Showing posts with label R. S. Thomas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label R. S. Thomas. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 April 2018

Love's risen body

The text of a sermon preached at the Cathedral Eucharist on the Second Sunday of Easter.  As i was preparing to preach, I came across a news story on the BBC website entitled Can you be spiritual if you don't believe in God?  More than half of the British population identify as having no religion. The sociologist Linda Woodhead describes them ‘nones’ - rejecting the categories of secular or religious, but still affirming a spiritual side to life. In this context, the BBC asks people to explain what spirituality means to them. 

In the article above, Barbara describes her spiritual life as enabling her to move away from hatred towards compassion, forgiveness and love.  Ziad names the pressure of individualism and self-indulgence; seeing in all religions expressions of the one truth, the divine spark in us. Hugh talks about being an orphan from infancy and discovering that he had a Father who was God.  Reverend Bonnie talks about the way in which doubt and questions have shaped her personal development. She says ‘certainty closes doors. Doubt deepens faith’. 

It's the final comment which feels pertinent when preaching about Thomas' response to being absent when the disciples encounter their risen Lord behind closed doors. It's become a truism to say that faith and doubt aren't opposites; questioning and conviction often go hand in hand. What we see in Thomas a deep desire to be assured of the extent of transformation brought about by resurrection - it is the wounded Jesus who is risen, defeating death. 

I begin with another Thomas: R. S. Thomas whose own ministry grapples with the nature of presence and absence, and persistence in the way of faith.


Alleluia: Christ is risen!
He is risen indeed: alleluia!

Lines from the welsh priest-poet R. S. Thomas [The Answer]:

There have been times
when, after long on my knees
in a cold chancel, a stone has rolled
from my mind, and I have looked
in and seen the old questions lie
folded and in a place
by themselves, like the piled
graveclothes of love’s risen body.

Like the Thomas of today’s Gospel, his witness to ‘love’s risen body’ flows from the intersection between certainty and doubt, sight and insight. 

They walk with us - these faithful Thomases - as old questions resolve in faith: in silence and waiting, in seeking and hoping, in absence and presence, and in kneeling to pray, 

Belief flows from the defeat of death itself. 




In the days following the resurrection event, Jesus’ disciples have been grappling with the reality of an empty tomb and rumours of encounter with the one who was their lord, teacher and friend.

As they gathered behind closed doors, did the beloved disciple share the experience of sudden realisation as he saw grave clothes piled up in a tomb? Did he describe the way in which that absence awakened in him an ever present love?

Did Mary Magdalene take the risk of seeking them out, her heart pounding as she hammered at a locked door? As the bolt slides back, she rushes in; her breathless declaration ‘I have seen the Lord’ flowing from a faith which lets go and embraces new life.

They talked about these things: these moments of recognition and these transformed lives. Their old questions shifted to make space for new ways of thinking, giving way to new life.  

A stone rolled back; piled grave clothes; love’s risen body.

The very person who was crucified is risen.

They see his wounded side.

And Jesus speaks words of peace.

They see the marks of death.

Their fear is turned to joy.

And Jesus repeats the promise, the gift, the truth, the hope: Peace be with you.

This moment of encounter is an awakening of a new community: a community which is breathed into existence. 

Those who are gathered together in a room are sent into the world. 

Jesus’ death and resurrection have changed the world: this is the ultimate reality of the power of God’s love to create, heal, forgive and bless. 

But the world is changed through them, through their witness; it is changed through us, through our witness that love wins.

In an act of recreation, love’s wounded and risen body gives to them the gift of the Spirit: a gift which continues to seek reconciliation; a gift which bequeaths mercy and justice; a gift which pursues forgiveness; a gift which dares to hope. 

The church is a wounded body; a body which dares to speak of love’s risen power.  Walking in the step of Jesus demands humility and courage; compassion and patience.  Small acts which resist the toxicity of hatred; repeated gestures which build peace; dogged perseverance that things can change.

In the complexity of our lives and the uncertainty of our world, that can sound naively optimistic, but there are glimpses of realistic hope.

Watching the BBC’s My Dad, the Peace Deal and Me last week offers one such glimpse (quotations from the Irish Times).  It’s a searching and disarming documentary by comedian Patrick Kielty: his father was killed in the troubles; his family resisted revenge. Twenty years after after the Good Friday Agreement, he continues to search out fresh perspectives on the way forward - remanning equally open minded when interviewing the DUP’s Arlene Foster of Sinn Féin’s Emma Rogan.  



Today Stormont is deserted and Brexit presents new obstacles. The experience of violence and mistrust are grievances which way heavily. And yet. And yet transformation is possible. The peace campaigner blinded by a British soldier’s bullet speaks of the way forgiveness brings freedom; it ‘allows us [you] to let go’. Those Kielty meets in schools and comedy clubs, on the Belfast streets and in his home town hold onto the hope expressed my Mo Mowlam: ‘it may take a wee while but we’re going to make it’.

We’re going to make it. God’s Kingdom will come near in small steps amounting to unimaginable change.

Reconciliation takes time.  It is a glimpse of love’s risen body transforming wounds. As Kielty puts it: ‘where there’s peace, there’ll always be a wee bit of hope’.

This is the hope of forgiveness that love’s risen, still wounded body, breathes into us: forgiveness is a process; there is no coercion; each of us can chose moment by moment to accept that gift and be embraced by it; to refuse it or withhold it.

Thomas stands with us - like us - in that place of hesitation.  He has heard his friends talk about the peace of love’s risen body.

Rather than seeing him as the doubter or the skeptic, the pragmatist who wants to see for himself; perhaps he is just like every other disciple, then and now, grappling with loss and the most profound grief.

He hesitates with his tears and questioning; he’s seen some run away from the cross and others waiting at the tomb.




He, like us, waits for the old questions to answered; for fears to be rolled back like the stone. He needs to know that the horror and scandal of death - of the death of his Lord - to be overcome.

As the poet and writer John Gardener puts it:  ‘For [Thomas] to believe, death itself - and those specific wounds - would need to be overcome. It would have to be transformed, all of it… Thomas would have to see the very thing that had crippled him and broken his spirit undone’ [John in the Company of Poets]. 

Jesus speaks peace to his anxious heart.

Jesus tells him: what you most fear has been turned into life.

Death has been overcome by love’s risen body.

And Thomas declares the truth of his heart; the reality of his experience; the meaning of the Gospel.

My Lord and my God!

My Lord and my God!

Thomas rejoices that in Jesus God is with us. His death restores life to our frail, wounded, suffering and mortal bodies.

Jesus is God himself, in the fullness of our humanity, overcoming the enemy of death. He is love’s risen body.

Here at this Eucharist, our fears are dispelled by the peace we share; in broken bread and wine outpoured, we rejoice at transformed wounds and restored life.

We are called by name as witnesses to a new reality: like Thomas, belief is rooted in recognising this new life in love’s risen body.  




Such life is not an abstract ideal or unobtainable ideal. It is found in a person.  Because Jesus lives and overcame death, we too live.

We are united with as members of his body: love’s risen body.

We are to communicate that love in our body language:

Dare we have the confidence of Moses: encouraging others to stand firm, to not be afraid, to trust that God will guide us?

Dare we have the boldness of Thomas: naming our hurts, declaring our faith and having the courage to place our trust in the risen Lord?

Dare we follow the example of the early church: witnessing to our faith with grace and passion and striving to deepen our fellowship with each other?

To be members of love’s risen body is to be willing to put all that we have - and all that we are - at the disposal of God, in the service of others - in words of peace and in generosity, in acts of trust and in a movement towards forgiveness.

Alleluia: Christ is risen!
He is risen indeed: alleluia!



© Julie Gittoes 2018

Friday, 3 April 2015

Christ walking

The Coming by R. S. Thomas

And God held in his hand
A small globe. Look he said,
The son looked. Far off.
As through water, he saw
A scorched land of fierce
Colour. The light burned
There; crusted buildings
Cast their shadows: a bright
Serpent. A river
Uncoiled itself, radiant
With slime
                            On a bare
Hill a bare tree saddened
The sky, many People
Held out their thin arms
To it, as though waiting
For a vanished April
To return to its crossed
Boughs. The son watched
Them. Let me go there, he said.


Chris Gollon: Women of Jerusalem (2013)

Let me go there, he said.

God’s Son dwells with us. He comes to this small globe – a light of water and light and colour; a place of buildings and shadows.  He comes to us; to a people whose arms are out stretched in longing; to a people waiting in hope and fear.  Let me go there, he said; to a bare hill and a saddened tree.

R. S. Thomas’s poem captures our human condition.  It is both bleak and luminous. Such is the complexity of our world, our lives.  God does not just look on – watching us build and create and desire.  God comes to us. For God so love the world he sent his only Son.  The one who abided with his Father comes to us and dwells amongst us.

Christ walks in our midst.  Let me go there, he said.  Over the course of his ministry, Jesus has walked the length and breadth of the land.  As he does so he encounters crowds and pays attention to individuals; he captures imaginations with parables and arouses wonder and outrage with his acts of generous mercy and transformation.

He walks.  And many follow: the lost and the least; the curious and the hopeful; the bold and the restored.

Today the voice of earthly authority is shouted down; Pilate wants to release Jesus.  He finds no grounds for the death sentence; he cannot equate the man standing in front of him with the charges against him.  He hopes that flogging will suffice. He does not prevail.  His verdict colludes with their demands. Political expediency claims another victim.   Crucify, crucify, crucify.

This victim is Emmanuel. The one who dwelt with us, walking among us and calling us to follow, is led away to a bare hill and saddened tree.

They led him away.  And coming towards the crowd is a Simon of Cyrene.  They seize him.  They lay the cross on him.  He carries it. He follows Jesus.  Does he cast his eyes down to the ground, bearing the weight and fearing lest he stumble? Or does he focus his gaze on the crowned head in front of him? He is following Jesus, walking the steps of suffering and humiliation; bearing the weight of brutality and injustice.  And he looks ahead, and the crowned head.  The thorns piercing matted sweat soaked, bloody hair.

If we dare to look up we see a head crowned with thorns; we see the vulnerability of the nape of his neck; our eyes bore into the back of his head as our footsteps are placed in his.
Let me go there, he said. To a people whose arms are stretched out in need and longing, in desperation.  He walks.  Simon follows.  A great number of the people followed.  And there is a double lament.

The women beat their breasts and wail for him. Their lament is gut wrenching and visceral; they rend their hearts as they follow this man who has loved, who has walked among them, reaching out to them. But Jesus turns his head to face them.  Daughters, he says, weep not for me.  His lament is reproachful and sorrowful.

We too lament: we lament the brutality of conflict and injustice; we lament over the words that embitter us and the people who are alienated from us; we lament the divisiveness of policies that pit one generation against another; we lament the exploitation of the earth’s resources.  We weep not just for the one who walks ahead of us; but for those who walk with us and those who follow us.

Do we pass by or mock or lament?  Every footstep Jesus takes, is a step with us in the anguish of our world, the personal burdens, all that overwhelms us as we see the scale of human suffering. In every step he takes, bears the pain and sin of the world.  We see the love of God meeting us in the midst of all that, whether unsought or self-inflicted;  we see that hurt and despair taken up into the heart of God.

We are confronted  with a crowned head.  Around it lies a purple robe of mockery.  We gaze upon the face of one who walked ahead of us, and with us; the face of one we are called to follow as we step back into the world. We too are to weep and to love; to follow Christ, walking our own paths in his way.

And God held in his hand a small globe.
The Son watched them.
Let me go there, he said.



© 2015 Julie Gittoes