Sunday, 31 December 2023

December 31 - A New Year’s Eve Prayer




So here we are on New Year’s Eve 2023. We await 2024 with hope but also with trepidation. Tonight the news is full of Russia and Ukraine and Israel and Gaza and now tension between the United States and Yemen. And man at war with man hears not…

Tonight is either celebrated or dreaded or ignored. Some will go to bed as normal, others will watch Rick Astley and the fireworks from London, others will be at a party (Harpenden readers - how we miss those gatherings at John Farrow’s!) and others will be in church and gather at an event to herald midnight. We will be at the cathedral a bit later and then in the market square to see 2024 in as a city. Ripon does these big days well. 

We had a lovely upbeat service at Snape chapel here this morning. We reflected on the light of Christ coming and us needing to follow it when 2024 gets bumpy. One of our preachers present said when we have a light in front of us we focus on it, we don’t look at the ground below. We keep our eyes on where the light is leading us out of the darkness. 

There’s a very tongue in cheek website called Newsthump. Australia has already entered 2024. A headline says “Australians say 2024 is as rubbish.” We don’t know what lies ahead. We can only do our best. We stand tonight at the gate of another year. We put our hand into the hand of God. 

I don’t like New Year resolutions. They put pressure on people and when we fail it does our mental health no good at all. So in wishing my readers a very happy and peaceful New Year, and a thank you for letting me know some of you read this stuff, I’ll leave you with the wonderful Nadia Bolz-Weber and her honest prayer for us all. Let’s be kind to ourselves. It’s not going to be an easy year. But we enter it with assurance we don’t enter it alone. 

A New Year’s Blessing for realists.

As you enter this new year, as you pack away the Christmas decorations and get out your stretchy pants,

as you face the onslaught of false promises offered you through new disciplines and elimination diets,

as you grasp for control of yourself and your life and this chaotic world -

May you remember that there is no resolution that, if kept, will make you more worthy of love.

There is no resolution that, if kept, will make life less uncertain and allow you to control your aging parents and your teenage children and the way other people act.  

So this year (as every year),

May you just skip the part where you resolve to be better do better and look better this time.

Instead, may you give yourself the gift of really, really low expectations. Not out of resignation, but out of generosity.

May you expect so little of yourself that you can be super proud of the smallest of accomplishments.

May you expect so little of the people in your life that you actually notice and cherish every small, lovely thing about them.

May you expect so little of the service industry that you notice more of what you do get and less of what you don't and then just tip really well anyhow.

May you expect to get so little out of 2024 that you can celebrate every single thing it offers you, however small.

Because you deserve joy and not disappointment.





Saturday, 30 December 2023

December 30 - tomorrow’s sermon!!



When I was a child, I’d be a nightmare on the last day of a summer holiday. Back in the 1970’s you had one holiday away. We usually went to Bournemouth or Cromer or Clacton on Sea. 


One year we even went north of Watford Gap to the far-flung delights of Scarborough! On the last day when told to come off the beach, I’d run back onto it. Why? Because I didn’t want the holiday to end. Returning to normality – school and so on – needed to be put off for as long as possible. 

 

I wish it could be Christmas every day. But isn’t Christmas over? I was in a Morrisons in Harrogate the other day. In your face as you enter the shop is a big sign. It says “Easter”! The girl behind the till asked me if I was still being festive. I said “your shop is full of Easter.” “Yes,” she said. “Christmas came down on Tuesday. It is Easter now!” “I’m a church vicar,” I said, “I need a break before I can think about Easter!” 


One of the presenters on Radio 1 said the other day as they’d stopped playing Christmas songs, “thank goodness I don’t have to play Mariah, I’m sick of it.” In our homes Christmas is in a heap, stuff everywhere and bits of food to be used up. One of my friends asked “is it okay to have a mince pie for breakfast?” To which I replied, “I’ve just had one on my way to making breakfast. Is that okay?” 

 

For much of society Christmas is over. And like me on the beach, journeying from celebration to the reality of January and dark miserable wet days like yesterday isn’t attractive. We want the lightness and the hope and the fun and the escape from it all to last longer. But it doesn’t last. We’ve sung about peace on earth, goodwill to men but Russia is still bombing Ukraine and Israel is still bombing Gaza. We’ve sung about the little town of Bethlehem how still we see thee lie, when Bethlehem at the end of 2023 is anything but still. We’ve celebrated the light of the world, and it seems that light isn’t doing very much. You don’t hear me preach very often in this part of the Circuit, but regular hearers know I get inspiration from funny places. How about a sign on the toilet door in Holy Trinity church in Ripon? “Light not working. May be dark. Sorry.” That’s where people are. We support each other through a dark struggle, and we don’t know what to do. 

 

I wish it could be Christmas every day. Well before you say dear God he’s a miserable preacher. Let’s hope it’s three years and four months until he comes again, let’s remember the Christmas Gospel. The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light. Arise shine for your light has come and the glory of the Lord has risen upon you. In him was light and that light was the life of everyone. The light shines in the darkness and the darkness shall not put it out. I am the light of the world, whoever follows me shall not walk in darkness but shall have the light of life. 

 

Friends, this is the Christmas season. 

It lasts at least until 6 January, but you can stretch it out to 2 February which is Candlemas. I never got that until I was the minister of an Anglican and Methodist LEP as I am now. Anglicans keep the crib out until Candlemas and they light the Christ candle until Candlemas. It is to remind us that Christmas truths equip us to do January and whatever a New Year brings. The light might not be working. It may be dark. Sorry. But there is a greater light. 

 

Today the lectionary leads us to two characters who see Christmas as a lasting gift, a light that will shine for ever. Mary and Joseph are in the Temple to do two things, obey two Jewish rites. The first rite was for Mary, purification 40 days after the bleeding from the birth of a son. There’s a very exciting eight verses on it in the twelfth chapter of Leviticus if you’re bored this afternoon. Mary comes with the offering of a pair of doves or pigeons, as required for those who can't afford a sheep. The second rite was the presentation of Jesus as a firstborn son. 

The text doesn't focus on the rituals that brought the family to the Temple. Instead they encounter older people, filled and led by the Spirit. As so often in Luke's Gospel, there is a pairing of a woman and a man: Luke's birth narratives also begin with an older couple, in Elizabeth and Zechariah. 


Simeon's reaction reflects both personal and universal hopes. The Spirit enables him to see the promise of the Messiah for all peoples fulfilled in this baby now – long before Jesus has done anything. That also fulfils a personal revelation, that Simeon would see this. Here is light. Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace: according to thy word.  For mine eyes have seen thy salvation, which thou hast prepared before the face of all people. To be a light to lighten the Gentiles and to be the glory of thy people Israel. Simeon had waited year after year for the moment of revelation. He found peace and deep joy at the end of his long life.


Anna is also led by God to this baby. She also sees God's promises fulfilled and shares her excitement with others. Luke describes Anna as a prophet, as someone who speaks God’s truth not just about the future but about the present, God’s presence here among us. As an old woman, a widow, possibly with no children of her own, Anna would not have had much status in society. She may have spent all her time in the temple, but as a woman she would not have had much religious status either. And yet, it is to people like Anna that God makes himself known. Light not working. May be dark. Sorry. Here’s the Christmas that lasts shared to us by two very elderly people – light, peace, glory, contentment and excitement. We don’t know how many years more Simeon and Anna lived but we can imagine Christmas was with them every day. Life had changed. 


I wish it could be Christmas every day. Well, it can be. Our diet needs to improve, we can’t party all year, we have things to get on with, but if Jesus the light is here then he is here forever. We can’t blow his light out. Remember one candle, one light is a protest saying we will not have it this way. 


I don’t know what your numbers at services over Christmas were like. Allhallowgate had its highest number on Christmas Day for several years. People like Christmas, a sweet baby story, the comfort of carols. They might reflect later well nothing much has changed. As the sign says it might be dark. Sorry. Where’s the light and peace and goodwill? Christmas still has work to do in the world.

This doesn’t mean that Christmas failed. Far from it. It means that what God was doing in Jesus was always meant to be the beginning of something, not the end. 


The New Testament and Christian writings from the first centuries have a clear expectation that the Christians will participate in, appropriate, or be absorbed into Jesus’ mission. Maybe we need a focus as churches in 2024. We join with him in incarnating the presence of God in the world. We join with him in calling oppressive authorities to account. We join with him in feeding the hungry and tending to the sick. We join with him in proclaiming good news, in freeing captives, in making peace — not the tentative ceasefires we call peace in our world, but God’s true peace of whole and healed relationships, which we call shalom. 

This is the true work of Christmas. This is the life Christmas calls us to incarnate in the world, to offer to the world in and through our bodies. This is the Kingdom of God in action.

The words in Scripture about light and the testimony of Simeon and Anna are worth reflecting on once more today as we enter into the brave, new world that Christmas inaugurates and we stand near another new year. 

 

I wish it could be Christmas everyday. Here’s how.. 

I will end with some powerful words from the wonderful twentieth-century American theologian Howard Thurman:

When the song of the angels is stilled,
When the star in the sky is gone,
When the kings and princes are home,
When the shepherds are back with their flock,
The work of Christmas begins:
To find the lost,
To heal the broken,
To feed the hungry,
To release the prisoner,
To rebuild the nations,
To bring peace among brothers and sisters,
To make music in the heart.

Friends, continue to have a joyous Christmas and commit yourselves to live it in the New Year. Let’s transform the toilet door sign: The light is working. The darkness won’t last. Alleluia! 




Friday, 29 December 2023

December 29 - Christmas as pastoral act



I’ve been pondering what Immanuel means in these days after Christmas. The stories post Christmas are dark. The gospel writers throw in a relationship on the rocks, a tyrannical census, no room at the inn, an unhinged ruler (see yesterday’s blog), genocide, warnings, and the holy family as refugees. 

Incarnation into the world isn’t a sweet story. The Christ child is born in poverty, in the cold. The Christ child causes others to be threatened and lash out. The Christ child causes the world to be unsettled for a while. The Christ child is forced to seek sanctuary in a foreign land as a toddler and doesn’t know when it will be safe to return. Incarnation is about dirt, rejection, revolution and an identification with the poor, outcast and refugee in the world. 

The angel sings into the story. Peace on earth. 
Our carols get it right:
Above its sad and lonely plains they bend their hovering wings…
And…
He laid his glory by, we wrapped him in our clay. 

There was a tongue in cheek article on News Thump today that Jesus arrived on our shores in a small boat. He was sent away. “I thought the innkeepers in Bethlehem were a pretty bigoted bunch, but you should have heard the so-called Christians patrolling the beach I arrived on.

“I opened my arms to receive them warmly, but they all told me to get back in the boat and go back to where I came from. They were really quite aggressive about it. Even Pontius Pilate didn’t accuse me of being in a grooming gang of terrorists.” 

The good news of Jesus at Christmas is that he comes to quote Wesley again “contracted to a span.” One of us. One of us if we struggle. One of us if we face unknown journeys. One of us if we are unwanted. One of us if bombs drop on us because a ruler wants what he wants. One of us if we find ourselves on the move with no certainties. One of us if we have nowhere to lay our head. One of us if we are labelled not one of those we will accept. Maybe Jesus would have ended up in Rwanda.

The good news is that Jesus is for all who struggle. I wrote this pastoral note to my churches just before Christmas citing the image of Bethlehem that had just gone viral…


This image has just gone viral, it’s an artists impression of Christmas 2023 in Bethlehem. Christians in Bethlehem this Christmas are reminding the world where Jesus comes. He comes under the rubble. He comes with a different agenda. He comes to herald peace, mad as that sounds. The heart of Christmas is that peace is possible. Even when it’s absolute chaos.I know a lot of you have had a sad 2023 with loss and illness and uncertainty. For you Christmas though hard to do like the world does with its bonhomie and frills, can be a time God would give you his peace. Remember he comes into the heart of human experience, under the rubble of shatter hopes and uncertainty ahead. He comes also to  turn mourning into dancing. That’s why Christmas carols were originally to be danced to! I just want on this Christmas Eve to wish you a peace filled Christmas and a hopeful 2024. I also want to say thank you to you for your commitment to our work together. All six of my communities as we find ourselves nearly half way through my fourth year with you, have huge potential. Like shepherds and magi we need to look up and see what’s going on. God is ahead of us. 2024 marks the 25th anniversary in June of my ordination. After 25 years and seven Circuits, I remain convinced our best work happens when we are prepared to listen to God, celebrate our gifts and be positive about what we are called to be. This has been a year where we’ve seen significant change, not least me handing over two churches to Sarah. That wasn’t planned this time last year! 

Take time on this fifth day of Christmas to simply thank God he came in Jesus. He will never leave us. We are cared for - always. 






Thursday, 28 December 2023

December 28 - the bit of Christmas we don’t want to talk about…




If every memorable story needs a villain, the Christmas story certainly has one. His name is Herod or, if you wish, “Herod the Great.” Sure, Herod was a great builder, but here is a snapshot of his ethical “greatness”: he had three of his sons killed; one of his wives executed, along with her mother and grandfather; and he left instructions that, when he died, there would be a mass execution of Jewish elders so as to cause great mourning upon his own passing.

That, at least, is what we know from Josephus. This first-century Jewish historian passed over one more murderous deed of Herod, either because it was unknown to him or because so “minor” a bloodbath hardly seemed to merit inclusion. We usually call it The Slaughter of the Holy Innocents or simply The Holy Innocents. The church traditionally remembers it today, December 28.

Some time after the birth of Jesus, when the star-guided magi showed up in Jerusalem asking around for the one born as “king of the Jews,” Matthew tells us that Herod was ταράσσω  This Greek verb can mean “troubled, agitated, vexed, terrified, disturbed.” Herod was indeed a “disturbed” man, in both senses of the word.

He did what any other unscrupulous, power-hungry, furious and “disturbed” politician might have done: “he sent and killed all the male children in Bethlehem and in all that region who were two years old or under.” It’s horrific but not unusual. Rulers who are threatened get unhinged. Jerome Murphy-O’Connor  writes as follows about the threat of Herod and the flight into Egypt:

“ it would be extraordinary if Herod had not taken very seriously the prophecy of a warrior king who would come from Bethlehem (Micah 5:1) …An opponent could recruit forces much more easily if he claimed to be the promised Messiah from Bethlehem. As God’s Chosen One he was guaranteed success; he could not lose. It would be extremely naive to imagine that Herod’s secret police were not all over Bethlehem just waiting for someone to step out of line.

Since Herod was prepared to execute his own sons on mere suspicion, one did not have to be a genius to realize that he would have no compunction about wiping out a whole village just to give himself peace of mind. … Given what everyone knew about Herod’s character and temperament, it would be incredible if those who were free to leave Bethlehem and seek safety outside Herod’s jurisdiction did not avail of the opportunity. Egypt was the traditional place of refuge for those in danger in Judea and it was not very far away. ... 

Joseph’s skill as an artisan gave him mobility. He could find work anywhere. He was not tied to land as were the farmers and shepherds. There can be no doubt about the historicity of the flight into Egypt of Jesus and his family. In fact, I would be extremely surprised if they were the only ones to flee from Bethlehem.” (‘Jesus and Paul: Child Refugees’, in Vivian Boland OP, editor, Watchmen Raise Their Voices, Dublin 2006, pp.64-65) 

So why do we need to include this dark bit of Christmas? Because Jesus doesn’t come to a nice world. And if he is one with us, he is one with us in the darkness and his presence can unsettle those with a different agenda. 

Today as we remember innocents we can’t not think of Gaza and children who are no more. And Rachel who still laments over them. Micky Youngson helpfully reflected on this on Radio 4 this morning. The link to listen to it is below.  





Wednesday, 27 December 2023

December 27 - Apparently it is Easter



Why can’t we do the twelve days of Christmas? I walked into a Morrisons Daily in Harrogate this afternoon and the first thing you see is a big sign saying “Easter.”

The lady behind the till asked me if I was still being festive. I told her the shop had Easter all over it.
“Christmas was all taken down on Tuesday,” she said. “It is now Easter!” 
“I’m a church vicar, I need a break before I do Easter!” I said. Writing on Twitter, one shopper has shared an Easter Terry's chocolate orange and has written: "Don't worry folks! To make sure you don't miss the next big event, shops have started stocking Easter treats and goodies. Nice one @Morrisons. We were beginning to panic that you'd forgotten!"

We seem to need something to look forward to in life. We rush on to the next celebration or event. But isn’t there a danger we hurry away from the last thing with no time to savour it or think about it. My Gran used to you should masticate every mouthful of food 30 times to enjoy the flavour and goodness of the dinner. We love in a world that downs Macdonalds fries quickly as we’ve no time to stop. 

In a week or so I will need to think about where I will be on Easter Sunday but the chocolate eggs can stay on the shelves for now. I’m still doing and resting after Christmas. Remember Mary pondered all these things and treasured them in her heart. She took time. And there were no creme eggs in the shops next day! 





Tuesday, 26 December 2023

December 26 - the day after



I’ve not seen much of today. I slept all morning then got up and slept most of the afternoon. I’ve every admiration for those with energy to go out walking today or hit the Boxing Day sales. These are a few days where not a lot happen really. Someone had better remind me 31 December is a Sunday! 

I wonder how exhausted the Christmas characters were after all the drama was over. Mary and Joseph must have been shattered mentally and physically. We think Jesus was a lot older when the magi came - they were in a house - so maybe once the birth of Jesus had been recovered from there was a little time of stability before they fled into Egypt when Herod went into his tyrannical genocidal rage.

Getting over the journey from Nazareth to Bethlehem must have taken time. Someone has worked out how long it would take today with checkpoints and danger. It’s as ardous a journey for many families today. 



It’s okay to take time this week to recover and readjust. It’s okay to sleep and have nothing happen. Unless you are in Albert Square. Linda appears to have done in Keanu! 



Anyway we need help to recover wherever there’s been excess energy given out or a major event  and I wish us all a peaceful and uneventful few days… and cheese. 




Monday, 25 December 2023

December 25 - God is born among us


‘Glory to God in the highest heaven,
and on earth peace to those on whom his favour rests.’

Luke 2.14 (NIV) 

There’s the message of Christmas: peace on earth.  Three simple words: peace on earth.  It’s a lovely message, and I’m sure few would disagree with it.

Really

Here’s the problem: if Jesus came to bring peace on earth, where is it?  Not a day goes by without the news mentioning war, fighting, death, famine, disease, struggle. It’s rather like that little girl who visited Santa. Santa asked her “what would you like for Christmas little girl? “ And she replied “peace on earth and goodwill to all humankind.” And Santa said “I’m sorry. That’s far too difficult, here’s adoll.” Peace on earth? They cry peace peace where there is no peace. We were at the midnight service at the Leper Chapel last night. Ros the chaplain in her sermon said we’ve stopped being shocked about Ukraine. 

It’s been going on nearly two years. We’ve also stopped being shocked at Gaza after three and a half months of hell on earth there. It’s like war and inhumanity are part of just how it is. It’s never going to end.

So where’s Christmas Peace then? Well here’s the point. We cannot just do peace. We have to experience it. Peace comes down to us in this story. One of my minister friends puts it well in her Christmas letter: 

 

If we want to see it, all we need to do is to look down. We’ll find, beneath our feet, the ground.” 

 

This Christmas we cannot not go to Bethlehem. One of the churches has placed a baby Jesus under the rubble of their bombed-out sanctuary. The minister maybe has it right. He says: 

In Gaza today, God is under the rubble. 

And in this Christmas season, as we search for Jesus, he is to be found not on the side of Rome, but our side of the wall. In a cave, with a simple family. Vulnerable. Barely, and miraculously surviving a massacre. Among a refugee family. This is where Jesus is found. 

If Jesus were to be born today, he would be born under the rubble in Gaza. When we glorify pride and richness, Jesus is under the rubble… 

When we rely on power, might, and weapons, Jesus is under the rubble… 

When we justify, rationalise, and theologise the bombing of children, Jesus is under the rubble… 

Jesus is under the rubble. This is his manger. He is at home with the marginalised, the suffering, the oppressed, and displaced. This is his manger. 

THIS is the incarnation. Messy. Bloody. Poverty. 

This child is our hope and inspiration. We look and see him in every child killed and pulled from under the rubble. While the world continues to reject the children of Gaza, Jesus says: “just as you did it to one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did it to me.” “You did to ME.” Jesus not only calls them his own, he is them! 

We look at the holy family and see them in every family displaced and wandering, now homeless in despair. While the world discusses the fate of the people of Gaza as if they are unwanted boxes in a garage, God in the Christmas narrative shares in their fate; He walks with them and calls them his own. 

This is Christmas today in Palestine and this is the Christmas message.



Glory to God in the highest heaven and on earth peace on those in whom God’s favour rests. Announced by angels, experienced by shepherds. A gift for a weary war-torn world.

You know thinking what to say to you this Christmas morning has been hard going. I want to say there is no peace on earth. Maybe my favourite spiritual writer Nadia Bolz Weber comes to my rescue…she’s struggling too. She says: 

 I cannot sit here and claim that I know what gift the birth of the Christ Child will bring this year, only that whatever God delivers, it will be needed, and it will be unexpected.  Like the first time.

Thank God. Because I need this birth to be something I do not expect. I need it to be something I could not imagine. I need to be shocked by the glory of God shining on my mud-caked soul, and I will search like hell for even the tiniest sign of it. The tiniest sign of God’s glory will do for me this year.” 

Remember this year what Christmas is. Think about Bethlehem. 

He comes under the rubble. He comes with a different agenda. He comes to herald peace, mad as that sounds. The heart of Christmas is that peace is possible. Even when it’s absolute chaos.

I know a lot of you have had a sad 2023 with loss and illness and uncertainty. For you Christmas though hard to do like the world does with its bonhomie and frills, can be a time God would give you his peace. Remember he comes into the heart of human experience, under the rubble of shatteredhopes and uncertainty ahead. He comes also to  turn mourning into dancing. That’s why Christmas carols were originally to be danced to!

We sang Hark the herald angels sing a moment ago. Peace on earth, and mercy mild: God and sinners, reconciled.’ Peace on earth, that is the message of Christmas in a nutshell: not world peace, but God and sinners, reconciled.

God’s gift to you this Christmas – and every day – is his Son Jesus.  God’s gift to you is peace – reconciliation – shalom

And we change things slowly and quietly when we know God’s amazing love for us. We lament over where the world isn’t at peace and we commit ourselves to live Christmas all year. Let’s believe in peace and hurry like the shepherds to see this thing which has taken place which the Lord has told us about.

Even in the chaos of war and uncertainty we can wish each other a happy Christmas. Glory to God in the highest heaven and on earth peace.That’s our gift. And after Christmas is done and we’ve had our dinner and a sleep and whatever we do to celebrate today we respond to what’s been told us. Let there be peace on earth and let it begin with me…

The Coming of God” by Ann Weems 

 Our God is the One who comes to us       

in a burning bush, 

in an angel’s song, 

in a newborn child.

Our God is the One who cannot be found 

locked in a church, 

not even in the sanctuary.

Our God will be where God will be 

with no constraints, 

no predictability.

 

Our God lives where our God lives, 

and destruction has no power 

and even death cannot stop the living.

Our God will be born where God will be born, 

but there is no place to look for the One who comes to us.

When God is ready 

God will come 

even to a godforsaken place 

like a stable in Bethlehem.

Watch … for you know not when 

God comes.

Watch, that you might be found whenever 

wherever God comes.





 

Sunday, 24 December 2023

December 24 - Christmas heralded



A Christmas Eve which has had two carol services in it and us returning to the Leper Chapel for midnight communion tonight. 

This morning the two congregations in Ripon joined together to count down their top ten carols chosen over the last few weeks. It was as exciting as the Christmas pop chart being announced last Friday: the Sam Ryder versus Last Christmas by Wham! battle. The clear winner was this:

Cradled in a manger, meanly,
Laid the Son of Man His head;
Sleeping His first earthly slumber
Where the oxen had been fed.
Happy were those shepherds listening
To the holy angel's word;
Happy they within that stable
Worshipping their infant Lord.

Happy all who hear the message
Of His coming from above;
Happier still who hail His coming,
And with praises greet His love.
Blessèd Saviour, Christ most holy,
In a manger Thou didst rest;
Canst Thou stoop again, yet lower,
And abide within my breast?

Evil things are there before Thee;
In the heart, where they have fed,
Wilt Thou pitifully enter,
Son of Man, and lay Thy head?
Enter, then, O Christ most holy;
Make a Christmas in my heart;
Make a heaven of my manger:
It is heaven where Thou art.

And to those who never listened
To the message of Thy birth,
Who have winter, but no Christmas
Bringing them Thy peace on earth,
Send to these the joyful tidings;
By all people, in each home,
Be there heard the Christmas anthem;
Praise to God, the Christ has come!



I was very pleased this carol won. For me it sums up what Christmas is all about - transformation. Wesleyan Methodist Minister George Stringer Rowe wrote these words which are as fresh as they were in the 1870’s. Christmas is at its heart a protest, an explosion of grace, a radical narrative which says something new is about to happen. Christmas things help us feel good about ourselves, the trouble is that it doesn’t last. 

Today has been full of good things:
The top ten carol service was well received. There were yelps of joy at the winner!
A lovely Christmas lunch with my colleague Sarah : battered sprouts with a chilli dipping sauce - YUM! 
Another carol service at Dallowgill in the howling wind.  
Midnight communion at the Leper Chapel. 

What if we decided to live Christmas every day going into a New Year? What if battered sprouts were available all year? Wouldn’t both be great? 
Let us live Christmas. We can make a difference. 





Saturday, 23 December 2023

December 23 - The Cherry Tree Carol



I want to stand up for Joseph. But what do we know about Joseph? In all the New Testament he never utters a word. Yet, he’s one of the principal figures in the Christmas drama. And so, let’s take just a moment to give Joseph his due.

Tradition has it that Joseph was a simple man of an honourable trade: A carpenter from Nazareth. 

His place in the Christmas story, of course, is that of Mary’s husband. According to Matthew, Joseph and Mary were “betrothed,” but not yet married. William Barclay explains that there were three steps in a Jewish marriage: The engagement, which was often arranged by the parents through a matchmaker when the boy and girl were children; the betrothal, which was a formal ratification of the marriage-to-be, usually done a year before the couple was married; and the wedding itself, which lasted a whole week, at which time the marriage was consummated. During the betrothal, the couple were legally bound to each other so that, if the man died before the actual wedding took place, the woman was considered to be a widow. They were actually referred to as husband and wife, though they refrained from having sexual relations.

It’s at this particular stage in their relationship that Joseph learned that Mary was pregnant and, though the scripture is not specific at this point, I think it’s safe to say he probably blew a gasket. Like any husband-to-be, Joseph would’ve been beside himself to learn that his fiancé was pregnant. 

He would’ve been angry and upset, to say the least. After all, if Mary were pregnant, the only explanation would’ve been that she’d been unfaithful, in which case, he had a legal right to have her stoned to death.


We went to a fabulous nine lessons and carols in the cathedral last night. The service included a very strange carol! 

Joseph was an old man, an old man was he,
When he married sweet Mary, she's Queen of Galilee.

Now Joseph had wedded Mary and home had her brought.
Mary proved with child, but Joseph knew her not.

Oh, Joseph and Mary went walking in the grove,
They saw cherries and berries as red as any rose.

And up spoke young Mary, so meek and so mild,
“Oh, pick me cherries, Joseph, for I am with child.”

Then Joseph flew in anger, in anger flew he,
“Let the father of your baby pick cherries for thee.”

Then up spoke the baby Jesus, all in his mother's womb,
“Bow down low, you cherry tree, let my mother have some.”

And the very tall branches bowed low to her knee,
And Mary picked cherries by one, two and three.

Now Mary had a young son which she dandled on her knee,
“Come tell me, sweet baby, what will this world be?”

“Oh, this world,” he said, “is no other than stones in the street
But the sun, moon, and stars will sail under thy feet.

“And I must not be rocked in silver or gold
But in some wooden cradle like the babes are rocked all.

“And on the sixth day of January my birthday will be,
When the skies and the elements will tremble for me.”



The song could be based on a passage in the apocryphal "Infancy Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew," a Latin work of the ninth century. In it, a miracle took place after Jesus's birth. Joseph, Jesus, and Mary were fleeing from King Herod when Mary became faint from the heat. Joseph led her under a date palm tree to rest. Mary begged Joseph to get her some of the dates. Joseph refuses. He is angry. He is still questioning paternity. HereJesus (who was no more than two years old) commanded the palm, "Bow down, tree, and refresh my mother with your fruit." And bow down it did, and remained until Jesus ordered it to straighten up (and be carried up into heaven!)

And it came to pass on the third day of their journey, while they were walking, that the blessed Mary was fatigued by the excessive heat of the sun in the desert; and seeing a palm tree, she said to Joseph: Let me rest a little under the shade of this tree. Joseph therefore made haste, and led her to the palm, and made her come down from her beast.

And as the blessed Mary was sitting there, she looked up to the foliage of the palm, and saw it full of fruit, and said to Joseph: I wish it were possible to get some of the fruit of this palm. And Joseph said to her: I wonder that thou sayest this, when thou seest how high the palm tree is; and that thou thinkest of eating of its fruit. I am thinking more of the want of water, because the skins are now empty, and we have none wherewith to refresh ourselves and our cattle.

Then the child Jesus, with a joyful countenance, reposing in the bosom of His mother, said to the palm: O tree, bend thy branches, and refresh my mother with thy fruit. And immediately at these words the palm bent its top down to the very feet of the blessed Mary; and they gathered from it fruit, with which they were all refreshed. And after they had gathered all its fruit, it remained bent down, waiting the order to rise from Him who bad commanded it to stoop.

Then Jesus said to it: Raise thyself, O palm tree, and be strong, and be the companion of my trees, which are in the paradise of my Father; and open from thy roots a vein of water which has been hid in the earth, and let the waters flow, so that we may be satisfied from thee. And it rose up immediately, and at its root there began to come forth a spring of water exceedingly clear and cool and sparkling. And when they saw the spring of water, they rejoiced with great joy, and were satisfied, themselves and all their cattle and their beasts. Wherefore they gave thanks to God.


In the N plays, in fifteenth century Norfolk  “Joseph’s Doubt,” was performed right after the “Annunciation” and before the “Nativity.” “Joseph’s Doubt” devotes 135 astonishing lines to back-and-forth between a distressed and angry Joseph and his increasingly anguished wife. Joseph’s scorn is unrelenting: 

“God’s child? You lie! God never played thus with a maiden! … All men will despise me and say, ‘Old cuckold,’ thy bow is bent.” 

 Hearing of the angel’s visit to Mary, Joseph scoffs, 

“An angel? Alas for shame. You sin by blaming it on an angel … it was some boy began this game.” 

 Helpless, Mary prays to God and the angel appears to set Joseph straight, at which point he apologises abjectly, 

“I realize now I have acted amiss; I know I was never worthy to be your husband. I shall amend my ways and follow your example from now on, and serve you hand and foot.” 

 

In the Bible, faced with Mary’s interesting condition, 

“Joseph, being a righteous man and unwilling to expose her to public disgrace, planned to dismiss her quietly” 

 No histrionics here. Joseph is rather more upset in the second-century apocryphal “Infancy Gospel of James”: 

“[H]e smote his face,and cast himself down upon the ground on sackcloth and wept bitterly,”  demanding of Mary, “‘Why have you done this? … Why have you humbled your soul?’ But she wept bitterly, saying, ‘I am pure and I know not a man.’” 


I found this article. I also found its been sung by Eliza Carthy who we went to hear wassail in Halifax. There is big, dark, difficult stuff here. The Cherry Tree Carol finds what's unpredictable in the story of the Incarnation, what's dangerous about it: an angry man caught up in events he cannot understand or control, a child speaking from the womb, a tall tree which suddenly bows low, a baby who says he will make the skies tremble. Gods should be unpredictable; they should be outside human knowledge. One of the things which appeals to me most about medieval Christianity, by contrast with the modern variety, is that it has space for these kind of strange, uncomfortable stories. If you want a religion which appears reasonable and amenable and sophisticated and modern (and certainly not that dreaded word, medieval), you have to take away these myths and miracles, leaving only what can be argued about; this is how we get a church which can only talk about ethics and law and morality, without ever mentioning mystery and wonder and the supernatural. 


Anyway! 


It’s though at this point that Joseph proves his faithfulness, first to Mary and then, more importantly, to God. 

According to Matthew, when Joseph learned that Mary was pregnant, he was “not willing to make her a public example, intended to put her away secretly.” (Matthew 1:19)

Joseph was a man of quiet strength. He was a man of integrity, true to his convictions. Yet, he was compassionate and considerate of others. He found himself in a no-win situation. He couldn’t, in good conscience, go on with the wedding; yet, he couldn’t bring himself to humiliate Mary either, much less put her to death.

Breaking off the relationship, but not making a big deal of it, seemed to be the most honourable thing to do, and if Joseph’s part in the Christmas drama ended here, we could understand and respect him as a man of faith.

But there’s more. According to Matthew, Joseph had a dream in which an angel of the Lord appeared to him and told him that the child in Mary’s womb was of the Holy Spirit and that he should become as a father to the child.

Now, it’d be tempting for us, reading the story some two thousand years after the fact – knowing the rest of the story, as it were – simply to say, “Well, there you have it.” The angel explained everything.

But then, we’ve all had dreams, haven’t we? And we know how bizarre and elusive dreams can be. I don’t know many people who make major life decisions based upon what they think they saw or heard in a dream. Do you? Yet, according to Matthew, Joseph awoke from his sleep and did as the angel of the Lord commanded him. 

And then, in one further act of faithfulness and obedience to God, Joseph publicly named the child. Matthew says simply, “he named him Jesus.” In so doing, he claimed the child as his own and gave him the benefit of a noble ancestry, making him a descendent of the house of David. 

Because of the faithfulness of Joseph, Jesus would have a father and Joseph would have a place in the drama of God’s salvation.

What we learn from the Christmas story about Joseph is that God chose to father his son a man who was devout, full of faith, obedient, just, merciful, and one who loved and carefully guarded both Mary and the Child Jesus.  He doesn’t utter a word but without him the story would have turned out very differently. No wonder in some traditions he’s known as the patron saint of changed plans!