24 June 2012

Last Sunday's Thought: On personal accountability


‘We are putting no obstacle in anyone’s way, so that no fault may be found with our ministry’ (2 Cor. 6:3). St Paul’s words to the Corinthians move from the negative to the positive: he goes on to say that he has worked with ‘purity, knowledge, patience, kindness, holiness of spirit, genuine love, truthful speech, and the power of God; [and] with the weapons of righteousness for the right hand and for the left…’ There is, he says, ‘no restriction in our affections’.
Yet it is clear from what Paul says and implies that there has been only a limited response from the Corinthians in return. He appeals to them to ‘open wide your hearts also’. Affection and open heartedness are two signs of a church which is also open and receptive to God through the working of the Holy Spirit.
The seven gifts of the Holy Spirit are wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, knowledge, piety, and fear of the Lord (Isaiah 11:2). The 7 gifts are to be distinguished from the ‘fruits’ of the Holy Spirit in Galatians 5:22-23: these are ‘love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control’. The gifts of the Holy Spirit are interior qualities, while the fruits of the Holy Spirit are external signs of the workings of the Spirit.
Receiving gifts of the Spirit as interior qualities and these being transformed into fruits, the external and visible signs, is evidence of the transformation that can happen in our Church as we deepen our discipleship and spirituality. Paul and the other apostles in Acts established new churches or brought the Gospel to fledgling churches which were struggling to know what the Gospel was and is. Remember that at the time, it was not yet written down. Now, it is claimed that 40% of born-again Christians don’t even know what the word ‘gospel’ means! (Neil Cole, Cultivating a life for God, 1999: 84).
Paul encountered difficulties at Corinth that he had not anticipated. As one commentator writes:
Emotionally they were the polar opposites of the converts Paul had made in Galatia. The Galatians were paralyzed by prudence, afraid to make any moral decision for fear that it might be wrong. They desperately wanted to live by a rulebook.
‘The Corinthians, on the contrary, were bursting with initiative, and joyfully welcomed Paul’s invitation to work out for themselves what Christian living meant. Their enthusiasm, however, was not matched by their sensitivity to the gospel, and their insights were regularly wrong…’
What Paul’s experiences with the early church at Corinth suggest to us is that, though debate and discussion enlivens a Church, there is a point at which it can degenerate into mere speculation and thus become destructive. Similarly, comments about Paul’s ministerial style and the effectiveness of his preaching seemed to serve no purpose other than to undermine his authority in dealing with a profound doctrinal challenge – facing off those who required converts to Christianity to become Jews first. Unity of purpose is essential to a young church or a developing church: there is no substitute for it. Fortunately we learn that in the end the Corinthians calmed down and accepted his authority once more, so that in the winter of 55-56 Paul was able to spend a second visit there, where he wrote his letter to the Romans.  
Making disciples – not just Christians, but disciples who bear fruit – is what being Church is about. Paul’s difficulties with the Corinthians also tell us that things do not work always out as they should. This is not what we want in our Church. But how do we ensure that we don’t backslide and end up with something that is less than we seek? Constant vigilance is one way. We are counselled to open up our definition of church to mean a way of life, not just a location or a timeslot on Sunday. We need to expand our understanding of discipleship. We must each and every one of us to seek to be Good News to someone in need. In prayer we need to offer our hearts and souls to Jesus Christ and recognize that this will involve sacrifice. It may be easier for us to be generous and compassionate than it is to be forgiving. But both issues lead to a contrast between God and ourselves. God is infinitely more generous than I can ever be; He is also far more forgiving.
Another way in which we can make progress is by holding ourselves accountable. This is a process by which we ask ourselves questions that are the relevant ones for each of us. How has God made his presence known to us this week? What is God teaching us? How are we responding to His prompting? Is there someone with whom we need to share Christ this week? Do we have a need to confess any sin? (Neil Cole, Cultivating a life for God, 1999: 65). If you identify in yourself a particular weakness or need, the questions can be specifically directed in that area; all that is required is honesty and frankness to God. For example, did I invest the proper quality and quantity of time in my most important relationships? Did my life reflect integrity? Did I express a forgiving attitude toward others? Did I talk with someone about Christ? (Cole: 128).
The technique of accountability is as old as the Bible itself. It was used by John Wesley in what became his ‘Methodist’ groups. ‘Am I a hypocrite?... Do I thank God that I am not as other people, especially as the Pharisee who despised the publican? Is there anyone whom I fear, dislike, disown, criticize, hold resentment toward or disregard? If so, what I am going to do about it? Do I grumble and complain constantly? Is Christ real to me?’ (Cole: 125-6).
The questions can be as precise or as open as we choose. The two basic questions that underlie everything else are these: What is God telling me to do? What am I going to do about it? (Cole: 131). If our own lives cannot be transformed first, we have no right to expect to transform another’s. There is a cost involved in seeking the multiplication of disciples in our Church.

09 June 2012

Last Sunday's Thought: Prayer is the gift of the Spirit


         ‘…Everything is for your sake’, Paul writes to the somewhat difficult Corinthians, ‘so that grace, as it extends to more and more people, may increase thanksgiving, to the glory of God. So we do not lose heart. Even though our outer nature is wasting away, our inner nature is being renewed day by day. For this slight momentary affliction is preparing us for an eternal weight of glory beyond all measure, because we look not at what can be seen but at what cannot be seen; for what can be seen is temporary, but what cannot be seen is eternal’ (2 Cor. 4:15-18).
Is our ‘inner nature’ being renewed day by day as Paul suggests? And if not, what can we do to ensure that it is so renewed? Well, in the newsletter last week and this I have carried an insert about listening to prayer, and contemplation in prayer, referring those of you who have the internet to www.pray-as-you-go.org. Lasting between ten and thirteen minutes, each day’s contribution combines music, scripture and some questions for reflection. The aim is to help you to become more aware of God’s presence in your life; to listen to and reflect on God’s word; and to grow in your relationship with God. It is produced by Jesuit Media Initiatives, with material written by a number of British Jesuits and other experts in the spirituality of St Ignatius of Loyola. The so-called ‘Ignatian method’ is a well-respected method of meditation and though Roman Catholic in origin, there are testimonials from non-Catholics on the website from enthusiasts who use the site’s materials every day in their prayer life. I have found it very peaceful and helpful. I hope that you do too. For those who have no access to the internet, ask a friend who has access to download the materials for you to play through I-tunes on an I-pod or the like. There are also regularly prayers, songs and readings from TaizĂ© on another free webcast. Meditation on Scripture, it has been said, draws us more deeply into a loving relationship with the God whom we meet there, and a clearer knowledge of his purposes for us.
         We’ve been thinking about prayer at the PCC recently, and concluded that we needed a new group from the congregation to draw up our intercessions. Today is the first occasion when we are using the offerings from a member of the group. We pray that the Holy Spirit will inspire the thoughts, contemplations and meditations of the members of the group as they prepare these prayers for us. We are aiming at spiritual diversity and different styles of prayer: this reflects the wonderful diversity of the Christian experience throughout the world. If our prayer life is rich and deep, then so too will be our witness.
         In American parlance, a ‘breakout church’ is a congregation that has experienced at least five years of decline followed by at least five years of growth. Recently the common elements in 50,000 churches in the US, which had experienced a period of decline followed by one of growth, were analysedIn sum, the process described is one of gaining a newly found confidence and hope, or moving from an inwardly-focused to an outwardly-focused mind set. This story can become the story of our church. The first steps are to strengthen our life of prayer and our meditation upon the Word of God, in order, as Paul suggests, to renew our inner nature day by day. Once we are ourselves renewed we can turn to enquire of others whether they wish to join us on our journey because we can talk with a newly found confidence about the working of the Holy Spirit within our Church. Henceforth, ‘we look not at what can be seen but at what cannot be seen; for what can be seen is temporary, but what cannot be seen is eternal.’
I was looking for an additional closing thought. Where to look? What better place than Henri Nouwen’s Bread for the Journey. Reflections for Everyday of the Year? I happened upon the entry for 9 June in this, Nouwen’s last book, an entry which was called ‘empowered to pray’. Here it is:
‘Prayer is the gift of the Spirit. Often we wonder how to pray; when to pray and what to pray. We can become very concerned about methods and techniques of prayer. But finally it is not we who pray but the Spirit who prays in us.
‘Paul says: “The Spirit… comes to help us in our weakness, for, when we do not know how to pray properly, then the Spirit personally makes our petitions for us in groans that cannot be put into words; and he who can see into all hearts knows what the Spirit means because the prayers that the Spirit makes for God’s holy people are always in accordance with the mind of God” (Romans 8:26-28). These words explain why the Spirit is called the Consoler.’
And Nouwen’s entry for 8 June, on the theme of being ‘empowered to speak’, is also relevant in our prayerful support for our new group of intercession writers. He writes:
‘The Spirit that Jesus gives us empowers us to speak. Often when we are expected to speak in front of people who intimidate us, we are nervous and self-conscious. But if we live in the Spirit, we don’t have to worry about what to say. We will find ourselves ready to speak when the need is there. “When they take you before… [the] authorities, do not worry about how to defend yourselves or what to say, because when the time comes, the Holy Spirit will teach you what you should say” (Luke 12:11-12).’
‘We waste much of our time in anxious preparation’, Nouwen warns us. ‘Let’s claim the truth that the Spirit that Jesus gave us will speak in us and speak convincingly.’ Amen.


04 June 2012

Thought from Trinity Sunday: Contemplation of the Holy Trinity


For the twentieth-century theologian Karl Rahner, the beatific vision is ‘God’s perfect self-communication’, ‘the perfect and ultimately the only absolute fulfilment of the spiritual creature’ (Rahner (ed.), Encyclopedia of Theology, 79). Where on this earth can we begin to feel something of this ‘absolute fulfilment of the spiritual creature’? For more than ten years off and on, I have been contemplating the icon of the Holy Trinity painted by St Andrei Rublev (1370-c.1430), and now I have found expression of my contemplation in the words of Gabriel Bunge’s profound meditation on the subject. ‘The meaning and end of Christian life [is] ... communion with the All-Holy Trinity in and through the Holy Spirit’, he writes. ‘What is experienced when this icon is contemplated is ‘my being, my salvation, as the subject of conversation between the Father, Son, and Spirit’  (Bunge, The Rublev Trinity, trans. Andrew Louth: 2007, 111).


The Rublev icon, or the Old Testament Trinity as it is often called, depicts the hospitality of Abraham to three strangers who turn out to be angels (Genesis 18:2–5). Yet the icon is also a depiction of the Trinity as God’s love towards the world, preeminently so according to a decision of the Russian Orthodox church at a synod in 1551: it’s a vision of unanimity and universal love. The spiritual beauty and timelessness of the scene is an image conceived of by a Christian to whom the Christian understanding of the Trinity has been revealed. The story may be from Genesis 18; but the vision is essentially one from the New Testament, not the Old.


Life in the Trinity–St. Sergius monastery emphasized ‘fraternity, calm, love (toward) God and spiritual self-improvement’. The work was painted in about 1410 for the abbot of the Trinity Monastery, Nikon of Radonezh, a disciple of St. Sergius. Russian icon painters before Rublev subscribed to the view that Abraham was visited by God (in Christ’s image) and two angels. Hence, Christ was represented in icons of the Trinity as the middle angel and was symbolically set apart either by a halo with a cross, by a considerable enlargement of his figure, by widely spread wings or by a scroll in His hand. In Rublev’s icon for the first time all the angels are equally important.


The icon is more than theology in paint. It is prayer in paint. This achievement was only possible because of Rublev’s ascetical discipline. Bunge notes that Rublev and his friend and ‘fellow faster’ Daniil, himself an accomplished icon painter, would sit for hours simply contemplating an icon of the Holy Trinity in St. Sergii’s Trinity Monastery. It was this devotion that nourished his soul and prepared Rublev for his greatest aesthetic achievement (Bunge, p. 109). The texts on Trinity talk about the love which fills the Trinity: ‘Trinity is love’, ‘the Son loves His Father, the Father loves His Son’, ‘the Love of the Heavenly Father is Given to the World through His Son’, and so on. Rublev’s Trinity is not only a representation of the three hypostases of God, the triune God, and the symbol of the Eucharist, but it is also an all-encompassing symbol of unity and an image of divine love. ‘There exists the icon of the Trinity by St. Andrei Rublev; therefore God exists’ (Bunge, p. 107). This remarkable statement by Fr. Pavel Florensky, Russian Orthodox priest, mathematician, art historian and martyr, is not the kind of comment that Christians in the West are used to, but it reveals the intensity of feeling that the icon draws out of those who have contemplated its beauty for a long period of time.


For Henri Nouwen, Rublev’s trinity is ‘a holy place to enter and stay within. As we place ourselves in front of the icon in prayer, we come to experience a gentle invitation to participate in the intimate conversation that is taking place among the three divine angels and to join them around the table. The movement from the Father [on the left] toward the Son [in the centre] and the movement of both Son and Spirit [on the right] toward the Father become a movement in which the one who prays is lifted up and held secure... Rublev’s icon gives us a glimpse of the house of perfect love.’


Contemplation of Rublev’s Holy Trinity can help fill the relative scarcity of peaceful images on which to meditate in our stressful lives. We need images that bring us peace; images that encircle us with love (we can be more than just witnesses, we can be participants, drawn into the circle of love); images that inspire our prayers and lift us up above the maelstrom and stress of life rather than bring us down to the ordinariness of institutional or personal conflict. If not quite the ‘absolute fulfilment of the spiritual creature’, as Karl Rahner envisaged the beatific vision, it is not far short of it. Thanks be to God.



Update: Rublev by Rowan Williams

One day, God walked in, pale from the grey steppe,
slit-eyed against the wind, and stopped,
said, Colour me, breathe your blood into my mouth.


I said, Here is the blood of all our people,
these are their bruises, blue and purple,
gold, brown, and pale green wash of death.


These (god) are the chromatic pains of flesh,
I said, I trust I shall make you blush,
O I shall stain you with the scars of birth.


For ever, I shall root you in the wood,
under the sun shall bake you bread
of beechmast, never let you forth.


To the white desert, to the starving sand.
But we shall sit and speak around
one table, share one food, one earth.