Tuesday, October 10, 2017

A reflection on 2 Timothy 3:16



As part of the season of prayer at St Peter's, a time when we encourage people to work on developing their prayer and devotional life, I invited the congregation to take a verse to meditate on for each day this week. To read it in the morning, chew it over and pray on it during the day and then write down what they felt God was saying to them through it in the evening. So I thought I'd just put a couple of my reflections on line... as I found the spiritual disciple helpful.

The verse on Monday was 'All Scripture is God-Breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness"  2 Timothy 3:16... It has always been used to affirm the scriptures as being God breathed or inspired. It's one of those proof texts that we can prattle off in defence of a certain position. But in taking some time to ponder it and chew it over and wrestle with it... I felt the Spirit Speak to me in a way that this verse has not before.

The passage does talk of the divine inspiration of the scriptures... I know that how Christians unpack and understand that is very diverse and divisive.

As a preacher I found it an encouragement to keep faithful to exploring and explaining the scriptures because in doing that we are part of the process the Holy Spirit uses to allow the scriptures to do what they are designed for, to bring new life, maturity and transformation. As a verse it also challenged me to examine how I teach and  preach. is my vision and prayer "So that all God's people may be thoroughly equipped for every good deed."

However, as I thought about this passage through the day the real challenge for me came in the question. if the scriptures are useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness ...So that all God's people may be thoroughly equipped for every good deed... What is he attitude I come to reading and reflecting on scripture with...

What is in it for me...? Bless me Lord!

"intellectual curiosity?' As a preacher that is one of the things that we must do... but it also must never become the sum total of our engagement... particularly in our own devotional life.

I'm just doing my spiritual discipline thing... Like all disciplines you can easily fall into a rut.

In the end this verse in 2 Timothy invites us to come to scripture with a openness to what God is wanting to do in our lives... we come as a learner, open for God to speak change and transformation into our lives... even when it means that God points out the bits that need to change, which can be a painful process... Jesus sais that the person who builds their house on a rock is the person who heard what Jesus has to say and puts it into practise... or the more blunt wording who obeys it.

In the end of my reflection I thought the best way to come to scripture was with the prayer that Eli gave to Samuel in the midst of a night of disturbed sleep... 'speak Lord, for your servant is listening' (1 Samul 3:10) a mantra (OK, a centring prayer when I open up the scriptures, devotionally and for preparing a message for Sunday.

here is a link to the verse for the day resource mentioned in this post...

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0ByJ_VpCT9WEETDIyRWdwVXc0X3c/view?usp=sharing

Sunday, October 8, 2017

If you can worry you can meditate (Psalm 1119:97-112, 2 Timothy 3:16-17)



October at St Peter’s is designated as our season of prayer. It’s the fourth year in a row we’ve set aside this month to look at developing and growing our devotional and prayer life. Central to our vision as a church is that we are growing as followers of Jesus, and in our five year strategic plan the parish council has seen developing prayer and devotional life as one of the key areas for that growth as followers of Jesus to occur. It makes sense that a healthy church would be based on its members having a healthy and growing relationship with God. Our being a community and reaching out in love and inspiring others to join us on the journey comes from knowing Jesus love and presence in our lives, living it out and sharing it with others.

Today we are going to start our reflections for the season of Prayer,  by looking at the practise of Christian meditation on scripture. Now I don’t know about you but when I think of meditation I get images that are shaped by the increased identification of meditation with eastern religions… the chanting of mantra, burning insence and sitting in positions that don’t look that comfortable to me in fact they rather resemble complex knots.  A lot of that is just relaxation techniques, contemplative Christians talk of centering prayers, short sentences or verses of scripture that help us to calm ourselves and focus not on nothingness or the universe, but on God. Breathing exercises that help us to quiten our minds and bodies amidst the rush of everday life. It might make meditation seem complex and difficult, this morning I want to simply say that if you can worry then you can meditate.

When something is worrying you it is always on your mind, it becomes your focus, it can consume your time, you lie awake at night turning it over and over in your mind. That’s not necessarily a healthy process, it saps your strength, it does not always lead to a solution. I attended a business training course when I was in Napier, and the business man who took the course, talked of how he dealt with problems and issues that ‘worried him” about his business in a healthy manner. He said he took time out to sit in his thinking chair, and work the problem, he would continually ask the question why until he had explored the issue, from so many difficult angles and got it down to well thought out practical steps he could take.  Christian meditation I believe is taking the time to think reflect and turn over and over again in our minds the word of God, so it is able to be used by God to lead us forwards.

The word Meditate has the same feeling as the word Masticate: which is to chew. When you worry something gnaws away at us, meditation is to chew it over, like a cow chews its cud. Cows have four stomachs and they will bring the grass they’ve eaten back up to chew it over again and extract all the goodness and nutrients they can get from it. That is a gross but good illustration of meditating on God’s word, chewing it over and extracting all the nutrients and goodness from it and allowing that to become part of us and to energise and direct our lives.

Our bible passage this morning is from psalm 119 and I want to look at what it has to say about meditating on scripture. Psalm 119 is the longest of the psalms and it is an acrostic poem, made up of twentythree eight line stanzas, each starting with a different letter of the Hebrew alphabet. It celebrates God’s word that the psalmist had at that time and it uses the whole of the language it was written in to do so. We had two sections read out today verse 97-104 which is the letter ‘mem’ and 105-112 which is the letter ‘nun’. The ‘mem’ section focuses on giving praise for the wisdom that God’s word provides and the ‘nun’ section acknowledges the value of God’s word in leading us through the dark and difficult times of life, like it is a torch illuminating a treacherous path at night. 

For the Psalmist the focus on his meditation is the law, the Torah. We also have the rest of the Jewish cannon, the old testament and the gospels and epistles, Jesus said he did not come to do away with the law but to fulfil the law, so Christians beleive we have that fuller revelation of God, to meditate on. In the psalm itself there are eight different terms to refer to the scriptures, its not tying it down to a set torah, but it focus is on the psalmists relationship with the scripture and through them with God.  If the psalmist was a Jew writing in the time of the exile in Babylon it would have been when the written books of the Old testament would have started to become available, and away from the cultic life in Jerusalem they would have been the focus for establishing synagogues and of keeping the faith alive, in a society that pressured all those who they conquered to adapt and be assimilated. Focusing on the Torah keeps the psalmists focused on God and God’s covenant.  The book of Daniel tells the story of such Jews being indoctrinated in the Babylonian ways and religion, and we see Daniel and his friends resist and keep their faith and identity as they keep their spiritual practises.

The psalmist says he has a daily routine and discipline of meditating on God’s word. In Jewish society being a scholar and student of the scripture and having the day to devote to it was the highest privilege you could have. Today you can see yeshiva’s schools dedicated to Jewish students focusing on their scripture and related teachings, both in class room settings and also in pairs or small groups. But if this was the exilic period they may not have had the benefit of such schools or the time to do this and it could as easily speak of taking the time during the day to focus on the scriptures. As the psalmist goes through his day, his mind is thinking about the scriptures. Those he has read that day or he may be reciting scriptures he has memorised under his breath, and scripture memorisation is a great discipline, and groups like the navigators have got some great resources to help you to do that.

The psalmist says this meditation on scripture gives him wisdom, and in his exile environment, he says it makes his wiser than his enemies and gives him more understanding than his teachers.  This is not a vein boast, but rather elevates the knowing of God and God’s purposes and ways as important and central in the face of all the other messages he is receiving from the society round him. It’s not that those things are unimportant but rather the central thing is that life is lived through that knowing of God. 

The rest of this section of the psalm helps us to see what this daily meditation might look like.  In verse 103 the psalmist talks of the word of God being sweet to the taste. There is the daily consumption of God’s words. There is a daily routine of reading scripture, again there are many different ways and means of doing that. For the past four years I have set myself the goal of reading through the bible each year. I use an ap on my phone called ‘one year bible’ which also gives me an email each day with readings from the Psalms or Proverbs, the New Testament and Old Testament to systematically read through the bible in a year. Each day they come with comment from Nickey and Pippa Gumble and a daily prayer as well. Here at St peter’s we provide people with the chance to use ‘the word for today” produced by Radio Rhema, which has a reading for each day and a reflection on one verse or section each day as well. Also the daily bread from scripture union. They are all just helps to allow us to have a regular input of God’s word.

In verse 104, the psalmist talks of gaining understanding from God’s precepts, not only is there the reading of the word daily there is the process of understanding what the passage is saying as well. That takes time and effort to reflect on scripture, not just to read it. It’s as we come to understand it that we are able to apply it to our lives.

That application to life is what is at the centre of this first section of our reading. In verse 101 and 102 the psalmist talks of obeying God’s word and not departing from God’s law. It is the process of understanding what God has to say and them allowing it to change us, to speak to our way of life. Contemplation leas to application. Thomas Morton was a famous monk from the 20th century, he was always wanting more time to spend on retreat to go away and pray and meditate on God’s word, one of the things that has made Thomas Morton one of the most influential Christians of the last century is that when he came back from those times of meditation and retreat he would have written very insightful and powerful books or essays on important social issues like the rise of the atomic age and how to respond to it, the challenge of living in a pluralistic society and how to relate and communicate and act with other religions. We may find it is simply how we react in difficult situations in our work place or family, seeing our job not simply as a necessary evil, but part of God’s calling on our lives., or to be encouraged to simply show love to our neighbours.

This is what is called an inductive bible study. Starting from the word by reading it, then coming to understand it, what does it say, understanding its message: what did it say to the people then and there and applying it: what does it say to us today and how am I going to live differently in light of it.

Then in verse 102 we also get what makes meditating on God’s word communication with God. The Psalmist says that god himself has taught him, it’s an affirmation of the fact that scripture is God’s word or as we had in our new testament reading from 2 Timothy, it is God breathed, but also that God is involved in the process of open the scriptures to us and teaching us. AS we have come to believe in Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit has been poured out on us, one of things Jesus said the spirit would do was lead us into all truth, and bring to mind all that Jesus had said and taught us and as we reflect and meditate and chew over God’s word, God is able to speak to us.

The second section that we read today the ‘nun’ section talks of God’s word being a lamp for our feet and a light on our path, that it can be trusted to lead us through the dark and difficult paths of life. Along the rugged storm lashed coast of England there are lifeboat stations, and people go out in small boats from those stations out into the stormy weather to save the lives of sailors on ships that get into trouble. The people who man the lifeboats will tell you it is not the times they have gone out in response to emergencies that make them able to do their job and save people, rather it is the hours and days and weeks and months they put in practising and practising in the lulls between the storms that enables them to do what they do. It is as we allow God’s word to sink deeply into our lives in a regular routine of  reading and reflection, meditating on the word allow our lives to be marinated in the word of god that enables the Holy Spirit to use it in those dark and stormy times. 

I want to leave you with just a simple practical exercise for this week. Two spiritual disciplines which I believe will help you to develop meditating on scripture to be more a part of your life. It’ll take about ten minutes in the morning and maybe another ten or so at night and hopefully some time during the day when you’ve got a chance to take a moment or so to simply read the verse over again.

The first discipline is just to have one verse for the day, to reflect on this week. To chew over and contemplate. To carry with you and allow God to speak to you through.  Maybe even to commit it to memory, can I say that is a challenge for me, my mind just does not seem to be wired that way. You probably notice that when I’m leading worship and even when we’ve sung a song over and over again I still get the lyrics wrong.

The second is to have a go at journaling. To take time at the end of the day to write down your reflections on that passage and how you have felt God speak to you through it during the day. When you write that sort of thing down it gives you the chance to reflect and actually think of how you’ve related to it and how God has related to you through it during the day. It also allows you to put it in the back of your bible and then look back at it in a month or a few months’ time and remember what God said and even how it has continued to be manifest in your life.
if you want to use or view the verse of the day reflections booklet her is the link to it as a pdf

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

A Cry from the Depths and Hope of the Light (Psalm 130 and 1 John 1:5-2:2)



Psalm 130 is a lament, a crying out from the depths. It’s a plea for help as the psalmist finds himself sinking below the waters of the troubles that have flooded into his life. Is the psalmist going down for the last time, does God even hear his cry… has he been abandoned and left to die? Because of sin has God turned his back?

It’s been gathered into the psalms of ascent, made a pilgrims’ prayer and as the psalmist does not tie his depths down to a specific time and place, a single set of troubles, it invites those coming to worship God in Jerusalem to find themselves in this psalm.

It’s a post exilic Psalm so it invites the pilgrim to identify with God’s people, who had suffered the pain and anguish of the destruction of Jerusalem, and seventy long weary years in Babylon, waiting and hoping that God was not finished with them. Like the sentries on Babylon’s walls looking for the dawn. Looking and looking.

It is a Psalm that could equally invite the pilgrim to remember or cry out from their own depths: Sickness and pain, suffering or hardship, sorrow and grief.

It’s a psalm that we may also find ourselves in. A psalm uttered in hospital ward, in the wake of the loss of a loved one, in relationship breakdown, life crumbling and dragging us down, injustice or abuse.

It’s a psalm that has been raised throughout the history of God’s people. It’s a psalm whose cry echoes in the concert halls of Paris, Manchester and this very week Las Vegas. That could be heard rising over the wind as Hurricane bears down on Caribbean Island, and whispered in the aftermath of devastation, when life’s all been blown away. Shouted at the heavens when we see things like military forces descend and burn Rohingya village after Rohingya village  in the Rakine state of Myanmar. As a lament it fits right in.

But Psalm 130 is also a psalm of hope. It’s spoken in the long dark night, but it looks forward to the dawn of a new day: to God who is light. It is a Psalm of faith uttered in the depth, it finishes with a declaration of God’s unfailing love and the redemption of God’s people.

The hope comes in the very nature of God. That God does not hold sin against us, writing them down in some divine leger, so he can then write us off, throw us away like a bad investment, or wastage, rather God forgives and restores.  That is not a cheap grace, as E M Blaiklock says ,it  is not as if God were an ‘indulgent Father or an equally fallible friend’ who simply lets us off the hook consequence free, so we can keep going our own way.  Rather as 1 John 1:9 says he forgives because he is ‘faithful and just’ that as we know his forgiveness and his character, we might come to serve him with reverence.

Psalm 130 is a post exilic psalm and Israel knows God forgives sin and restores because they as a remnant had come back to Jerusalem, rebuilt and restarted their lives as God’s worshipping people. God has been faithful to his covenant with Israel, both in sending them into exile, being with them in that exile and hearing their cry and bringing them back again. That is the confidence that the psalmist has in Go’s character, that is the hope of the dawn as he waits in the dark night, it is the hope of the rescue from the depths.

The psalm is uttered in the night of waiting but it looks forward. Not only to God’s intervention in the psalmists personal problem but it looks forward to the coming of God’s light into the world, to the fulfilment of God’s promise to redeem his people from their sin, in the coming of his son Jesus Christ. Not just to pull us from the depths of trouble and strife, but to enable us to have our sins forgiven and be reconciled with God. Pulled out of the depth of sin and death to abundant new life, that is eternal because it is lived in relationship with our eternal God. Our freedom bought by the costly sacrifice of Christ on the cross, a freedom to serve God with reverence.

In the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ we have the dawn of a new day, we can know the confidence that the psalmist does that in God there is forgiveness of sin, we can know the assurance that as we confess our sin, that God is faithful and just and will forgive us our sin and cleanse us from all unrighteousness. With the psalmist we too look forward to the full brightness of that new day when Christ will banish all the darkness of night.

Maybe we all have our own stories of crying to God from the very real depths of life, hoping that God hears and is attentive to our prayer. We’ve had long dark nights where we have sort not only the dawn of the day but the hope that God would shine his light on our situation. Maybe you find yourself in those flood waters today…We have the assurance of God unfailing love shown in his dealing with that most basic and core human need the need for forgiveness and a fresh start. An assurance that our cries are heard and God answers as we await his light to shine afresh on us.  

Sunday, October 1, 2017

God's lifelong love... A Prayer of Thanksgiving and Confession on the International day of the senior person



Eternal God,

Unchanging and constant in your love, You hold our times in your hands.

In your son Jesus Christ your love took on flesh and became one of us

Christ lived, taught, healed and delivered, welcomed back the lost,

Christ suffered and died and rose again

that we might have a fresh start and know abundant and eternal life.

You have poured out your Holy Spirit, your abiding presence with us

And we praise you for your lifelong love, presence and guidance.



We praise you for the joy of childhood

Formative years where your love is known in the care of parent

In the embrace of family and friends

Where life seems to be unfolding before us and we grow every day

 A precious time to be guided and guarded

A time when those who suffer harm and deprivation

Need your great love in hands and hearts that reach out with compassion



We give you thanks for the vitality of youth

Transforming and becoming, blossoming and starting out

The adventures of forging our identity and who we are

New horizons stretching out before us, owning our own faith

A vibrant time full of potential and hope

A time when we need to know your love in the gentle voice of a mentor

Where your Spirit  invites us to explore and hope in ideals



We give you thanks for adulthood

For the growing ability to take on the responsibilities of life

Of finding meaning and purpose in what we do and achieve

In finding love and starting families, in being single and going solo

A time when we look to you O God, to lead and guide us

To bring us the wisdom we need and mature us in your love

To help us contribute, make a difference and leave a legacy



On this day of the senior person we give you praise for age

For looking back on a life well lived, being nana or grandad

Facing new different challenges as the years bring their changes

Having so much still to give, to be of use and valued 

and yes, now slowing needing more to take care of us

A time when our faith has been tested and is strongest

Where we need your presence God to see this long journey through



We give you praise O God for your love our whole life through

 Your love is fresh each morning,  right for each age we pass through

We confess we have sinned and done wrong, and left good undone

We have neglected and abused those who need us the most

We ask for your forgiveness and thank you that you do 

Fill us afresh with your Spirit’s presence and renew us we pray

To live and witness to Jesus Christ, to the glory of God, father son and Holy Spirit

Monday, September 25, 2017

The Flow of God's Saving Power in History (Psalm 68) River Sunday


The Clutha is New Zealand’s second longest river. It flows out of Lake Wanaka in the southern Alpes, through the wonderful rugged landscapes of central Otago, the rich pasture of south Otago, out to the Pacific Ocean about 70 Km south of Dunedin just past the town of Kaitangata. It is a unique and beautiful river with its amazing turquoise blue colour.

It wasn’t intentional but one Summer, we visited both ends of the river in a matter of a couple of days, and travelled along and over much of its length. We went to Lake Wanaka and watched it start it journey, we stopped for lunch by the remains of the old bridge in Alexandra, saw its blue water mix with the grey brown waters of the Kawarau, from Lake Wakatipu. We travelled down through the Cromwell gorge and along lake Dunstan, picked cherries at Roxburgh, visited the Hydodams.

W
e Crossed it by bridge and by car ferry, at Tuapeka mouth. We walked down to one of the two river mouths, in that wonderful long summer dusk they have down south. The whole place bathed in vivid golds as the sun loitered by the horizon.

The thing that sticks out about the Clutha, is yes that wonderful colour, but also the sense of constant flow. Vast volumes of water incessantly moving past. Flowing down through the landscape. You also get the sense of the flow of that river through history as well. Maori settlement near its banks, an early whaling station at its river mouth, the gold rush, the hundred year floods reminding us of the rivers wild power, building of dams to feed New Zealand’s growing demand for power, a whole town moved and then what was left flooded, agricultural change, vineyards in central Otago. When I first spoke at Clinton Church, where we were doing summer supply, my opening joke was that I was happy to be there as I had heard of the revival that was happening, that there were conversions going on all over the countryside, but then I realised it was to dairying, that dramatic change and its impact a pivotal issue in yesterday’s election. The flow of the river and the flow of human history inevitably linked.

Psalm 68, has that sense of flow as well, not of a river through the landscape although it speaks of God’s presence and blessing in terms of the land being watered, but the flow of God’s great deeds in history. It’s attributed as a psalm of David, if it comes from his life then it is very much after he has been made king and is bringing the ark of the covenant up to Jerusalem. Down through the ages its insistence on God’s sovereignty and power, have become a hope for Israel as they faced difficult times, threats from surrounding nations and the rise and fall of empires. It was comfort during the exile in Babylon and the return from that exile of God’s character and his sovereign power.  The same hope that we who look back at it from beyond the cross and resurrection also have in God’s saving acts and the ultimate victory of God’s just and righteous reign, in the Kingdom of God.

The four psalms we’ve been looking at this season of creation, form a subunit within the wider works of the Psalms. In Psalm 65 we saw the whole of creation summoned to come to a praise Party to give thanks to God. Its focus was on the countryside around Jerusalem bursting forth in luscious growth and vitality in response to God’s great deeds: His work in creation and providence, sending the rain, answering prayer and forgiving sin. In Psalm 66 we saw all the earth called to give praise to God, for his saving deeds shown to Israel and to the psalmist himself. In Psalm 67 we saw this extended so that people of every nation and people group tribe and tongue should come and   know God’s saving love; know his just rule and guidance. The ends of the earth and farthest seas are called to join creations praise for its creator and receive his blessing.  Psalm 68 acts as the high point of creations celebrations. The special guest arrives, the central figure appears, God arises and is pictured as coming in a victorious procession to Jerusalem to receive the praise and accolades of humanity and creation. 

It’s a hard psalm for us to appreciate, some of the images it uses are for us strange and foreign and it is full of the violent images of conquest and the brutal dealing with those who have been defeated. It’s good that the kids have gone out because it has an adults only feel with people ankle deep in spilt blood. It should have a warning on it…  for mature faith audiences only…

It’s poetry and pulls its imagery from the world around to speak of God’s victory. It attributed to David a warrior, who may have seen such acts of brutality. It is written to a nation that would have been and periodically was again on the receiving end of such brutal treatment. 

It’s the language of ‘Theophany’ the real physical turning up of God and as such is full of extreme language:  Enemies disappearing like smoke and hills melting like wax. The stars arrayed as God’s burning Chariots.

It also has a cosmic element to it, like apocalyptic language, That God’s moving in history is played out on a heavenly scale. It marks both real events in history but looks forward to the ultimate fufilment of God's soverign reign.  Cannan’s god Ba’al was the god who was seen as being the one who rode on the clouds a storm God, but here it is Israel’s God YHWH that has displaced him and rides on the clouds. It is YHWH who has provided the rain and watered the land. In Luke 20 Jesus quotes from the Psalm 110 and talks of God saying

“‘The Lord said to my Lord:

“Sit at my right hand

until I make your enemies

a footstool for your feet.”

From beyond Jesus life and death and resurrection we can see that the enemies that are defeated here are ‘sin, and injustice, evil and as it says in 1 Corinthians 15:26 that final enemy, of humanity and creation, death and decay itself. Paul in Ephesians also picks up this language, “For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places.”



Psalm 68 also reminds us that God is full of compassion and concern and righteous. He is a father to the fatherless, a defender of the widows, the people of low or no status in society. He sets the lonely in families, and leads the prisoners out with singing. God’s rule is about justice and he opposes those who in act and entrench injustice.



The psalm gives us a picture of God’s saving acts through the wilderness and exodus. His providing water in the desert and as Israel come into the land, of there being plenty of water and a bounty of crops. Again, God’s purpose is to ensure there is enough for all including the poor.



In verse 11 the scene changes and in a profound way we see God’s word being announced by a group of women and the effect of that being God’s enemies are scattered. EM Blaiklock suggests this is a reference to Deborah in the book of Judges, calling God’s people together to battle, king Sisera, and his army being routed. His chariots of iron bogging down in the swamps before Mt Tabor. The difficult verses in that stanza may revolve around Jeal, killing Sisera by agreeing to hide him then driving a tent peg through his head. The passage finishes with a picture of God scattering the kings of the earth like snow on the mountain. It’s quite profound that it speaks of the impact of Women who are prepared to speak God’s truth to power. It is an affirmation of the place of women in that proclamation. Foreshadowing the women who were given the privilege of being the first to proclaim Christ is not dead he is alive, and are still called to proclaim that.



Mount Bashan refers to a rugged mountain range to the north east of the Jordan, it is a place known for its abundant grass lands and its healthy cattle. But this place blessed with natural abundance is told seen as being jealous of the lesser peak of Zion because that mountain is where God chooses to dwell.



In verse 24 the procession comes into view God is coming to his sanctuary, he is accompanied by all the tribes of Israel. Although only four are mentioned they are the ones from the furthest south and from the furthest north so represent all Israel coming together. They are led by singers and dancers. Not only that but as the procession moves on we see kings coming to bring gifts to honour Israel’s God. God in his strength also rebukes the nations that delight in war. The bulls amongst the reeds is an image of Egypt, and the bull amongst the calves gives the idea of the fat cattle and strong kings pushing and driving people to war. It is God who brings peace not only to Israel but to all the world.



The psalm finishes with all the kingdoms of the earth gathered in song, worshipping God for his power and his mighty deeds.



All Humanity joins with the creation in Psalm 65 in giving praise to God for what he has done for us. It is a psalm that looks forward to the coming of Jesus and the universal proclamation of God’s salvation, while it speaks of the blood of enemies, the blood that Is spilled to free us from the tyranny of sin and death is Christs. This is Good News for all humanity for all creation. It’s the postscript and the missing stanzas for this psalm, the continued flow of God’s coming and moving in history, bringing salvation and the possibility and reality of new creation. 



Its river Sunday, and how does that relate to Psalm 68.



But we also need to look what the psalm tells us about the physical rivers of our world as well. The fact that while we may see the whole water cycle and rivers and lakes as a natural process, the Psalmist sees it as a show of God’s blessing and providence. Israel are a desert people and for them constant and consistent water courses are of paramount importance. They are a real blessing. The land is full of wadi’s dry river beds that only run with water when it rains. We are used to a more temperate climate, with a reliable water source and plenty of rain, rivers that flow from snow-capped mountains or the drenched hills and mountains that form the spin of our island homes. We are effected by changes in weather and over the past decade we’ve seen droughts in many areas, and of course this year is going to be known as the year that it didn’t stop raining.  But we can forget how precious water is and how important our river systems are as well. With increased population, increased intensification of farming and intensification of urban and industrial water use we are in danger of losing this valuable gift. Already we have rivers in this country that are undrinkable and unswimable. It may have been easier for us to remember rivers as part of our summer holiday experience than the children here today. Whatever the makeup of parliament, we need to continue to be working at cleaning up rivers and looking at ways of preserving our God given water.



Rivers flow through the landscapes but also human history, and what we need is a change in that flow, of how we think about our rivers and water use. It’s a creation issues; caring for what God has given us; it’s a justice issue, Psalm 68 says God sends the rain to provide for the poor out of the bounty it provides. On an international scale that challenges us as well. Jesus parable of the sheep and the goats, talks of giving a drink of water to those who are thirsty as doing it for Jesus.



We didn’t have it read to us but in Ezekiel 43 there is another vision of Theophany, of God dwelling with his people in the sanctuary in Jerusalem. It is of a river starting at the altar and flowing through the temple and out into city and out into the countryside and down the hills into the dead sea. Where it flows there is new life, tress grow that always fruit and whose fruit brings healing. Even the dead sea laden with salt and minerals begins to team with life. God’s victory and God’s love and justice brings living water to the whole land. Like the Clutha it flows through the landscape, but also it flows through human history as well. It is a river that flows in Jesus Christ, the living water, that brings new life and healing, it flows as the Holy Spirit is poured out on all who believe. In our New Testament reading this morning from Acts, Paul goes looking for a Jewish place of prayer, down by the river. In the diaspora if there were not enough Jewish men to form a synagogue then they would meet by a river to pray…looking back to their exile in Babylon, where by the rivers of Babylon we sat down and their we wept when we remembered Zion.’ But here that greater river of living water flows into the life of Lydia and her household gathered there and they receive the living water of Jesus, the river flows into Europe. You and I find ourselves caught up in that rivers flow as we have come to know Jesus Christ and that river now flows through us to bring life and healing to the world around us, as we are prepared to let it well up more and more in our lives.  

 

Lets pray

Monday, September 18, 2017

Wilderness Renewal: from the Ends of the Earth to the ends of the earth... (Psalm 67)


I love the rugged west coast of Auckland, places like Piha, when it’s not crowded, Karekare, Muriwai and Whatipu. If I may be a little poetic…The drive out through the Waitakeres, separating you from the city streets and sights,  with the evergreen of native tree. The cliffs and bush clad hills sweeping down sharply to the iron sand beaches, that resound to the crash and boom of pounding surf.  Walking along the beach being accompanied by foam flurries and those little tumbling seed heads which bounce and skid past in the wind. There is a kind of awe that comes into my soul in those places, you feel on the very edge of the world, and I feel close to God.

It’s the same sort of thing that you can experience as you go along the desert road and after navigating the twists and turns of creeks flowing through that rather desolate landscape you come up to the plateau and there off to your right (if you’re going south) are the awe inspiring mountains Tongariro, Ngauruhoe and Ruapehu. They take your breath away. Maybe you’ve been more off the beaten track than I have and its tramping through bush clad hills or deep southern beech forest, or you’ve been overseas and there are wilderness places that stick in your memory: Glaciers and snowy peaks, jungle greenery, desert dunes, places that feel like the ends of the earth, that inspired awe and praise. The proclaim the greatness of the creator.

In this season of creation, we are working our way through a series of four psalms that speak of God’s awesome deeds and calls all of creation to give praise to God for what he has done and is doing: for Creation, for his sovereignty in the world, for his providence and as we saw last week for his saving acts for Israel. In Psalm 65 it was cause for a praise party, agricultural and pastoral fields, alive with rejoicing. In Psalm 67 that invitation is extended to the ends of the earth, not just the land we inhabit and use but the wild and wilderness places, as well. Not just Israel or the church but  all people and all of creation to come and praise God for his awesome deeds.

The Psalm we are looking at today builds on the previous one, it extends God’s saving grace and acts to a universal level. No longer just Israel but the whole of the earth, all nations and all people groups, all tribes and tongues are to come and know God’s salvation and God’s Kingdom. It starts and finishes with a benediction a blessing, and in between there is a prayer that all peoples would know God’s righteous rule and his guiding presence.


I remember one day going out to the beach and in front of the sun was a large storm cloud. There were rays of light coming through breaks in the cloud and shining down like spotlights on the water. The patches where it hit looked like sparkling jewels on what was otherwise a grey and foreboding sea.  As I continued to walk along the beach suddenly the clouds moved further offshore and the sun came out, the sky and the sea turned blue and the whole place was filled with light. The opening benediction of this psalm is like that. It takes the words of the Aaronic blessing in Numbers 6 “the Lord Bless you and keep you, the Lord make his face to shine upon you, the lord lift up his countenance upon you and give you peace”, which was a blessing specifically for Israel, like they are in that beam of God’s light and presence and peace and takes it over the border to include all nations. It’s a radical Psalm for Israel that includes all the pagan nations around them as objects of God’s love and his blessing. 

 It looks back to the blessing of Abraham in Genesis 12, where Abraham is blessed to be a blessing to the nations. It reminds Israel that their mission is to show God’s goodness and justice to the world.  It looks forward to the coming of Jesus Christ, his death on the cross and his resurrection and the amazing truth that this new life in relationship with God, is not just for the Jews but for the gentiles as well. It’s for all people. The sun has come out and shines on all.   EM Blaiklock sums it up like this…

“God’s rich benevolence, bathing humanity and the world like the life giving and comforting sun. In order that those who are blessed may pass the blessing to others…”

The central section of Psalm 67 is a prayer that that blessing might become a reality. It starts and finishes with the petition  “may the people praise you, God; may all the peoples praise you.” And is a hope that all people may experience the joy that Israel knows because of their relationship with God. In verse 3 & 5 the psalmist had used the Hebrew word for nations but in this repeated refrain it is extended to be more universal, it is a call to all people groups and tribes. God’s love and grace is for all. God’s love is for all humanity fulfilled in Jesus Christ: For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son. Just like the sun shines over all the earth and gives it light and warmth so God’s love is for all people.

Rules with equity and guides the nations look forward to what we know as the Kingdom of God, inaugurated by Christ. It looks forward to the reality of the presence of God’s Holy Spirit poured out on all who believe to lead us and to guide us in God’s ways. The picture is of God as the Good Shepherd caring for his flock and leading them to good pasture and plenty.

The psalm is a mission prayer, it’s a prayer that is answered in Jesus commission to his disciples, to you and I as those whom he has blessed, to go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit and teaching them everything I have commanded you, and I am with you even to the end of the age.  We fit into this psalm not only as those from outside Israel, from the ends of the earth,  who have come to know God’s blessing and ways in Christ, but as embodiment of its central prayer.

The final benediction is a statement of confidence in God’s blessing. Israel has experienced God’s blessing in the plentiful harvest as we saw in Psalm 65 and here God’s care and love for all peoples is seen as resulting in that same bounty in all lands.  Now we know that that is not a present reality, there is famine and drought and starvation and malnutrition. This benediction looks forward in hope to what God is going to do. Gerald H Wilson comments “ there is an apocalyptic expectation that as the fractured and corrupted earth is restored to its originally intended productivity so fractured and divided humanity will be restored to its originally intended unity and reliance on God.” It is the whole of nature groaning waiting for the sons of God to be revealed that Paul talks about in Romans.

This is not just some distant future hope, in the opening benediction God’s blessing was to cause the nations to know God’s ways. Abraham was blessed so he could be a blessing on others. In James 2 it says what good does it do to say to your brother or sister bless you and send them away empty handed. God’s provision is to be shared with those in need and through that people will see his goodness and come to acknowledge him.


It's wilderness Sunday, and it would be easy to simply talk about care and preservation of the wild and wonderful places in this world. Places that do need our protection and care. When we thing of the land producing its harvest you can think of land only in terms of its usefulness to humans. We can forget about how the various wilderness environments contribute to the whole ecosystem. How these different places are God’s provision of various habitats for God’s amazing creatures, it is God’s blessing that they produce the harvest needed to sustain that life.  On a spiritual level as the Psalms say they proclaim the wonder of God’s awesome deeds.  National Parks and world wilderness heritage sites marine reserves, and other conservation efforts are wonderful.

But I want to finish however by going off the deep end a bit and talk about the place of the wilderness in spiritual renewal and revitalizing the faith. In scripture and church history the wilderness has often been the place where people’s faith and in fact God’s people, both Israel and the Church have found renewal of faith and zeal for sharing God’s blessing with the world.

Israel’s journey to learn how to be God’s people was in the wilderness, in scripture Israel looks back to that time, as pivotal and formative.  They learned to rely on God, the lessons were not always easy, they didn’t always get it. But it was the preparation they needed to move into the promised land.

In the passage from Matthews gospel we had read today, John the Baptist was out in the wilderness calling people to repentance and to spiritual renewal. There is sometime important about stepping out of the everyday into the wild places and the edge that allows for that renewal to happen. It’s in the wilderness that Jesus comes and starts his ministry, he is baptized by John and goes out into the wilderness and is tempted for forty days, in preparation for his ministry. During his ministry Jesus would regularly go away from the crowd out in the wilderness and the lonely places and pray. There is something about it that renews the soul.

Under emperor Constantine Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire, and one of the big question in church history is was that a good thing or a bad thing? It’s the start of Christendom, one of the responses to that was the desert Fathers. People who went out and sort for spiritual renewal in the wilderness. Some of them went to great extremes and we have stories of crazed hermits, but for many of them there came a renewal of the Christian faith, a renewal of discipleship and passion for the gospel.

The Celtic monks followed in that line as well instead of going to the desert they held on to the craggy seashore of Ireland and were willing to travel and wander in the wilderness.  They would go to seek a place where they could focus on developing their relationship with God. What would happen is they would set up their community and they would become a place of healing and learning, on many levels and become places of plenty as there agricultural practises tended to be better. People would come and join them and there are many towns and cities in Scotland and England that grew round them. They Christianize Ireland, Scotland and helped re-Christianize much of Europe in the dark ages. Where ever they went they shared the good news along the way. It just flowed out of them. I ’ve mentioned it before but there is a great book called “the day that the Irish saved civilization’ that talks of the impact the Celtic monks had on the world.

Francis of Assisi, is another who sort spiritual renewal and revival by going out into the wilderness.

While it wasn’t exactly the wilderness, john Wesley and later movements like the   salvation army responded to the industrial revolution by going to the edge and into the urban wastelands that sprung up, and preaching and serving there.

Now I’m not saying we need to all move out to through the  Waitakere’s and go live in a cave out on the west coast, or find a craggy outcrop on the side of the mountain somewhere to spend years meditating and praying. But there is a lesson for us from those west coast beaches. In New Zealand for water safety reasons we are always told to swim between the flags, as a parent with the kids we will always try and swim between the flags. But at the same time as a body boarder my eyes would wander to the wild waves, where maybe it wasn’t so safe, but the waves were better. We’ve allowed that water safety message to apply to our faith as well. We’ll only go in between the flags, in a well defined safe environment. But our faith needs a bit of wilderness, its needs a bit of wild, not just tame and safe. God’s inviting us to meet him in the wild waves, in the wilderness places, on the edge, where it’s not safe, off the beaten path. That might be going on a retreat, or as Leonard Sweet calls them Wilderness spiritual advances, it maybe willing to step out of our comfort zones to do something we’ve never done before… But just like when we find ourselves awestruck by a ocean coast vista or mountain range or forest or desert landscape, it’s in those more wild places we will experience God’s presence, provision and glory. It is as we are prepared to step into the wild that we will renew our sense of God’s love for all the world and his call for us to go and share, and be, the good news of God’s kingdom.

Monday, September 11, 2017

A Covenant Relationship with the Land (Psalm 66)


Land and stories go together. Wonderfully illustrated in New Zealand’s and possibly the world’s longest place name, given to an unassuming hill near Poranagahau in the Hawkes Bay, "Taumatawhakatangihangakoauauotamateaturipukakapikimaungahoronukupokaiwhenuakitanatahu”, its 85 characters long and tells a love story. in English it is "the place where Tamatea, the man with the big knees, who slid, climbed and swallowed mountains, known as 'landeater’, played his flute to his loved one." The locals just call the place Taumata hill for short.  

Land and identity are also very linked, as people groups, families and individuals… I was named ‘Howard” after the place where our family lived when I was born… “Point Howard” in Wellington, and of course I am always grateful that the family didn’t live in Christchurch in the suburb of Shirley. But having moved to Titirangi, in west Auckland when I was very young I can’t help but look at the Waitakere’s or down at the Manukau and feel a sense of belonging to that place. You could say “Mt Atkinson is my mountain and Big muddy creek is my river.”

Faith and land also go together. Our faith looks back to the Israel, to the small town of Bethlehem, a cross on a hill outside Jerusalem, an empty tomb carved into the rock, a gathering of disciples in an upper room in Jerusalem as the spirit of God descended on them.  Our denominations journey looks back to the Celtic saints and places like the island of Iona that St Columba used as a base for the Christianization of Scotland. It moves through the city of Geneva where John Knox fled religious persecution and sat under the teaching and influence of John Calvin. It moves to lands and islands where the missionary descendants of those people went to share the gospel.  In New Zealand it holds the story of people coming from all over. As a parish it talks of early growth of the town of Ellerslie, and the housing developments in Mt Wellington in the 40’s and 50’s and a coming together of two congregations that were planted to be God’s people in those places,  to this place and this building.

On a personal level there are places that I readily identify with significant events in my faith journey. Some church buildings like The little war memorial church on park road in Titirangi where I first experienced the reality of the presence of God, and the present Presbyterian Church there where that experience developed into a strong faith and I was nurtured and encouraged to take on leadership and ministry. There are many others, including this one. Beyond church buildings, places like Piha where I was baptized in a stream. The hill above the Arataki information center on the scenic drive where I went to pray when I had to decide about staying in Auckland or moving to Rotorua, and received a profound answer from God through his word. I remember God's guidance everytime I go past that hill. Even last week sitting on Maungakiekie (one tree hill) early in the morning and having God speak encouragement from my daily devotions. Probably you have those same connections to places as well. I don't think I will look at One Tree Hill anymore without remembering Paul's words "Do not Lose Heart" As you held the small pottle of dirt this morning in the service those kinds of stories, of who you are and your relationship with God may have come to mind.

The psalm we read this morning, invites all the earth to come and praise God and rejoice because of ‘His awesome deeds!’ following on from the psalm we looked at last week, this is not just an invite to the earths various people groups but the whole of creation to join in a great praise party. The previous psalm ended with images of harvest fields joining in a liturgical dance with the wind, grasses and wild flowers responding to God sending of rain, by painting the normally barren hillsides with vivid color. Animals reveling in what God has provided and the hills dressing themselves in there festive finery. As it was Forest Sunday we saw that as a reference to the forest and trees which Isaiah 55 tells us clap their hands with joy because of God’s saving deeds. If you’d seen the Church car park here on Thursday you’d think the trees were holding a dance party as the cabbage tree leaves shivered and shimmied in the wind, the Pohutukawa in the corner rock its head back and forwards and everything was in motion, as the wind blew.  

Psalm 66 invites all the earth to give thanks to God for his awesome deeds and moves on from the previous Psalm which looked at those deeds as creation, forgiveness, God’s sovereignty and God’s provision to look specifically at God’s saving acts for Israel. The Psalm gives no indication of when it was written, but it was a time when God had once again delivered Israel from their enemies, but like most of the Psalms it ties that in historically with the exodus. Specifically, God leading the people of Israel through the red sea and through the Jorden river on dryland. Leading them to victory over the various tribes and nations that had opposed them. The whole of creation is to see that what God has done for Israel now  is as miraculous as those two occasions and only makes sense when you see that it is God who is moving, God who is on the side of his people. For you and I equally we look back at the cross and the resurrection as God’s saving act in history, one that only makes sense when it viewed from the reality of God.

The psalmist then invites the people of the earth to see that God has been with and for his people during those past events and this present event and his purpose was to refine Israel. The imagery used in verse 8-12 are those of smelting precious metals like Gold and silver going through the furnace to have all the dross removed. Israel can look at the hardships and difficulties they have been through and see God using them to bring them in closer and closer relationship with him. Despite the fierce suffering’ says Gerald H Wilson, “ God’s intention for His people were good from the beginning and a blessing in the end when he bought them to a place of abundance.”

At the end of verse 12 the psalmist tells us Israel is bought to a place of abundance. In the case of the exodus it was into the land of Milk and honey, as a fulfillment of God’s promise to Abraham. For Israel their relationship with the land and the lands around them is very much tied to their relationship with God, and their identity as God’s people. Israel’s story cannot be separated from the land, their continued occupation was dependent on their keeping their covenant with God and God’s covenant faithfulness, in the exile there hope was for God to restore them and during the diaspora, their heart cry had always been ‘next year in Jerusalem’… Now the Psalmist equally sees the end of the time of hardship and a return to knowing all the good things of God in that light as well.

The psalm then takes a turn. It moves from the Awesome deeds of God being for Israel to the psalmist’s individual experience of God’s forgiveness. It turns from communal experience of God’s salvation to personal testimony. From ‘Us” to “I”. The psalmist offers sacrifices to God and  invites God’s people to see that God has answered his personal prayers, forgiven him and bought him through the time of testing to being right with God. It’s a personal testimony of God’s saving grace. Creation is invited to see God’s awesome deeds in creation, forgiveness, sovereignty, provision and saving his people and now that becomes personal. It opens the psalm up to all of us to join our stories, our experience of the grace of God in Jesus Christ, our journeys through times, and suffering to places of abundant life. For God’s people to hear and be encouraged by and as part of why all of creation should rejoice and celebrate God’s goodness. In Jesus parables of the lost sheep and coin, the punch line is that the whole of heaven rejoices and parties when one sinner repents.

The psalm also gives a good picture of the truly repentant heart as one that does not cherish sin in my heart. It is easy to say the religious words of forgiveness but it requires a change of heart. Seeking God’s good not our own sinful desires.

It’s land Sunday and what does this have to say to us about the land.

We can’t simply bring the idea of Israel’s covenant relationship with God and its effect on the land forward to our own situation today.  We are not Israel, some people have tried to do that and it is a false interpretation of the scriptures. Brian Tamaki for instance made the connection between moral standards in New Zealand and natural disasters. That is in my humble opinion a wrong understanding of scripture. But when we think of land in New Zealand we do have to think of a covenant relationship, between Maori as Tangata Whenua, people of the land and the crown, the treaty of Waitangi. Part of the historical reasoning behind the treaty was that because of the awakening in England after the Wesleyan revivals that amongst the social changes that occurred such as the abolition of slavery and child labor, the setting up the RSPCA to look after animals, the push for universal education, and a great missionary movement, in foregin policy it showed itself in a desire to treat other people groups with respect and honorably, in New Zealand’s case with a treaty between two equal peoples. Sadly our history is that that covenant agreement has not always been honored. We have a bad track record. While there have been some attempts to address the wrongs of the past, we still have a long way to go to honor the intent of that treaty, it impacts on how we think of land and use land and make decisions today and in to the future, and who gets to make those decision.

Israel’s covenant relationship with God did have an impact on the land. As you look through the books of the law that make us the beginning of the scripture you see that their relationship called them to treat the land with respect and care. I guess you’d call them sustainable farming practices. While I don’t think you can simply take those practice across to be a text book for modern land uses. However, they do question intensification of farming where instead of harvest being a gift of god’s abundance land we can push for ever higher and higher productivity. The impact of such things on our waterways are an example of how this is not sustainable. 

Israel’s covenant relationship also spoke to who was to benefit from the land. The land was given not just for those who had the wealth to acquire it and profit from it, in fact Israel had strong laws to stop the wealthy from taking a lion’s share of the land. The jubilee was to be a time when land was given back to its original owners. It could be why it never happened. But the poor were to be allowed to glean the crops in the fields. In the book of Ruth Boaz instructs his harvesters to leave a little extra for Ruth and Naomi, yes because he was attracted to Ruth but also because he was a honest and righteous man. In a time of increased inequality, it’s important that remember that the abundance of the land is to be for the benefit of all. In our more urban non-agrarian world, it may be more about living wages and a better welfare system, be it governmental or the non-government sector.  Part of the housing crisis is that instead of having the New Zealand dream that everyone should be able to own a home we tell ourselves the narrative that land ownership is wealth creation. Even first home buyers are said to be getting on the first rung of the property market, rather than simply getting a home for their family.

Going back to the connection between the land and God’s awesome deeds. The land as part of God’s creation is invited to join in giving praise to God for what he has done. I think it calls us who know God’s salvation and grace, who have experienced God’s lavish love and mercy should care for our fellow worshiper. Psalm 65 painted a picture of the land in its festive best as both God’s provision and as being called to celebrate his awesome deeds. The picture is of creation in its finest, not as beaten and battered, marred and scared, polluted and misused, limping in and made to stand at the back like the poor person in James chapter 2, while we all jostle for front row seats. Our story of God’s awesome saving deeds in Jesus Christ, is one of grace that calls us to new relationship with God, a love for God’s people and a universal call to all people to know God’s goodness and it calls us to identify with the land God has given and to care for it as God’s creation.  It is the story of God leading all of us to a place of his abundance.