Thursday, 27 September 2018

Concert: 'Shine' at Crawfordjohn Hall

Come along and...

'SHINE'

on Fri. 5 Oct.

An opportunity to support this great youth organisation while at the same time, having a great night out.

Tickets can be bought in advance, 
or at the door.

Some excellent door prizes on offer,
and a tombola.

See you there - and bring your friends.


*a joint fundraiser with proceeds being shared between 'Shine' and Upper Clyde Parish Church

Wednesday, 26 September 2018

Harvest theme 2018: Heard/ herd of goats?

'Cows and goats provide milk to help feed families.
Together with sheep, chickens and rabbits they give mineral-rich manure
to improve the soil and its crops.'

As part of our upcoming Harvest celebration on 14 October, we'll once again be supporting
the great work of the Send a Cow charity -
started by British farmers to help farmers in Africa - specifically the countries of:
Uganda, Burundi, Zambia, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Rwanda.
This year, we're thinking about goats...
The gift of a goat = £33 and a kid = £18.
Let's see how many goats/ kids we can gather 
through our church and schools fundraising efforts this year
and help support other folk in rural communities through the work of Send a Cow

We're hoping that goats of many kinds will be flocking to our Harvest celebration,
and plans are already takings shape/ underway with our schools in the run up to Harvest.
[and, they should be awesome: we've already had practice with cows in 2016]
The goats made and used in Harvest assemblies will join us for our Harvest service...
we're hoping they behave and don't eat the food and floral displays that will also be
decorating the church that day...!

Keep your eyes and ears out for flocks of goats flooding the area...

In the meantime, here's a wee video, showing the work of Send a Cow.

Sunday, 23 September 2018

Sun 23 Sept Sermon: A tale of two brothers - Cain and Abel


Continuing our journey through some of the stories in the Book of Genesis:
today we meet Cain and Abel.

READINGS: Genesis 4:1-16; Genesis 4:17-25;
Leviticus 19:15-18

SERMON ‘A tale of two brothers’
Let’s pray: May the words of my mouth, and the thoughts 
of all our hearts, be acceptable in your sight, 
O Lord, our strength and our redeemer. Amen.

What is it about siblings, about families,
that has the capacity to somehow make you lose the plot completely?
It’s a two-edged sword to be known so well:
there’s the comfort of belonging,
but, there’s discomfort too:
of those closest to you knowing just which buttons will produce a certain response.

Last week, we saw the end to humans living in the paradise that was Eden:
choosing to eat of the forbidden fruit,
choosing to cover themselves up
and cover up what they’d done.
The story tells us that these first humans were sent away:
choices have consequences.
For its early hearers, the story was a way of explaining why life can be hard at times.

This morning, we’ve moved on to the next instalment of the story.
Humans are now beginning to learn how to live outside of Eden –
to work the land,
to raise a family,
navigate their way in the world.
So we’re told that, in the course of time, Adam and Eve became parents to sons:
Cain and Abel –
and some Biblical scholars suggest that, the way the text reads, these two brothers are twins.
The story doesn’t mess about –
we move straight from their birth to when they have grown old enough to work.
Both are farmers.
Cain, like his father before him, is a tiller of soil.
He grows crops.
Abel keeps animals.

At some point, Cain sees fit to make an offering to God,
and so, brings a portion of his crops.
As we know, Abel also does this, bringing the best, choicest of cuts
from some of the firstborn of the flock.
And a weird thing happens:
God doesn’t seem to get particularly excited about Cain’s crops.
Abel’s offering is preferred.
Why?
Has God got something against vegetarians?
Possibly not.
However, there have been many convoluted and torturous explanations for why God
seemed to prefer one to the other.
Most of them revolve around the attitude of mind and heart.
Abel gave of the very best to God –
put God first by offering to God the very best he had...
Cain, it’s been suggested, did make an offering,
but it was done probably because he thought he should have,
and, he didn’t offer the best:
Cain’s attitude was one of holding back the really good stuff for himself,
and giving God the leftovers.
Okay.
It sounds plausible enough.
But:
Nowhere in the passage does it even begin to say anything of the kind.
There’s absolutely no reason given as to why God prefers one offering over the other
Something else is going on here.
And, to put it mildly, Cain is not best pleased with God’s reaction.

Back in the day, the comedian, Harry Enfield, used to portray a teenager called ‘Kevin’.
Kevin hid behind his long hair,
was pretty moody,
and spoke very little –
about the only time he’d respond to his mother was to complain using his catch-phrase:
‘That’s so unfair!’
In our story of two brothers, Cain’s gone a wee bit ‘Kevin’ in his response to God:
he’s very angry, and is having a right good sulk.
It’s not fair at all, thinks Cain.
But, life out of Eden isn’t fair.
Life is harder.
There’ll be harvests of stones and thistles;
what’s gathered will be through sweat of the brow and solid grafting.
Childbirth will be painful.
Eden was easy.
Out of Eden, you have to work at life,
and, even when you do,
there’s no guarantee that all your ducks are going to end up all nicely lined up in a row.
So, if the lesson in Eden was that relationships require honesty, transparency,
and that choices have consequences,
here, out of Eden,
we find a more brutal version of that.
‘Do what is right,’ says God,
‘sin is crouching at your door...
it wants to be your master:
you must master it.’

Out of Eden, when the odds seem stacked against you, how will you choose to cope?
That seems to be the question underlying our story in Genesis this morning.
And, the measure by which you manage,
is the measure of your character...
And the decisions you make, as you try to steer your way though life
aren’t just decisions which will affect you:
they impact upon the lives of others.
We're connected.
As the poet, John Donne, observed:
‘No man is an island,
Entire of itself,
Every man is a piece of the continent,
A part of the main.'   ...
Later he says:
‘Any man's death diminishes me,
Because I am involved in mankind.’

Cain has a choice:
to focus on the niggling sense of unfairness;
to let it seep into the fibre of his being so that,
like the fruit in the garden that his parents ate,
he can focus on nothing else.
‘That’s so unfair!’
And the unfairness whispers into his soul,
just like the voice of the snake whispered in the Garden...
and a choice is made:
not to shake it off and ask God to show him how to follow
more closely in God’s ways –
how to better walk with God ...
no, Cain’s all focused upon himself –
his pride’s taken a battering;
he hunkers down in his humiliation and revels in it,
and lets it become his master,
lets it direct his next course of action,
which is very definitely not to do the right thing.
He makes a catastrophic choice, which not only changes his life, but the lives of his family.
Unable to take his anger out on God,
he takes it out on the one who, in his mind, has been chosen as God’s favourite.
He takes his brother out to the field and there,
unleashes all that rage and pain, and jealous fury.
The ground is stained red with Abel’s blood.
Cain chooses death.

In a documentary about people who kill others,
a police psychologist observed that the primary cause of
the majority of murders was...humiliation.
You can see it at play here in the story of Cain, the first murderer.
The psychologist said that, for the murderer,
the only way to overcome the humiliation –
the loss of face –
was to strike out and kill, as a way of regaining the sense of self-status.
Cain can’t kill God,
but he can sure as heck kill his upstart brother,
who caused the whole situation in the first place.
In response to living in a world broken after Eden,
a world where life is not necessarily fair,
Cain seeks to rectify it with a chilling finality.
The choice destroys Abel, and destroys the family.
And, interestingly for those who would make arguments for the death penalty:
although God could choose to kill Cain,
on the basis a life for a life,
that’s not what happens.
Cain is spared.
Spared, but not unpunished.
He is sent away from his family, to be an exile forever...
is marked –
so that none kill him,
even though he, at times, might think it better to die
than to live with the stain and stigma of his brother’s death.
As a song by the Eurythmics puts it:
‘dying is easy, it’s living that’s hard.’

What do we take from this brutal, bloody story – the story of the first murder?
This tale of two brothers?
Well there’s an obvious one:
please don’t kill people!
But beyond the obvious?
What choices are we going to make as we find our way in the world?
When things don’t go our way,
when things go wrong,
when the harvest is poor,
when loved ones die,
when others hurt us in some way...?
Do we allow ourselves, a little like Cain, to let circumstances turn our focus
inward in such a way that we can no longer see God’s way?
Do we let it niggle, rather than nip it in the bud.
Do we open the door a little, and, in so doing,
let sin whisper in our ears and poison our hearts and minds so that the wound festers?
Do we get caught up in our need to retaliate,
rather than our need to choose another way –
to break away from a cycle of wrong choices that not only hurt ourselves, but the lives of others?
Here’s a small but powerful one –
remember the old saying:
‘Sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never hurt me?’
Well, that’s nonsense.
Because it does hurt.
Bones might not be broken,
but a small part of someone’s soul can feel diminished – especially if it’s an ongoing thing.
When we’re angry, while we might not lash out and kill our brother, our sister, our neighbour,
we might strike them down with words.

What’s the right way – the better way?
Instead of choosing to turn in on ourselves,
of hunkering down in our humiliation and hurt,
choose God:
give the hurt to him.
Prayer is a great way of working through things:
as you pray, often, situations clarify themselves in your mind...
you see the reality of a thing,
the way you’re responding.
And in the giving of it to God,
you begin to let it go,
to let God deal with it,
to find your self-worth, and status in him,
as his beloved Child.
Hunker down in God’s love,
let God be your foundation,
your focus,
give the mess,
the sense of unfairness,
even the humiliation and hurt pride to God.

Cain chose to let his rage master him.
Cain chose to open the door to sin with horrifying consequences.
Cain chose to serve his need for revenge, rather that to love God, and love his brother.
Cain...chose death.
Every day, we make choices.
And every day, there are times we make mistakes.
Choose to trust in God’s grace, God’s mercy.
As God’s people, do what is right in God’s eyes:
choose to love God;
choose to love your brothers and sisters, your neighbours.
Are we our brother’s, our sister’s keeper?
Yes.
And because we are,
this day, every day, unlike Cain,
we.... choose... life. Amen.

Thursday, 20 September 2018

Concert: 'Shine' at Crawfordjohn Hall

Come along and...

'SHINE'

on Fri. 5 Oct.

An opportunity to support this great youth organisation while at the same time, having a great night out.

Tickets can be bought in advance, 
or at the door.

Some excellent door prizes on offer,
and a tombola.

See you there - and bring your friends.


*a joint fundraiser with proceeds being shared between 'Shine' and Upper Clyde Parish Church


Monday, 17 September 2018

Sermon, Sun 16 Sept: 'In Paradise'

This morning we began a journey into Genesis
[with an occasional dip into Exodus].
We'll be exploring some of the foundational stories of the faith, and meeting some key figures from now up until mid-Advent.
What can we learn from these stories?
What can we learn about our own faith by looking through the eyes of those who have walked the faith journey before us?

READINGS: Genesis 3:1-7; Genesis 3:8-24; Ezekiel 28:13-18

SERMON
Let’s pray: may the words of my mouth and the thoughts of all our hearts, be acceptable in your sight, O Lord, our strength and our redeemer. Amen.

The writer, Frank McCourt – he of ‘Angela’s Ashes’ fame –
wrote another book telling stories from his time as an English teacher
in a state school on Staten Island, in New York.
Like many teachers, he would set homework.
And, like many teachers, McCourt would be met with a note the following day,
apparently written by a parent, giving a reason why the homework hadn’t been done:
The good, old-fashioned excuse note, in shuggly writing,
suggesting that the parent probably hadn’t written the thing at all.
Over time, McCourt began to save the notes.
Why?
Simply: he was impressed with just how well written they were,
and with the level of imagination and creativity involved in composing them –
in fact, they were better pieces of work than anything that the students would
tend to write in the classroom itself.
Here are a few examples – and they go well beyond the usual
‘the dog ate my homework’ of my childhood:

"The stove caught fire and the wallpaper went up and the fire department 
kept us out of the house all night."

"Arnold doesn't have his work today because he was getting off the train yesterday and the 
door closed on his school bag and the train took it away. 
He yelled to the conductor who said very vulgar things as the train drove away.  
Something should be done."

"A man died in the bathtub upstairs and it overflowed and messed up 
all Roberta's homework on the table."

"Her big brother got mad at her and threw her essay out the window and it flew away all over 
Staten Island which is not a good thing because people will read it and get the wrong 
impression unless they read the ending which explains everything."

McCourt wondered at the effort and the ingenuity of the many different
excuse notes he’d receive –
often thinking that the actual homework itself probably could have been completed
in less time than it took to write the actual excuse note.
However, given the quality of work he’d seen in these notes, one day in class,
he decided to take a different tack in teaching method:
he challenged his students to write an actual excuse note, and they had a choice.
This note was not be for themselves, but for a rather well known pair.
On the board, McCourt wrote up the options:
‘An excuse note for Adam’
or
‘An excuse note for Eve’
The usually boisterous class grew quiet, as the students settled down to their unusual task.
McCourt describes the scene:
"The heads went down.  
Pens raced across paper.  
They could do this with one hand tied behind their backs.... 
The bell rang, and for the first time in my three and a half years of teaching, 
I saw high school students so immersed they 
had to be urged out of the room by friends hungry for lunch."
That assignment prompted the most imaginative and expressive writing
he had ever seen from his students. 
Apparently, they came up with some brilliant excuses for Adam and Eve.

Adam and Eve – or, as I think of them in the context of our story from
Genesis this morning: ‘A’ and ‘E’ –
‘Another Excuse’ or:
‘Accident and Emergency’, if you like,
because, by getting distracted from listening to God’s voice, they certainly end up
as casualties of their own bad choices.

This story was originally told, and shared around campfires,
as a way of explaining things such as:
why snakes – seen in other cultures such as Egypt as creatures of wisdom to be revered –
slither on their bellies
and why they should be crushed underfoot:
snakes aren’t wise, they’re dangerous.
There are other matters too, that are covered within the story:
what’s the reason for the all the grind and hard work of farming -
why is it so much easier to harvest stones and thistles at times, than it is to harvest crops?
Or, why do sheep seem to have a built-in death wish?
Or/ Why is childbirth such a painful process?
The story helps its listeners understand just why life, at times, can be all struggle and toil:
choices have consequences.

In the story, God has caused the universe, the world,
all manner of living things,
to come into being.
And, at the end of the second of the Creation stories, we see humans:
a man, a woman – Adam and Eve.
They dwell within a beautiful garden,
at one, in harmony, with all the creatures who also live there.
It is quite simply, a wonderful paradise.
They have a close connection with God –
they are companions, and God speaks with them.
They are companions for each other:
God recognising that it is not good for humans to be alone.
They explore this paradise –
God showing and sharing with them so many wonders –
‘Let me show you the waterfall...'
'Come and see this purple-headed mountain range...'
Check out these – what did you name them again, Adam? Flamingos, yes, yes, that’s right - 
check out this enormous flock of flamingos on the sand bank over there!'
'Isn’t this all good?’
They have been given so, so much.
A glorious, living, jewel of a place to enjoy –
a demonstration of God’s overflowing generosity

In among all the treasures for them to delight in, places to see, things to do,
there’s just one thing they’re asked not to do:
God shows them two trees –
the tree of life,
and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
‘Don’t eat the fruit from that second one – that tree brings death, not life,’ says God.

But, there’s another voice in the garden –
a voice that begins to insinuate itself into the thinking of the humans.
And there, at the foot of that one forbidden tree,
Eve and the snake have a conversation,
with Adam standing there watching and listening.
And as they listen to the voice of the snake,
God’s voice... is tuned out.
‘Eat it.’
‘We can’t.’
‘Go on, ...you’ll be fine.’
And there, with all the wonders of Paradise available to them –
the only thing they can now see is the one thing that’s forbidden.
‘Why can’t we?’
‘Why is God keeping this thing from us?’
...‘If we ate it... we could be like God.’
A choice is made to the sound of a crunchy bite.
Another choice is made – another bite.
And life as they’ve known it is changed forever.
Guilt.
Shame.
From being completely open and unafraid –
imagine that: never having been afraid –
they move to fear and the need to conceal.
They begin the great cover up –
first with fig leaves,
then with excuses.

God comes searching for them:
they hide,
no longer comfortable in his presence.
God finds them:
tries to get them to be truly themselves once more – to tell him the story of what happened.
But, instead, there are deflections.
They struggle to be real with God.

Over many centuries, the story of what happened in the Garden
has been grist to the mill for many a theologian and biblical scholar.
In the 2nd century, Tertullian used it to explain why women were bad news –
why women couldn’t be trusted to make decisions, or have power of any kind.
After all, it was Eve who ate the fruit and caused separation from God.
Tertullian claimed that ‘women were the Devil’s gateway’
a bad lot, needing controlled.
His philosophy set in train century upon century of policies and attitudes,
built around the restriction and control of women:
we still deal with the consequences of some of his teaching even today.
In the 5th century, the theologian, Augustine,
knit together the story of what happened in the Garden with sexual desire...
And set in train Western society’s hang up’s around the body and desire,
again for centuries to come.
It’s from Augustine that we get the term ‘Original Sin’ –
the first sin, from which  sin came into the world.
But just what was the sin?
Was it about Adam not controlling his woman?
Was it all about sexual awakening?
Because, I wonder...
is this story actually about something else?

In the gospels, we often hear Jesus talking about ‘life in all its fullness.’
That life comes about through following in faith – listening to the voice of God;
being open, being real.
That is how we were designed to be, so much so,
that God could walk alongside those first humans and talk with them in a Garden –
and they were unafraid:
they felt no compulsion to hide anything from God.
So, here’s another way of interpreting the story:
Is the story of the fall actually a story about inauthenticity –
of not being real?
Of covering up,
not being open,
not being transparent,
of hiding yourself from God.
And when you start to do that,
guilt kicks in;
things begin to play on your mind:
you stop trusting God;
you begin to fear what God might do...
and when that happens, you make excuses.

God, already knowing what they’d done – for God knows all things –
gives them the opportunity to tell him what happened, to confess.
And
they
just
can’t.
Instead of ‘the dog ate my homework’,
we have ‘the snake made me do it,’
and then ‘the woman made me do it.’
Perhaps the sin in the Garden was not being able to be real, and
not owning up to their choices.
Because Adam and Eve refuse to take any responsibility
for the choice that each of them made –
neither was forced into eating the fruit:
the snake didn’t have Eve in a vice-like grip,
nor did Eve compel Adam forcibly.
They simply chose to listen to an alternative viewpoint, and made their decision.
And there’s this great ‘what if’ that I wonder about...
What if, instead of trying to cover up,
instead of hiding behind fig leaves and excuses,
the two of them had come clean?
Had simply, sorrowfully, said:
‘Okay, we did this. 
We know you didn’t want us to.
And yet, we still did it.
We shouldn’t have.
We took our focus off you – stopped listening to your voice.
We made a choice, and it was wrong.
And now, nothing will ever really be the same.
We are so very sorry.’
And, what if, God, hearing them bare their souls and sorrow, in infinite mercy
said ‘forgiven.’ 
Had said, ‘you are loved.’
Had said, ‘let us always be real: let there be nothing but the naked truth between us.’
Had said, ‘hey, let’s go look at this fabulous waterfall – when the light shines through 
the water’s mist, you can see all sorts of beautiful colours dancing together.’
And so, with all things out in the open,
with lesson learned, the relationship iss restored – fixed –
for nothing iss coming between them anymore.
What if... hmm?
But the choice they made had so clouded their mind,
that they had lost the sense of the mind of God –
and so, experience a new sensation: they were afraid.
And with the fear, had come the forgetting:
they forgot about God’s infinite capacity for forgiveness and mercy.

To conceal, or to be real?
I think that is a lesson we can take from this story of eating fruit in the Garden of Eden.
All God has ever wanted from us,
as his creatures,
as those created in his image,
is to be real.
God loves us,
wants to be in a relationship with us;
wants to be involved in our lives,
and us with him;
to walk companionably through the world
sharing its delights,
to heal hurts and reconcile relationships;
and, to share God’s message about fullness of life –
of being real with others and real with God.
In any relationship, it is healthy, and good to clear the air, and to own up to our choices.
And, it’s why, as God’s community, in relationship with him, that each week in worship,
we have a time of confession in our prayers:
a time to uncover and hand over the junk, and so stand before God unashamed once more.

In the Garden, there were two trees:
the tree of of life,
and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil – this second, a tree that would bring death.
A choice was made by those first humans.
And, in response, God made the choice that death would not be the end –
and sent us Jesus,
who reminded us what an authentic life looked like;
who, in his death upon a different tree, reversed that first human choice for all eternity –
bringing us new life, resurrection, and restoration to fullness of life.
It is the greatest gift:
to break out of the cycle of death and separation from God
and to choose to be real,
to choose life –
to open ourselves fully to God:
unafraid, unashamed....
For, in trusting in God’s overflowing love and mercy, we need never make excuses.
Amen.

Sunday, 9 September 2018

Worship, Sun 9 Sept: 'Songs of Praise'

This morning we held our annual
'Songs of Praise' service.

Over the last several weeks, the congregation has been quietly nominating favourite hymns, and the choices were absolute crackers.
During worship, we also remembered the Guild, and rededicated our own members as they begin another year's programme at Upper Clyde.
[details will go up shortly on the Guild page].

Including the Guild hymn, we had a total of 9 fabulous hymns and a fairly full house in the hall for morning tea afterwards - singing is very thirsty work!
A great atmosphere, and some excellent singing.

Here's the play-list from this morning:
154 How great Thou art
*Guild hymn: Let us follow Christ's example [tune: Courage Brother]
220 The day You gave us, Lord, has ended
561 Blessed assurance
551 In heavenly love abiding
514 Onward, Christian soldiers
*as we gather the offering we sing: 555 Amazing Grace
461 How sweet the name of Jesus sounds
251 I, the Lord of sea and sky

Readings were taken from the Psalms: Ps 98, 100, 146, and 150.
Rather than a sermon, there were several shorter reflections, including hearing about
two of our hymnwriters this morning - Fanny J. Crosby and Anna Laetitia Waring.
Book-ending these, were reflections on Ps 98, and Ps 150, which are included below....

Reflection on Ps 98/
As part of declaring how great, and how marvellous God is,
the writer of Psalm 98 doesn’t just focus upon the people of Israel –
here we see God’s hand upon the whole of the world:
‘all the ends of the earth have seen the salvation of God’ says the Psalmist.
That’s such a great image –
and, for us, God’s people gathering to worship in the Upper Clyde Parish, it’s so encouraging:
we are small, but, we are part of God’s family – we are Christ’s body on earth.
As the world turns, over the course of this day, the wider church
has gathered,
is gathering,
and will gather...
from New Zealand, the islands of the South Pacific, Australia,
the countries comprising Asia,
and across mainland Europe...
God’s praises have been sung.
From the UK and places on Greenwich Mean Time...
God’s praises are being sung.
Across the Atlantic, the Caribbean, the countries of the Americas,
and those near-end points of the date-line that include Anchorage and Hawaii...
God’s praises are yet to be sung...
From east to west,
north to south,
the nations of the world will join in worship and praise God for all that he has done.
We get to be a part of that –
some forms of worship will be very familiar,
some, not at all like how we are used to worshipping...
and yet, all of it, around the globe,
an offering and outpouring of praise to God:
how amazing is that?

There’s a lovely prayer I came across,
reflecting this sense of God’s global community of praise –
so, in prayer, let’s think of our brothers and sisters in the faith those who have gathered,
those who are gathering, and those yet to gather
Let’s pray:
Your church gathers, Lord,
in Virginia and Mozambique,
in Brazil and to the ends of the earth.
Your church gathers, Lord,
in city and country, in suburbs and slums,
in sanctuaries and buildings,
under trees and by streams of water.
Your people gather to praise you, Lord,
in English and in Portuguese,
with organ and guitar and drum,
with voices of young and old,
with song and with silence,
with dance and with prayer.
Your people praise you, Lord,
for hope in the midst of despair,
for strength in times of weakness,
for justice in situations of oppression,
for courage in the face of fear,
for life in the midst of death.
We are the people who call you Lord.
Let everything that breathes, praise you Lord! Amen.

Thereafter we sang: 'The day You gave us, Lord, has ended'
not often heard in morning worship, but a beautiful hymn, so it was lovely to have
the opportunity to sing it today.

Reflection on Ps 150/
‘Praise the Lord!’
And so, we come back to praise –
Creation began with God singing it into existence,
and, at the end of all things,
when time is no more,
when tears are no more,
when sadness, sickness,
suffering and death
are no more...
so there will be an eternity of praise.

The majority of the psalms give us reasons why we should praise God –
here, our psalmist shows us where, and how, to praise God...
and who is to praise God:
Where?
‘Praise God in his sanctuary...
praise God in his mighty heavens’
Basically, there are no limits to where you can praise God –
praise God...everywhere, anywhere.
How?
Praise God with trumpet,
with harp and lyre,
with tambourine, strings, and flute,
don’t forget to add some resounding cymbals...
And not just praise with musical instruments:
praise God with dancing.
This is a bit of a tricky psalm for the more reserved in personality.
And who?
Not just humans:
‘Let everything that has breath praise the Lord!’
As God’s people, we join in with all of creation –
singing songs of praise to the One
who made us,
who saves us,
who loves us,
and who is always with us –
not just now, but forever.
Praise is the song of harmony healing the discord
of a broken creation,
a broken humanity;
praise is part of that spiritual armour that deflects cynicism, bitterness and despair –
for praise puts God at the centre and reminds us we are not alone –
that we are beloved
and we are God’s people;
praise is the song that gladdens the heart
and strengthens us to enter out into the world,
sharing the good news that no matter how dark things look,
love wins –
for God is love.

Praise the Lord –
in the sanctuary,
in your hearts,
from your lips –
with every breath,
and with all of creation.

The Shorter Catechism asks:
‘What is the chief end of man?’
or/ What is our life’s purpose, as human beings?
The response is:
‘Man's chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy him forever’
or/ The whole purpose of our life is to glorify God and enjoy him forever...
Our lives are to be one of continual praise –
to turn our ‘all’
into an ‘alleluia’ ...Amen.

Tuesday, 4 September 2018

Service Sun 2 Sept: 'Tradition'

Sunday morning was our Autumn service of communion.
The theme picked up from our texts was on tradition, and serving God wholeheartedly.
Has the reason for some of our ways of doing things been forgotten over time?
Are there bad, as well as good, traditions?
What helps or hinders us as we try to walk in faith as God's people?
We began by hearing a story....

READINGS: Ps 15; Mark 7:1-23

SERMON
Let’s pray: May the words of my mouth and the thoughts of all our hearts be acceptable
in your sight, O Lord, our strength and our redeemer. Amen

She was a stranger in a strange land.
She had travelled far and wide,
met many people,
encountered many different ways of living in the world.
And here she was, another place,
near another group of people.
She settled by the free-flowing river,
made a home of sorts among the willow trees,
set out the few possessions she’d carried with her in her rucksack.
The days were warm, the fishing and hunting were good,
and the neighbouring villagers seemingly harmless.
It was good to rest in this green and pleasant place.

At the beginning of her first week, she was aware that she was being watched –
but not in an alarming way –
rather, it was in a gentle and curious manner:
a checking out of the new neighbour.
Occasionally, she would call a cheerful ‘hello’
holding her arms out wide in front of her
showing them they had nothing to fear,
a gesture of welcome,
of invitation.
The days passed.
Eyes watched.
Welcome continued to be shown.

By the end of the first week,
one of the more curious of the watchers decided that she was harmless.
When the ‘hello’ was sounded,
and the gesture of welcome made,
he emerged from behind a thick brown willow trunk and slowly made his way toward her,
arms open wide – to show no weapons,
giving a nod and a smile acknowledging her presence.
Inviting him to sit by the fire, she made tea,
handed him the cup, and they set to the business of learning about each other.
Mug in hand, he seemed suddenly uncomfortable, slightly unsure.
She, smiled at him, nodded reassuringly, then drank from her own mug first,
to encourage him – and show him the drink was safe.
Cautiously, slightly nervously, he sipped the tea and began to relax.
Soon they found a common language, and exchanged names:
she was Evadne and he, David.
Bidding her to come to the village for a meal and to meet the others,
David urged her to bring a jacket and hat solemnly saying something that sounded a little like: ‘yaahstincaze’. 
Feeling the warmth of the sun on her arms, and looking at the clear blue sky,
Evadne was puzzled by David’s insistence on the hat and jacket –
nor did she understand the word he’d used.
A seasoned traveller, however, Evadne bowed to her new friend’s obvious local knowledge
about possible weather vagaries.
Picking up her coat and cap, she followed David to the village, just less than a mile up river.

Coming into a clearing, she saw a collection of small, stone, white-washed cottages
with neatly thatched roofs,
gathered in a circle around a pretty green bordered with a variety of wildflowers
that were putting on a stunning show.
Villagers emerged from doorways, watching as she and David
walked to the centre of the green to meet a tall woman,
dressed in a long, cornflower blue cotton skirt, and fawn shirt.
Looking at Evadne, the woman noted the jacket and cap slung over her arm, and nodded approvingly.
‘Ahhh, ‘yaahstincaze’. 
Pointing to herself, she said ‘Myra’ then looked at Evadne with a warm smile.
‘Evadne’ came the response, with a smile in return.
Evadne found herself being led to the largest of the village houses.
The bright yellow door was open wide, and delicious cooking smells tempted her in.
Gathered in the living room was an assortment of villagers, who greeted her cheerfully.
Along with the heat of the day the room was also further warmed by the
sheer number of people, so that they were positively ‘glowing’ with perspiration.
Occasionally, David needed to translate, but for the most part,
general conversation flowed in a friendly way.
With the sound of a gong signalling dinner, the group headed...
not to the dining room, but for the coat rack by the door, each collecting their coat and cap,
before turning back and following the smell of the food down the corridor.

Evadne followed the crowd and entered a large room.
At the centre was an enormous dining table,
laden with bowls overflowing with roast tatties, broccoli, peas...
two swan-shaped gravy boats graced either end of the table,
and, mid-table, a huge haunch of beef sat ready to be carved.
A fine feast indeed.
Suddenly there was a brief whispering and then David quickly disappeared,
reappearing with Evadne’s coat and cap, and handing them to her with a nod.
The room was already boiling, and Evadne could not imagine why on earth
she would have need of these.
Bewildered, she took them from David with a puzzled ‘thank you.’
She noticed the diners all stood behind their chairs, each with their coats and caps,
waiting expectantly and looking at Myra.
Tapping her crystal glass lightly with a fork, Myra solemnly uttered the strange word once more:
‘yaahstincaze’.
On cue, the diners placed their caps on head, donned their coats, and were seated.
Following their lead, Evadne did likewise, hoping beyond hope that she wouldn’t
pass out with heat exhaustion...
she could already feel her face growing flushed as she wiped a small bead of sweat from her brow.
Heroically, she tucked into the hot meal.

Many years, many miles, many cultures later,
Evadne had cause to remember the villagers and their custom of donning cap and coat
for their meals.
Now settled, and writing a book, she decided to do a little research on the village.
Sitting in seat B7 of the library, surrounded by books,
Evadne at last caught mention of the village.
Originally a make-shift stock camp, people began to settle –
first in tents, which were gathered in a circle around a common working area.
Here they would make and share a fire,
where, in the open, they would cook and eat communally.
While the area enjoyed generally good weather, it was not unknown for storms
to blow up from out of nowhere,
and so the villagers were in the habit of eating with their caps and coats on
should the weather turn, and they be faced with the risk of pleurisy or pneumonia
so far from medical help.
They took to heart the potential danger and acted accordingly.

As the years passed, and old memories were lost in the mists of time,
the village saw many changes:
stone cottages replaced tents,
cooking was now done in their own homes,
and the common work area became the green.
There was one thing that didn’t change however:
regardless of the temperature, even though they no longer knew why they did it,
the villagers continued their practice of donning coat and cap,
and muttering ‘yaahstincaze’ before they ate.
There it was again, that strange word Evadne had heard so long ago,
now, no longer strange as she looked at it in print,
and said aloud not one word, but three, in her own accent:
‘just in case.’
---------------------------------------------
Remember the old Scout motto – ‘Be prepared’?
Well, it’s a good thing to be prepared –
in the case of the early villagers living in tents and sharing meals in common, out of doors,
it was a good thing to have at hand their cap and coat just in case the weather turned.
Being prepared meant – hopefully – avoiding illness.
Being prepared became something that they just ‘did’...
even many generations later.
Despite changes in the way they lived,
despite the utter discomfort
despite no longer needing to ‘be prepared’
in this particular way any more...
they still practised something that was now essentially unnecessary...
no longer an exercise of the heart,
but an ingrained habit now without meaning.

The Psalmist asks ‘Lord, who may dwell in your sanctuary, who may live on your holy hill?’
And then, they answer their own question –
describing someone who follows God with their heart,
and whose actions are done out of intention, rather than unthinking habit.
Reflection and action working together creating an integrity of purpose.
There are a good number of psalms that talk of ‘ascending’ to God’s holy hill,
that talk of making a pilgrimage to the temple in Jerusalem.
The direction is always  up.
Now, I’m not sure how many of you go hill-walking,
but I am pretty sure that if you are inclined to go yomping up the hills,
that the last thing you want with you is...
well, a lot of unnecessary things to slow you down,
to make it harder than it needs to be.
You want to be well prepared, of course,
and, a part of that preparation is getting rid of that which holds you back.
And this is what Jesus is really talking about when he has yet another
encounter with the group called the Pharisees.

These guys aren’t bad people:
they’re trying to keep the Law that was handed down by Moses.
They’re trying to keep their tradition alive.
A tradition that marks them out as God’s people;
a tradition that gives them a sense of identity,
a sense of purpose,
a sense of purity,
a sense of comfort.
Tradition isn’t always a bad thing.
And yet, in this case, over the generations,
added extras have crept in to the tradition.
Instead of what had been intended to help people follow God more easily,
the tradition with all the added extras
had become a burden...

Again, the Pharisees are not necessarily bad people - perhaps it’s a matter of bad practice.
Doing the thing correctly became the focus:
what they were doing,
not who they were doing the thing for.
And Jesus cuts through the centuries of tradition and addition
and turns the spotlight on heart and motivation:
it’s not the external stuff you do out of habit...
it’s the reason that you’re doing it that matters.
Also, just to say that Jesus isn’t against basic principles of hygiene when
he makes his comments about ritual washing...
he wants them to remember why they’re doing what they do –
it’s not for the sake of the thing,
it’s for God’s sake.
And, if the action is now a barrier to God,
rather than a help to follow in God’s ways...lose it.
Marry word and action so that what you do is an intentional part of how you follow God.

Last week we talked of putting on God’s armour.
Perhaps, in order to put on those things that help to follow God,
you need to take off those things that slow you down or stop you altogether.
It’s good to examine what we do and why we do it, and in doing so,
to rediscover some of the good things in the tradition and perhaps lose some of the less helpful...
doing this, while also discovering new ways to love and serve God –
like the words of that old hymn:
‘ponder anew, what the Almighty can do.’
It’s what Jesus did, in a meal with friends –
where gathered at a table, he took ordinary things –
bread and wine –
and transformed them into something new:
a meal based on old custom and tradition,
but renewed for a new generation of people
wanting to walk in God’s ways.
He stands at the head of the table,
arms open wide to show us we have nothing to fear,
arms open wide as a gesture of welcome,
of invitation.
We can leave behind our caps and coats and all the unnecessary things
we carry with us day to day.
All we need to bring is ourselves, our hearts.
It’s not a meal where we need to have stuff with us ‘just in case,’
it’s a meal offered with the call to lay our burdens down –
a meal of freedom,
a meal... of grace. Amen.