Sunday, 20 January 2013

Bumping into Glory

A sermon given by Ray Anglesea at St Andrew’s Dawson Street, Crook
Sunday 20th January 2013: 3rd Sunday of Epiphany
 
During the wedding rehearsal, the groom approached the circuit superintendent with an unusual offer: "Look, I'll give you £1000 if you'll change the wedding vows. When you get to the part where I'm supposed to promise to 'love, honour and obey' and 'be faithful to her forever,' I'd appreciate it if you'd just leave that out." He passed the circuit superintendent a £1000 cheque and walked away satisfied. On the day of the wedding, when it came time for the groom's vows, the circuit superintendent looked the young man in the eye and said: "Will you promise to prostrate yourself before her, obey her every command and wish, serve her breakfast in bed every morning of your life, and swear eternally before God and your lovely wife that you will not ever even look at another woman, as long as you both shall live?" The groom gulped and looked around, and said in a tiny voice, "Yes," then leaned toward the circuit superintendent and hissed: "I thought we had a deal." The circuit superintendent put a £1000 cheque into the groom's hand and whispered: "She made me a better offer!”
At a different time and in a different place we heard this morning of another wedding, the   Wedding at Cana, taken from the second chapter of John’s Gospel. It is an event which begins Jesus’ public ministry. There was music, there was dancing, there was food, there was wine. Everyone was with the bride and groom on their wedding day. It was such a happy celebration.
John who tells the story of the wedding feast at Cana is without doubt a brilliant literary craftsman. He uses a series of intimate dramatic encounters, mini dramas if you like, often called in church speak “signs,” to enable the listener to be drawn into a dramatic arena in which actions as well as words speak to us. In short, in this Gospel (which we read at the conclusion of our carol service) we hear those not-to-be-forgotten words “the Word became flesh.” John in his gospel will speak to us through the flesh, flesh to flesh, through all the five senses. This is the Gospel in which we will see Jesus hungry and thirsty, weeping, touching the eyes of the blind man with the spit of his mouth and the soil of the ground; confronting the crowd who want to stone the woman taken in adultery. He will kneel down and write with his finger in the dust. His feet will be anointed with costly fragrant oil and Mary will dry them with her hair. Jesus himself will wash his disciples’ feet. We will see a sword piercing his body and blood and water flowing from his side, and later Thomas will be asked to place his hands in those wounds. This is a Gospel which invites us to see, touch and taste the presence of God in the midst of the suffering of our world. The divine will be made present down here in the sweat and dust of real lives.  
So John starts the public ministry of Jesus in a backwater, nondescript village wedding.  He is present in a wedding feast, in the ordinary happiness of a family event, in the music, the laughter, the turning of Palestinian plonk into a beautiful rich mellow sauvignon red. This, according to the events of the day, is when Jesus reveals his glory, his first sign. Sadly, as it turned out, very few people noticed what happened, let alone saw any glory. The servants knew where the wine came from; the steward knew it tasted good, but not its origin; and the bridegroom seemed blissfully ignorant of everything. Mary and the disciples knew, and believed in Jesus, but that was it.
Of course we can read this wedding story at various levels, it is the set epiphany-tide gospel reading, we hear it every year, the third day points to the resurrection of Jesus;  the wine represents the abundant generosity of God; Jesus attending a mega party with “the wrong sort” of people upsets his opponents and give his critics ammunition;  instead of sin and rule breaking, over-eating, over-spending and over drinking Jesus saw possibilities and abundance. And the Cana wedding also points to the time in heaven when all will sit with Jesus at the “eternal banquet prepared for all those who love me,” as I reminded the mourners at my mother-in-law’s funeral last Friday.
This gospel story is well known to us. But what I would like to talk about primarily this morning in this little word “glory,” because here at this wedding breakfast Jesus’ glory is revealed. The word glory was frequently used last year when the London 2012 Olympics brought stories of sporting triumph, often against all the odds, of gracious athletes such as Sir Bradley Wiggins, Sir Chris Hoy, Jessica Ennis and Mo Farah performing in spectacular settings. Glory was reflected in 29 Gold medals. In the bible on the other hand  the psalmist sang of "The heavens telling the glory of God" (Psalm 19.1); "the whole earth is full of [God's] glory" said the seraphs whom Isaiah saw (Isaiah 6.3). “Glory to God in the highest,” sang the angels to the shepherds. In a theological prologue, John summarises his whole Gospel: "The Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father's only son, full of grace and truth" (John 1.14).
Isaiah tells of God's irresistible urge to scoop his people into this extravagant revelation of divine glory. Writing when political upheavals foreshadowed freedom from the Babylonian exile, his excitement was barely contained: kings would see the glory, as God vindicated this tiny, exiled nation; worn-down exiles would be a crown of beauty in God's hand, a royal diadem; their ravaged homeland would be called "Married", "My Delight is in Her". The details are historical; the enduring message, the continuing story is that God's glory is revealed when God acts among his people.
Paul's echoed Isaiah's message when trying to order worship in an immature and irrepressible church: God pours out his blessing with abandon, and reveals his glory among his people, who are open to the Holy Spirit working among them. The initiative is entirely God's, and even the exasperating Corinthians see, and themselves reveal, God's glory in Jesus Christ, the head of the Church.
But I can’t help thinking that it was in a backwater village that’s God glory was revealed, where the "wonder of his saving presence,” was made manifest, was made known - as our opening prayer puts it. And yes John picks up Isaiah's imagery of marriage's heralding the dawning of the messianic age that comes in Jesus Christ, but the context was not Isaiah's international stage, but this village called Cana situated 7 kilometres north east of Nazareth. It is in the lowly small details of human life that God’s glory is revealed. And this perhaps might allow us to rethink our concepts of what it means for heavenly glory to be revealed. Jesus' glory revealed on earth was modest and unassertive. It was a costly glory; Michael Ramsey identified it with Jesus' utter self-giving to the Father, which breaks the power of human, sinful glory. And here’s what we have to remember, to take on board from this story. The crucial thing at Cana was not that everyone was wowed by something spectacular, but that the disciples believed in Jesus. The seven signs that John recorded teased and disturbed people enough to raise questions, but, for glory to be revealed, they needed to be met by faith. Thus, near the end of his life, Jesus said to Martha: "Did I not tell you that if you believed, you would see the glory of God?"
And yes we can glimpse, bump into glory in our day-to-day lives if only we would open our eyes. I opened my sermon with a joke, the same joke I used for my eldest son’s wedding two years ago. Amongst the lace and roses, the extravagant hats, Elgar and champagne, speeches and dancing, the dreams and tears of two people hopelessly in love I saw something of the glory of God, a epiphany moment if you like, a glimpse of God, a bumping into God. Something of God’s glory was revealed that day in that stone flint church and the opulent trappings of a garden marquee. And yes we do not have to be in church to bump into God, to glimpse God, we can do so sharing a meal with friends, watching a film (I can recommend the wonderfully film Quartet starring Maggie Smith, Bill Connolly and Tom Courtney, directed by Dustin Hoffman), just right for you seniors!
We can somehow get a peak of a greater love and reality all around us when we see something beyond the material world, you may call these moments “sacred” joyful, sad, inspirational, melancholic, awesome.... like...................receiving an undeserved smile from a child, weeping over a broken relationship, gazing at the stars on a dark night, sipping a cold beer on a summer day with nothing to do, listening to a Mozart opera or Barbara Streisand, singing at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff, that final Sunderland goal feeling inspired by a new product, holding the hand of a dying loved one, standing at an open grave. Life is packed with moments of God-ness, epiphany moments. And because the world is an ambiguous place we so sometimes miss these God experiences because we are so aware of the darkness and evil that we see or that we hear about on the media.
St Augustine sums it up: "The presence of his glory walks among us, if love finds room." For those at Cana with eyes to see and hearts open to love, the revelation of Jesus glory was life-changing. It can be the same for us when God's glory is disclosed in the everydayness of life - and suddenly our world “is charged with the grandeur of God” as the poet Manley Hopkins has it. We are in the Epiphany season of glory revealed in Jesus Christ. Rarely is this glory revealed blindingly, as at the transfiguration which we shall celebrate in a couple of weeks; but it is there for the seeing, when suddenly we glimpse, as though through a crack in the ordinary into heaven, a miraculous foretaste of the fuller revelation of glory to come (John 17.24).
Then our world is charged with glory, and Cana's simple marriage-feast takes on a messianic meaning, as God rejoices over us as a bridegroom with a bride. Dare we believe that we will see the glory of God where we live and work? Can love find room? Perhaps I should leave it to the closing scene from the widely acclaimed film Les Miserables where in the convent the spirit of Fantine leads Valjean peacefully in to heaven with these words “Take my hand and lead me to salvation; take my love for love is everlasting, and remember the truth that once was spoken - to love another person is to see the face of God.” Amen
1 Corinthians 12.1-11; John 2.1-11
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Ray Anglesea is a self supporting minister working in Durham Cathedral Bookshop and at St Andrew’s Dawson Street LEP, Crook and in the wider West Durham Methodist Circuit
 

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