Sunday 4th June 2023

NOTICES:

A very warm welcome to all who worship with us this morning. Many thanks to Rev Chris Elliot for leading our service today. Rev Stephen Dewdney will be with us next Sunday.

Here’s our Zoom link –

Topic: St Martin’s Sunday Worship. To Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81508696154?pwd=cnErZFM5VG5OQVhsZkxYc0dxOHdvUT09

Meeting ID: 815 0869 6154
Passcode: 712158

Wednesday Walkers 7th June: Meet 9.30am at corner of Hawford Rd & Opawa Rd for a ramble around the area. Coffee will be at the Opawa Café. All welcome. Judith 332 1577 or 027 688 1861.

MEN’S GROUP Thursday 8th June 6pm in the church lounge for a shared meal. David French will talk on his “Personal journey from Protestant Pentecostal to Orthodox Church.” This is the first in a series which will explore different faiths. Ladies are very welcome to join us at 6.30pm. For more information, contact Rob:  r.j.connell56@gmail.com

QUIET DAY “Faith in Midlife” with Dr Anne Shave: Saturday 17th June 9am-3pm at St Mark’s Opawa. All are welcome. Suggested koha $10, shared lunch. If you’re interested, contact Anna in the Office.

MOVIE NIGHT: The next film will be ‘The Quiet Man’ – Saturday June 24th 2023 5.15pm. Sean Thornton (John Wayne) is an American who swears off boxing after accidentally killing an opponent. Returning to the Irish town of his birth, he finds happiness when he falls in love with the fiery Mary Kate (Maureen O’Hara). Though he is sorely tempted to pick up the gloves against her brother, the town bully, Sean is determined not to use his fists. Mary Kate and Sean wed but her brother refuses to pay the dowry. Sean would rather walk away than accept this challenge. Even when his new wife accuses him of cowardice Sean stands firm. But when she boards a train to leave, he is finally ready to take matters in to his own hands. The resulting fist fight erupts into the longest brawl ever filmed followed by one of the most memorable reconciliations in motion picture history!

THIS WEEK AT ST MARTINS                                              

Tuesday 10am              South Elder Care (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Tuesday 7.15pm           Meditation Group (lounge) Dugald 021 161 7007

Wednesday 9.30am      Walking Group: Opawa Judith 027 688 1861

Wednesday 9.30am      Port Hills U3A (whole complex) Joy 337 2393

Thursday 10am             Crafty Crafters (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Thursday 1.30pm          Sit & Be Fit(church) Anneke 021 077 4065

Thursday 6pm               Men’s Group (lounge) Rob 384 4320

Friday 9.30am               Sing & Sign (lounge) Becky 022 086 2211

Pentecost Sunday 28 May 2023 – Rev Hugh Perry

I recently read a book called Resilience written by Inge Woolf whose family I got to know through photography.  The book reminded me of how important refugees have been in the development of our society. Furthermore, on rereading and reflecting on our Acts passage I was reminded that refugees were an important part of the development of the early church.  Sadly, Inge did not live long enough to complete the book and left that task to her daughter Deborah.  Very competent hands indeed.

Deborah Heart is the director of the anti-smoking group ASH and they note that she is a former lawyer, Human Rights Review Tribunal Panel member, Chair of the Consumer Advocacy Council and the Holocaust Centre of New Zealand.  She is also the former executive director of the Arbitrators’ and Mediators’ Institute of New Zealand.

I know she was also a photographer at Photography by Woolf, that was her father’s firm.  It is currently run by her brother Simon who is also a regional councillor, and Deborah is currently chair of the Government-driven independent review of electoral laws.

At a time when the world seems filled with refugees who seem to be universally rejected and despised, it is worth knowing that Deborah and Simon, who give so much to our nation, are the children of refugees.   

It does not spell it out in the book of Acts but it’s not hard to discern that refugees, persecution and slavery were very much part of the wind and fire that spread the early church throughout the known world and even beyond. 

To understand that, we first need to understand some of the metaphors that Luke and John use and the best place to start is at the beginning, Genesis 1:1and 2 tell us ‘In the beginning when God created the heavens and the earth, the earth was a formless void and darkness covered the face of the deep, while a wind from God swept over the face of the waters’ (Genesis 1:1-2)

The footnote in one of the Bibles I have used makes the point that ‘a wind from God’ could also be translated ‘the spirit of God’   So right at the beginning of the Bible the story begins with the action of the divine Spirit, and wind and Spirit are interchangeable.

Wind and spirit are often a creative force in the Bible.  As well as the creation story, we can remember the breath that gave life to the bones in Ezekiel’s dream.  There is also the restoring wind in the story of Noah. ‘And God made a wind blow over the earth, and the waters subsided’. (Genesis 8:1b) 

That is a divine wind of new beginnings for life on earth.  As we move on through the Bible we come to the beginning of that forty year refugee journey that formed the people of God. 

‘Then Moses stretched out his hand over the sea; and the LORD drove the sea back by a strong east wind all night, and made the sea dry land, and the waters were divided.  The Israelites went into the sea on dry ground, the waters forming a wall for them on their right and on their left’. (Exodus 14:21-22)

The reference to wind as the creative force from God continue but the reference to that particular sea crossing is a good place to note that one of key story lines in the Gospels is ‘Jesus as the new Moses forming a new people of God.’

Not surprising therefore that as Luke begins to launch the disciples into his story of the young church in action he does so with the announcement: ‘And suddenly from heaven there came a sound like the rush of a violent wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting. (Acts 2:2) 

Luke also wants to make it clear that the Spirit rested on each of the disciples. ‘Divided tongues, as of fire, appeared among them, and a tongue rested on each of them’. (Acts 2:3) The Spirit empowers them as apostles.

The other useful thing about the fire metaphor is that flames will ignite any potential fuel they touch.  The story that Luke is telling is about the church spreading through the known world like wild fire.

However, we also need to look at the Gospel reading, and alternative spirit transfer it presents. 

Luke tells us that all the disciples were in one place and goes on to describe the reaction of people around them. We can assume that they were outside in a public space with the crowds who have come to the festival of Pentecost. 

But in John’s Gospel, the disciples are locked away in a room and the risen Christ arrives and breathes the Spirit onto or into the disciples. 

This was the first appearance of the Risen Christ to the male disciples although he had previously appeared to Mary Magdalene, and she had reported to the others. 

John is a theological gospel and one of the important theological points John is making is that, in commissioning the apostles, the Risen Christ breathes the empowering and life-giving breath of God. 

Importantly for us this reading shows that a meeting with the Risen Christ can be a private meeting not just the public display of ecstasy that Luke described.

Both our readings confirm the tradition that God acts through the Spirit to equip and empower God’s people. 

That is something that we can all experience.  We may have had faith confirming spiritual moments in our lives at a particular time.  But we can also experience serendipitous moments when following a hunch or unexpected opportunity leads to something special and a new turning point in our lives.

We can all spend a lot of time working out a cunning plan, but often real progress has come when we have taken opportunities that unexpectedly presented themselves.  

The story of Archimedes discovering the principle of flotation when his bath overflowed is a case in point.  Although it is probably best to contain one’s excitement and not to rush through town clad in nothing but a towel shouting ‘Eureka’

In fact, the Pentecost fire storm story is filled with serendipitous events.  Firstly, Luke sets it at the feast of Pentecost when so many people from so many places were in Jerusalem.  Both Jews and proselytes.  Proselytes were gentiles who had studied the Jewish culture but didn’t have Jewish mothers and were probably apprehensive of the required minor surgery.  All these people were religious tourists who would go home and carry the Spirit all around the Roman Empire.  Traders, refugees, and slaves would take it even further.  In fact, tradition and archaeological evidence suggests that Thomas even took the Jesus message to India, possibly as a slave.

Whether the Spirit came to the disciples in the locked room or singled them out amongst the crowds at the festival of Pentecost the Spirit came to the disciples at ‘an opportune time’. 

In fact, the whole Jesus story happened at the best possible moment for the life changing Spirit to begin its journey throughout the world and into the future.  Travel on Roman roads was easier than it had ever been, the Roman Empire, just like the British Empire was a trading organisation so people were moving around the known world.  Furthermore, the language of trade was Greek so missionaries could make themselves understood. 

Something that is really worth remembering is that the Holy Spirit can even make the most of disaster and tragedy. 

Just seventy years after Jesus’ death the Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed as Rome put down the rebellion.  Some of those who weren’t killed were taken as slaves.

Others fled as refugees to other parts of the empire.  Some of those would have been followers of Jesus and would have established emerging church communities in the towns and cities were they settled. 

The tongues as of fire did not just ignite those first apostles, they ignited lives the apostles touched and the world of that time had all the ideal conditions for the fire to spread. 

We can look at the big picture with hindsight, analyse those conditions and realise that the church spread because it came out of an established religious tradition at the right time and the right place. 

However, those involved would not have seen the big picture in the same way we can’t see the big picture in our world.  Think of the kind English woman who looked after little Inge Woolf, but also muttered with deeply ingrained prejudice ‘the trouble is you will grow up and marry a big fat Jew.’ She had no idea of the impact Inge and her children would have on the other side of the world or as Inge wrote in her book, no idea she would actually marry a delightful and talented skinny Jew.

Luke and John have both given us powerful imagery of the way the Spirit of everything those first apostles felt and learned about Jesus, became part of them. 

The imagery tells us that without knowing the outcome they opened themselves to serendipitous opportunities. Meetings on the road and making the most of disasters and forced migration.  Like us, they probably looked at events with hindsight and realised God’s Spirit was acting in their lives.  Inspired by the Spirit they wrote down some of the experiences and insights they had.  They wrote to inform and encourage others and those writings have been passed onto us.  Our scripture and our tradition bring us to the noise and excitement of a religious festival or the quiet reflection in a locked room.  Moments where we encounter the Spirit of Christ.   

Through our own Spiritual encounters, we too will feel the creative and re-creative divine breath as a burning passion to live Christ into reality in our world.

Sunday 28th May 2023

NOTICES:

A very warm welcome to all who worship with us this morning. Many thanks to Rev Hugh Perry for leading our service today. Rev Chris Elliot will be with us next Sunday.

  • If you remain uncomfortable about being in church where masks are no longer required, use @church via Zoom until you feel confident enough to be in church with or without a mask.
  • If you’re unwell please stay at home, and use @ Church via Zoom.

Here’s our Zoom link –

Topic: St Martin’s Sunday Worship. To Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81508696154?pwd=cnErZFM5VG5OQVhsZkxYc0dxOHdvUT09

Meeting ID: 815 0869 6154
Passcode: 712158

We give thanks for the life of Paul Beaumont, and pray for Fern, James and the family as they mourn.

Wednesday Walkers 31st May: Meet 9.30am near Pillars Café Madras St     (parking suggestions: Chester St East, Margaret Mahy Playground carpark, near fire station) for a walk around river, old cemetery and back to Pillars Café for coffee. All welcome. Rosalie 021 239 5005.

MEN’S GROUP Thursday 8th June 6pm in the church lounge. David French will talk on his “Personal journey from Protestant Pentecostal to Orthodox Church.” This is the first in a series which will explore different faiths. All men are very welcome. For more information, contact Rob:  r.j.connell56@gmail.com

A new Sunday roster is available today – please check to see if there is a copy for you in the foyer.

THIS WEEK AT ST MARTINS                                              

Tuesday 10am              South Elder Care (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Tuesday 7.15pm           Meditation Group (lounge) Dugald 021 161 7007

Wednesday 9.30am      Walking Group: City East Rosalie 021 239 5005

Thursday 10am             Crafty Crafters (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Thursday 1.30pm          Sit & Be Fit(church) Anneke 021 077 4065

Friday 9.30am               Sing & Sign (lounge) Becky 022 086 2211

Sunday 21st May 2023

NOTICES:

A very warm welcome to all who worship with us this morning. We thank Irene & Bill for leading our celebration of favourite hymns today. Rev Hugh Perry will be with us next Sunday.

  • If you remain uncomfortable about being in church where masks are no longer required, use @church via Zoom until you feel confident enough to be in church with or without a mask.
  • If you’re unwell please stay at home, and use @ Church via Zoom.

Here’s our Zoom link –

Topic: St Martin’s Sunday Worship. To Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81508696154?pwd=cnErZFM5VG5OQVhsZkxYc0dxOHdvUT09

Meeting ID: 815 0869 6154
Passcode: 712158

Wednesday Walkers 24th May: Meet 9.30am in Charlesworth Street near Reserve entrance. We will have coffee at Columbus Café, Mitre10 Ferrymead. All are welcome. Judith 027 688 1861. 

MOVIE NIGHT THIS Saturday 27th May 5.15pm. Gilbert & Sullivan light opera “HMS Pinafore”- On the quarter deck of the HMS Pinafore, Captain Corcoran (Peter Marshall) and his crew await the coming of Sir Joseph Porter (Frankie Howerd), the First Lord of the Admiralty, who is going to inspect Corcoran’s ship and marry his daughter, Josephine. But Josephine is secretly in love with Ralph Rackstraw, a member of the crew. They attempt to elope but are apprehended…. however it all ends happily ever after!

Bring your own takeaways for tea; hot drinks provided. Talk to Irene for further information.

THIS WEEK AT ST MARTINS                                              

Tuesday 10am              South Elder Care (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Tuesday 7.15pm           Meditation Group (lounge) Dugald 021 161 7007

Wednesday 9.30am      Walking Group: Charlesworth Reserve Judith 027 688 1861

Thursday 10am             Crafty Crafters (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Thursday 1.30pm          Sit & Be Fit(church) Anneke 021 077 4065

Friday 9.30am               Sing & Sign (lounge) Becky 022 086 2211

Saturday 5.15pm          Movie Night (lounge) Irene 332 7306

Sermon 7 May 2023 Rev Chris Elliot

 Jesus the (only) Way?

It was 1984 and my first weeks as an independent degree student at Holy Cross Catholic Seminary, in Mosgiel, when a very intense candidate for priesthood leaned over the top of the study nook I was in. Without any preamble he said in a strident voice,  Do you believe that Jesus is the (only) way, the truth and the life?                                                                                                            

I was somewhat taken aback and didn’t quite know how to answer him. Aware that the Librarian was close by, with ears tuned in; from memory I think I shrugged my shoulders, smiled politely, picked up my books and left.                                                          

Part of my hesitation was also due to the fact that in lectures Patrick (or Paddy as he was known)  had already shown his exclusive position on just about everything.  That included his declaration that the only way to the Father was via the Roman Catholic faith. Paddy’s endeavours to re-convert we pagans to Catholicism had fallen somewhat flat in a class that included a dozen or more independent students -mostly Anglican or Presbyterian, with a goodly percentage of women.                                                           

Paddy was to end up without too many friends, as the class responded to the lecturers’ challenge to see that there are many pathways to the same God.                                                                                             

In fairness I would have to concede that there were also students at the Theological Hall, who were equally strident and full of the conviction there was only one way. Their way!  The sureness of such conviction, and the exclusivity of it continued to make me feel uncomfortable.        

Still more years later, this issue was again raised when a (now) former Pope of the Roman Catholic Church issued a very exclusive papal statement in 2000.  That set off alarm bells in most other Christian communities, as well as giving offence to members  of other religions. [Pause]

It  was a liberating experience for me when I became part of an Inter-faith dialogue, where such issues could be aired and discussed in a safe setting.  What a relief it was to be with open minded people who valued what every faith tradition brought to the table. It also humbled those of us of the Christian Faith, when we realised that others had a profound knowledge of the Old and New Testaments. In return we had only rudimentary understandings of their sacred Scriptures – if that.

So I ask this question:
Is this heavy ‘salvation’ stuff what the storyteller John
was on about with today’s gospel account?

While the John story seems to have been set within the context of a debate over differences, that debate appears to have been between those who were Jewish followers of Jesus,  and those who were Jewish followers of Jewish orthodoxy.
They viewed matters differently.  Perhaps profoundly so.

But the story’s more modern usage seems to have been taken to extremes and I’d like to consider  that this morning.

It isn’t a particularly original conclusion to draw, that during Jesus’ life he resisted questions about his personal identity. In other words, who he actually was?  When pressed, he usually deflected such questions toward the central theme of his teaching.
(i) of a compassionate God always present;
(ii) and God’s radical demands for human living – against the prevailing culture of the day.

However, it is true that when the words, I am the way, the truth, and the life… have been used, Jesus sounds rather  like a bouncer, tasked with keeping  people away from God: especially those without faith, those with not enough faith, and  those who express their faith differently.                                                                

Religious authorities and groups of every age and creed have often exercised their religion in two ways – as a weapon against others, and as supposedly protecting God from others. History seems full of such weapon stories and events: The Crusades.  The Inquisition.  The Middle East.  Northern Ireland. The Balkans. The Sudan. I’m sure you can add some more.                                                                     

And then the gospel stories are littered with protection stories: People who brought their children to Jesus, but…
Women who touched, ate with, pleaded  with Jesus, but…

The sinners Jesus ate with, but…

As one theologian has pointed out…ethnic cleansing
is really just an extreme form of this same motivation.///

So what are we to do with the words: ‘I am the way, the truth, and the life, no one comes to the Father except by me…

If we are to be honest we have to confront the fact that today’s scholars tell us it is very probable that Jesus never made this claim. The words were put into his mouth by the mystic, who penned John’s Gospel.  So to understand them, we need to hear them differently.

If the words are read in the context of relationship with God rather than describing an absolute, or dogma if you like, to be believed, the words can be seen as an invitation to be on the pathway Jesus was taking; that Jesus provides a way of journeying from one place to another; exploring and doubting, becoming, rather than condemning, or hitting people over the head.

So let’s think about what Jesus is, and  what he is not.

  • Jesus is not the way in the sense of being a moral guide or a model of leadership.
  • Jesus is the pathway into the depths of the relationship between God, self and neighbour. The way into the mystery of our common existence.
  • Jesus is the truth about that common existence.
    He uncovers what is hidden, bringing to light the dimensions of human existence.
  • Jesus is life because he is the way and truth by which God, self, and neighbour, break their isolation and become one with one another. 

Storyteller John Shea puts it this way: Jesus of Nazareth was the triggering centre of an event which restructured the God-self-neighbour relationship.  This event was not only healing and transforming but mysterious and overwhelming.  

It is in that context that the words of Jesus, as suggested by John, came. I am the way, the truth the life…

And as Jesus challenged the dominant system of his day, so these words as written by the author of John’s Gospel came into conflict with the powers and principalities of his day.

In this person, Jesus, we see a concern for the marginalised and the vulnerable, which included both the poor and the wealthy.  In him there was rejection of the belief that the high-ranking people of power were the favoured ones of God.

The good news then in this statement, I am the way, the truth the life is, not so much about Jesus, but about God and us in the spirit of Jesus.  Or, as New Zealand born Bill Loader puts it in his comments on this story: 
Trust that God is the way Jesus told us and demonstrated to us.  That means two things: we can trust in the God of compassion in which there’s a place for us, and we can know that the meaning of life is to share that compassion in the world – there’s a place for all!

But then Loader’s important suggestion:
We can join that compassion wherever we recognise its ‘Jesus shape’, acknowledging it as life and truth and the only way.