Preached on Vestry
Days, Saturday, Feb 24, and Sunday, Feb 25, at St. Luke’s, Creemore, and All
Saints, Collingwood, Anglican Diocese of Toronto.
Readings: Gen 17:1-7.
15-16; Ps 22:22-30, Rom 4:13-25; Mk 8:31-38.
”Then he began to teach them that the Son of Man must undergo great suffering, and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests, and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again" (Mk 8:31)
Imagine that you’re invited to be part of something – a new business, a political campaign, a romantic relationship – wouldn’t you want to know that all would turn out well? Would you accept the invitation if you knew that it would all come crashing down and that your hopes would be dashed?
I’m sure that at this
point in Mark’s Gospel, Peter and his fellow disciples were completely
blindsided by Jesus’ prediction that he would undergo rejection, suffering,
torture, and a terrible death. Think of
all that they had seen and done with Jesus thus far – demons put to flight,
lepers cleansed, crowds fed from scraps of food, storms calmed by a word from Jesus. Sure there had been bumps along the way. They had seen Jesus scorned and rejected in
his home town, they’d seen the Pharisees become increasingly hostile, and they’d
heard of the arrest and execution of John the Baptist.
Even so, Peter’s
shocked reaction to Jesus’ prediction shows that the disciples expected a
triumphant outcome, that Jesus would fulfil their expectations of the Messiah
and be a conquering king, a second David, who would drive the Romans from the
land promised by God to Abraham and his descendants.
It’s almost as if
Peter was so outraged at what sounded like a prediction of defeat and crashing
ruin that he did not hear Jesus’ last words, that “after three days [he would] rise again”. And really, who can blame him.
We all want the
future to be bright and to keep our hopes intact. We don’t want the pain of disappointment. We don’t want to admit that we’ve failed. I think that’s true of life and, I would
say, it’s also true of churches.
Today and tomorrow we’re
having vestry meetings at two historic churches, St Luke’s, Creemore, and All
Saints, Collingwood. The people who
dreamed of these churches, built them, paid for them, looked after them, they
have long since gone to their reward. If
they were here with us today, would they be disappointed by what they would
see?
Would they be
disappointed by the general decline of Christianity in a country that’s become
increasingly secular? If they asked
where the children were and we said, most of them go to hockey on Sunday
mornings, while congregations got smaller and older and clergy got fewer, what
would they think? If they saw that
famous Anglican Journal newspaper saying that our church will go extinct by
2040, would they think they’ve failed and that founding these churches was in
vain?
No. I think that if they were here with us
today, they’d say no, it was all worth it, because here you are, acting in the
present and planning for the future. Here you are, feeding the hungry, welcoming
the stranger, sharing the good news of Jesus Christ. Here you are, living out the hope of our
faith, inspired by the same Holy Spirit that inspired us to build these
churches. It was worth it then. It’s worth it now.
I said earlier that
Peter didn’t hear or understand what Jesus said, that “after three days [he
would] rise again”. Peter and the
disciples couldn’t understand those words at the time. None of Jesus’ friends were prepared for the
reality of the resurrection. It wasn’t
until they saw him, heard him, broke bread with him, that they began to
believe. And it wasn’t for years
thereafter, as they started to travel and preach throughout their known world,
that they began to realize that Jesus had empowered them to build his church.
The same is true of
us. We dedicate considerable time,
energy, and wealth to keeping these churches going, which is good thing if
these buildings bring people closer to Jesus.
When things go wrong, or as we get older and fewer, we can lose sight of
the promise of the resurrection that Jesus promised.
But here we are,
still going. Our ministries have
changed. We run foodbanks and we feed people. We see society fragmenting and we care for the
lonely. We see the housing crisis
getting worse and we are called to speak out to those in power, as you will see
in our social justice motion. That’s
the spirit of the resurrection, leading us to follow Jesus in new ways and to
adapt the mission of the church.
So let’s remember, in
our vestry meetings and in the year that follows, that we continue to be church
because we follow the same Lord, and hold to the same promise of the
resurrection, that animated the first disciples. We keep faith with the generations before
us that built these churches and served these communities and worshiped this
God. Some of what we do – prayer, praise, and
worship – hasn’t changed. Some of our
ministries have evolved and changed as we follow the Holy Spirit. We do all these things because we believe
the mystery of our faith – Christ has died, Christ has risen, Christ will come
again – and that gives us our hope.
Amen.
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