Preached at All Saints, Collingwood, the Fourth Sunday of Easter, 26 April, 2025. Readings for this Sunday: Acts 2:42-47; Psalm 23; 1 Peter 2:19-25; John 10:1-10
“Awe came upon everyone, because many wonders and signs were being done by the apostles.” (Acts 2.43)
Coming back to the pulpit after two Sundays’ vacation after Easter makes me feel a little like Thomas the Disciple in John’s gospel, wandering in and going “Hey guys, anything happen while I was away?”
Joy and I had a very pleasant and restful vacation and now I’m back and there is still just as much work as when I left: meetings, grant applications, diocesan paperwork, and all the usual business. Ask any of our devoted wardens, our staff and lay ministers, or our volunteers, and they will all agree that doing church is time-consuming and often tiring.
Sometimes, to be honest, it can all be a little ridiculous. You often here the term “churchland” to refer to the petty conflcts, squabbles, and displays of ego that can arise in any community or organization. People will look at each other, chuckle, and say something like “that’s churchland for you”. And, lest you think this is anything new, may I refer you to St Paul’s complaints to the Corinthian Christians? Church is as church was, a grouping of sinful and imperfect people following Jesus as best we can.
I wonder, sometimes, if our experiences of the daily and weekly grind of church, or even the negative and sometimes harmful moments of our church life, can dull us to the beautiful and amazing things that God can do, and does, do in our midst. In our first reading from Acts, which describes the very first days of the church in Jerusalem following the miracle of Pentecost, we hear that ““Awe came upon everyone, because many wonders and signs were being done by the apostles” (Acts 2.43).
Now we might say that that was then, the miracles of that mass appearance of the Holy Spirit — the tongues of fire, the speaking of many languages, the preaching that led to three thousand becoming believers in one day — was a one time, formative experience, a spiritual Big Bang. Well, yes, in a sense. Jesus did tell his friends to go out and preach, and he did promise them that the Holy Spirit would guide them and equip them, and that is waht we see in Acts. But, if we think that there was an age of miracles, and then God and the Holy Spirit left us alone, then I think we are missing out on the best part of church.
In her book Why Gather? The Hope and Promise of the Church, Canon Martha Tatarnic challenges us to be confident that God is working in the Church, that Jesus is with us, and that the Spirit is empowering and leading us. When is the last time you looked around All Saints and felt awe at the “many wonders and signs being done here”? I hope it was recently, because I see wonders and signs all the time. Let me give you some examples.
Just before Easter, at our Community Dinner, we seated over a hundred guests. In fact, we had to put out extra tables. Our volunteers, some of them otherwise unaffiliated with All Sants, came through as they always do. We didn’t run out of food. People left satisfied. Over Holy Week and Easter, over two hundred people came through our doors to worship and to meet the risen Christ. People come through our doors on Thursdays for CO3 because we offer them a respite from violence, cold and poverty.
I see wonders and signs whenever I look over at our hardworking tech team and think of what they make happen. Just before Easter, I visited a parishioner in hospital. She hasn’t attended in years for health reasons, but our livestream keeps her connected with our worship and preaching. Likewise, I think of the lady in ICU at the end of her life; her daughter held a tablet so she could watch the service, she heard her name in the prayers of the people, closed her eyes, smiled, and went home to our Lord. These things happen because faithful and generous parishioners invested in our technology. To me these things all fall in the “wonders and signs” category.
If our first reading encourages us to be excited again about what God is doing in the life of our church, it also encourages us to think about the purpose of the church. Acts tells us that the early church prayed together, ate together, and supported one another, to the point where “they would sell their possessions and goods and distribute the proceeds to all, as any had need”. Now I suspect that my friends in the Stewardship Committee would not want to go out on a limb and urg us to do the same, but it is worth asking why the earliest believers would go so far as to sell all they had and live in such generosity,
As I’ve said before, the ancient world was a place of huge inequalities, where most people lived in poverty at or just above the subsistence level. For these first believers in Jerusalem, they also lived as a conquered part of an empire dedicated to the ruthless anv violent extraction of taxes and resources. What the Spirit created in this first church community was the opposite of empire, a real glimpse of the kingdom of God on earth. In the Beatitudes, Jesus says that “Blessed are the poor, for yours is the kingdom of God” (Lk 6:20).
The church then and now is that outpost of the kingdom of God that, in true Beatitude fashion, overturns the hierarchical values of empire. Those empire values persist today in all sorts of ways:
fear of the outsider, turning housing into wealth and demonizing the homeless, celebrations of technology and violence that negate our common humanity .. the list, sadly, goes on. The church then and now, if the church is worth its salt, is the place where the values of the kingdom of heaven are lived in common.
In our gospel reading today we heard Jesus, somewhat confusingly, refer to himself both as the shepherd and the gate, but both metaphors have the same meaning, in that they both point to Jesus as the one who keeps the sheep safe. When I’ve heard this gospel preached, it’s often to say that we are the sheep, which is true, but I wonder if we shouldn’t also think of the church as the sheepfold. The church after all is, or should be, a safe place where all are welcomed and valued, and where the values of the kingdom of God are lived out. To find such a church, indeed, to be part of such a church, should surely cause awe, wonder, and joy in an increasingly dark and uncertain world. So my friends, let us see and treasure the work that God is doing here at All Saints, in our regional ministry, and in the church at large.


