381. If we do the sums,  it was 350 years after the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus before a fully-fledged doctrine of the Trinity was able to be articulated, eventually becoming orthodoxy.  During those centuries, there were also many other diverse ways that people’s experiences with God were understood and expressed. 

Today we are a long way beyond the  Trinitarian battles of the Early Church.   And today we are not limited to how the Trinity was understood in the 4th century.  Afterall it did take 350 years to settle on an official doctrine.  The Ecumenical Councils where this occurred were actually only called  because of bitter disputes among rival groups on  how to talk about Jesus Christ. These rivals had various ways to understand God, both Trinitarian and non- Trinitarian.

Although the Trinitarian camp received a majority of votes at the 4th century Ecumenical Councils, the minority Christian groups didn’t disappear.  So called heresies flourished, along with diverse interpretations of the orthodox creeds.

Early Christians did their best to reflect theologically about their experience of God from the limits of their time and place.                

Our challenge is the same, as it has been for people of faith in every age. 

We are called to reflect about God as best we can, based on our  experience, while taking into account the wisdom of the past. 

For example, many people today, find it insufficient to limit our language about God to the classic Trinitarian formula of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.   Limiting ourselves to an exclusively masculine formulation (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit) can be an inadequate reflection of our 21st century experience.               Just as Sandy Sasso’s children’s book and Brian Wren’s hymn urge us to bring many names for God, we need to bring many names for the Trinity.  There is strong precedent for this.  In the 4th century, St. Augustine, bishop of Hippo, in Algeria, listed twenty different formulations for the Trinity in his book On the Trinity.

When we hear  different Trinitarian formulas, do they resonate with us, or disturb us?  Either way, it might be helpful to ask ourselves the question, why? What feelings, thoughts, or memories emerge in response to the metaphors?

First, how do we respond to the traditional language of Father, Son, Spirit?  What are the things that affect our response?

Secondly, one I use often,  Creator, Redeemer and Giver of Life.   

And thirdly, from Jim Cotter’s Lord’s Prayer, Eternal Spirit, Earth-Maker, Pain-Bearer, Life-Giver.

We don’t have to look far to find many other images or metaphors.  You may like to consider what names for God are meaningful for you.  What formulation of the Trinity would you choose to express something of your experience of God?  

You won’t be too surprised that  argument and conflict over Trinitarian formulations continued beyond the great Councils of the 4th and 5th Centuries.  16th Century Protestant theologian John Calvin reminded people,  that no figures of speech can describe God’s extraordinary affection towards us; for it is infinite and various so we might be more aware of God’s constant presence and willingness to assist us. Today’s readings from Genesis 1 and Psalm 8 reinforce that.

In fact God loves us as if we were God; and invites us to love other humans beings in the same way that we are loved by God – by loving our neighbours as our very selves. That is the deep meaning for us on this Trinity Sunday.