
Harvest Festival
Today we celebrate Harvest Festival, traditionally a time to give thanks for all we have and to recall that we are creatures who depend upon our creator for sustenance. Yet our readings do not highlight thanksgiving. Instead they emphasise fear; the anxiety that we experience around our material needs and security. The prophet Joel, 2:21-27, tells even the land and the animals not to fear; they are made and sustained by God and will be blessed with abundance and fruitfulness. In our gospel, Matthew 6:25-33, it is we who are reassured. Jesus goes further than the prophet Joel; yes, yes, the necessities of life will be provided, but more than this our security and well-being, our flourishing, is not dependent upon material prosperity. If we are to experience fruitfulness and abundance it is by understanding that we need more than physical sustenance and that our truest identity is found by participating in God’s reign.

Eighteenth Sunday after Trinity
It is tempting to skip to the end of today’s Gospel reading (Mark 10:2-16) and focus on the image of Jesus with the child in his arms whilst missing out all the difficult talk of divorce and adultery. The hard talk, however, gets to the heart of Jesus’ message: it is not that Jesus is fixated on rules and laws; what he is concerned about is our hearts. Do we have a heart for those who are vulnerable?

Seventeenth Sunday after Trinity
The work of God is not always taking place where we expect or in ways that are familiar to us. In both our readings today (Numbers 11: 4-6,10-16,24-29 and Mark 9:38-50) the people of God witness others bearing the fruit of God’s spirit yet struggle to accept it because they are not the usual suspects, not part of their group.
The Spirit blows where it will and it is often most powerfully at work outside of religious structures and organisations. Perhaps one of the reasons for this is found in the way the Church can interpret Jesus’ hard saying in Mark: “if your eye offend you pluck it out… better to enter life maimed.” This saying has been used to support a judgmental theology that encourages people to discard their “bad bits” and conform to some version of moral goodness. But here’s the thing, we are all maimed in one way or another and it is our wounds that open us to life, to God and to one another. A community of faith that accepts and welcomes the broken and the maimed in us liberates us from trying to confirm to an externally imposed perfect goodness and allows us to uncover and share our own imperfect goodness.

Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity
When life is tough it is tempting to resort to soothing assurances, but today’s readings both encourage brutal honesty. The prophet Jeremiah, 11:18-20, writing at the time of the exile, the destruction of his people, his homeland and his hopes, speaks honestly to God of his despair, his fear and his desire for retribution. Both the people and their God need to voice how bad things are, how wounded they are, before they can rebuild.
In the gospel passage, Mark 9:30-37, Jesus is again telling hard truths to his followers, that his path is to suffer, and they do not want to hear. In response he puts a child in their midst as their instructor and guide. A child knows that she is not in control of her life, that she cannot will things to be as she wishes. Instead she must learn to trust, and trust can only be built on truth, however hard it is to hear.

Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity
Isaiah 50:4-9a Who are we and what are we here for? The prophet recognises that all that he is, is given by God and that delighting in his unique createdness allows him to do what he was made for. Who God is answers the question of who we are.
Mark 8:27-38 The passage centres around the Jesus’ question to the disciples “who do YOU say that I am” but the point of the passage is who we are. Jesus is the example of someone who is fully human. To become fully human and so to become fully ourselves we need to follow Christ’s example and give ourselves entirely to what God calls us to do. This inevitably feels like losing ourselves but in the process we find ourselves.

Fourteenth Sunday after Trinity
Today’s gospel is one of my favourites: a foreign, female, infidel has the audacity to ask Jesus for help. Another woman who doesn’t know her place!
This is a tricky passage though, because it uncovers in Jesus a strand of nationalism which sits uncomfortably with us. Here is Jesus, Saviour of the UNIVERSE, suggesting that God’s favour should be kept for just one nation, one people; his own.

Thirteenth Sunday after Trinity
Today’s readings are about law and the spirit of the law. In Deuteronomy the people of God are instructed to keep God’s commandments strictly, but this instruction is within the context of a close relationship with God “for what other great nation has a god so near to it as the Lord our God is whenever we call to him?”. All obedience flows from this intimate relationship with God that comes, as Jesus explains in Mark, not from the outward obedience to rules but from the heart. Those who are moved to act through love of God will be obedient even if their actions can seem at odds with the normal rules and conventions.

Twelfth Sunday after Trinity
Today's readings are about the nature of an immanent God who desires to dwell in us and with us.
In Joshua 24, Joshua asks the people to choose: do they want God or not? The people recall that God accompanied them from slavery, through the wilderness, into the promised land: that God has been present among them and dwelt with them.

Feast of the Blessed Virgin Mary
In our gospel this Sunday (John 6:35, 41-51) Jesus and the crowd cannot understand each other: they cannot see beyond Jesus’ earthly status (poor, illegitimate) to see the divine within him. Jesus calls us to a new way of seeing which will transform the way we see the world, one another and ourselves.

Tenth Sunday after Trinity
In our gospel this Sunday (John 6:35, 41-51) Jesus and the crowd cannot understand each other: they cannot see beyond Jesus’ earthly status (poor, illegitimate) to see the divine within him. Jesus calls us to a new way of seeing which will transform the way we see the world, one another and ourselves.

Ninth Sunday after Trinity
It is easy to have faith when our bellies are full and life is good, but not so easy when times are tough. In our Exodus reading, the people of God are wandering around in cloud and dust. They don’t know where they are going, they don’t know when they will get there, and they are sugar lowed. God complains about their lack of faith but still provides them with the food they need when they need it. In the gospel Jesus has already fed the people but they demand further proof before they will believe.

Eighth Sunday after Trinity
Last week the reading from Job explored the complexity of God’s creative energy: tearing down in order to build up, unmaking us so that we may be re-made. Similarly, this week’s text, from Lamentations 3:22-33, acknowledges that suffering and setbacks are not a sign that God is absent but that God is at work in our world.

Fourth Sunday after Trinity
Last week the reading from Job explored the complexity of God’s creative energy: tearing down in order to build up, unmaking us so that we may be re-made. Similarly, this week’s text, from Lamentations 3:22-33, acknowledges that suffering and setbacks are not a sign that God is absent but that God is at work in our world.

Third Sunday after Trinity
Storms are brewing this week: Job’s life has crashed around him in Job 38:1-11, and in our gospel Mark 4:35-41 the disciples’ boat is swamped by waves.

Second Sunday after Trinity
This week's readings ask us to look again at the work of God in the world around us. They open for us new ways of seeing to reveal a vision of God’s kingdom that is not what we expected…