Trinity SundayRomans 5: 1-5 John 16: 12-15Today is Trinity Sunday. A day when many will scratch their heads in puzzlement, trying to understand some great truths. Cast to one side the traditional ways of attempting to come to terms with what is taking place. Leave the traffic light and its three colours, leave the orange with its many layers. Instead let us look at the basic ideas.Basic ideas mean that we begin with looking at the start. I enjoy mathematics. A good old sum can be fun to work out. However, we must begin at the start. Mathematics is dealing with numbers and so we begin by looking at numbers, what they are and what they mean. Only then can we progress towards combining them and using them in different ways. Simple sums and equations at first leading up to complex issues and formulae. We gain understanding as we progress.In John’s gospel the disciples are being told that, although they understand a certain amount, there is still much more that they have yet to come to terms with. As with my mathematics example it is quite pointless in asking a child in the first years of school to solve a complex sum or prove a complicated theorem. They work up to the required level of understanding. It does not come to them overnight.Today we are looking at the thorny question of the Trinity. Here we see God as God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit. God in three persons and God in one. To fully understand this concept requires us to have travelled along life’s pathways to a certain degree. We have passed beyond the most basic of understanding and have moved to a greater insight of God. We have learnt how God is the Creator of all we see about us. How he created both you and me giving us the characteristics that we carry, all of them as he designs. How the many types of trees are in the fields and the animals that graze beneath them. All of these are the work of God the Creator, fashioning as he wills.Next, we explore God the Son. It is that part of God that came to Earth to be with us, to teach us, show by example. I introduce this by describing the Son as that part of God. It is obvious that God cannot be in heaven, doing all of the heavenly things that he does, and be here on Earth involved here as he is. There is no place on Earth where God does not exist. From the highest mountain to the deepest trenches or mines, God the Son is there. He is ever present within us as we have opened our heart to him. Casting wide our heart and inviting him in is how we carry him in our daily life. God as Holy Spirit is constantly at our side. He gives us strength when we are faced with all manner of dilemmas. By the Holy Spirit we have been given gifts to take and use in the world. The list of potential gifts is long, and we do not necessarily know which gift, or gifts, we have been given. But a gift we have, and it is up to us to discover that gift and use it for the good of others.Our education continues and as we learn more our understanding increases. This is just what Jesus was meaning as he spoke with the disciples. This can be shown as we look at our understanding of God through the ages. In the days of the Old Testament God was frequently seen as a vengeful God yet in the New Testament he is seen as a loving God. How do we come to understand this change? In the Old Testament days where there was much fighting and territorial changes in which the Jews could not risk their belief being tainted. Its purity must be safeguarded. The way to do this was to destroy all non-believers, the heathen. The people of the Old Testament times had grasped a great truth, but only one side of it.As Jesus came he preached a God of love. The heathen need not be destroyed but educated. Here we see how education over time provided a greater understanding. Our view of God has changed over time. Our capacity to perceive God has increased, to know him.As time progresses no doubt our perception of God will continue to grow. The Holy Trinity will continue to be present working in the world. We will play our part in that work by utilizing the gift that we have been given. Gods will be done, as we say as we pray the Lord’s Prayer. We have a part to play in that work.Collect for Trinity SundayAlmighty and everlasting God,you have given us your servants grace,by the confession of a true faith,to acknowledge the glory of the eternal Trinityand in the power of the divine majesty to worship the Unity:keep us steadfast in this faith,that we may evermore be defended from all adversities;through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,who is alive and reigns with you,in the unity of the Holy Spirit,one God, now and for ever.
Seventh Sunday of EasterActs 16: 16-34 John 17: 20-endMany of us would recognise a pyramid. Also, many of us will have come across the concept of pyramid selling. The process starts with just one individual who encourages ten others to join in a selling method which relies on each of them recruiting ten others. At each level a modest amount of money is handed over with the promise of ever-increasing riches as more and more people are recruited. This was very popular during my school days as student after student would try to get on the ‘band wagon’.I like maths, and I like playing with numbers. There is an inherent problem with pyramid selling as I have described. In just ten levels more than the entire population of the world will have been recruited, the figure being 8.2 billion people.I doubt if Jesus had such sums going through his mind as he prayed to his Father. Jesus was in contact with his Father, possibly almost constantly. It is only natural that he should pray whilst he faced the prospect of the Cross, that terrible ordeal that was awaiting him as he entered Jerusalem.Then we learn of how he prayed for his disciples. They had been with him during his ministry as he travelled from town and village teaching of God’s love, healing the sick, bringing more and more people to know God. He prayed that God would look over them and be with them in their ministry. He had confidence in his disciples and commended them to God and his love.Now we see how the numbers begin to mount. Jesus also prays for people in distant lands, places far away. More so he includes those who are in far off ages, way into the future, as they hear of the Christian message and turn to God, who accept him into their lives. It is a great comfort to know that Jesus actually prayed for you and for me. This is a passage that is very dear to us.Jesus prayed that we might be as one. This is a prayer for the Church as it begins to grow. The Church is now world-wide. It has many hats, many forms of worship, many rules, etc. Yet Jesus prayed that we might be one. It was for a unity of relationships. Administration, and all other things which we put in the way of a complete unity of Church was not the plan. Jesus was praying for a unity of heart, a unity of personal relationships.If we love God with our whole heart and allow him into our life, we are sharing that same degree of love with the person sat by us in Church. They too, in their turn, are also sharing the similar love with the person just away from them. It is a truth that the love is shared with the person in a neighbouring village or town. Going back to my pyramid example the Christian love is spread far and wide and all based on a love of God. It is this love that was the basis of the prayer of Jesus.Jesus had a relationship with God which was based on love and obedience. It is that relationship that Jesus prayed that we all should have, a unity in which we all love each other regardless of race or class. We all have a love based on God because we love him. It is a love which is based on a relationship between one heart with another heart. This is the base of the prayer which Jesus prayed, a prayer which includes us, you and me.Collect for the Seventh Sunday of EasterO God the King of glory,you have exalted your only Son Jesus Christwith great triumph to your kingdom in heaven:we beseech you, leave us not comfortless,but send your Holy Spirit to strengthen usand exalt us to the place where our Saviour Christ is gone before,who is alive and reigns with you,in the unity of the Holy Spirit,one God, now and for ever.
2nd Sunday of EasterActs 5.27-32 John 20.19-endWhen something unexpected happens, you can be caught wrong footed. It is like when meeting someone you have not met for quite a long while and you suddenly see them. Does your mind go to a momentary stop while you search to recall the person’s name. All the points that you use to locate them have gone. It is as if they are floating in air and there's nothing to lock them into any particular location or set of circumstances.In the gospel reading the disciples are gathered together. The news of Jesus being seen after his death was hot on the agenda. One can imagine how they must have felt when Jesus suddenly appeared amongst them. The reading tells us that they were startled and terrified. I would've thought frightened out of their wits was a good description.Jesus tries to settle them, calm them down. He shows the disciples the marks of his crucifixion on his hands and his feet. In addition he ate some food in their presence to show that he was not a ghost. Once they were in a more receptive condition he explained to them the situation as it was and the role that they would play.Here is where people of all ages can derive great comfort from what Jesus says. Initially Jesus sets the position that the words of scripture have been fulfilled, the Messiah would suffer and rise on the third day. The Good News continues as Jesus proclaims that the repentance and forgiveness of sins is to be proclaimed in his name to all nations. This means that it applies to anyone everywhere. The disciples were witnesses of this by their very presence.Ever since, this important piece of news has been proclaimed. All through the infant Church right up to the present day. Service by service people are offered the opportunity to confess their sins. In the majority of cases it is through the use of a general confession. But occasionally this may not be felt that it is sufficient. That a greater unfolding of the troubled soul is required.Many people think that the confessional approach as used by the Roman Church is special to them. However, the same approach of making a particular confession can be used in the Church of England. Confession of particular sins can be made on a one-to-one basis. After suitable words of advice an absolution is given by a priest and the slate wiped clean. The sins have been forgiven.To wonder through life with our soul burdened down by the sins from the past is a heavy burden to bear. But it need not be so. From the very words that our Saviour himself said if there is true repentance, real desire not to repeat them, our sins committed in the past will be forgiven us. The burden that we have been carrying around for so long can be removed. It has been likened to having a yoke around the neck, like a beast working in the fields. It's removal gives us a lightness of foot, a weight removed from the shoulders.Collect for the Second Sunday of Easter.Almighty Father,you have given your only Son to die for our sinsand to rise again for our justification:grant us so to put away the leaven of malice and wickednessthat we may always serve youin pureness of living and truth;through the merits of your Son Jesus Christ our Lord,who is alive and reigns with you,in the unity of the Holy Spirit,one God, now and for ever.
2nd Sunday of EasterActs 5.27-32 John 20.19-endWhen something unexpected happens, you can be caught wrong footed. It is like when meeting someone you have not met for quite a long while and you suddenly see them. Does your mind go to a momentary stop while you search to recall the person’s name. All the points that you use to locate them have gone. It is as if they are floating in air and there's nothing to lock them into any particular location or set of circumstances.In the gospel reading the disciples are gathered together. The news of Jesus being seen after his death was hot on the agenda. One can imagine how they must have felt when Jesus suddenly appeared amongst them. The reading tells us that they were startled and terrified. I would've thought frightened out of their wits was a good description.Jesus tries to settle them, calm them down. He shows the disciples the marks of his crucifixion on his hands and his feet. In addition he ate some food in their presence to show that he was not a ghost. Once they were in a more receptive condition he explained to them the situation as it was and the role that they would play.Here is where people of all ages can derive great comfort from what Jesus says. Initially Jesus sets the position that the words of scripture have been fulfilled, the Messiah would suffer and rise on the third day. The Good News continues as Jesus proclaims that the repentance and forgiveness of sins is to be proclaimed in his name to all nations. This means that it applies to anyone everywhere. The disciples were witnesses of this by their very presence.Ever since, this important piece of news has been proclaimed. All through the infant Church right up to the present day. Service by service people are offered the opportunity to confess their sins. In the majority of cases it is through the use of a general confession. But occasionally this may not be felt that it is sufficient. That a greater unfolding of the troubled soul is required.Many people think that the confessional approach as used by the Roman Church is special to them. However, the same approach of making a particular confession can be used in the Church of England. Confession of particular sins can be made on a one-to-one basis. After suitable words of advice an absolution is given by a priest and the slate wiped clean. The sins have been forgiven.To wonder through life with our soul burdened down by the sins from the past is a heavy burden to bear. But it need not be so. From the very words that our Saviour himself said if there is true repentance, real desire not to repeat them, our sins committed in the past will be forgiven us. The burden that we have been carrying around for so long can be removed. It has been likened to having a yoke around the neck, like a beast working in the fields. It's removal gives us a lightness of foot, a weight removed from the shoulders.Collect for the Second Sunday of Easter.Almighty Father,you have given your only Son to die for our sinsand to rise again for our justification:grant us so to put away the leaven of malice and wickednessthat we may always serve youin pureness of living and truth;through the merits of your Son Jesus Christ our Lord,who is alive and reigns with you,in the unity of the Holy Spirit,one God, now and for ever.