Showing posts with label ten commandments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ten commandments. Show all posts

Saturday, 20 July 2024

Learning to live

 Sunday, 3rd March - Lent 3: Exodus 20:1-17, 1 Corinthians 1:18-25 and John 2:13-22


At the Brits last night, Raye made history by winning six awards. Her love of music drove her to be an artist - her beginnings in a Christian home where her father placed her hands on piano keys.


She’s not unusual in finding that the course of life took her away from church, but now she hosts hymns services at home with friends. After thanking her producer, she thanked her grandmother for her prayers. 


Raye with her grandmother at the Brits: Sky News article

Elsewhere she’s talked about how grateful she is for her own faith - how it’s pulled her out of what she calls a ‘really dark place’: coping with trauma, addiction and pressure. It’s a reality she acknowledges in her song “Hard out here”. She said: there was  ‘a moment where I really found God, in the time that I really needed it and it saved my life… I really owe my life to faith, it’s kept me going and it’s kept me okay, it’s given me strength’. 


In our first reading today, we hear the words of the ten commandments which frame life in relation to God: words which emerged after a time of crisis, after a period of slavery and migration. In our Lent book Tarry Awhile Selina Stone talks about the place of movement in our journey of faith. 


For God’s people there were times of temptation and frustration in the wilderness; times when stability seemed a distant hope.   These instructions or guidance on living well emerged at a time when the community was beginning to take on a more settled form. Having owed their life to their faith, what did they now need to keep them going - to keep them ok?


The Greyhound might be the only pub in North London - if not in the city - with the text of the ten commandments on wooden panels on the wall.  


Today we have the opportunity to hear them afresh not as something life-limiting, but as something life-giving.  In the midst of the challenges of our own lives, how do  these words help us use this gift of freedom - of healing and salvation?


The commandments speak about God and human relationships and, in the middle, the need for rest.


They invite a certain kind of self-awareness - taking seriously our embodied existence. They ask us to consider how attending to the pulse of divine love might help us live wisely. 


Perhaps obedience to the commandments is one of those things which, as Rowan Williams puts it, ‘is about learning how to live in heaven by learning how to live on earth, in the body, in the moment.’


‘Learning how to live in heaven by learning how to live on earth’ might include naming what it is to be human: where are the challenges, the risk of harm, the things that overwhelm us or niggle away at us or our relationships?  


It also has to do with how we live well with freedom and desire:  not just for ourselves, but for our neighbours. There is something profoundly practical about the commandments - honouring life in various ways, setting aside the idols we create of wealth or status, looking at our relationship with work and time.


The command to rest lies at the heart of this list of guidance: it echoes the rhythm of creation - goodness poured forth, life, breath and love taking shape, and then God rested. We are invited to hold onto that space as something holy, special, consecrated, set apart and blessed. 


As God’s people moved from slavery, migration to the settled state of a home, they could find rest. However, we know how easy it is for us as human beings to have an uncritical or unhealthy relationship with the opposite of rest: our work. 


If we are tired, overworked and stressed we risk burning out and our relationship to activity and to rest become dysfunctional: holding onto the hope of a lie in or time away; becoming ill the moment we stop; or missing those moments to delight in life as it happens around us.


To think of the balance between work and rest looks shifts across our lives: the pressures of work and parenting, the domestic labour we juggle and long hours or multiple jobs; our self-worth impacted by seasons of illness where we are unable to work, or times when we are unable to find the work we’d love to or need to do; the years of retirement which itself might have seasons of being occupied with volunteering, family, service and the things which bring pleasure. 


In all this rest might elude us - sleeplessness, worry or loneliness. Rest might elude us as we strive for the things that command our attention which become idols: from wealth and possessions, to social media and status.  


The problem with idols is that not only do they demand our focus but they can also demand a high price in terms of well-being, addiction, envy and dissatisfaction. All of which negatively impacts on our relationships - and displaces that first call to love God, to know ourselves as beloved by God, and to allow that love to shape how we live. 


The purpose of the commandments was to create and support a community: helping us to learn to live well, on earth, in our bodies. They still have a relevance - challenging us when we stop honouring each other in our primary households, parent and child, partner and friend; inviting us to be faithful in work, rest and relationships; reminding us that there is more to life than exchange and consumption. Inviting us to shape our lives around a pulse of love.


When Rowan talks about learning to live in the body, in the moment he is inviting us to see faith as a deeply natural rhythm - it’s not just about our minds, but our whole reality.  If the commandments point out some of the pitfalls in life, imagination and relationship, he points reminds us that ‘this is the sort of challenge and transformation that trust in Christ is likely to open up for you, and this is how you can guard against losing the plot’ - or being consumed by the dark places as Raye puts it. 


In today’s gospel we witness Jesus inviting us to honour holy places - as places of sanctuary and inspiration, as places holding us safely as we share the depths of our loves, hopes and faith.  But he goes beyond that in pointing to his body as the palace where God chooses to dwell - God’s goodness in the flesh. 


That body would live and die and rise again: with the unstoppable power of God’s love and breath.  It’s a way of seeing bodies as sites of the sacred - in need of rest and honour, because they are loved by God.  If that is true of our bodies, what of the bodies around us. If we value our bodies as places where God’s grace and delight are made known, then we are called to value the bodies of those who’re exploited, suffering, addicted, lonely. 


Jesus moves in a few verses from concern to compassion, anger to action when he sees the loving commandments of a loving God being broken: he reveals the power of love to act and to deepen relationships - with compassion and justice. 


Paul reminds the Corinthians that the message of the cross - the place where God’s goodness and love in Christ goes to the depths of human pain, darkness and alienation - is power rather than foolishness, strength not weakness. His death carries the weight of our restlessness and disobedience and allows us to find peace and renews our obedience in love. 


Sometimes we see power as foolishness and weakness as strength in the world around us. Alexei Navalny’s death and funeral have attracted as much attention as his political campaign and arrest. What is being talked about more is his conversion to Christianity following Putin’s attempt to kill him in 2020. 


The following year he told a court: ‘the fact is that I am a Christian, which usually rather sets me up as an example for constant ridicule in the Anti-Corruption Foundation, because most of our people are atheist and I was once quite a militant atheist myself.’ He went on to describe how his faith gave him clarity and focus in grim circumstances.


We might not win Brit awards or face persecution for our religious or political convictions, but we are called to live with a radical new awareness of how we belong to each other: a depth of connection between us and creation, between all that is and a loving God. 


We can sit a bit lighter to material satisfactions - and go beyond the surface of things; we find that our inclination to selfishness is transformed into selflessness; our failures forgiven. We are invited into an economy of gift rather than exchange - and find here, in song and word, silence and peace, blessing and bread all that helps us to ‘learn how to live in heaven by learning how to live on earth, in the body, in the moment.’


© Julie Gittoes 2024


Selina Stone: Tarry Awhile - Archbishop's Lent Book 2024

Rowan Williams: "We learn to live in heaven by learning to live on earth', Catholic Herald Feb 20204


Sunday, 7 March 2021

Holy disruption

 Third of Lent: Exodus 20:1-17 and John 2:13-22


 

Image: YouTube still


The Prince of Egypt is a beautiful animation of an ancient story. 


A story of the struggle for freedom in the face of power and oppression.


It’s an epic narrative which blends the emotional intensity of human relationships with the presence of God. There is awe and mystery and intimacy. A God speaking in fire and cloud and in a still small voice.


The film ends with the moment that God speaks in today’s reading from Exodus.


It  ends with the giving of the Ten Commandments.


What makes for a cinematic finale is actually the beginning of a new phase of understanding God’s character and relationship with humanity, with us.


Here is a God who is loving and merciful. A God whose words demand a degree of courage and humility. 


For God speaks words which redirect our hearts towards love; words which name the damage done when our hearts are ruled by selfish desires.




Moses Delivering His Ten Commandments by David Courlander. 



The words that God speaks reminds the people of their story. 


The Lord God brought them out of slavey and into freedom. 


This God is the great I am: who was and is and is to come. There is no other. 


The words that God speaks forms a people with identity and belonging and purpose.


The Lord God has given them a way to live. To turn away from that - to give other gods, idols, desires and prizes central place - would have repercussions on future generations.


To remain faithful to God’s ways would be a blessing of love to not just the third or forth generation, but the thousandth. 


The Greyhound might be one of the few, if not the only, pub in north London with the ten commandments on the walls. 


And yet perhaps those words which God spoke ought to be just at home  convivial meeting place as in a place of worship.


These words: 


Honouring God’s name and embracing the command to rest. The holiness of God blessing and setting aside and hallowing the rhythms of time.


Honouring one another: in family relationships, in preserving life and in faithfulness.


Honouring community: not stealing, speaking falsely or coveting that which belongs to another.


All these words, held within a covenant of love.


A covenant of love, which as it was lived out and interpreted, included provision for widow and orphan; which released those in debt; which acknowledged that the earth was the Lord’s. 


Before the presence of God, and in the company of one another, God’s people are called to live in faithfulness to the commandments.



Jesus Cleanses The Temple by Jhoti Sati


What then are we to make of today’s episode from John’s Gospel? So soon after turning water into wine at the wedding feast, Jesus is overturning tables in the temple.


If God’s response to our failures to love it to keep on loving, perhaps we need to be alert to that fact that that’s not always comfortable; for the Lord comes to the Temple as a refiner’s fire.


Is this perhaps a form of holy disruption? 


Does it reveal something new? Does this action draw us more deeply into the mystery of God’s ways of loving?


This story feels familiar to us - the other Gospels place the episode in the final week of Jesus’ life; but John sets it at the beginning.


Here, Jesus doesn’t talk about the Temple as a den of robbers; nor does he remind his hearers that it should be house of prayer for all nations.


Whilst not naming exploitation or exclusion, Jesus seems to be saying something about himself, as well as the Temple.


Amidst the noise and hubbub and habits of trade, the Temple’s purpose, as a place of intimate and awesome encounter with God, has been obscured.



Alexander Smirnov - The Cleansing of the Temple


In the midst of this whirlwind of disruption, the bystanders ask for a sign to explain this action; they want to debate it.


Jesus doesn’t given them a ‘sign’ or miracle; instead he gives them something more like a riddle.


“Destroy this temple”, he says,  “and in three days I will raise it up.”


To take this literally sounds preposterous or outlandish.


The people don’t understand. John breaks the narrative wall to turn his gaze on us; to say to us, that Jesus is talking about his own body.



Here, at the beginning of his ministry, Jesus is making a bold statement about where God’s presence dwells.


Here, in flesh and blood, God is with us. 


But what Jesus reveals about himself - and the natures of God is the depth of loving.



Stations of the Cross - Alice Sielle


He points us to this arrest, death and resurrection.


In this holy disruption in a holy place, Jesus overturns what we thought we could say about God’s presence with us.


The God who’d led a people from slavery to freedom is leading us from death to life. 


The God whose commandments call us to faithfulness, rest, honour and obedience doesn’t stop loving when we make mistakes.


Instead, this God remains steadfast; dwells with us in Jesus; and through him loves and heals and forgives. 


This God puts out all our misdeeds; and makes us a clean heart.


In Jesus, we are not cast away from God’d presence; in him the covenant of love is extended.


This God calls us back from sin, selfishness, misdirected desire: and says:

If ye love me - keep my commandments. This God promises to renew us with his Spirit.



© Julie Gittoes 2021