Thursday, 25 November 2021

The Gift of Hope

A sermon for Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
28 November 2021

Jeremiah 29.1-2, 4-14
John 14.22-27

 
The news this week, of 27 refugees
            including children and a pregnant woman drowned in the English Channel,
            having risked everything in a desperate search for a new life,
is yet another reminder to us that people-displacement
            as a result of violence and exploitation
            is a very real and tragic part of our world.
 
It is my firm belief that our society should be a place
            where the refugee finds welcome and support,
and that as Christians our scriptures offer us ample justification
            for arguing that this should be the case.
 
As we begin the season of Advent this week,
            we will be addressing the theme of hope,
and I think we are called to hope for a better world,
            to hope for a country where strangers are made welcome,
to hope for communities where generosity displaces selfish motives,
            where inclusion displaces prejudice;
and for that hope to become within us a deep longing,
            which drives us, in our actions and interactions,
            to be part of creating the world in which we long to live.
 
If you, like me, found yourself horrified and appalled
            that people should die like this, within sight of our shores,
then we need to be asking ourselves what we are going to do about it?
 
What actions can we take to build a world
            where the outcome for refugees seeking a new life away from war
            is not death in the English Channel?
 
As a church we are a key member of the West End Welcome project,
            and I know many of you have been praying for Fatima and Amina
                        over the last couple of years since they arrived with us
                        from the refugee camp in Iraq.
            And I also know that many of you have provided practical support
                        to them during this time too.
 
We should not underestimate the impact of our welcome and generosity
            to those who have come to our part of London in this way,
and we will continue to welcome and support others in similar ways.
 
The welcoming and integration of refugees into our society
            through community schemes such as West End Welcome
not only helps the refugees themselves,
            it builds a culture of acceptance, of generosity,
            from which we all benefit.
 
But of course, small-scale acts of assistance, significant though they are,
            are only part of the bigger picture.
 
From our voting decisions in local and national elections,
            to our engagement with charities and NGOs that advocate for refugee rights,
there are many ways that we can seek the welfare
            of those who are exiled to our city.
 
Which brings me to Jeremiah,
            and to an ancient but compellingly contemporary story
            of exile, people-displacement, refugees, war, and violence;
and the question of where God is to be found in the middle of it all!
 
Our reading today from the book of the prophet Jeremiah
            picks up the story of Israel’s history,
                        some 100 years on from last week’s reading from Isaiah 9,
                        and the creation of Israel’s messianic expectation.
 
If Isaiah saw that the writing was on the wall for Jerusalem and its temple,
            by the time of Jeremiah the walls had come tumbling down.
 
Jeremiah was a prophet living in Jerusalem,
            and he witnessed the destruction of the city at the hands of the Babylonians.
 
What happened was that in 597BCE,
            the army of King Nebuchadnezzar invaded Jerusalem,
and carried off the newly-crowned Israelite King Jehoiachin into exile,
            along with a whole bunch of nobles and prophets,
            including Ezekiel and other elite members of the Jerusalem establishment.
 
In his place, Nebuchadnezzar installed a puppet king called Zedekiah
            onto the throne in Jerusalem,
expecting him to keep the Israelites in check and pay their taxes.
 
However, about ten years later, Zedekiah revolted against Babylon
            and sought an alliance with Egypt to secure independence for Jerusalem.
 
To say Nebuchadnezzar was unimpressed would be an understatement,
            and in 587BCE the Babylonians swept in to destroy Jerusalem and the Temple,
and to carry much of the rest of the population of the city into Exile in Babylon.
 
So, among the ruins of Jerusalem,
            Jeremiah the prophet wrote to the exiles in Babylon.
 
He had been counselling Zedekiah to submit to Babylon,
            but had been ignored;
and so he then wrote to those who have been deported
            with a similar, and perhaps surprising, message.
 
He told them not to rebel,
            not to seek to harm their enemies the Babylonians.
Rather, he said they should seek the welfare of the city where God has sent them.
 
And there is a key point here that I think we need to hear very clearly,
            if we are to get to grips with what it means for us to live faithfully in our world.
 
None of us should ever think of ourselves as natives.
            We are all, theologically speaking, exiles.
 
Our true eternal home is the Kingdom of God.
            Our only King is Christ,
            as we proclaimed last week at the feast of Christ the King.
 
All other homes and rulers are secondary and temporal.
            They may be long-term, but they are not permanent.
 
However, this does not mean that we should seek their downfall or destruction.
 
The theologian William Willimon  uses the phrase ‘Resident Aliens’
            to describe the people of God in the world.
He says we are not to think of ourselves
            in terms of being part of this tribe, or that tribe,
but rather as a people with a different allegiance,
            that leads us to work for the good of the whole world.
 
Listen to this quote. He says,
 
We reject the charge of tribalism,
            particularly from those whose theologies
            serve to buttress the most nefarious brand of tribalism of all
                        —the omnipotent state.
The church is the one political entity in our culture
            that is global, transnational, transcultural.
Tribalism is not the church determined to serve God rather than Caesar.
            Tribalism is [any political state], which sets up artificial boundaries
            and defends them with murderous intensity.”
― William H. Willimon, Resident Aliens: Life in the Christian Colony
 
It is often said that the definition of being a ‘Londoner’
            is simply being someone who lives in London,
            regardless of where you were actually born and raised.
There is a tension here:
            I am Simon from Sevenoaks,
            but I am also Simon the Londoner.
 
And I think that this tension
            of being both an integral part of a city,
                        but also significantly distinct from it,
is at the heart of what Jeremiah is trying to say
            to the Jewish exiles in Babylon.
 
It is their home,
            but it is not their ultimate place of belonging.
 
Their eternal home, their place of deepest belonging,
            was in their holy city of Jerusalem;
but the place where they were going to live out their lives was Babylon.
 
And so their calling before God
            was to work for the good of the city
            to which they had been sent as exiles.
 
We too need to hear this calling.
 
There is a lamentable history of Christians dis-engaging from society,
            retreating into their holy huddles
                        to focus on the purity of their worship
                        or the correctness of their doctrine.
 
The Jews in Babylon could so easily have taken this path,
            but this was not, said Jeremiah, their calling.
 
And neither is it ours.
 
It is entirely appropriate for the people of God to enter the world of politics,
            whether through election
            or through non-partisan organisations such as Citizens UK,
to seek the welfare of the city to which we have been sent as exiles.
 
But there is a flip-side to this, too.
 
For all of our calling to work for the good of the city,
            we must never lose sight of the fact that we are only here as exiles.
 
However, if some strands of Christianity
            have disengaged from seeking the welfare of society
            in their quest for moral and doctrinal purity;
others have gone to the opposite extreme
            and sought to create society after their own image.
 
The legacy of Christendom, with church and state fused into one entity,
            is still very much with us.
 
And I think that those of us who seek to be faithful followers of Christ
            in this country, in this city,
need to resist the temptations of longing for a return
            to the so-called ‘Christian Country’ of previous generations.
 
As Baptists, we were founded on the principle of religious freedom for all.
 
Our founding father, Thomas Helwys,
            argued against the idea of a ‘Christian Country’,
facing imprisonment for writing to the King
            to suggest that the freedom to choose one’s religion
                        was an essential human right,
            and that it should be for all, whether Baptist, Muslim, or Jew.
 
We are exiles, we are called to be never fully at-one
            with the city to which we are called;
even as we work for its welfare,
            even as we pray for it,
believing that in the welfare of the city we will find our own welfare.
 
We have to recover, or possibly discover,
            our identity as the people of God.
 
Not in a way that isolates us from others,
            and certainly not in a way that gives us permission to dominate others,
but in a way that frees us to live differently,
            according to the priorities of the Kingdom of God.
 
And what we also need to discover
            is that this freedom is a freedom to truly live:
to enter into the life of the world,
            to build houses, plant gardens,
            and take action for the common good.
 
As Stanley Hauerwas puts it in the book Resident Aliens:
 
The loss of Christendom gives us a joyous opportunity
            to reclaim the freedom to proclaim the gospel
                        in a way in which we cannot
            when the main social task of the church
                        is to serve as one among many
                        helpful props for the state.
 - Stanley Hauerwas, Resident Aliens: Life in the Christian Colony
 
And so we come to the most famous verse from Jeremiah Chapter 29.
            It’s a verse which has starred
            on a thousand fridge magnets and coffee cups:
 
Jeremiah 29:11
For surely I know the plans I have for you, says the LORD,
            plans for your welfare and not for harm,
to give you a future with hope.
 
This is, surely, the ultimate expression of faithful hope.
 
To those in exile, to those living in darkness,
            to those who feel they will never truly belong:
God says that there is a hopeful future.
 
But this verse of hopeful promise
            has to be heard alongside the command
to work for the good of the city to which we have been sent in exile.
 
It is not some get-out-of-jail-free card,
            to be cashed in when things get difficult.
 
It isn’t an excuse to abdicate our responsibility for our actions in the world.
 
Rather, it is an invitation to enter into a way of living in the world,
            where we are free from the deep existential worries
that beset those whose lives are judged
            by the prevailing standards of society.
 
Stanley Hauerwas again:
 
That which makes the church "radical" and forever "new"
            is not that the church tends to lean toward the left on most social issues,
but rather that the church knows Jesus
            whereas the world does not.
In the church's view, the political left
            is not noticeably more interesting than the political right;
both sides tend towards solutions
            that act as if the world has not ended and begun in Jesus.
 
Those of us whose citizenship is in the Kingdom of Heaven,
            those of us who are exiles to this world,
            who live as resident aliens in our society,
are invited to discover the freedom
            that comes from not having to answer to the demands of the world.
 
The pressures that drive so many people,
            pressures of materialism, militarism, and economic exploitation;
the pressures that oppress so many people,
            pressures of racism, sexism, and homophobia;
these pressures do not own us, and neither do they constrain us.
            We are judged not as the world judges,
                        but by Christ who loves us.
 
So to those of us who live as exiles in this strange land,
            called to work for its welfare but never to let it own us,
Jesus echoes the message of Jeremiah,
            offering us a word of hope, a word of peace.
 
We heard it earlier in our reading from John’s gospel,
            when Jesus said to his disciples:
 
“Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you.
            I do not give to you as the world gives.
Do not let your hearts be troubled,
            and do not let them be afraid.” (John 14.27)
 
Through Christ we receive the gift of hope,
            through Christ we are gifted the gift of peace.
 
Through Christ we are released from the troubles and fears
            that drive so many to acts of hopeless self-destruction
            and violence towards others.
 
As we work for the welfare of the city to which we have been sent in exile,
            we discover within ourselves
            the capacity to love, to hope, and to embody peace;
because these are the gifts of Christ to us,
            and through us they are Christ’s gift to the world.
 
So as we welcome the stranger,
            advocate for the dispossessed, and include the excluded,
we are living into being
            the truth that Christ has planted deep in our hearts:
that in Christ there are no strangers, in Christ none are excluded,
            in Christ all are worthy of equality.
 
This is the gift of hope, and it is ours to receive, and ours to give,
            as we pray and work for the welfare of the city
            to which we have been sent in exile.

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