Reflecting on People
Sermon by The Reverend Richard Ledger
You know how the conversation goes. “How
are you?” “I’m alright; it’s the others.”
Well, there are over six billion of us
others – and there are likely to be ten billion before growth stops. And we
are concentrated in quite small areas of the earth – large areas of desert /
ice / jungle / mountains – not very good for people to live. So most live
in lowlands near the coast. One in five of us is Chinese! There is great
variety of race, language, culture and wealth. There are getting on for 200
different countries, each with its own boundary or border. Most are armed
to the teeth – this year the world is spending a record total on weapons of
£560 billion, and so there is enormous potential for conflict. Movement of
people is not so easy as it was over 100 years ago when the poor went to new
and empty lands to start a new life. So we have asylum seekers and all that
means – and the illegal, but very profitable trafficking in refugees.
So – lots of differences. Reinforced by
finger-prints, DNA, ‘eye’ security – each person is unique! No-one quite
like us – just as well, you may say (Fan of “Home and Away”, Peterborough
Utd and Telecare).
But we have lots in common as humans.
Bodies. Brains. Experience – we learn and can pass on knowledge – so there
is progress – unlike, it seems, the case of animals. Because of this we
have had a great impact on the world – its environment and climate
and ‘look’ – with cities etc – despite the fact that we have arrived
only very recently in the earth’s history.
We are, no doubting it, as scripture says,
“fearfully and wonderfully made” – the crown of the creation (Hebrews 2
quotes Psalm 8) – but part of it. Yes – you and I and everyone is
created to be stewards of the rest of creation. Note that all
creation was “very good” – including us!
We also learn in Genesis that Man is
disobedient. Well, you know the story in Genesis 3 – Charlie referred to it
last week. It is the story of every person – timeless truth. We are
told not to do something – it seems very attractive – so we do
it. It turns sour; we are found out. We try to wriggle out of it – blame
someone else. But we have to face the consequences. Give people the
choice – and we so often do the wrong thing. We have that in
common too.
We also tend to fall out –
differences lead to conflict on all scales. Genesis 11 tries to explain
differences in language which are a source of trouble, suspicion and
hostility – what we don’t understand. And Genesis 11 links it with pride
– trying for more – bigger, rather than understanding. The BBC
Charter is “Nation shall speak peace unto nation”! This is precisely what
most nations don’t do!
So – created, disobedient, divided. It
seems to fall apart. Yet, crucially, we are loved – actively loved
by God. His nature is love, and he loves the whole world so very
much (Psalm 3, v16). This good news is for all nations so that all may
believe and obey - whoever may believe – salvation for all! And his
love overwhelms, eliminates the decisions … you are, so we read in
Galatians, clothed with the life of Christ – so there is no difference
between Jews and Gentiles, slaves and free men, men and women – you are
all in union with Jesus Christ. Listen to what Paul says to the
Corinthians (remember how wrong they got everything!) (2Cor 5,
vv16-19). If anyone is in Christ he is a new being. The old is gone, the
new has come. All this is done by God, who through Christ changed us from
enemies into his friends.
What is all a mess, God in love
wants to bind together – to make whole, according to Paul –
through Jesus he brings the whole universe back to himself. God made peace
through Jesus’ death on the cross and so brought back to himself all
things, both on earth and in heaven. It is sealed in resurrection.
And there is, as we can read, on Revelation – the final scene – the
enormous crowd from every race, tribe, nation and language not at each
other’s throats, but worshipping God.
So everyone, yes, you and I as well
– are loved, loved to bits by God who longs to love out the potential for
good in each of us – which means we are understood, forgiven, accepted –
just as we are, a love gift from Jesus to his Father above, and God gives us
his spirit – puts his stamp of ownership on us. We are his friends,
his sons and daughters, heirs of his kingdom. Of tremendous worth to God!
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