Plastic Free July

A little history…Once we lived without it, now we can’t escape it.  In the last 100 years it has revolutionised life and now it is everywhere.  Plastic bottles, plastic bags, plastic everywhere we look.  Carpets used to be wool now they are mainly plastic.  Packaging used to be a brown paper bag but now there are all sorts of plastic packages.  We are all wearing plastic in our clothes. Synthetic materials took over our economy, our lifestyles, and our imaginations because they did their jobs so well.

Bakelite, the first plastic produced entirely from synthetic materials, was invented in 1907. By the beginning of the second world war, plastic was in use for industrial parts like automobile distributor caps and colorful costume jewelry. Initially plastic was valued because it was unbreakable and long lasting.  A plastic mug wouldn’t break if dropped.  Perspex didn’t shatter like glass.  And plastic could be shaped and moulded. 

A new idea came with plastic.  People used to spend considerable time and effort taking care of things – oiling and waxing, mending and altering, working to prolong the useful lives of the things they owned.  The new idea was disposability.  Because you could mass produce plastic cheaply and easily we got all sorts of new products:  disposable razors, bottle caps, and plastic containers and bottles of all sorts.  The war had taught us how to use plastic to make parachutes and now this material was used to make nylon stockings.   

By the 1960s, long-lasting plastics had been joined by single use plastic.   Shampoo used to come in glass bottles with the possibility of broken glass in the shower, but now plastic bottles offered a cheap alternative to bloodied feet.  In the 1980’s paper bags were replaced by cheaper and stronger plastic bags.  The transition to a throwaway consumer culture was complex and gradual, but we all got hooked and now we wonder how we could survive without plastic.  Our cars are full of plastic.  [P1] We go shopping at the supermarket and come home with a heap of plastic.  Plastic wrap, plastic trays, plastic bottles, and yes even with a plastic bag ban in place we still have plastic bags.  The clothes we buy are full of plastic, the carpets we stand on are invariably plastic, the computer or phone we use is plastic, the paper we read is delivered in plastic, even the pacemaker that keeps us going is plastic.    

When plastic bags transformed shopping and packaging in the 1980’s no one gave a thought to what might happen to all those bags.  Rubbish was invariably just buried and dear mother earth would take care of them.  Slowly a new way of living emerged.   We can just throw it away when it’s job is done.  Even the old rubbish tin was replaced with a plastic bag for rubbish.  It made everyone’s job easier and tidier, although it wasn’t much chop for hot ashes.  But another problem was emerging.  The small rubbish trucks were replaced with bigger rubbish trucks because there was so many plastic bags full of …. plastic. 

So the idea of recycling was born and little triangular arrows with a number inside told us that this plastic could be recycled.  Aware that dear old mother earth wasn’t coping well with the amount of rubbish being gifted to her many of us got on board with yellow, green, and red bins.  Problems solved.  Well no…

 In recent years there has been a tsunami of single use plastics. About half the plastic ever produced has been made since the year 2000. Research tells us that the average plastic bag produced does it’s job for about 12 minutes.  It could take 450 years to decompose. If Jesus had used a plastic bottle of hair shampoo we could possibly dig it up today. A million plastic bottles are purchased around the world every minute and the number is increasing rapidly thanks to the growth of western consumer culture in China and Asia.

So much plastic it is getting everywhere. Some does get recycled but actually not that much.  Lots of people still live in the chuck it in the rubbish and all will be well, or even chuck it out the car window.  Sorting plastic or even recycling some say is for greenies. 

[P2] Plastic is ending up in all sorts of places, polluting our eco systems.  Our oceans are full of plastic.  I doubt whether any of you have been to the Cocos Islands in the middle of the Indian Ocean.  They are touted as ‘Australia’s last unspoilt paradise.’  Marine scientists visited these islands to do a plastic count along the beaches thinking these remote largely unpopulated island could function a bit like the canary in the coal mine.  They found a very sick canary in the form of 238 tonnes of plastic.  Most was single use plastic: bottles, plastic cutlery, bags, straws.  There was 373,000 toothbrushes.   In total 414 million pieces of plastic were retrieved and they reported there was many more times that amount buried in the sand.  

   [P3] And plastic is making its way into all the creatures in those oceans.  We read of literally kilograms of plastic being found in the stomachs of whales who can’t tell the difference between food and plastic.  They and other sea creatures think a plastic bag looks like a nice jellyfish.  Their digestive systems can and the plastics clog them up and kill them.  I think the record currently stands at about 40 kg of plastic found in a young curvier beaked whale near the Philippines.  Just under 10% of its body weight was plastic!  Can you imagine 10% of your bodyweight inside and a collection of plastic?  We see pictures of other creatures being entangled in plastic waste. 

   [P4]  This picture is a close up of salt crystals but see something else… plastic..  its in salt increasingly its in the water you drink.  Microplastics, tiny plastic fragments, from all sorts of places including the plastic from the clothes we wear and wash getting literally everywhere including our own bodies.  The very latest research tells us we ingest about 50,000 particles of microplastic a year or about the equivalent of a credit card a week, and we have no real idea what it might be doing to us.  But every time we wash clothing with plastic in it, and that’s just about everything we wear, we are flushing more micro plastic into our rivers and oceans.  The  plastic dream has become a plastic nightmare

[P6] Plastic has  become the defining material of our time and despite some limited success in recycling it turns out that much of our plastic is used once and literally dumped.  Remember those little triangles on plastic containers.  The 1&2’s are easier to recycle but 3,5,6,7 are usually not worth it.  It’s even worse if people put plastic in for recycling that hasn’t been washed.  Ideally we would incinerate the difficult to recycle plastic, carefully filter emissions,  and derive energy from it but this costs large amounts of money.  What actually happens is that the developed countries like New Zealand is that we simple put it into landfill.  About 20% of our landfill in NZ is plastic.  WE love burying stuff and forgetting.  You simply cant do it in most western countries because it costs way more than here to bury. In reality we lag way behind most developed countries in waste management.  We also ship  plastic we can’t recycle off to poorer countries for them to deal with.  It used to be China, but China stopped taking plastic from the world for recycling back in 2017.  Like Australia we started sending plastic to countries like the Philippines and Malaysia.  You need very cheap labour to sort the stuff to make money from recycling.  But what was happening was that while we paid someone to take our plastic with the idea it would be recycled, unscrupulous operators were simply burning it with horrible effects on local populations not to mention the atmosphere.  But now these countries are waking up to what’s going on and soft plastics which are difficult to recycle are currently are going who knows where. 

.  .  And what will save us…I believe we have a fundamental problem.  While human beings think they can do what they like and while profit is the key driver of our existance we are doomed.  We need to find a new religious way of looking at our world, a way that values the  sacredness of life.  We need to hear the pain of a whale with 40 kg of plastic in its gut.  We need to feel the agony of the littered beach on the Cocos Islands. We need to acknowledge the pain of God that our consumptive way of life is screwing up the world for all future generations. 

Polluting the earth, the sea, and every living thing with bits of plastic tells God we want to do it our way.  This is sin in its simplest definition.  Protecting my comfort and my way of life becomes paramount.   A religious outlook says we are accountable to the creator and the sustainer of life.  A religious outlook says we are people who long for heaven and earth to become one.  We look to transform how things are to how things should be.  We look for an earth that exists in harmony and peace with all its abundance and diversity. 

There are some Biblical verses that are worth remembering. [P7]

The Earth is the Lord’s, and everything in it, the world, and all who live in it (Psalm 24:1).  The Lord, however you want to see the Lord, is bigger than us and all life belongs to this Lord.

Let us make humankind in our image and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, and over the cattle and over all the wild animals and all every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.  (Gen 1:26)  Dominion does not mean domination but has the meaning of working with God to nurture and care – to be caretakers and stewards.

So how do we live out these verses?

[P7a] Live wondrously…. Before we start laying down laws I think we have to connect with creation more closely. Step outside, take a walk by our local river.  Explore, ponder, slow.  Listen to the song of a bird. Stop and pause in front of the sight of a spring bulb pushing through the earth.  Notice the bees busy on the warmer days.  Look for the first flowering of kowhai.  We often get so tied up in our little worlds that we fail to notice the handiwork of God all round us.  This noticing re-orientates us in our rightful place within creation.  It is actually prayer and a reawakening of this prayer is needed.

[P7b]  Live with an enquiring mind.  Ask questions and educate ourselves. What is actually happening to the plastic we put in the rubbish or the recycling bin?  Is there an alternative to buying something in a plastic bottle?  Is it possible to purchase meat without buying plastic trays and plastic wrapping?  Which plastics are recyclable here in New Zealand?   Which plastic products do we want to keep because let’s be clear….plastic can be a wonderful life giving material.

[P7c]  Live in community.  Talk with others about this issue.  Encourage each other with small steps that will help us live a God’s caretakers and guardians. We need to talk about plastic and what we do with it and how we have discovered ways of minimizing our use.   That’s why on the pledge I suggest we tell others about our commitment.  It’s not to show how good we are but to nurture a build a movement of people who call themselves caretakers and trustees of God’s creation. 

[P7d] Dream that as God’s people we may show the world how to be good caretakers.

The prophet Amos

Read…   Amos 8:1-10

   If I asked you to tell me about the prophets of the Old Testament, I wouldn’t be surprised if many of you told me you didn’t know much about them but didn’t they predict the future and especially didn’t they predict the birth of Jesus.   We read bits of Isaiah around Christmas time to show his birth was predicted by the Old Testament.  (Actually I think Isaiah would be very surprised to hear about Jesus!)

   The prophets (and they make up about one third of the Old Testament)  did of course make some statements about the future but usually these were along the lines of ‘things need to change in our society and if they don’t these are going to be the consequences’.  Primarily I believe these charismatic characters were God’s messengers sent to tell societies about how God wanted them to live and to call the people back to faithful living.  They spoke of justice for everyone, a fair go for everyone, respect for everyone.  Often they were reluctant and they usually had a hard time because what they had to say wasn’t welcomed.  Telling people they have to change the way they are living usually goes down like a lead balloon.  But in Amos’ case change was needed because his people had gone off the rails.  

  We are told at the beginning of the book that carries his name that he was born in Tekoa, a small village not far from Jerusalem.  He was a semi nomadic shepherd who lived in the time of when Uzziah was king of Judah and Jereboam king of the northern kingdom of Israel.  What he said was anchored in a specific time and place.  The opening verse of his book tells us he spoke out two years before the great earthquake.  It seems we share something in common with Amos although I think the earthquake that he’s remembered for is his message that the way things were needed to radically change!    

      Amos speaks for God:

For crime after crime of Israel I will grant no reprieve, because they sell the innocent for silver and the destitute for a pair of shoes.  They grind the heads of the poor into the earth and thrust the humble out of their way.  Father and son resort to the same woman and they profane my name…..it’s not a pretty picture that Amos portrays about some of the things that were happening in his own society.  And yet around him people were optimistic.  The economy was doing well, and the rich were wallowing in their wealth. People were heading along to local synagogues on the Sabbath.  But Amos says God is not fooled.  This is not how things should be for God’s people.  For him and the God he knows a country is not judged by it’s economic growth, its economic outlook, or even how full the churches are.  Amos tells us we should judge a nation according to how well it treats the poor, the disadvantaged, and the marginal.  Crucial for him was the question of what was happening to forgotten people at the bottom of the heap, or the fringes of society.  In some of his hard hitting comments he rages against the upper class women of  the wealthy area of Bashan famed for it’s fertile soils and fine cattle:

Listen to this you cows [he is calling the women cows!] of Bashan who live on the hills of Samaria.  You who oppress the poor and crush the destitute with your indifference, who say to your husbands, ‘bring me a nice gin and tonic’..it’s not going to last….”  

And he goes on to speak of foreign armies invading the country that has gone rotten and the rich cows being led away into captivity.  The message is clear.  God wants a caring society, a just society, and if you won’t change then watch this space.  God’s judgment was close at hand.    

   He also has a go at the religion of his day picking out the two biggest and most holy sites of worship in the land at Bethel and Gilgal.  People would expect him to say come to Bethel and Gilgal and worship God.  But mocking them he says:

Come to Bethel and turn your back on God.  Come to Gilgal and turn your back even moreYes bring all your tithes and your offerings, do all the right religious things, but he says,  your worship is a mockery

He was saying their worship was an empty sham.  They might have prayed loudly on the Sabbath but on the first day of the working week they went back to ripping others off and behaving in ways that dishonoured God.  Again Amos pronounces the word of God:

Spare me the sound of your songs; I can not endure the music of your lutes.  Instead let justice flow like a river and righteousness like an ever flowing stream. 

Amos was speaking about the inequality he saw.  Some said their wealth was a gift from God, even a reward for their fine upright moral behavior.  Amos saw another reality.  Clearly there was no concern for the disadvantaged and struggling people in society and instead of a cohesive caring society there were huge inequalities and very little understanding of what life may be like on the other side of town.

     Amos saw visions.  WE heard about one this morning.  A basket of beautiful summer fruit.  The grapes, figs, olives, apples, oranges, looked lovely.  The Hebrew word for this in the text is gayitz.  It is a picture of abundance and all being well.  But Amos hears God saying to him that in fact not all is well and the end is nigh.  The Hebrew word for end is qetz which sounds like gayitz.  The word play was not lost on the Hebrew listeners.  Things may look lovely like the basket of fresh summer fruit, but in reality the fruit was going rotton.  It was well past it’s ‘use by’ date. 

 On that day says the Lord I will make the sun go down at noon, and the earth will grow dark.  I will turn your feasts into mourning.  I will make it like mourning for an only child, deep and bitter.  Even the land will become dry and desolate.    

   Archeologists have confirmed Amos’s picture.  In the early days when the Israelites settled Canaan the land was distributed more or less equally amongst the families and tribes.  As late as the tenth century BC archeologists have found houses were all approximately the same size and there wasn’t great disparity of wealth.  But by Amos’s day two centuries later everything had changed   Groups of large palatial dwellings were found in some areas while tiny hovels were found huddled together in other areas.  The gulf between the rich and poor had increased dramatically and the once united society had become divided by a chasm with no caring bridge between them.  God’s word through Amos was frightening.  The consequence of this inequality was that Israel would collapse as a nation and be utterly destroyed and laid waste.

   And that’s what happened. Just a few years down the track the Assyrians came and conquered the land.  Buildings and life as they knew it was ended.  The cows of Bashan were taken away into captivity and their fine homes destroyed. The land became dry and desolate.  The judgment of God as prophesied by Amos came to be.

What do we make of Amos and the prophets like him in our Bibles?  They tell us God is very concerned about the sort of society we shape for ourselves.  Good societies are fair societies full of honesty, fairness, and a respect for each other and for God.  No more us and them. 

    Profits and the drive for good dividends must always be balanced with good and safe working conditions for workers.  I’m sure ex ANZ boss David Hisco is a nice guy, but he was living on another planet.  Ultra high salaries and crazy perks for the boss, questionable property deals for his wife, while the cleaners in his bank are paid probably close to the minimum wage.  It’s a recipe for disaster.  You can’t build good societies with us and them.    

We know there are good hard working families in our own society who just never get a chance to get ahead with a lack of affordable housing and basic health costs resulting in a hand to mouth existence.

   The sort of society and world we live in matters to God, so I give thanks for the work of our community project at Waltham Cottage.  It may be a few small drops in the ocean, but every drop in the ocean counts.  Every endeavor that seeks to build good community, every action that proclaims we are all neighbours makes God smile.

  Amos and other prophets are there in our scriptures to unsettle and remind us we should be greatly concerned for others especially those that don’t get the opportunities we do, the blessings we take for granted.   We are a society and we are all linked.  Let justice flow like a river and righteousness like an ever flowing stream.  Let us be part of that river and stream.

The Trinity

An address for Trinity Sunday: Readings – Proverbs 8:1-4,22-31 John 16: 12-15

   One of the things our early Christian forebears struggled with was a paradox.  They agreed there was only one God, and their faith was a monotheistic faith, but the one-ness of God wasn’t as one dimensional or static as they had thought.  They had met Jesus, or heard stories of Jesus, human like us, and yet revealing God in a way unseen before.  And now there was a power and presence in their midst they called the breath of Jesus speaking into their lives in a new dramatic way. 

  God was not an unknown God, a vague mysterious being out there beyond the clouds but was known and experienced alongside, and even speaking from deep within.   One of the images from their culture that helped them make some sense of this was from the world of Roman theatre.  There one actor often played multiple parts in a play simply by wearing a different mask.  This phenomenon gave them an idea.  Maybe God could be thought of as an actor in the world wearing different masks.  The one-ness of God was upheld but within this one-ness they came to see there was a dynamic diversity.  In Christ and though the Spirit they claimed God was alive in the world in new ways.  And as they pondered and debated a radical new understanding and teaching about God emerged.  They had to create a whole new term to convey it …. and that term was the Trinity.

    I need to say we are embarking on an impossible journey today because books and books have been written about the Trinity and it still remains a mystery.   It is at best an idea that helps us draw closer to God, but at its worst it simply confuses and divides.  Our Muslim brothers and sisters shake their heads in horror saying we are making the one God three.

   I might say this term was particularly helpful for the Irish and for St Patrick because they quickly cottoned on to the shamrock as an image for this new understanding.  One shamrock leaf has three parts, and those of you who have looked into Celtic Christianity will recognise the motifs that originate from the image of the trinity.  The Celts were very familiar with the idea of interconnectedness and they quickly resonated with the idea that God was best seen in interconnectedness and community.  If God exists in community maybe we also find life in community. 

   There were other images that became popular including that of a spring of water which has an unseen underground source, a spring or fountain where it becomes visible, and a stream that flows from it.   In all three parts it is the same life giving water but it is experienced in different ways….. hidden, gushing, and journeying out into the world.  All three parts contain the same substance, water, but you see the water in different ways.  Images help us understand.

   The three parts to the Trinity picture of God were described by our forebears as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

   First through Jesus and his good news they had come to know and relate to God in a parental way.  Like a parent God was the source of all creation, the giver of life and existence.  They saw God’s parental love as source and wisdom that guides, corrects, surrounds, and watches over us in a manner that is seen in the very best of parenting.  It is a gracious, longing presence that gives freedom to choose, but which goes on seeking the best for the child.  They called God the Father, and there were reasons why they only rarely used motherhood to describe God back then.  Today if we were formulating the idea of the Trinity for the first time we would include both motherhood and fatherhood to speak of God’s creating and parental love.  It’s not an easy task to redefine our traditions in light of now.  It takes time.

   Secondly in Jesus they saw God in the life of a fellow human being who walked with them.  God was not some far off remote presence, or something that was unseen such as a hidden source of water, but God wanted to participate in the life of the world.  If you have seen me you have seen the Father Jesus says in John’s gospel.  God had broken into our human world as a visible spring of water, a human being born as one of us – Jesus.   Our forebears called the gift, the Son, partly as a reaction to the proclamation of the world around them that the son of God was the emperor of Rome.   No said the Christians the true light of God wasn’t the emperor but is seen in Jesus the crucified one.   He is the raised up by God from the power of death.  He is the true spring of life. 

   Through Jesus and his good news they also experienced a third reality.  Within them and around them they felt a presence that called them to reshape their lives and the communities of which they were part. A burning fire within, a rushing wind, a gentle breeze whispering.   There was a power alive within, around them building bridges across divides, reconciling, forgiving, boldly proclaiming a new way of life.  The water of eternal life was flowing like a river in their midst transforming lives, giving courage to be different.  They called this outpouring of God, the Holy Spirit.

   The Trinity was an attempt to put into words the radical way the early Christians were rethinking and freshly experiencing God in the aftermath of their encounter with Jesus.  Through God’s parental love, through Christ’s revealing life, death, and resurrection, and through this unrelenting  wind blowing inside and outside the fences they felt they were caught up with a God who while beyond and over us, walked with us, and stirred fires within us.    The new teaching or doctrine about the Trinity helped them see God in a life giving way reminding us that the word doctrine and doctor share a common root.  Both doctor and doctrine are supposed to help us find health and wholeness.

   You may be shaking your head and saying this is all over the top and the doctoring power of the Trinity really is academic claptrap.   

   I don’t know how many times I’ve been challenged with the view that the God of our scriptures is a violent bloodthirsty God.  It is one of the main reasons people reject organised religion.  Look at the conquest of Canaan by Joshua as he led the Hebrew people into the Promised Land.   The first target was the city of Jericho where not only all the people were killed, with men women and children totally wiped out with the exception of Rahab and her family, but also all the animals…. Anything that was alive was brutally slaughtered – at the command of God we are told.   Joshua was leading an invasion of Canaan and wanted to terrorise the inhabitants into submission, but does this way really reveal the heart of God?  Our forebears in giving us the doctrine of the Trinity brought a healing picture of God.  Creation is sometimes brutally violent, but consider how such violence sits with Jesus, who instead of picking up a sword would rather be tortured and killed.  Imagine how this sits with the reconciling, connection building Spirit who descends upon us like a dove.  The Trinity invites us to see three faces of God and through seeing all those faces we come closer to the heart of God.    

  A  temptation of any religion is that it becomes frozen in time.  Seeing the Trinity like a spring of water that is flowing should alert us to the possibility that we have more to learn.  Jesus told us the Spirit would guide us into more truth when we were ready to bear it.  The Spirit dances within us, breathing the life of God, proclaiming the sanctity of all life.  It took nineteen centuries before we proclaimed slavery was evil, and even longer to proclaim the equality of women.  We are still struggling with the learning that human sexuality can take different forms.   The Spirit is now breathing of a new revolution in how we live in harmony with the gift of creation, how we use resources, and how we can no longer treat the earth as a giant garbage disposal unit that can deal with all our extravagant lifestyles.  There is a dynamic changing face of God in the Trinity.

    We are used to seeing ourselves as isolated individuals.  Our protestant faith has emphasised individual responsibility.   The Trinity sees God characterised by ‘living in relationship’.  God is characterised not by a single entity but by a community with different faces.  I wonder what that has to say to us in an individualistic world.  If God exists in creative tension I wonder if we can’t give witness to a community where we celebrate creative tension instead of hiding our differences.  If God exists as the melding of different faces, maybe we can see more clearly the value of the different faces in our community.  

    Let the mystery of Trinity speak to you.

Dugald Wilson 16 June 2019

The Holy Spirit

An address for Pentecost Sunday, reading  Acts 2:1-13

       The wind is a mysterious force.  In Hebrew and Greek the two languages of the Bible the word for wind and breath is the same word.  In Hebrew, ruach, in Greek pneuma.  You cant see the wind but you can see its effects.  You cant see your breath but taking a breath has an effect.  (without it you die)

Participation activity: Blow up balloons and let them go   – cant see the breath in the balloon but it energizes and creates a new life in the room as balloons zip everywhere!

It is God’s Spirit, or breath, who moves over the empty creation as a wind and life begins.   In the creation stories it is God’s Spirit, or breath, who breathes into the first creatures made of dust and human beings are brought to life.  It is the breath of life.  It is the breath that gives and enhances life.  All of us I think want to feel alive.  We want to do more than just exist, we want to live, really live.  We want to find eternal life as our scriptures call it, we want to walk tall, make a difference, and find deep peace.  When I think of the Holy Spirit I think of a power that is working in the world to bring this life we long for.  The Spirit is working in my life to lead me to this abundant life, the Spirit is working in our community to bring this life, and the Spirit is reshaping the world to bring this life.   So when economic systems work to benefit the powerful and forget the rest the Spirit blows the embers of discontent.   When people think the earth can be treated as a commodity for plunder and abuse the sacred gift of creation pumping carbon into the atmosphere and all sorts of nasties into our local waterways the Spirit will raise up people to lead a revolution.  When the church loses its saltiness and withers away the Spirit will stir a reformation.  When you and I are tempted to put our feet up and say this is as good as it gets the Spirit will nudge and whisper of another chapter in the journey of aliveness, the journey towards abundant life.   The Spirit is a breath of life…. Life in all its fullness in all creation.

There was a sound like rushing wind and the early disciples encountered the breath of life, the Spirit of aliveness.   A new community was born that was called to give witness to this life in all its fullness in individuals and in communities. 

Lets do something that illustrates this.  Take your balloon.  It’s limp and lifeless, but I invite you to blow it up.   It now invites you to a party, maybe to throw it to someone and have some fun.  You can let it go and it literally takes off.  The Holy Spirit is a power alive in our world like the breath in the balloon that brings life, and goes on whispering and blowing to bring a fullness of life that Jesus talked about.

The  tongues of fire – (Participation activity: light a flaming torch and giving out little flames to everyone and talk about fire and flames)    We recognize this with the decorating of the church with red, the colour of fire.  Our story tells us at Pentecost these bursts of fire-energy spread out and touched each one of them.  No-one was missed out.  I think that’s significant. The flame of fire is a symbol of God, and at Pentecost we witness the truth that each of us are empowered with a God given flame or burst of energy.   I wonder what this could symbolize?  The Holy Spirit is alive in me your little flame celebrates. 

I choose to give the flame another name and that is the passion of God.  Within each of us there is a God filled passion or energy to do or be something.  I believe that each of us comes into the world with a sacred purpose.  There is a dream of God in our being.  This may involve undertaking a particular task or tasks or it may be to live a certain way, or maybe most often a mixture of both.  Whatever each of us has a unique role to play in God’s ongoing plan for the life of earth.  One way of recognizing this is to see what we get passionate about. We each have unique gifts, and a calling to play a part in the ongoing journey of creation.  Some people are wonderful planners and administrators, some are great carers, while others teach brilliantly or work with their hands.  Some are great encouragers, or have a gift of healing, others are great prayers have great wisdom.  Some are musicians, while others are teachers, academics and researchers.  There is a God flame burning within each of us and one of my prayers this morning is that we will each know our God flame well. 

There was what appeared to be like tongues of fire dancing around the room where they were, and a flame came and rested on each one of them.    A new community was born that was called to discover their God given gifts and to use those gifts together to transform and heal the world.

Today we celebrate that the Spirit of God is alive within each of us.  I invite you to be still for a moment and consider your own gifts.  Remember each of us is gifted…. It’s often the case that we are not very good at recognizing our giftedness and that is largely because we are not good at reflecting back to each other and encouraging each other.  You are invited to write on your flame a word or words to describe your gift then peel off the double sided tape and stick it on you.  You may like to talk about your gifts over coffee after the service. 

Wenn ich anfangen Deutsch zu sprechen Sie wahrscheinlich nicht verstehen mich  (When I start speaking German you probaly wont understand me!)  Participation activity: See how many greetings we can recite in the congregation…

I start speaking in another language and you can no longer understand me –  our sense of connection is broken.  But if we speak the same language we can communicate, have a conversation, and hopefully connect.  Connecting is a wonderful thing.  The cross we have on our church is a connecting cross just like an addition sign.  And when we add and connect things happen.  One connected to one becomes two.  Two connected to one becomes three.  When we connect with another amazing things happen.   It’s a wonderful thing to have a common language that enables us to connect. There is a power released when you know you are not alone.  The Holy Spirit is a connecting power.  The Spirit of Jesus wants to build connections with god and with each other. 

I’m thinking of the great gulf between generations in our own society, or the gulf between races or religions, the huge gulf between those who live comfortably and those who struggle to pay the bills or to find a roof over their heads.  At Pentecost a new community formed where the fences were down, the connections were made across all sorts of boundaries – there were to be no insiders and outsiders.  This sense of connection was to be a key feature of the new community.   Slaves and free, young and old, Jew and gentile.  The Christian community was a community without fences.  The first Christians stirred by the Spirit were people who put effort into building bridges across divides, reaching out beyond the comfort zones to discover the stories of the strangers.  The Pentecost story isn’t just about speaking other languages it was about connecting across all the things that divide us and building team.  Maybe the Spirit is whispering to you today to do some connecting?

Dugald Wilson 9 June 2019

Christian meditation – new group

   Jesus often withdrew to places of stillness and solitude to re-orientate his life in God.  Early Christians practiced mediation.  Today this practice has often been ignored, yet passages like  “be still and know that I am God” attract us.  Spiritual teacher of our time Fr Thomas Keating said “silence is God’s language”.  A new group is starting with the aim of learning and practicing the art of Christian Meditation.  

   Christian Meditation is based on: stillness, silence and simplicity. The aim is to move closer to union with God by sitting quietly. To aid us in being still we are invited to repeat in silence the word “Maranatha” which means “come Lord”.  We come in simplicity, not asking for anything, or seeking to tell God anything, just wanting to be open to God. We are leaving busyness and self-consciousness aside to let God transform us deep to deep. We’re not thinking about anything, spiritual or otherwise, just seeking to be in the presence of God and to be wholly present to God.  Those who persevere will inevitably see the results in their lives, “the fruits of the spirit” (Galatians 5): love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.

   Meditation does need to be regular, and it does require discipline.

The new group will meet for the first time at St Martins Presbyterian Church, 43 St Martins Road, on Tuesday June 11th at 7pm.  If you are interested come and see.  The group is not for experts, but for people interested in exploring a form of prayer that is much needed in our time.  Our aim is to meet weekly for those who can make it, but to also encourage a daily personal practice of mediation.

   For more information make contact with Dugald at dugaldwil@gmail.com or go to www.christianmeditationnz.org.nz &/or www.wccm.org