Fourth Sunday of Easter 3 May 2020 Gospel St John 10.1-10 Jesus replied to the Pharisees ‘Very truly, I tell you, anyone who does not enter the sheepfold by the gate but climbs in by another way is a thief and a bandit. The one who enters by the gate is the shepherd of the sheep. The gatekeeper opens the gate for him, and the sheep hear his voice. He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out. When he has brought out all his own, he goes ahead of them, and the sheep follow him because they know his voice. They will not follow a stranger, but they will run from him because they do not know the voice of strangers.’Jesus used this figure of speech with them, but they did not understand what he was saying to them. So again Jesus said to them, ‘Very truly, I tell you, I am the gate for the sheep. All who came before me are thieves and bandits; but the sheep did not listen to them. I am the gate. Whoever enters by me will be saved, and will come in and go out and find pasture. The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.’ HomilyEvery year on the fourth Sunday of Easter we contemplate the Risen Lord as the shepherd of his Church, and ourselves as his sheep. It is one of the main images of St John’s gospel, and so rich in meaning in relation to the rest of scripture that it is divided up for reading in the Eucharist over three years [vv.1-10 in year A, 11- 18 in year B, and the reprise of the theme at vv.25-30 in year C]. This year we are not dwelling on the image of the Good Shepherd, but instead on the door to the sheepfold. Jesus declares, ‘I am the Door!’ (v.9) through which each disciple must pass. He is our spiritual pathway: listening to him, following him, and knowing him (vv. 3-4). The image of a door has strong resonances at the moment while we are housebound due to the pandemic. In normal circumstances our front doors are signs that we do not live in prisons – as well as being to those who are abused at home a sign that in fact they do! They are signs of our freedom: that we can come and go as we please. Our front doors protect our intimacy, but they also open out to freedom, to society, and to relationships and responsibilities beyond; and they enable others to enter our homes and be our guests. But for many at the moment our front doors have come to mark a rather worrying boundary, through which it is almost taboo to pass. If there’s an easing of the lockdown, many they say will be fearful to venture out. Something of the same feeling, in reverse, is being felt by the Church. Although the preservation of life and the common good undoubtedly requires it, Christians inevitably feel sharply their exclusion from their churches, like being locked out of your own home. Our churches are true symbols; but they are also, more simply, our Christian family homes – God’s house where with brothers and sisters we gather around Christ, to offer the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, and to receive afresh from him the Spirit who enables us to pass back out of the church doors again to live and die with Christ, and to find new brothers and sisters in the world of men and women. In through those doors we come to be baptized and enter eternal life; and if we are blessed in this life our faith will carry us back out through them to eternal rest. When Christ applies to himself the symbol of the door of the sheepfold—through which the sheep come and go—he reminds us of the Christian’s job of living daily by following him. We each recognize his voice, and he ours; and he both leads us and feeds us. This truth also implies a judgment: ‘Whoever does not enter the sheepfold through the door, but gets in some other way,’ says Jesus, ‘is a thief and a brigand’ (v.1). This much Jesus says in parable. But because his hearers prove to be a bit dim-witted, after verse 7 he begins to be explicit, explaining his parable by speaking about himself: ‘I am the door of the sheepfold’, he says. False prophets, false messiahs even, come ‘only to steal, to kill and to destroy’ (v.10a). In other words, they are interested only in their own gain and glory. I am not interested in my own glory, only the Father’s glory, and my way of life, a way of death-to-self so that my Father’s love may reveal itself. It is a way of life for all Christ’s disciples, but because it is Christ’s way it leaves particular responsibility on the pastors of the Church. Not because they are more elevated: quite the opposite. Because there is no such thing as leadership in the Church which is not first follower-ship. Jesus alone is the absolute sacrament of the Divine Shepherd (Ez 34.1), which was something well understood by St Ignatius of Antioch (one of the earliest martyrs after the generation of the apostles, and may be what we could call a spiritual grandchild of St John himself). ‘Christ’, he wrote, ‘is the Father’s door, through which Abraham, Isaac and Jacob enter, the prophets, the apostles and the whole church’ (in his letter to the Philadelphians 9.1). Jesus is, we could say, the door between the worlds by whom we make our own safe passage through death into life. If our Gospel passage contains a judgment on a false teachers, it also gives us an encouragement for the majority of disciples. As the sheep are able to pass freely in and out of the sheepfold through the door, they come to know, to recognize and to trust the voice of their shepherd. Conversely, they learn to know to run from the stranger whose voice they do not know, or recognize, or trust. In other words they come to discern the true pastor, and true teaching. Pope Francis talks of the smell of the sheep, emphasizing that that is what the shepherds needs to know; but we can also speak of the sheep’s intuition of shepherd. An ancient Christian text, just a bit earlier than St Ignatius whom we heard from just now, affirms that a true teacher can be distinguished from a false one because he will ‘have the behaviour of the Lord. From their behaviour the false prophet and the true prophet shall be distinguished.’ (Didaché 11.8). The sheep have this discernment about their teachers and what is being taught. This intuition is gained by Christians both by being taught by the Good Shepherd, whose word and behaviour they know from the Gospel and trust; and also by the continuous effort of their discipleship as they follow their master, observing, and listening to, and imitating, what their master is saying and doing – much as Jesus himself claims to see, and hear, and imitate what his Father is saying and doing. It is something developed patiently, over time, and sometimes learned the hard way. But it always comes with that relationship, and with a disciple’s daily task of conversion to the master. Whatever claims are made for various kinds of technical, scientific or artistic knowledge – important as those things are – they don’t actually substitute for the kind of knowledge and discernment that builds faith and expands hope and deepens love, which take time and are built on relationship with Christ and Christ’s body. This is the relationship that we are used to sharing by leaving our homes and gathering together in church as God calls us to be guests in his house: to pray, to listen to his word, and to celebrate the Eucharist. We pray that it will not be long before we can begin to resume our life together and our service in the community. But in the meanwhile we must all (not just the Christians, but everyone who is currently living behind closed doors) get used to another idea: that the Lord comes to our house; comes to knock on the door of our life; comes to meet us in the places and times of our frustrated or frightened daily existence; comes to offer us, or to strengthen, a bond of friendship. He says, ‘Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me.’ But he knocks because he wants us to cross the threshold, to share in his time, his life, his eternity. Prayer Almighty God, who through your only-begotten Son Jesus Christ have overcome death and opened to us the gate of everlasting life: grant that, as by your grace going before us you put into our minds good desires, so by your continual help we may bring them to good effect; through Jesus Christ our risen Lord. Amen.
Reflection – Feast of St MarkToday we celebrate the Feast of St Mark, the writer of the second Gospel. Mark was the secretary of St Peter, the Prince of the Apostles. As such, it is not inappropriate that his Gospel is sometimes known as ‘the Gospel of St Peter’, for in it is much of Peter’s reminiscences of his time travelling around Galilee, Judea and Samaria in the company of Christ and the other disciples over the course of around three years.Probably after Peter’s death in Rome, Mark went to Alexandria in Egypt, which had close links with Rome and was home to the largest Jewish community in the world, to preach the Gospel. We can only imagine the impact his words, and those of his own disciples had, but it is an historical fact that by the end of the 1st Century there was a large, vibrant and growing Church in Alexandria, which was to play an enormously important role in the Christian world over the course of the next few centuries.The colour of today’s feast is red, which serves to remind us that Mark, having faithfully discharged his duties of teaching and preaching, laid down his life as a martyr for his faith in Jesus Christ. A century or so later, a Christian from further West in Roman Africa, Tertullian, wrote that ‘The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church’, and Mark may well have been one of those he had in mind in writing this statement.Today, the Coptic Church of Egypt, descended from St Mark’s original mission and faithful to the witness he displayed through his life, ministry, writings and death, is one of the most actively persecuted Christian bodies in the world. Although technically legal in Egypt, the Church, which comprises around 10% of Egypt’s population, faces considerable obstacles to its life. This is mainly unofficial persecution, but the State does, from time to time, work to make life difficult for the Christians in the country.For the most part, the main persecutions Christians face are in the rural districts of Egypt, although city centre churches have periodically been the targets for Islamist terrorist bombs, with many hundreds of worshippers slain. Elsewhere, in areas more remote from the gaze of the law, it is far from unknown for Christians to be targeted for rape, to have their throats cut or even to be crucified to the doors of their churches! Such are the times in which they live – but, in truth, it is not very much different from most other times in Egyptian history since the Muslim conquest.Very often, Western Christians are so obsessed with being ‘nice’, with being tolerant, that we forget that others are far less tolerant than we are. Throughout much of the world, in Muslim lands especially, little or no tolerance is shown to Christians. For one reason or another, we are considered to be an existential threat to the powers that be. Yet this should not surprise us, for Christ repeatedly warned us that this would be the case for his followers.In these days of a lethal pandemic, it is only natural that our concerns regarding the COVID-19 virus dominate our lives. So many people have become ill and have died from its malignant curse that it is little surprise that it seems to exclude all other concerns, at times, from our daily lives. Yet, as Christians, we need to recall that, although our churches are closed at this time, we live in far better circumstances than millions of our fellow-believers. We are not going to be actively persecuted (at least, not in the same ways) for our Christian faith. It is therefore of great importance that we continue to support these people in prayer and, where possible, financially, at this distressing time.St Mark taught truth through his Gospel. At the heart of that truth lies the reality of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. It was a truth for which St Mark gave his whole life and for which he was prepared to lay it down, confident in the certainty that, having himself conquered death, he would bring those who believe in him to that eternal life of God which he truly promises.Nothing, St Paul reminds us, can separate us from the love of God in Christ – not even death itself. In an age when thoughts of mortality cannot but press on us even more than ever, we need to hold before our eyes the life and witness of St Mark. It is through his preaching and writing, through the truth to which he witnesses, that so many down through the centuries have not only come to believe that Jesus is God incarnate but to realize that he is, indeed, Lord of both Life and Death and the One who brings his people to eternal life with God. That is, indeed, something which gives us great joy and consolation at this time.Father David
Holy SaturdayToday we await the great Feast of Christ’s Resurrection from the Dead. It is a day of sorrow and mourning and, by Tradition, a fasting day. Tonight, at 8pm, all that will change as we celebrate with the lighting of the Paschal Candle the First Mass of Easter.Although somewhat abbreviated this year and celebrated with only the two of us present, nevertheless we SHALL celebrate Easter and invite you all to light a candle and join prayerfully with us as we, once more, make present the completion of Christ’s saving action.
Good FridayToday, the most solemn day of the Church’s year, we will walk the Way of the Cross at 2pm in the Memorial Garden, following the Stations there. At 3pm, we will celebrate the Liturgy of the Passion in the Vicarage dining room/chapel and invite you all to be spiritually with us as we keep a necessarily simplified commemoration of this most holy event.