Monday, 1 October 2018

Do Miracles Still Happen?


A sermon preached at
Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
30 September 2018

Luke 6.17-19; 8.43-46
Acts 5.12-16; 19.8-12

This week’s sermon in our anti-lectionary series,
            in which we are looking at passages and topics
            that don’t normally get addressed from the pulpit here at Bloomsbury,
takes the form of a question:
            Do miracles still happen?

From my days of setting exams for university students,
            I remember the adage of never setting a question
            which could be answered with a ‘yes’ or a ‘no’,
but on this occasion I’ve done it.
            Do miracles still happen?

What do you think,
            particularly in the light of our Bible readings for this morning?
My guess is that if you’ve got history with a different kind of church,
            you may have heard this kind of passage preached before,
and it may be that the reason you’re at Bloomsbury,
            is that we usually stay away from them.

Let’s see how we get on.

On my way to church this morning, I walked past this sign,

            which has just gone up at Waterloo Station,

            and I thought it was a good introduction to the sermon:



Also, I was fascinated this morning
            to discover that the BBC news was publicising the results of a survey
            on the belief, or not, in miracles, amongst the UK population.

Apparently, 3 in 5 people believe in miracles... 

Last week was Open Doors weekend here in London,
            which if you don’t know is when various buildings
            that are normally closed to the public open their doors,
                        and some of them put on tours.

Liz and I went to the Royal College of Physicians
            for a fascinating tour of their Grade 1 1960s listed building,
and in the exhibition there I saw these two gold coins,
            and I thought, ‘I know a good sermon illustration when I see one!’



Does anyone know what they are?

These are gold ‘touch-piece’ coins from 1660-85,
            sometimes called ‘Angels’ because they had the Archangel Michael on them.

These were used in public healing ceremonies by British monarchs
            from the 15th century onwards.
The monarch was believed to have authority from God
            to cure what was then called ‘scrofula’, a kind of tuberculosis.

King Charles I apparently ‘cured’ over 100,000 of his subjects
            in public ceremonies with his royal touch
            and by placing gold coins around the patient’s neck on a ribbon.

The practice finally was ended in the 18th century by King George I
            who apparently regarded it as too superstitious,
            or possibly (according to some sources), ‘too Catholic’!

Anyway, it raises an interesting question for us,
            which is relevant for our reading for this morning.
And the question is this:
            do we believe that a hundred thousand people were cured of tuberculosis,
            by the King of England placing gold coins around their necks?

It may be that you disagree with me on this,
            but from where I’m standing,
                        as a post-enlightenment scientifically literate person,
                        it sounds like utter nonsense.
            Of course it didn’t happen.
                        People are not healed by the touch of the king,
                        nor by touching something that the king has touched.

And yet, the origin of the belief that this could, and indeed did, happen
            is found directly in our readings for this morning,
            where people are healed by touching Jesus or his cloak,
            and by having the shadow of Peter or the handkerchief of Paul fall onto them.

So what are we to do with the related question
            of whether we believe that people were healed of their diseases
                        by touching Jesus, or his cloak,
                        or by Peter’s shadow, or by Paul’s handkerchief?

Again, it may be that you disagree with me on this,
            but from where I’m standing,
                        as a post-enlightenment scientifically literate person,
                        it sounds like utter nonsense.
            Of course it didn’t happen.

There, I’ve said it.

I don’t think it happened in the first century,
            I don’t think it happened in the seventeenth century,
            and I don’t think it happens today.

Do miracles like this still happen?
            No. And I don’t think they ever did.

Here endeth the sermon for this morning.

I said there was a danger in asking questions which invited one word answers.

Except…

It seems to me that the question
            of whether these things happened or still happen
            is possibly the least interesting part of these stories.

St Augustine, writing in the fourth century,
            was concerned that people got stuck on the ‘wonder’ aspect of miracles
                        - the ‘against nature’ bit –
            and spent so much time speculating on whether these things actually happened
                        that they missed the real point of the story.

He said,

Let us ask the miracles themselves what they tell us about Christ,
            for they have a tongue of their own, if it can only be understood.

Because Christ is the Word of God,
            all the acts of the Word become words to us.

The miracle which we admire on the outside
            also has something inside which must be understood.

If we see a piece of beautiful handwriting,
            we are not satisfied simply to note
            that the letters are formed evenly, equally and elegantly:
we also want to know the meaning the letters convey.

In the same way a miracle is not like a picture,
            something merely to look at and admire, and to be left at that.

It is much more like a piece of writing
            which we must learn to read and understand.[1]

So if we return back to the story of the King of England
            curing scrofula by handing out gold coins,
we might find that if we can get over the hurdle of
            ‘did these healings really happen?’ (answer: ‘of course not’),
there is a more interesting answer to be had
            in the question of ‘why was this story told and circulated?’

And here we find ourselves in the world of power, politics,
            and the relationship between the state and the church.

The reason people of power propagated the belief
            that the monarch could heal in this way,
was because of what it said about the divine right of kings.

After all, if Jesus, and Peter, and Paul could do these things,
            then the divinely chosen successor
                        to Christ’s power and the authority of the apostles
            must be able to do them too.

And, of course, keeping the population cowed in awe and loyalty,
            by spreading stories of the amazing divine power of the monarch,
            particularly over a feared disease that struck children and adults alike,
was a powerful tool for maintaining social order.

And the thing is, some of those people receiving gold coins from the king
            would have got better.
Just as some of those on whom Peter’s shadow fell,
            or who received a handkerchief from Paul, would have done.

The human body has an astonishing capacity to heal itself,
            and sometimes diseases, even serious ones,
            do get better of their own accord.

And then you need to factor in what we now call the placebo effect,
            where the administration of an inert substance
                        generates a genuine physical healing effect,
            as the patient believes they are being treated.

This relationship between the mind and the body
            is still being explored by medical science,
but it does seem that a positive mindset
            can sometimes have a healing effect on the body.
By the same token, a person who lives with
            immense stress and depression for many years
may well find that it has a negative effect on their physical health.

It’s interesting that in both our passages from Acts,
            and one of our passages from the gospels,
the narrator specifically mentions both those who are physically sick,
            and those who are tormented by spirits (Luke 6.18; Acts 5.16; 19.12)

The link between sickness of the mind,
            and sickness of the body, is profound and real.

This is why I’m always willing to pray with people about their illnesses.

I’ve sat with people in suffering and sickness,
            and prayed for them to receive the healing peace of Christ
                        by the power of his Spirit;
            and I’ve seen them relax, find peace in their pain,
                        and experience a move towards wholeness
                        in both their mind and body.

It’s also why I’m always willing for us to pray for one another
            in our sorrows and illnesses,
because a world where our attention has been turned away from ourselves
            and towards another in love,
is a world where Christ’s healing is coming to reality in our midst
            as selfishness is set aside, and love is made real amongst us.

We should not underestimate the power of prayer for healing
            to bring people to wellness and wholeness.

But neither should we overestimate our ability
            to banish disease in the name of Christ.

In all my experience of ministry, over nearly twenty years now,
            some of it in more charismatic environments
                        where prayer for physical healing was common,
            I’ve never seen someone incontrovertibly healed of a physical illness.

For example, I’ve never seen someone with a missing limb have it grow back.
            I’ve heard plenty of claims made for healings in response to prayer,
                        but they have always seemed to me
                        to be at the tenuous end of medical proof.

At one level, I’d love to think that I could pray for someone who is terminally ill,
            or seriously impaired by disease,
            and see them healed before my eyes.
But I just don’t see that happening.

And actually if it did, I think I’d actually have a deeper problem,
            which would be why it should be
            that some were healed in this way and some not?

I’ve heard it said that whether someone is miraculously healed
            depends on either the faith of the person offering the prayer for healing,
            or more insidiously on the faith of the person being prayed for.

I’m afraid I firmly reject both of these explanations.
            For my money, the reason people aren’t physically healed
                        against the laws of nature,
            is because God doesn’t work in that way.

The healing he brings is not a capricious, conditional, supernatural miracle.


Once, when I was attending a ministers’ conference,
            I went to a seminar on Healing and Wholeness.
The facilitator was great, and spoke about how God’s healing
            can sometimes be helping a person come to terms with their illness,
            and move with God towards a good death.
In this context, I shared a little of my own family’s situation,
            as my wife’s mother was at that time dying with Alzheimer’s Disease.
I said that we were pray for her to have a ‘good death’.

A fellow minister, sat opposite me, folded his arms and said to me,
            ‘Your problem, mate, is that you don’t have enough faith.
            If you’d seen the things I’d seen, and if you had more faith,
            you’d pray for her, and she would be healed.’

Thankfully the facilitator moved us on at this point,
            but later that evening in the bar, I decided a further conversation was in order.
So I approached the man who had challenged me,
            and said that I was still angry and hurt at what he had said.
Then I asked him if he would be willing to give me permission
            to punch him on the nose, and break it.
I said that if he was, I’d feel better,
            but that because he has faith to pray for and see healing,
            he could pray and he would immediately get better.
At which point, I’d see that he was right and I was wrong,
            and I’d apologise, and he’d have convinced me.
So, I said, ‘I guess it all boils down to how strong your faith is?’

Strangely, he just put down his pint,
            and walked out of the room, and never spoke to me again.

I think Jeffrey John, who preached at Bloomsbury recently for the 2:23 gathering,
            is quite helpful here.
In his book, ‘The Meaning in the Miracles’, he says:
  
The stories of healing in the New Testament are, ‘of course,
            [demonstrations] of Jesus’ healing power and compassion
                        for the individual [who is healed],
            but that is not the main point.
Uppermost… and far more relevant to us
            - is the miracle’s universal significance:
the overturning of social and religious barriers;
            the abolition of taboos;
            [the] declaration of God’s love and compassion for everyone,
                        expressed in the systematic inclusion
                        of each class of the previously excluded or marginalised…
As we consider the meaning of … miracles for today,
            the question [that] repeatedly poses itself [is this]:
how far has the church seen or wanted to see
            the implications of this systemic, subversive,
            highly risky inclusivism on Jesus’ part,
[or how far has it] preferred instead
            to create and cling to its own taboos?’[2]

So let’s see how this kind of approach
            might help us understand the anti-lectionary readings
            that we have set ourselves for today,
and if it can help shed light on how they might speak to us
            about our own Christian discipleship.

The first thing I’d like us to notice about the two stories from the book of Acts,
            of Peter’s shadow, and Paul’s handkerchiefs,
is that they give us a powerful example of God’s healing power
            breaking out of the boundaries that have been set around it.
  
In the reading from chapter 5,
            those who are cured are people who are so ill that they cannot even walk,
            and who have to be carried out into the streets.

The effect in those days, of being so ill you couldn’t walk,
            was that in a number of key ways you were excluded from society.
Firstly, you couldn’t attend religious ceremonies and festivals,
            and so you were excluded from the worship life of your religion.
Secondly, you couldn’t work,
            and so you were a burden on your family.
Thirdly, you faced economic exclusion
            from wider society.
And fourthly, there was a good chance that you were considered ritually unclean,
            which would extend your exclusion to those who shared your house.

In this context, the story of people receiving the touch of God,
            in as random and profligate a manner
            as simply having the shadow of an apostle fall on them,
becomes a powerful story about the breaking down of those barriers
            that exclude the sick and the vulnerable
            from the presence and love of God.

Interestingly, in the ancient world,
            a person’s shadow was believed to convey something
                        of the essence of the person, whether for good or for evil,
            with Cicero speaking about how a corrupt person’s shadow
                        could affect those it fell over.

Stand off, my friends, nor come within my shade,
That no pollutions your sound hearts pervade,
So foul a stain my body doth partake.[3]

These days we usually work with a social model of disability,
            where a person’s impairment might be physical,
            but its disabling effect on them is determined by society.

So, for example, a person who is a wheelchair user
            is only disabled from being up on this platform with me
            if we, as a community, have not invested in a ramp
                        that they can use to get up here
            (we do have one, in case you’re wondering).

And I think that we need to hear a challenge from this passage
            for us, as the inclusive and welcoming community of Christ’s people,
to take seriously what it means
            for us to ensure that those who are impaired
            are not disabled from coming to God in worship.
We have questions to ask ourselves about how accessible we are,
            and I’ve been interested recently to read the resources
                        from an organisation called Inclusive Church,
            who highlight not only disability,
                        but also sexuality, ethnicity, gender, mental health, and poverty,
            as factors that can exclude people from the worshipping community.

But also more widely,
            I think there is a call here for us to be active
in challenging those systems and structures
            that disable the sick and the vulnerable from participating fully in society.
We might, for example, need to take a long hard look
            at the inhumane roll-out of Universal Credit,
                        as it forces people further into the poverty trap it claims to be alleviating;
            or the rise in zero hours contracts,
                        which the Archbishop of Canterbury recently described
                        as ‘the reincarnation of an ancient evil’.[4]

There are social forces and structures
            that exclude and disable, disempower and demean,
and the healing love of God in those circumstances
            is needed as much now
as it was when people were carried to Peter
            for his shadow to fall over them.

But moving on,
            what are we to make of Paul and his handkerchiefs and aprons?
  
My great aunt was a member of an organisation called the Panacea Society,
            a bizarre early-twentieth-century, proto-feminist,
                        apocalyptic sect, based in Bedford.
Amongst their various other activities, they offered a healing ministry,
            thought by its members to be a ‘panacea’ a healing cure for all illness.

The cure consisted of drinking ordinary tap water
            infused with a linen square in it
            that had received the prophetess Octavia’s divine breath.
A kind of healing-handkerchief tea-bag.

These squares of linen were sent free of charge to anyone who requested the healing,
            and in total applications were received from 130,000 people
            across 90 different countries.

There is a clear parallel here between this recent movement
            - the Panacea Society still exists, and a friend of mind works for them –
and the healing ministry of Paul’s holy handkerchiefs.

Setting aside, again, the question
            of whether these healings actually occurred (answer: they didn’t),
we might notice that there is a contrast as well as a similarity
            between Paul’s healing ministry in chapter 19,
            and Peter’s in chapter 5.

Whereas Peter’s shadow was falling on those excluded from Jewish society,
            it was still falling on Jews, in Jerusalem.
Paul’s handkerchiefs are going out
            to bring the healing peace of Christ to the gentiles of Ephesus.

Paul makes a significant physical move in verse 9,
            when he walks out of the Synagogue after three months of teaching there,
            and starts speaking instead in the public lecture hall.
He leaves Jewish space, and moves into gentile space.

The breaking down of barriers that had begun in Peter’s ministry
            is taken to a new level in Paul’s,
as the ethnic barrier between Jew and gentile
            is once again challenged within the narrative of the book of Acts.

Also, the distance over which the healing is given is increasing.

Peter needed to be nearby for his shadow to fall on people,
            but Paul’s healing cloth can go far and wide.
The sick needed to be carried to Peter,
            but Paul’s ministry of healing goes to the sick wherever they may be.

It seems to me that this is a story
            that speaks powerfully of the love of God
                        extending over ever greater distances,
            and across ever more challenging boundaries,
                        as the early church embraced the message of universal love
                        extended to all in the name of Christ.

There’s an interesting further parallel
            with the only three healing miracles in the gospels
            which are done at a distance.
The Syro-Phonician Woman’s Daughter (Mk 7.24-30; Mt 15.21-28),
            the Centurion’s Servant (Mt. 8.5-13; Lk 7.1-10),
                        and the Capernaum Official’s Son (Jn 4.46-54),
are all miracles of healing that cross boundaries
            - of gender, geography, ethnicity, or social class.

The message starts to become clear,
            which is that God’s wholeness for humans
                        is not restricted to a select few,
            nor is it defined by geography or gender,
                        nor is it constrained by ethnicity,
                                    nor is it controlled by class.

Over the last two weeks, our sermons here at Bloomsbury
            have challenged us on racism and slavery,
                        and on sexuality and hospitality.
We need to hear these messages, and act on them.

If the biblical stories of miraculous healing
            are not to be reduced to pointless debates over historicity,
and if we are to avoid the damaging and abusive approaches to healing
            that some Christians fall into
            when they try to replicate these stories in a contemporary context,
we need to open ourselves up
            to the possibility that the healing love of God
                        is far wider, and far more comprehensively offered,
                        than specific prayers for specific individual illnesses.

The healing that is in view here,
            is not so much the healing of the individual,
            as it is the healing of society.
And the challenge is to seek the transformation
            of those structures that disable the weak and vulnerable,
                        that marginalise the minority,
                        and that seek to legitimate their own power,
by claiming for themselves
            a healing power that it is only God’s to dispense.





x


[1] Quoted by Jeffrey John, The Meaning of the Miracles, p.4.
[2] Jeffrey John, The Meaning of the Miracles, p.11.
[3] Cicero, Tusculan Disputations 3.12 https://www.gutenberg.org/files/14988/14988-h/14988-h.htm Quoted in Rick Strelan, Strange Acts: Studies in the Cultural World of the Acts of the Apostles.

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