Posts

Showing posts from February, 2025

Love and forgiveness: Joseph, Jesus and us.

Genesis 45:3-11, 15           Luke 6:27-38 A sermon in two parts: Introduction to first reading   We all know the story of Joseph, thanks to Tim Rice & Andrew Lloyd-Webber’s “Joseph and his amazing technicolour dreamcoat”. But today we hear a part of the story which rather gets glossed over in the rush to a happy ending in the musical. Joseph, the Pharoah’s second-in-command, is directing the storage of food during the famine in Egypt. His father Jacob, unaware that Joseph is even alive, has sent his other sons to Egypt for food, as the famine is also affecting them, in Canaan. Joseph finally decides that it’s time to reveal his identity to his brothers.   Genesis 45:3-11, 15   Talk 1 We have heard what must have been a very tense moment for the brothers, as they realise that the very brother they tried to kill, and then sold into slavery, Joseph, is standing in front of them. He is now a high-ranking Egypt...

Blessed? or surprised... (3 before Lent)

  Luke 6: 17-26  & Psalm 1 When did a sermon last take you by surprise? For most of us – when we’re sitting in the pews, anyway – it’s time to settle down, pop in a mint imperial, and wait to hear some interesting things about God, or the Bible, or the life of Jesus. I wonder whether the crowd who first heard what we heard Jesus say today had similar expectations to us? Perhaps they expected something like Psalm 1: happy are those who have kept away from the wicked, from sinners, or the scornful. There is a translation of this called “the Message” which re-imagines the Psalm like this:   How well God must like you—      you don’t walk in the ruts of those blind-as-bats,      you don’t stand with the good-for-nothings,      you don’t take your seat among the know-it-alls. Instead you thrill to   God ’s Word,      you chew on Scripture day and night. You’re a...

Being part of the work of God’s kingdom, in a world which is in a mess.

  Isaiah 6: 1-13, Luke 5: 1-11 Introduction to readings Our first reading about the ‘call of Isaiah’ – though we’re going to read on today to hear the message Isaiah is sent to tell the people. Isaiah lived in a chaotic period of Israel's history during the 8th century BCE. At this time, the nation was divided into two kingdoms: the Northern Kingdom of Israel and the Southern Kingdom of Judah. Both kingdoms faced pressures from the nations surrounding them. The Northern Kingdom had already fallen to the Assyrian Empire, and both Israel and Judah had turned away from God in the interests of political survival. To a world which was in a mess; in a world which we might feel is in a mess today, let’s hear the words God speaks through Isaiah.   Sermon Traditionally we might all have seen both our Bible readings today as passages about call, especially call to ministry: but given the mess the world is in, I want to look at them again today, thinking about...