A sermon for Bloomsbury
Central Baptist Church
13 June 2021
Listen to this sermon here:
two for a penny or three for a pound,
cheap at half the price,
get ‘em while they’re hot
eat ‘em while they’re fresh
here today, gone tomorrow
guaranteed to last for the lifetime of the product
have echoed through the streets of London for centuries
And the great markets of Petticoat Lane, Camden Lock,
Borough, Covent Garden, and so many more
remain as much a ‘must see’ part of a tourist’s visit to London
as any of the great museums or art galleries
I spent a year running a market stall
on Camden Market
and for a young man from the pleasant leafy town of Sevenoaks,
this was, I can tell you, something of an eye-opener
the huge ethnic and social diversity
that is such a feature of this great city
and became friends with
people from so many different cultural backgrounds
the shadier side of London life,
with the ‘under the counter’ trade in drugs
a regular feature of some of the stalls around mine
for the first time in my life, physically threatened,
as a man with a broken off bottle
waved it in my face and demanded my takings.
the strong bond between stallholders
as those from neighbouring stalls came to my rescue
the breadth and depths, the highs and lows of life
and others sweating in the heat
there were days when I earned good money
and others when I sold nothing
but it left me with a sense that in some strange way
the whole of life could be found represented in the market:
riches and poverty, friendship and violence,
suffering and rejoicing
All present in the market:
a microcosm of life
I sold Indonesian clothing
which my aunt imported
in what was, I now realise with hindsight,
a forerunner of the fair trade movement.
such as Batik and Ikat,
and in a micro-enterprise she employed local tradespeople
to create western style clothes from Indonesian materials
which she then sold through a few market stalls.
everyone was known to her personally,
and hand on heart I can say
that her particular engagement with the marketplace
sought to bring life and justice to those involved
and from drugs to knocked-off CDs
from immigrant workers to pickpockets and thieves
there were those who found the market a place of oppression
or cut-throat opportunity
experienced through the microcosm of the market
we seem to be hearing quite a lot
about ‘the market’ these days as well, don’t we…
it’s never very long until we hear someone talking about ‘the market’
the financial markets of London, Tokyo, and New York
where what is bought and sold is not fairly traded Indonesian clothes
or fake Rolexes, or stolen goods, or…
are not so different from my experience of Camden all those years ago
side by side in the market,
with the whole of human life reflected there
as a part of the financial and economic systems
which drive our world
that a sickness of great seriousness
has affected the health of our global financial institutions:
the European Debt Crisis, that continues to affect European economics;
or the global debt cycles of boom and bust,
which allow banks, hedge funds and the super rich
to lending money irresponsibly,
exploiting those in developing countries;
or the extortionate rates paid to farmers by UK supermarkets;
and those affected by this sickness
are laid out for all to see
as the poor get poorer
as health programmes fail
as countries slide deeper into recession
as jobs get more scarce
as benefits are reduced,
as the environment is exploited,
and international aid payments are threatened.
on the very real lives, of very real people.
when the market becomes infected in this way
which acquires a life of its own
and rampages its way in the world
demanding that all must worship it
and leaving a trail of devastation in its wake
who fills his house with good things
at the expense of those who have less.
but the tendency of financial markets
to enter into alliances with those who hold military strength
to extract wealth from the world
for the benefit of the few
is not a new thing.
with the Roman empire
which bestrode the world as a financial and military colossus
dominating the markets and extracting its tribute at every turn.
you would find a sickness in the market every bit as real and devastating
as that which we are experiencing today
The Roman empire imposed punitive taxes
which made the poor poorer and the rich richer
and whether you were in a city, a village or a farmyard,
there was no escaping the infection
that the empire had placed in the financial and trading markets
of those countries which Rome had occupied
and these religious leaders of the Jews went to great lengths
to ensure that they didn’t become infected themselves
from this morning’s reading from Mark’s gospel,
we’re told that
there was no separation between physical and spiritual uncleanness
They didn’t simply wash the goods from the market to get the germs off,
in the way that we might wash an apple before eating it.
For them, the ritual washing of goods purchased in the market
was about the ritual cleansing of tainted goods
that had been bought with tainted money
in a market place where all the wrong kinds of people were at large
and with those whose spiritual lives
might not measure up to their own exacting standards
that might have been grown by farmers
more interested in the next harvest
than in regular synagogue attendance,
or which might have been traded by merchants
who dealt with Romans and Greeks as well as Jews,
or who made the required offerings of worship to the emperor
so that they could trade in the markets of the empire,
the Pharisees needed some way of distancing themselves
from this ritual uncleanliness;
and so the washing of the food was part of this ritual of cleansing,
making real their belief that they were more holy before God
than those they contacted in the uncleanness of the market
Let’s hear Mark chapter 6, verse 56 again:
compared to the Pharisees?
and rather than becoming himself infected
with the sickness of the market,
by touching the wrong person, or handling the wrong thing,
rather than becoming himself unclean,
he brings healing and wholeness to those whom he meets there.
across every social sphere of society.
of the villages, and of the rural areas,
and in each market he enters,
he encounters those who are sick, those who are unclean,
those who are lacking wholeness,
and dislocated from their society,
and he restores them,
healing them and making them whole.
between physical and spiritual sickness,
and physical and spiritual healing.
body and soul could not so easily be separated,
as we who are the heirs of Platonic dualism seem to manage.
involved the whole person: body, mind and spirit,
as those who had been infected by the market
were restored to physical health,
to spiritual wellbeing,
and also to their right place within society.
the same is, or at least should be, true today.
have become fixated on the notion of healing in the name of Jesus
as a miraculous restoration of health,
and seek this whenever a human body starts to show the inevitable signs
of it’s eventual degeneration and mortality.
is that it sets in place a whole host of false expectations,
because the reality is that not everyone who is sick gets better,
even if they pray a lot, and have a lot of faith,
and eventually all of us will shuffle off this mortal coil,
in one way or another.
that have become fixated on the healing of the soul,
where what matters most is whether your heart is right with God,
and the present evil age is something to be endured
whilst waiting to depart to be with the Lord.
is that it creates an environment where all that matters
is the saving of the person’s eternal soul,
while the meeting of their physical needs either becomes neglected,
or, only marginally better, met as long as the person
takes some steps towards spiritual conversion.
that have become fixated on meeting
the physical needs of the vulnerable and disadvantaged,
and have poured all their efforts into programmes
designed to alleviate poverty, address homelessness
and caring for the alien in the land.
is that it can be too easy to meet the presenting problem,
without also shining the light of the gospel of Christ
into the troubled hearts and souls of those being cared for,
and so, whilst the immediate need is met,
the person’s long-term spiritual woundedness remains unhealed.
that take the same approach as that adopted by the Pharisees,
and they have minimal contact with those
who are spiritually unclean or physically sick,
lest they themselves might become infected with unholiness
in the process.
captures the healing that Jesus brought to the markets
of Israel in the first century.
captures the healing that Jesus seeks to bring
to the markets of our own troubled world.
tempting though it may be on occasions
to remain cloistered in some holy Christian clique,
is not ultimately an option for us
because the needs of our sick and damaged world
are too pressing for us to ignore.
seek to live out the approach of Jesus in our own lives,
we need to be willing to enter the market in his name,
to bring his healing and wholeness to those we meet there.
will not be simply a healing of the soul,
which ignores the plight of the body;
which ignores the plight of the soul,
while health and wealth are maintained through prayer.
and in so doing robs them of their power
to render human souls unclean.
as it brings wholeness to the physical situations we encounter.
and sets in place life-giving alternatives,
which value the individual at each stage of the economic cycle.
Imagine I need a new item of clothing, say a T-shirt.
and order him to make me one at a pittance.
I wouldn’t even like the idea of someone doing it on my behalf.
choosing the one that is the best value for money.
acting on my behalf.
it domesticates violence,
and makes us all complicit in the process.
similar to the micro-business run by my aunt thirty years ago,
And so we come to the importance of the fair trade movement,
and the various systems that it has spawned.
There is a trade in human beings taking place around the world,
predicated on the sex-industry,
as people are trafficked to service the market,
in sexual exploitation.
about the fact that Fifty Shades of Gray and its sequels and imitators
have consistently topped the best seller charts for the last decades;
But I cannot help but notice that sex sells,
and one of the things that sex sells is human beings.
And I wonder what it would mean to enter that market,
and bring healing in the name of Christ?
the London-based organisation working with women
who have survived trafficking and sexual exploitation.
https://www.ellas.org.uk/
to speak about their work,
and the difference they are making to women
who have been traded in the global marketplace.
https://youtu.be/z5xxIwwt71g
1 comment:
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