This was my Ash Wednesday sermon, based heavily on materials from Call to Change:
"Two men went up to the Temple to pray, one a Pharisee, the other a tax man. The Pharisee posed and prayed like this: 'Oh, God, I thank you that I am not like other people—robbers, crooks, adulterers, or, heaven forbid, like this tax man. I fast twice a week and tithe on all my income.'
"Meanwhile the tax man, slumped in the shadows, his face in his hands, not daring to look up, said, 'God, give mercy. Forgive me, a sinner.'"
Jesus commented, "This tax man, not the other, went home made right with God. If you walk around with your nose in the air, you're going to end up flat on your face, but if you're content to be simply yourself, you will become more than yourself." (Luke 18. 9 - 14)
The prayer of the tax man opened him up to reality – the reality of who he really was – while the prayer of the Pharisee was an exercise in unreality because it was designed to make him look better than he was by comparison with others.
This is one of the reasons why Jesus says in Matthew 6. 1 - 6 don’t perform your religious duties in public and don’t pray where everyone can see you. If our religious duties and our prayers are performed to gain the praise of others then they are not opening us up to the reality of who we are, instead they are poses designed to escape from, hide or mask that reality.
God’s judgment confronts us with reality. His word pierces through our layers of self-deception. It pierces through the false gods of profit, popularity and status on which we set our hearts, and through our shell of self-protecting cynicism.
Under the loving judgment of God, we see ourselves as we really are. We see the futility of our self-deception, the emptiness of our false gods and the destructiveness of our cynicism. Why does God force this painful truth upon us? For this reason: it is only when we face the reality of our lives that change and growth become possible.
The prayers and practices of Lent exist to open us to reality. Their words of penitence urge us to face the truth about our sins and their impact on others. For example, the chastening words of the Ash Wednesday liturgy ‘Remember thou art dust, and unto dust shalt thou return’ force us to face the truth of our mortality.
We won’t go on forever. The choices we make each day mean there are paths down which we have decided not to travel, possibilities we have shut down, perhaps permanently. We need to ask what kind of values we will affirm, in our deeds as well as our words. As we face our mortality, we are forced to ask: what do I want this life to say?
This question needs to be considered alongside an honest examination of what my life currently says. What would you say my values and priorities were if you looked, not at the beliefs I profess, but at the ways I spend my time and money, the things that preoccupy and vex me, the ways I treat the people around me?
Lent helps us to explore the gap between the answers we give to these two questions: what does this life say? and what do I want it to say?
These are questions we can also ask of our common life. In The Rock T.S. Eliot asks:
What is the meaning of this city?
Do you huddle together because you love each other?
What will you answer? ‘We all dwell together
To make money from each other?’ or ‘This is a community?’
Today, many people are asking these questions with a new intensity. There is a large and growing gap between rich and poor, one which politicians of all parties say they want to see reversed. And we all live with the ongoing and unpredictable consequences of the global financial crisis for years to come. In the midst of a recession – and the yawning gap between the richest and poorest in our society – there is a growing sense that something needs to change.
So this Lent, two Christian social action charities – The Contextual Theology Centre and the Church Urban Fund – are issuing a Call to Change. (This is online at www.calltochange.withtank.com and on Twitter at @calltochange.) It builds on decades of ministry by churches in some of England ’s poorest neighbourhoods. It seeks to draw more people into their work of prayer, of listening and of action for social justice by use of the season of Lent to achieve real change in our local and national life.
The Call to Change is not a call to scapegoat someone else – be they a ‘benefits scrounger’ or a banker. Each of us is called to open ourselves to reality. We do this through prayer: as we encounter the ultimate reality of God in Scripture, worship and personal devotion. We do it too through listening: and in particular, a serious engagement with the voice of England ’s poorest communities.
Words are not enough. They need to take flesh in action. The experience of churches engaged in their local community points to concrete things every Christian and congregation can do – to tackle poverty, and build an economic system that works for poor as well as rich.
Lent is traditionally seen as a rather gloomy time, when we turn inward in tortured self-examination. The truth is very different. The deeper purpose of this season is to draw us outward – into a deeper communion with God and with neighbour. We actually need Lent now more than ever, so that mind, body and spirit can be released from the self-indulgence of a consumerist, individualistic society. The ‘Good News’ of Lent is how much more we believe there is to life than this. This is God’s reality which Lent enables us to encounter.
Lent is mirrored on the way Jesus’ own ministry began: with forty days of prayerful discernment. Only then can our action be part of God’s transforming work. Without prayer, we will not discern God’s purposes or act his power. Without listening, we will not discover our neighbours’ concerns - or be able to harness the power of common action.
Both prayer and listening help us see that Christian discipleship involves a challenge to the values of our broken world. In Lent, we are called to remove the idols of money and power from the thrones they have in our hearts and in our society. In Lent, we are challenged to face up to the reality of our self-indulgence in a consumerist, individualistic society and remember that money and power are to be placed at the service of Christ, and of his Kingdom of justice and of peace.
It is through changes like these, individual and corporate, that we can grow together into ‘life in all its fullness.’ That is the message of Lent. And, more importantly, it is the message of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, God’s word of love made flesh.
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Keane - Everybody's Changing.
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