Homily for St Bartholomew (10th Sunday after Trinity)


Acts 5: 12-16 Luke 22: 24-30

Serving on a committee can take on several forms. Some members are there to fill up the numbers. They do not contribute much to the committee workings and at most just raise their hand with the majority when a vote is called for. Thankfully they are in the minority. Other committee members undertake tasks or responsibilities, some quite small ranging up to those who are office holders. The major point is that those who rise to the position of being an office holder have worked their way to that level. From being a new person on the committee, rather unsure perhaps of the full workings, to being the leader, the ‘Chair’, and having a broad knowledge of all that the committee has to manage, all will have had to be mastered.

Formal occasions involving sitting around a table frequently have place cards indicating where people should sit. Common practice is that the leader sits at the head of the table with the next most senior sitting on their right hand, the right-hand man. The next senior would be on the leaders left and so on alternatively.

Jesus was being faced with a similar situation with his disciples. They had been muttering and arguing amongst themselves as to who was the greatest. Jesus explained to them just what it meant to have a position of authority. It was not just a case of sitting in the most comfortable chair with the highest back, being served first at mealtime, being in a position of respect. Being a leader involves a complete understanding of the roles of those serving with you.

This is the point that Jesus was trying to get the disciples to understand. He was with them and was one with them. He did not rule over them, sit in judgment over them. Instead, he was with them as one of them, one who also serves, helps and aids.

I remember seeing films in my younger days, in black and white, where there would be a scene where a factory hooter would sound , the gates would open and the workers stream out to go to their homes, the pub, or wherever. The day’s work completed. But, in the background there would be a light shining in a manager’s office as work continued. It is a way of life that work and service leads to position of responsibility. The higher up that ladder one progresses the greater the responsibility, the more devout the servant.

Jesus was saying that he was amongst them as one who serves. He adopts the same mantle as his disciples. He is showing them how to conduct themselves in such a manner as to be basing their life on giving rather than on receiving. Somebody who is always out for themselves and for what they can get out of life will soon find themselves alone. They will miss the friendship from their peers and the reward of God.

Allowing Jesus into our life, letting him stand next to us as we battle our way through thick and thin, we will reap that promise that Jesus made. In the end we would reign with him. Sharing our life with Jesus, bearing his Cross with him. One day will lead us to that time when we shall share with him in the wearing of his crown.

Tenth Sunday after Trinity (St. Bartholomew)

Almighty and everlasting God,

who gave to your apostle Bartholomew grace

truly to believe and to preach your word:

grant that your Church

may love that word which he believed

and may faithfully preach and receive the same;

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.