Monday 4 June 2012

A Jubilee Tribute

A sermon preached at St. Andrew’s Dawson Street, Crook by Ray Anglesea on the occasion of HM The Queen’s Diamond Jubilee

It was The Spectator train advert on the Southeastern rail network from Earlsfield to Vauxhall last Monday that caught my eye – “In 1952 a woman knew her place – in 2012 she’s still there.” It was the magazine’s way of honouring and paying tribute to the Queens achievements in this her Diamond Jubilee Year. Today in our service we too honour the Queen’s achievements, her dedication, duty and service to this country and the commonwealth.
Much has happened in 60 years. In 1952 Britain was still the hub of an empire so vast that its new monarch could circle the globe alighting only on lands she ruled. In today’s world we have bade farewell to Empire abroad, the Queen has presided over 60 recessional years of deimperialisation, deindustrialisation, and de-Victorianisation. But put more positively, this also means that during the past 60 years, and notwithstanding the current economic downturn, which the Bishop of Durham alluded to in his maiden speech in the House of Lords on the 16th May 2012, and despite the current Chancellor’s fourth policy u-turn in two weeks, Britain has become a more open, a more diverse, a more liberal, a more mobile, a more tolerant and a more prosperous society. Although Queen Elizabeth herself may not have had all that much to do with these developments, this is surely cause for some form of thanksgiving in her Diamond Jubilee year.

When the English comedy actor, film director and star of the silent films Charlie Chaplin visited London from California 60 years ago in 1952 he was struck by its affluence. “I thought England was broke,” he said, “but the whole city is crawling with Rolls-Royces, Bentley’s, Daimlers and expensive blondes.” Britain was then burdened with the lingering costs of the Second World War and the new ones of the welfare state. Not so the west end of London; the West End was experiencing its golden prime, on a single night, May 18th 1952 the following were performing in London’s theatres, Tony Hancock, Vera Lynn, Alec Guiness, Mary Martin (in South Pacific, the year’s runaway hit), Peggy Ashcroft, Michael Redgrave, Edith Evans, Sybil Thorndike, John Guilgud, Paul Scofield, Norman Wisdom, Arthur Askey, Joyce Grenfell, Peter Ustinov and Richard Attenborough. On the other hand television was barely functioning, reaching just 4% of the population, petrol cost “four and thruppence (that 21p, kids) a gallon, one home in three had no bath, one in twenty didn’t have piped water. That weekend the Liberal party held its conference “We are determined to maintain our independence,” said Clement Davies the Liberal leader!
One of the great strengths of our culture and way of life is our new multicultural identity. Britain has been transformed into a multi-ethnic, multi-faith society; and no one does interfaith better that the Royal Family, starting wit the Queen herself.  This identity may not be so obvious in Crook, but riding on the top deck of the no 44 bus service along Garret Lane through Earlsfield, Wandsworth, Battersea en route to the Chelsea Flower Show last weekend one immediately became aware of how much Britain has embraced people from all over the world. London, our capital city, has become a magnet for foreign wealth, but also for strivers from every continent. However many medals Team GB wins at the Olympics, the host city will always be the first in which every language spoken by the competitors was already spoken by its residents. 60 years ago we lived in a deferential society, The Queen’s subjects were deferential, to her, to social rank generally, to the church and her government. Sir Edmund Hillary climbed high, Sir Roger Banister ran fast, Watson and Crick thought outside the box. But even they could have little inkling of the social revolution or the economic upheavals that the next half century had in store. Our Christian monarch too has watched over a changing church, sadly the erosion of traditional social bonds and the decline of religious observance. In an age of doubt and pluralism the church has had to accommodate different theological currents whilst the Reformed and Methodist traditions still maintain a repository of great historical legacies.
Fast forward to 2012 and the sixth series of Britain’s got talent  - a television phenomenon based on the joke that we have to remind ourselves of something we once took for granted and took seriously. The demise of the old world and the arrival of the new, has involved sometimes painful adjustments. In all this change and upheaval, the quiet dignity of the Queen has provided a focus for continuing national self respect and so has assisted the peaceful transformation of our national identity.
Our sovereign was called sixty years ago in tragic circumstances to very great responsibilities. Like King David in the Old Testament, she was the unlikely child who became a monarch. Until the abdication of her uncle, Elizabeth was not destined for monarchy and did not seek it. Yet for 60 years she has served the nation with a dedication and sense of duty that is unquestioned. One might argue that the monarch embodies a vocational approach to life, lived, not as a self promoter with personal gratification as the supreme good, but as a servant of God whose role is to strengthen the whole community. That community embraces our memories and the values for which previous generations have fought and died and these memories and values unite the living and the departed.

Monarchy has ancient roots and biblical reverberations ever since Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet anointed Solomon King and all the people cried “God save the King”. But the jubilee also gives us pause for thought. The jubilee is an opportunity to revisit important questions: what do we expect of leadership? what do we want from monarchy? And how is the reign of God expressed in our national life? Ian Bradley, a Scottish theologian, argues in a book called God Save the Queen that monarchy provides a storehouse of symbols and rituals to feed the nation’s imagination and maintain its sense of the transcendent. He believes that our rich ceremonial tradition with its feel for the numinous and the spiritual gathers up and ritualises the ‘soul’ of our national identity. Christian constitutional monarchy makes visible, he says, God’s rule and claim upon us, even in a modern democratic state. The monarch then gathers up and symbolises what we are as a nation.
And perhaps this says something important about leadership and how, according to Christian insight, it should be exercised. At her coronation, the Queen was presented with the Orb of State and told: ‘Receive this Orb set under the Cross, and remember that the whole world is subject to the power and empire of Christ our Redeemer.’ All institutions, however well they serve us, are provisional and made up of mortal beings. They are accountable to the rule of Christ the King; they are set under the cross for he is a king whose throne is Golgotha. One day they will be no more, for the kingdoms of the world will become the kingdom of God and of his Christ; and he shall reign forever and ever. So the monarchy is not only a symbol of a temporal society but can point beyond itself to the city whose builder and maker is God.

In the Old Testament reading, we heard about the part wisdom played in the creation of the world, and which our Durham boys, Will Young and Michael Hampbell had a hand in, presenting in a musical form to the Queen at her cathedral service on Tuesday. ‘When he established the heavens I was there, when he drew a circle upon the face of the deep, when he marked out the foundations of the earth, then I was beside him, like a master-worker, and I was daily his delight, rejoicing before him always.’ It may not have been clear to you that the speaker is a woman, Lady Wisdom. Not only is she God’s agent in fashioning the creation; she is also the inspiration and companion of all who want to live wisely and well, who intend through life to contribute to the fashioning of the world as a good and properly-ordered place.
We could make the obvious connection between wisdom personified as a woman and the fact that both our longest-serving monarchs have been women. We could also reflect that our church is wiser and better because of the tender and rich ministry of its women. All that is good, just, wholesome and right springs from divine wisdom. As we enacted in our service this morning, like the the coronation service, the sovereign is presented with a Bible and told ‘Here is wisdom, this is the royal law, these are the lively Oracles of God’. Lady Wisdom again: ‘by me kings reign, and rulers decree what is just’.

So the Monarch, the head of our state is not just a successful partisan who has emerged out of struggles about political issues and the exercise of raw power but a human being, a woman, mother, grandmother, great grandmother with the kind of relationships with which we can all identify. She embodies the themes in our common life together which are more fundamental than this or that new idea or policy taken from her annual Queens Speach at the state opening of parliament, seated on her throne in the House of Peers; I mean the themes of birth and death, love and loss. To place such a person, as we have done, the Queen, at the heart of our life as a nation is to honour humanity above all things and above all divisive theologies and ideologies. And here in the UK we honour humanity with some very definite characteristics of the kind which bind a community together.
For a Christian monarch, the whole community which includes our own community here in Crook includes people of different faiths and none. This is because a profound relationship with God can only be developed by those who have freely chosen to respond to his call. There can be no place for coercion and contempt. It is Christian to be tolerant not because we believe so little about God but because we believe so much in the importance of the free response to God’s call which the monarch exemplifies at the Coronation service.

The Queen embodies the truth at the heart of our life as a nation that the kingdom of God and a humane society is built not by raw political power and programmes alone but by the human touch, loving and unwearied service, attention to others. Christian monarchy today embodies not a programme but a life, a fully human life, lived in the presence and calling of God who dignifies all humanity. Such a life which is open to us all is the essential ingredient, the mustard seed from which the Kingdom, God’s plan for the human race, grows.

When we come to the overall theme of the gospel, however, it is clear that Jesus’ kingship is not demonstrated in palaces and panoply, but in love and self-abasement. His purple robe is died with blood and his throne is the cross. He calls us his subjects, and invites our allegiance and our love. It doesn’t look much of a kingdom, this clutch of nobodies - the peasants, fishermen, prostitutes and tax-gatherers Jesus gathers round him, some of the people we mentioned in our Wesley Day Circuit worship a week last Thursday night.  He does not promise that if we go with him, his way will be glorious, nor lead to wealth or success. On the contrary, he foretells afflictions, ridicule and trial. Yet he invites us to be faithful unto death and to seek rewards beyond this life. He is concerned not with outward appearances but the heart, and looks there for loyalty, truth and love. He calls all who lead to disdain privilege and the pursuit of honour. He summons the powerful of this world to lay aside the seductions of glory and wealth and wash the feet of the poor, which we did symbolically at the beginning of the service by bring a towel and jug of water to the communion table.  
In the Old Testament, ‘jubilee’ is the celebration of cancelled debt and freedom for slaves. It promises a world that is more just, more equal and more free. Institutions have awesome power to destroy, but at their best they can help shape the future for good, something never more needed than in today’s precarious world, we pray that as the church moves forward into the 21st century it will do so in a spirit of love and justice.  No doubt the monarchy will have changed much before the next time we celebrate a diamond jubilee. It will need to travel more lightly, stand back from our obsession with celebrity and image, shed the culture of deference.

But as we give thanks today for the service of our Queen over 60 years, we can, I think, loyally pray that the monarchy and indeed all entrusted with public office will embody more deeply the royal way of wisdom, humility and self-emptying. This is how Christ’s strange work is achieved in the world. Jesus comes among us not to be served but to serve. He lays down his life for us, not only teaching the greater love but living it. And whether we are simple or wise, strong or weak, rich or poor, leader or led, he speaks to us these words and summons us to make them real in our time: ‘Whoever would be great among you must be your servant, for I am among you as one who serves’.
This anniversary then is a time to speak about those things which may once have seemed obvious but which if they are not affirmed will pass into oblivion. In the words of St Peter - Honour Humanity, Love the Community, Fear God and Honour the Sovereign.

Amen

Ray Anglesea is a self supporting minister working in St Andrew’s Dawson Street LEP, Crook and in the wider West Durham Methodist Circuit

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