Matthew 28:16-end – Is God a hybrid?
I am indebted to Revd Dr Giles Fraser, Vicar of St Anne’s Kew for introducing me to the nurseryman Mr Thomas Fairchild of Hoxton in East London. Fairchild who lived from 1676 to 1729 and is believed to be the first person in 1717 to create a hybrid of two different plants, recorded as the Carnation and the Sweet William to form a new plant called the Fairchild’s Mule. Now a mule was a sterile plant so once it has gone unless you manage to get cuttings, it is finished. Thomas Fairchild had the foresight to take some cuttings, dry them and two remain with the Royal Society today which had been formed a little over 50 years before Mr Fairchild donated them so botanists can closely examine what this first ever man-made hybrid plant was like.
But Mr Thomas Fairhild was not at all happy with what he had done because he was a devout Christian and believed that the world had been created divinely by God and feared, and indeed some critics told him as much that any attempt to tamper with God’s creation amounted to blasphemy. So perturbed was Mr Fairchild that he left a bequest to his local church, St Leonard’s in Hackney for a sermon to be delivered every year warning against tampering with God’s creation by playing God and creating new forms of life. A sense of that crops up again in 19th century novels like Frankenstein. The sermon is always delivered in the week leading up to Trinity Sunday and this year that honour fell to Revd Canon Dr Giles Fraser.
In around 2011 a botanist tried to recreate Fairchild’s Mule and suspected the carnation Fairchild used might have been a Pink rather than a carnation and produced these magenta looking flowers which closely resembled the Fairchild’s Mule specimens at the Royal Society. They were indeed sterile and attempts to take cuttings of this prolific little plant failed and eventually it flowered itself to death. This picture of these replica Fairchild’s Mules is therefore all we have. Perhaps Thomas Fairchild was right to be fearful and leave the bequest he did!!
Today hybrids of plants and animals of two or three or more types are common and use of hybrids is constant to get the best strain or crop or variety. So, is the Godhead also a hybrid and was Fairchild playing at God’s game? To which my answer is emphatically no. For that to be the case someone would have to have made God and the three constituent parts of the single godhead and no one ever did. Last year we celebrated the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea where the Nicene creed was drafted and approved affirming the Holy Trinity. In it the writers wrote that we believe in “Jesus Christ the only Son of God begotten of the Father before all ages.” We know that the Holy Spirit was brooding on the face of the waters at creation. All three persons of the Godhead are eternally begotten. No one created God. We believe in one God who was and is and is to come who as well as being one is God in three persons.
And we are commissioned by Jesus in the penultimate verse of the last chapter of Matthew’s Gospel to go and make disciples of all nations, baptising them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Note the word “name” is used just once and in the singular. We baptise into the name of one God Father, Son and Holy Spirit and we do so because we are making disciples across all nations: disciples of the living God, Father Son and Holy Spirit. Yesterday as a JPCC we were looking at and reviewing the Mission Action Plan for our 6 churches so that we have a plan for how we deliver that great commission. By next Sunday lunchtime we will have had 4 baptisms in our Stodden churches compared to just one baptism in 2025 and we know there are more baptisms to come in the second half of this year and maybe by refocussing our mission action plan there may be even more. This is our job; it is what we are here for. We have also had 4 confirmations in the last 6 months – the first confirmations across our churches in over a decade but only two of our fonts have been put to baptismal use since I came and our confirmands have come from just 3 of our churches. So, there is lots of scope for our 6 churches going forward. Yes the Great Commission does challenge us to go out to all nations but let us at least go out to Pertenhall, Swineshead, Dean, Shelton, Melchbourne and Yelden getting people ready to be baptised – why not join us at Melchbourne for afternoon tea this afternoon and make a start so we can be baptising in all these places in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit as Jesus commissioned us to do. Amen