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Sermon for Eleventh Sunday after Trinity – Revd Dr Elizabeth Koepping

Sermon

Eleventh Sunday after Trinity

1 Kg 19, 4-8 Ps.130,34,91; Eph. 4:25-5:2; John 6, 35, 41-51

 

This is our third ‘I am the bread of life’ reading of four from John set for what is the period of bounty in field and garden for northern hemisphere Christians. Jesus was talking of himself as the bread of life, and some of us took this morning in Communion. Today’s reading from 1 Kings also see bread as stuff to eat: if you shop this week, help feed kids and their families in West Oxfordshire during the holidays by putting UHT milk, sauces for pasta, tinned meat, vegetables and fruit into the food bank box: they don’t need more sweet corn or soup! Not helping to feed people who for whatever reason- lousy wages, missing benefits, illness or helplessness- are hungry, should be unacceptable in this so-called Christian country.

Off my soap-box now, I’ll be looking at a verse of the Ephesians passage, but before that, let’s pick out some lines from todays’ trio of psalms, which all speak of trust and hope: ‘I wait for the Lord, my soul waits for him; in his word is my hope,’ and ‘O taste and see that the Lord is good, happy are those who take refuge in him.’ This evening we shall read: ‘Under God’s wing you will find refuge…fearing neither the terror of the night nor the arrow that flies by day’.

The earlier chapters of Ephesians made one thing clear. We shall live in tranquillity, at peace with God now and for ever if we trust in God, accept Christ as our guide, embrace the Holy Spirit, and pledge to respect and honour all as we leave church after taking Christ’s bread or singing his praise. The last few chapters of Ephesians, from four onwards, fill in some crucial details for life, not, let me hasten to say, life without trouble, sickness, or tragedy: but with the sure means to get through, held up by God.

Today’s Ephesians verse is: ‘Let no evil talk come out of your mouths, but only what is useful for building up as there is need, so that your words may give grace to those who fear’.  The phrase ‘as there is need’ is tricky, and much affected by context. Here’s an example. Aibeh was a very slow learner struggling in an English-medium school in Borneo in the 1960s. She really couldn’t write a clear sentence, so I decided to ignore the wrong words and just tick any which were reasonably correct.  Susie, on the other hand, came from the US to do a doctorate with me in Edinburgh. Politely but efficiently I took her first essay to pieces: she wept, saying, ‘No one has ever said my work isn’t good enough’. Applauding Aibeh’s meagre offering was useful for building her up, just as was shredding Susie’s work, though not Susie herself.

So this verse is saying, ‘don’t say unpleasant things unless strictly necessary, and then never for pleasure, or to hurt’. Kids, and adult cowards, often do that. My oldest grandchild, Conrad, gleefully reported that his younger brother Bastian ‘shook your Japanese toy and threw it on the ground and it’s broken’. Actually, the toy had yet again fallen apart- I’ve fixed it now- but Conrad (aged 4) wanted to get his brother in trouble.

Kids do that, but they will learn not to tell tales or score points, but what of adults? The comments made by bystanders when Jesus said he’d come from heaven were scathing: ‘who does he think he is? he’s just so and so’s kid’. Yet Paul isn’t just giving negative orders- don’t this or that. Lists of don’ts are easy to tick off: easy to say ‘I didn’t get drunk, commit adultery, cheat on my taxes this week’ and feel complacent. But a command about being – kind and fair and loving – is much more demanding.  ‘Build people up to give grace to them who fear’. Patronisingly building people up falsely by saying ‘wonderful work’ when it is below what they can do, as teachers had done to Susie, brings neither benefit nor grace. But what about compliments for kindness, for a task well done?  That doesn’t take much effort, does it, nor diminish the speaker, does it?

Well, quite a few people reckon there’s only so much good, so much beauty, so much adequacy, available, so if I compliment you, I’ll diminish myself. Yet God has said in the Psalms and all the readings: ‘I am there, trust in me, I will enfold you’, Christ gave himself for us that we could live in grace, the Spirit is sent to fill us with stalwart peace. How then can ‘good’ be limited, if God’s goodness and loving kindness is unendingly there for us?

But even devout Christians may feel it is, especially if they do not feel forgiven. Years ago, I mentioned to a woman in Australia that local people rarely complimented each other. She thought a moment, and said ‘Yes, you’re right. If I make a cake, my husband never compliments me for it, so I just have to know that it’s good in Jesus sight…But that’s rather cold’. Her husband had had little love as a child, and felt so weighed down with sinfulness and inadequacy he didn’t feel sufficiently filled with God’s bounty to give a little affirmation to the wife he loved.

‘Say what is useful for building people up, as there is need, so your words may give grace to those who hear’. We are sheltered under the wing of God, fed by the body of Christ, filled by the Spirit. As God’s gift of love fills us, pass it to others in words of affirmation, and acts of practical support, that our words and our deeds indeed give grace to others.

Revd Dr Elizabeth Koepping

 

 

 

 

Shipton Bell Fund Update

bells

SHIPTON BELL FUND APPEAL NEWS

update by Chris Seers, May 2018

The bells of St Mary’s, Shipton will shortly be undergoing major refurbishment. In 2017, an Appeal was launched to raise the £70,000 required for the project. We are delighted to let you know that to date (May 2018) we have raised just over £61,000 through a combination of individual donations, event tickets and sponsorship, and grants from charitable trusts.

We are very grateful to everyone who has supported the appeal so far as it means we have been able to confirm a slot with John Taylor & Co, the Loughborough Bell Foundry, for the restoration work. The work is scheduled to start on 24th September and we hope the bells will be returned in December in time to celebrate Christmas.

We need your help for this to happen! With a little under £10,000 left to raise to complete the project, we hope you will consider supporting it in one or more of the following ways.

 

Shipton Quiz Night in aid of Shipton BellsCome along to the first quiz night in aid of the bell fund on Sunday 20th May from 7.30pm, kindly hosted by the Wychwood Inn. Come as a team or join a team on arrival – the more the merrier! £2.50 per person to enter; pay on the door.

Make a donation
You can make a donation of any amount by bank transfer or cheque, for details of how to do this, email Clare [email protected]  If you would like to contribute to a specific part of the project, the following fittings may be sponsored:

Headstocks                            £1500 each (includes display of donor’s name)   2 remaining

Wheels and braces             £750 each

Bell ropes                               £250 each                                                                            6 remaining

Ash sliders                              £100 each

Ash stays and bolts             £100 each

Floor bosses                          £50 each

Sponsor the last Quarter Peal on the ‘old’ bells
On Monday 27th August to coincide with the Shipton Fete, we will be ringing the last Quarter Peal on the bells prior to their refurbishment. Most ringing consists of several short pieces (5-10 minutes each) during which different groups of the ringers present, ring different methods. There are normally more ringers than ropes, so that shares the ringing around. A quarter peal is different; it is a much longer performance, of a set length, to a specific composition, and with the same person ringing each bell throughout. On our bells, a quarter peal takes 45 – 50 minutes. There will be 8 of us ringing; we plan to start at 12.00 and we would welcome sponsorship of this event.

Please consider supporting this local heritage project ensuring that the Shipton Bells are fit to ring out for events and celebrations in the village for the next 100 years and beyond.

Pilgrim Path Guided Walks 2018 Sunday 6 May Milton to Shipton

Adventures on your doorstep for you to share with family and friends.

Journey together today…

Guided circular walks, led by experienced walkers offering reflections and insights.

The first Pilgrim Path guided walk will be on:
Sunday 6th May at 2pm. The walk will be from
Milton church to Shipton (3 miles).

Meet at Milton church and do bring your own refreshments.

Quiz Night Sunday 20th May 7.30pm at the Wychwood Inn

Quiz night bell fund 2018

Quiz Night at the Wychwood Inn
in aid of the Shipton Bell Fund
Sunday 20th May, 2018 7.30 pm
Teams of 4 to 6; £2.50 per person to enter (pay on the door)
Come as a team or join a team on the night