Sermon for Sexagesima Sunday

“They … having heard the word, keep it, and bring forth fruit with patience”

“As all the fruits of the season come to us in their proper time, flowers in spring, corn in summer and apples in autumn, so the fruit for winter is talk.” The quote is from Basil the Great, one of the outstanding fourth century theologians, one of the Greek Cappadocian Fathers who has shaped so much of the intellectual and spiritual history of Christian thought and life, both east and west. I love the image. The idea that talk is the fruit of winter. Something is meant to be alive and growing in us, in the soil of our hearts, even in the frozen wastes of a Canadian winter!

The analogy is straightforward: good ground and good heart and, as a result, good fruit brought “forth with patience.” How wonderful in what is, literally, the bleak mid-winter, to be reminded of springtime and flowers, of the fruits of summer and fall! Already Marilyn is consulting the seed catalogues and planning the vegetable and flower beds. But how wonderful too to be reminded that we are the ground in which God’s Word has been sown. What kind of ground will we be? And what will be the fruit of our planting? In Basil’s image, our talk, too, is the fruit borne out of our winter’s evenings, huddled by our fires in the long nights of winter.

But what kind of talk, we may ask? After all, this is a world of too much talk, a Panglossian world of all talk and no action, of talking heads, and talk, as is so often said, is cheap, not to mention dangerous and destructive of lives and careers. Yet Basil’s image, so appropriate on this Sexagesima Sunday, reminds us of two things: the seed which is the Word of God and the ground which is our heart in which it is sown. Yet there can be no fruit on a winter’s evening that is not borne out of an honest and good heart, as Luke so powerfully suggests. Therein lies the challenge that is our part.

The talk which is the fruit of winter, in Basil’s sense, must surely be our talk of God, the talk which allows God’s Word to have its sovereign sway within our lives, the talk which lets God’s Word shape our hearts and minds. Only because that Word has been planted and sown within us but if neglected and ignored? What then?

That is the point of the parable. There can be no fruit without the planting and without our nurturing of what is planted in us. The great parable of this day is the parable of the sower. “A sower went out to sow.” We are given the wonder of the parable and then, there is the greater marvel of the interpretation of the parable. Deeds and words, we might say; things done and things thought upon. Jesus gives us both in Luke’s account. This points to a particular kind of challenge which belongs to the season of the ‘gesimas’. There is what God makes known and provides, to be sure, but then there is the question about our taking a hold of his Word and truth; about it living in us. Something is required of us. Such is the great and surpassing dignity of the Christian faith. It is about God with us and us with God and with the good order, too, of creation. That is about the disciplines of spiritual life in attending seriously and thoughtfully to the things of God, bringing them to fruition in our lives.

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Month at a Glance, February

(Services in the Hall until Palm Sunday, March 24th)

Sunday, February 11th, Quinquagesima
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Holy Communion

Tuesday, February 13th
7:00pm Christ Church Book Club: The Invisible Siege: The Rise of Coronaviruses and the Search for a Cure, Dan Werb (2022); and Foreign Bodies: Pandemics, Vaccines and the Health of Nations, Simon Schama (2023)

Wednesday, February 14th, Ash Wednesday
12noon Penitential Service, Imposition of Ashes & Holy Communion

Sunday, February 18th, First Sunday in Lent
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Holy Communion
Followed by Potluck & Annual Parish Meeting

Thursday, February 22nd
7:00pm Holy Communion & Lenten Programme: Reading with the Fathers I

Sunday, February 25th, Second Sunday in Lent
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Holy Communion

Thursday, February 29th
7:00pn Holy Communion & Lenten Programme: Reading with the Fathers II

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Sexagesima

The collect for today, Sexagesima (or the Second Sunday Before Lent) from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

O LORD God, who seest that we put not our trust in any thing that we do: Mercifully grant that by thy power we may be defended against all adversity; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Epistle: 2 Corinthians 11:21b-31
The Gospel: St Luke 8:4-15

Georg Pencz, The Parable of the SowerArtwork: Georg Pencz, The Parable of the Sower, from “The Story of Christ”, 1534-35. Engraving, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City.

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