With the cost of living crisis threatening to overwhelm one in three families in Britain, and a world food crisis affecting the lives of up to a billion people there can be no better moment to consider Jesus teaching on Social Justice.
At the core of the Christian ethic is love for God and love for neighbour, so our responsibilities to one another are very much a concern for us all. Our response will, I suspect, be determined by how threatened we ourselves feel at this moment. Fear of the future can so easily drive out love for neighbours.
The Raft of Medusa. 1819-20 Theodore Gericault.
Consider a historical example famously painted by Theodore Gericault, ‘The Raft of the Medusa’ 1819 - 20. It is an over-life-size painting that depicts a moment from the aftermath of the wreck of the French naval frigate Meduse, which ran aground off the coast of today's Mauritiana on 2 July 1816. On 5 July 1816, at least 147 people were set adrift on a hurriedly constructed raft; all but 15 died in the 13 days before their rescue, and those who survived endured starvation and dehydration and practised cannibalism. The event became an international scandal, in part because its cause was widely attributed to the incompetence of the French captain.
But incompetence was not his only fault he, as a Captain, failed to put his passengers before himself, casting them adrift in an unseaworthy raft without sufficient food and water. The result was the barbaric desperation of men, women and children doomed to starve. Gericault’s painting depicts the moment when a sail is sighted and the fifteen who remained alive are rescued.
The ‘Raft of Medusa’ could serve as a parable for today as we see an artificially created food and energy crisis threaten the lives of so many. We live in a world of plenty, scarcity is the result of decisions taken by human beings who place themselves at the centre of their world rather than share it with others.
Do not worry. Luke 12:22
‘Do not worry about your life, what you will eat, or about your body, what you will wear. For life is more than food, and your body more than clothing.’ Luke 12: 22-23
Jesus paints a portrait of a man very much at the centre of his own small world. ‘The rich fool’. He piles up his crops into barns, thinking that he will be secure but he is robbed of everything by death.
“ You fool this very night your life will be demanded of you.” Luke 12:20
This is not a bad man, but he is mistaken in where his true treasure lies not in possessions but in the quality of one’s life. A life where we place ourselves at the centre is, in the bible, called idolatry. Listen to the way this man talks to himself appearing to live in his own world.
“ He thought to himself, what shall I do?” ‘ he said to himself, “I will do this. I will …I will … I will and I will say to my soul … relax, eat and be merry.” Luke 12: 17 – 19
This is a man who puts ‘Goods’ in place of God, and self in place of the neighbour, making greed his God. The OT prophets warned the Jewish people again and again that they would become like the gods they worshipped. If we worship lifeless objects we will lose our humanity, we will lose our soul, and we will become lifeless.
‘Perfect love drives out fear’ 1 John 4:18
The root of this greed is fear and anxiety, which is why Jesus repeats again and again:
“Do not fear … Do not be afraid … Do not worry.”
Greed then is the fear of scarcity but Jesus does not counter this fear with a promise of riches, but with a promise of love. He rejects the idea that our worth consists in the abundance of our possessions by telling us that:
“Life is more than food and the body more than clothing” Luke 12: 23
Jesus is not asking us to make a vow of poverty but pointing us to the true source of all our desiring. The desire to be loved, to know our true value in the love of another. We will fill our lives with things if we believe our true value consists of the things we own, but fill our lives with love and we will discover our true worth.
In the presence of God, in the presence of love, fear is cast out. Love reverses the vicious cycle of fear and scarcity and propels us outward toward others. A life grounded in this ethic of love recognises that we have nothing to fear because in God we meet the true object of our desires. The one who loves us and desires our love.
In God we meet our ultimate desire and destination, in God, we come home and when we hear the words: “ this night your life is being demanded of you” we can be at peace because we know we are loved.”
Today we meet at the Lord’s table, a symbol of His love and generosity. He lays a table for us with the symbols of His life, bread for His body, wine for His blood. Symbols of love that we are then sent out to share with the world.
The rich farmer was right about one thing, “ Relax, eat, and be merry” because “ You have plenty of good things laid up.” This is a table laid up for us. Taste its abundance and you’ll see that the Lord is good.
Rev simon Brignall
Prayer for Ukraine
God of peace and justice we pray for the people of Ukraine today,
and the laying down of weapons.
We pray for all those who fear for tomorrow,
that your spirit of comfort would draw near to them.
We pray for those with power over war and peace,
for wisdom, discernment, and compassion to guide their decisions
Above all, we pray for all your precious children at risk and in fear,
That you would hold and protect them.
We pray in the name of Jesus, the Prince of Peace. Ame
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