Meditation for the Feast of St. Simon and St. Jude

by CCW | 27 October 2015 21:00

“For I have come down from heaven, not to do my own will,
but the will of him who sent me”

The feast of St. Simon and St. Jude completes the parade of Apostolic Saints. With this feast, the holy band of twelve is gathered together in the unity of Jerusalem and in that gathering we glimpse something of the meaning of our eternal home. St. Simon and St. Jude complete the festal round of the Apostles and prepare us for the harvest festival of All Saints.

St. Simon and St. Jude, Apostles of Christ. Very little can be said about them. What can be said has simply to do with their apostleship. They are of the company of “twelve poor men, by Christ anointed,” as a hymn puts it. What more needs to be said than that? And how appropriate, too, on the eve of Nick Hatt’s deaconing in our diocese tomorrow night and whom we keep in our prayers this evening. Simon and Jude speak directly to the nature of the ministry.

They have, to be sure, lent their names to certain features of human life as patron saints, symbols, we might say, of some aspect or other of the virtues of Christ individually considered. St. Simon is the patron saint of zealots; St. Jude, more curiously, is the patron saint of lost causes, something with which I have more than a passing acquaintance! The zealous passion for a perfect political and social and spiritual righteousness readily complements the despair at lost causes that often accompanies such worthy and necessary aspirations. Ultimately, such zeal brings us to the true righteousness of Christ, realized in the city of heavenly Jerusalem. For what we have here is really “the unreal city” (T.S. Eliot), a lost cause.

“Zeal for thine house hath even consumed me,” the psalmist says, in a passage recalled by the disciples in John’s Gospel in relation to the cleansing of the temple. Through the myriad of lost causes, the deeper yearning for peace and righteousness is glimpsed, the deeper yearning which belongs to a peace, “not as the world giveth,” but as Christ gives.

The readings for this feast concentrate our attention on the Apostolic Foundation of the Church and the end of our humanity. Apostolic Foundation and Apostolic Fellowship; these are two things which we are badly in need of recovering and reclaiming. They belong to the truth of the ordained ministry. Without them, our parishes become little more than a club for seniors and a playground for children – we wish!. The church becomes a sect, championing one spiritual idea or quasi spiritual idea at the expense of all the rest, or trumpeting one of a myriad of the social and political agendas of the day while ignoring the larger vision of the whole of redeemed humanity that is hers to proclaim. We are too much with ourselves because we are not with God.

What unites Apostolic Foundation and Apostolic Fellowship is the Holy Spirit. “He carried me away in the spirit to a great and high mountain and showed me that great city, the holy Jerusalem, descending out of heaven from God, having the glory of God.” That vision complements the coming down of the Holy Spirit “whom the Father will send,” Jesus says, “in my name” and who “will teach you all things and bring all things to your remembrance.” The descent of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost marks the birth of the Church. That same Holy Spirit which unites this apostolic beginning and this apostolic ending enables our apostolic participation. It means that we have to live the vision.

“You are,” as St. Paul puts it, “fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God, built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the cornerstone, in whom the whole structure is joined together and grows into a holy temple in the Lord, in whom you also are built into it for a dwelling place of God in the Spirit.” (Eph. 2.19ff). We share in the foundation and participate in the life of heavenly Jerusalem. In the midst of the unreal city and the unreal church, it is good and necessary to remember this.

The Apostles are those who are sent by God in the sending of God himself in the going forth of the Son and in the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. To what end? The twofold sending of Son and Spirit makes known the purposes of God and keeps us within the meaning of their accomplishment. The divine purpose for our humanity, wounded and broken through the pursuit of our own fancies and follies, is the restoration of all things into unity and perfection with God in Christ, the source and end of all things. “This is the will of him who sent me,” Jesus says, “that I should lose nothing of all that he has given me, but raise it up at the last day.” We are, of course, quite good at getting lost and losing much else along the way.

Recalling the Apostolic Foundation and Apostolic Fellowship is essential to our being found in Christ and to our being restored to wholeness and completeness. It can only happen through our attention to those apostolic realities proclaimed and celebrated in our midst. That and that alone is the Church. The Church comes to be by the Word and Spirit of God and, in turn, the Church is sent forth to proclaim that Word and to be the place of that Spirit. The life of the Church, if it is to be the Church and not some sociological configuration of our own devising, is grounded in the life of God himself, in the going forth and return of the Word and Spirit. We live in the mission, in the sending.

In that fellowship of God with God in God, the fellowship of the Trinity, we find the true end and meaning of our humanity. All that has been scattered is now gathered in. All is complete. The vision of heavenly Jerusalem is that of a walled city with twelve gates, twelve angels, twelve tribes, twelve foundations, and the twelve Apostles of the Lamb. Twelve here is a biblical number signifying perfection and completeness. It is, in short, a picture of redeemed Israel, an image of restored humanity. All is complete, “having the glory of God,” complete by sharing in the fullness of the life of God the Blessed Trinity.

It is all wonderfully captured by the 17th century scholar and bishop, John Pearson.

This is the communion which the saints enjoy with the three Persons of the Blessed Trinity; this is the heavenly fellowship (represented unto entertaining Abraham, when the Lord appeared unto him, and three men stood by him:) for our Saviour hath made us this most gracious promise, If any man love me, he will keep my words; and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him and make our abode with him. Here is the soul of man made the habitation of God the Father, and of God the Son; and the presence of the Spirit cannot be wanting where those two are inhabiting; for if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his. The Spirit therefore with the Father and the Son inhabiteth in the saints; for know ye not, saith the Apostle, that ye are the temples of God, and the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?”

The end of man is life in God, “endless Godhead endlessly possessed,” as Austin Farrer puts it. The feast of St. Simon and St. Jude ushers us into that vision and celebration and recalls us to our Apostolic foundation as the principle of our life in Christ. We have only to live it in our lives.

“For I have come down from heaven, not to do my own will,
but the will of him who sent me”

Fr. David Curry
Christ Church
St. Simon & St. Jude, 2015

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