Sermon for Easter Tuesday

Jesus himself stood in the midst of his disciples

God, we have suggested, is in the midst of the sufferings of our world and day. Never more so, than in the Passion and Resurrection of Christ which shows us exactly that. What is of the greatest interest with respect to the essential Christian teaching of the Resurrection is that it is something which we learn from Christ. He comes into our midst. “Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved us.” That statement from 1 John 4.10 which we heard/ read in the Good Friday anthems (BCP, p.173) reverberates throughout Eastertide. Divine love conquers sin and evil. It is the life of the Resurrection in us but it has to be learned.

That is the point of the Resurrection appearances of Jesus to the disciples. It is about opening their understanding to see the principle and truth of reality in their very midst. It is a demonstration of the ultimate ‘lordship’ of Christ and it bears witness to Christ as true God and true man. The Lucan Gospel for Easter Tuesday is poignant and touching,  even if touch is now persona non grata in our world.  Yet there are ways of being touched by words, a kind of transmutation of the sensible into the intelligible.

Christ comes into our midst but the initial reaction is one of terror and fright even after Jesus’ first word of peace. “Peace be unto you.” They thought they were seeing a ghost. One of the important teachings of the Resurrection is that it requires us to think about the body in a new way or, perhaps, we might say, just to think about the body. For as something thinkable then it is already more than though not less than physical and material. Thinking after all is a kind of act of de-sensing; it removes things  from simply the tangible. It is an act of abstraction, a necessary and critical feature of what it means to be human.

This is the power of Jesus’ response to their reaction. “Why are ye troubled, and why do thoughts arise in your hearts?” Thoughts that are negative and sceptical. “Behold my hands and my feet, that it is I myself: handle me and see;” Jesus says, “ for a spirit hath not flesh and bones, as ye see me have.” This is a strong testimony to the reality of the Resurrection. The humanity of Christ is not a chimera, a mere appearance. It is very real and yet its reality is more though not less than what we see and imagine. Why? Because of the way in which we are wedded to the world and to ourselves. We struggle to learn how to think about ourselves and our own bodies in their deeper truth as grounded in God’s will and purpose. We are more, not less than our bodies.

(more…)

Print this entry

Tuesday in Easter Week

The collect for today, Tuesday in Easter Week, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

ALMIGHTY God, who through thine only begotten Son Jesus Christ hast overcome death, and opened unto us the gate of everlasting life: We humbly beseech thee, that as by thy special grace thou dost put into our minds good desires, so by thy continual help we may bring the same to good effect; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, ever one God, world without end. Amen.

The Lesson: Acts 13:26-41
The Gospel: St. Luke 24:36-48

Georges Rouault, Christ and the ApostlesArtwork: Georges Rouault, Christ and the Apostles, 1937-38. Oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Print this entry

Sermon for Easter Monday

“And they rose up … and returned to Jerusalem”

They were running away from Jerusalem in fear and perplexity about the events of the crucifixion, about everything, we might say “concerning Jesus of Nazareth”. The Resurrection changes everything. It literally turns us around. They rose up and returned to Jerusalem. How and why? Because Christ runs out after us.

The Passion of Christ is God’s suffering with us in our suffering world, God in the midst of our confusions, our sins, our fears, our tempers; in short, our evil and unloveliness. The whole of the Passion is about Christ in the midst. He is even crucified between two thieves. The Resurrection is the same. It is about Christ in the midst, making himself known in the radical truth of his being with the Father.

Easter Monday presents us with one of the classic stories of the Resurrection, the story of the Road to Emmaus. Two unnamed disciples are fleeing Jerusalem. Jesus runs out after them and “himself drew near, and went with them,” unrecognized by them. They were not, after all, expecting him. They were, after all, consumed and preoccupied in their confusions and uncertainties, not altogether unlike us in the face of Covid-19, clinging to our ‘technologies’, worshipping them in our idolatry even as they are at the heart of the problem of globalization, itself a technocratic artifice.

Jesus draws near and enters into their conversation. Why? To draw out of them precisely their confusion and perplexity. The two unnamed disciples give us a very complete account of the crucifixion, its immediate aftermath, their dashed hopes and expectations about Jesus, and their bewilderment about the empty tomb, about the testimony of angels, and even about the witness of the women! “We trusted,” they say, “that it had been he which should have redeemed Israel.” His crucifixion and death they were not expecting and cannot understand. The paradox is wonderful. It is precisely through his Passion and Death that Christ redeems Israel, the greater Israel, we may say, of our humanity, for such is the greater vocation and meaning of Israel.

“Foolish ones and slow of heart,” Jesus says to them and proceeds to unpack the radical meaning of his Passion and Death. He opens out to them  “in all of the Scriptures the things concerning himself.” In a way, it is very much about how we read, how we think and understand God and his dealing with us. In a way, God has to break us in order to make us, to make us new. “Batter my heart, three-personed God,” as the poet/ preacher John Donne says, evoking the extravagant language of violence and even rape. It is not enough, it seems, for God simply to “knock, breathe, shine and seek to mend,” the gentler forms of some of the more sentimental biblical images of God’s care. No. “Break, blow, burn, and make me new,” the poet demands of God. For only so might we be able to stand. And if that were not troubling enough, he cries out “imprison me, for I except you enthrall me, never shall be free, Nor ever chaste, except you ravish me.” Extravagant language, indeed, and yet language that complements the wonder of the story of the Road to Emmaus. Why?

(more…)

Print this entry

Monday In Easter Week

The collect for today, Monday in Easter Week, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

ALMIGHTY God, who through thine only begotten Son Jesus Christ hast overcome death, and opened unto us the gate of everlasting life: We humbly beseech thee, that as by thy special grace thou dost put into our minds good desires, so by thy continual help we may bring the same to good effect; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, ever one God, world without end. Amen.

The Lesson: Acts 10:34-43
The Gospel: St. Luke 24:13-35

Vasili Belyaev, Christ at EmmausArtwork: Vasili Belyaev, Christ at Emmaus, c. 1890s. Mosaic, Church of the Saviour on the Spilt Blood, St. Petersburg.

Print this entry

Sermon for Easter

So they ran both together

We are constantly being told that “we are in this together.” And so we are. We are all implicated in the global pandemic of Covid-19 if only because it reveals the assumptions of our global world and culture and challenges all our technocratic dependencies. It challenges us about the understanding of our humanity. But even more than this current crisis, we are implicated in the sufferings of our world in every age. For suffering belongs to the realities of our fallen humanity. Yet it is precisely the conditions of sin and evil, of suffering and death, that God addresses in the radical meaning of Christ’s Passion and Resurrection. You see, the Passion and the Resurrection are utterly inseparable. You can’t have one without the other and that is simply, literally, historically, and theologically the case. Such are the deeper joys of Easter. They arise out of the Passion just as the Passion, paradoxically, arises out of the Resurrection.

“Herein is love, not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins,” we heard (or read!) on Good Friday. Such words from 1 John are part of the Good Friday anthems (BCP, p. 173). And “herein is love,” too, in the wonderful motions of the Resurrection Gospel, the running of Mary Magdalene to Simon Peter and to John, and the running together of Simon Peter and John to the sepulchre, to the tomb where the stone had been taken away. It is empty. Everyone is set in motion. Such are the motions of love for love is motion towards another, towards God and towards each other.

It begins and ends with the divine love in Christ’s sacrifice on the Cross; God’s love towards us for “while we yet sinners, Christ died for us” (Rom. 5.8). It ends in death, yet love does not end and cannot end. “Never that which is shall die,” as Euripides observed so long ago.  Love is ever in motion. Out of the Passion of Christ comes Resurrection because it is all about love. And love casts out fear. It changes everything. It changes us even in our current fears and anxieties. And love connects us even in our current isolation and separation. Not digitally except perhaps as a means to share thoughts and ideas but through the connecting power of prayer. For that is Christ in us, his love ruling and moving in us in our care for one another. Love is Resurrection, the life that death cannot overthrow.

(more…)

Print this entry

Easter Day

The collect for today, Easter-Day, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962) :

ALMIGHTY God, who through thine only begotten Son Jesus Christ hast overcome death, and opened unto us the gate of everlasting life: We humbly beseech thee, that as by thy special grace thou dost put into our minds good desires, so by thy continual help we may bring the same to good effect; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, ever one God, world without end. Amen.

The Epistle: Colossians 3:1-11
The Gospel: St. John 20:1-10

Adam Kraft, Resurrection of ChristArtwork: Adam Kraft, Resurrection of Christ, 1490-92. St. Sebaldus Church, Nuremberg.

Print this entry

Sermon for Easter Vigil

“The night is come”

“The night is come,” the Paschal Praeconium proclaims exultantly. This night marks the beginning of something new, a new creation, not through the destruction but by the renewing of creation. What is new is what the great Easter proclamation, known as the Paschal Preconium, signals. Resurrection. That is the new creation. That is God’s great work of making something out of nothing, indeed, out of the greater nothingness of human sin and evil.

How can there be a greater nothing? Only as a figure of speech, it might seem, and yet in another way, that is exactly the great joy of the Vigil and of Easter. We wait expectantly for God’s great second act; such is the Resurrection. Sin and evil seek to unmake the creation and even, folly of all follies, to unmask and dismiss God from every human horizon. Sin and evil try to make creation and God nothing. God takes human sin and evil, and out of its greater nothingness, out of its vanity and folly, makes a new creation. There is Resurrection not by a denial of the past of the Passion and Death of Christ but by its transformation. God makes something out of the suffering and death that we have caused. “The night is come.”

“The night is come” when we can shout with exceeding great joy that Christ is Risen. Alleluia! Alleluia! What that means is signalled in the liturgy of the Vigil. It means that death has been completely changed, overcome; it has undergone a radical make-over. Death is no longer the terminus ad quem, the end of the road, the end to which all must succumb; death has been transformed into a transitus, a means to greater end. We pray that our “corrupt affections,” our sins being “buried with Christ,” “we may pass to our joyful resurrection”  “through the grave and gate of death.” The grave cannot hold him and God seeks something more for us. We only live when we live in him.

“The night is come” that out-nights all other nights including the love-duet between Lorenzo and Jessica in the Merchant of Venice, each seeking to gain an advantage over the other in references to the ancient stories of love and its powers. “The night is come,” the Paschal Praeconium says “wherein thou dividest the sea and madest the children of Israel to pass over as on dry land”,  the night, too, in which the people of Israel are led and guided by a pillar of light. The imagery recalls God’s deliverance of Israel from Egyptian slavery in the Exodus. So this night builds upon that story and its importance for the understanding of Israel. Christ’s Resurrection is framed in terms of God’s deliverance of the ancient people of Israel from death and slavery and extends it to the whole of humanity.

“The night is come,” then, when “all that believe in Christ upon the face of the earth” are “delivered from the shadow of death” and “are renewed and made partakers of eternal life.” Such is the radical nature of the Resurrection and its universal extent.

(more…)

Print this entry

Sermon for Holy Saturday

“Christ hath once suffered for sins … that he might bring us to God”

The quiet of Holy Saturday is the peace of paradise. All has been accomplished. All of the horror and noise of Good Friday is past. Christ is dead. The fury and rage of our disordered humanity in all its evil force is spent. There is a kind of stillness to Holy Saturday and to our service of Matins and Ante-communion. All is at rest, it seems, at least in terms of the destructiveness of our humanity in the vain folly of trying to kill God.

Yet God has let us have our way with him. Christ is crucified and now lies buried. We meet at his tomb and while all is quiet there are some disquieting rumours. The human spirit in its confusion is never quiet, it seems. There are rumours and talk of conspiracies about stealing Christ’s body and claiming that he is still alive. The Gospels do not hide from view the variety of opinions already in circulation about the mystery of the resurrection. But apart from the restlessness and inconstancy, folly and gullibility of our world, there is something else which is also stirring on Holy Saturday. We wait at the tomb of Christ in the sorrow of mourners. We wait in the quiet stillness of the morning.

But already something else is happening. The readings from 1 Peter hint at the deeper meaning of Holy Saturday. They hint at the creedal principle of the descent into hell, of Christ going and preaching to the spirits in prison, as Peter puts it, drawing upon the imagery of Zechariah about release and liberation. This will ultimately have its visual representation in the icon of the Resurrection in the Churches of Eastern Orthodoxy which depicts Christ bringing Adam and Eve up out of the prison house of Sheol, of Hades, of Hell, of death.

1 Peter points us to the further dimensions of the theory of the atonement. God seeks to be reconciled with the whole of his sinful creation past, present, and future. Such is the radical nature of Christ’s sacrifice on the Cross. He suffered for our sins to bring us to God. The reconciling love of God in the sacrifice of Christ has a long reach both backwards and forwards since it seeks to gather all time back into itself without which time has no meaning.

We rest while God in his unceasing activity seeks the good of the whole of our humanity. That should in like manner challenge us about our dealings with one another. It would seem, however, that even in the quiet stillness of Holy Saturday, stones will not be able to contain or constrain the love of God in Jesus Christ

“Christ hath once suffered for sins … that he might bring us to God”

Fr. David Curry
Holy Saturday, April 11th, 2020
Posted not preached owing to the Covid-19 outbreak

Print this entry

Easter Even

The collect for today, Easter Even, or Holy Saturday, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

GRANT, O Lord, that as we are baptized into the death of thy blessed Son our Saviour Jesus Christ, so by continual mortifying our corrupt affections we may be buried with him; and that, through the grave, and gate of death, we may pass to our joyful resurrection; for his merits, who died, and was buried, and rose again for us, thy Son Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Epistle: 1 St. Peter 3:17-22
The Gospel: St. Matthew 27:57-66

Ambrogio Bergognone, Lamentation of ChristArtwork: Ambrogio Bergognone, Lamentation of Christ, c. 1485. Tempera and oil on panel, Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest.

Print this entry

Sermon for Good Friday: Solemn Liturgy

“It is finished”

Yes. “It is finished.” And yet, in another way it is never finished. What is finished? All that belongs to the reconciliation of God and man through Christ’s atoning sacrifice. What is never finished? That reconciliation in us is a life-long project; it is only finished in us when we are finished and gathered to Christ. Here we are a work in process. The process is about our continuing efforts to realize who we are in Christ in our lives. Our justification, the truth of our being, is fully and perfectly in Christ; not so in us. For us there is the constant struggle to realize in ourselves the reconciliation between God and man in Christ.

Central to that constant struggle is what belongs to the Solemn Liturgy of Good Friday, namely our contemplation of the Cross and our hearing, as it were, the lamentations of Christ, his words to us about the meaning of sin and grace, the “reproaches.” Our Solemn Liturgy has four parts: first, the liturgy of the Word beginning with the general confession but no absolution, the Good Friday anthems (BCP, p. 173), the Good Friday Collects, Psalm 22, a Lesson from Isaiah 50. 4-10, the Salvator Mundi, the Epistle reading from Hebrews, and then the Passion according to St. John; second, the Solemn Intercessions; third, the Reproaches of Christ to us in the words of the Lamentations of Jeremiah in which we contemplate our betrayals of God’s love; and fourth, our communion with the dead Christ. On Good Friday, there is no absolution nor any celebration of the Holy Eucharist; there is only communion through what was consecrated and kept from Maundy Thursday. On Good Friday, we identify with Christ in his death for us.

All pretty somber and serious, and rightly so. In the context of our suffering world where there have been and continue to be an escalating number of deaths through the Covid-19 outbreak, the Good Friday service allows us to place our suffering world, and the deaths of so many, in the sufferings of Christ. He suffers even unto death, Why? That love may accomplish what belongs to the truth of our humanity as reconciled with God.

“It is finished,” Jesus says. It is the last word of Christ on the Cross in John’s Gospel. It signals a kind of end, a sense of accomplishment, of purpose realized. It signals atonement. All that belongs to the reconciliation of God and man is accomplished. Such is the divine love which seeks our good, our salvation, our completeness. Yet, in another sense, love is never finished. Divine love is ever active and never static. God is actus purus, pure act, as the theologians say. Love is ever in motion. That eternal motion is about the constant love of the Son for the Father in the bond of their mutual and indwelling love, the love of the Trinity.

And that love is what we seek to realize more and more in our lives even as we know only too well that our sins constantly beset us. There is no end, it seems, to our sins. But the good news of Good Friday which makes this day “Good Friday” is that nothing, absolutely “nothing can separate us from the love of God in Jesus Christ.” Knowing that means striving to live it in our lives with one another. Such a striving is for God in us. It is “thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” What makes that prayer so powerful is Christ’s word to us on the Cross. “It is finished.” It is all there in him and so we can seek it for us in our lives. That is our constant challenge: to realize in ourselves what has been accomplished for us in Christ’s sacrifice. Such is the cross in our lives. We seek to bear witness to what he has done for us.

“It is finished”

Fr. David Curry
Solemn Liturgy of Good Friday, April 10th, 2020
Posted not preached owing to the Covid-19 outbreak

Print this entry