Paul Writes
"We pray that at this time of National Celebration we may be upheld in love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness and gentleness ..."
Like it or not, Saturday 6th May 2023 will be a day of great celebration for our nation and further afield. For many people, me included, it really will be a day of great joy whilst for others who struggle with the idea of monarchy, it will not. Whatever our personal views are however it cannot be argued that anything that brings our community together to share friendship and memories, and most often food, is a good thing and I hope everyone will benefit in some part from the energy of the weekend. Indeed celebration is a Christian thing, Our Lord's first miracle was after all performed at a wedding feast.
The King's Coronation ceremony will be rooted in longstanding tradition but the service will also reflect The King's role in modern Britain, and throughout the Coronation Weekend themes of community life, volunteering and service will be highlighted and celebrated both nationally and locally; here in Shaw and Crompton, we will be taking part in the Big Help Out on Bank Holiday Monday with a Churches Together 'litter pick' which reflects the King's commitment to safeguarding the environment and our Christian commitment stewardship of God's good creation.
The Church of England has helpfully provided us with resources for prayer and worship to support the Coronation and within this has used the following headings for prayer intentions:
Called to pray - to pray is to respond to the God who reached out to us in Jesus Christ.
Called to serve - the call to serve is central to our understanding of the monarchy and King Charles has already pledged himself to that vocation.
Called to dedication - committing our lives to God and each other.
Called to constancy - as King Charles prepares for coronation, we pray that in all the changes of the world he may be rooted in the changelessness of God.
Concern for religious freedom - we pray our King continues to champion this cause.
Concern for charitable work - we give thanks for the work the King has done and continues to do and pray we draw inspiration from it.
Concern for the environment - taking heart in the fact that the King was one of the earliest advocates of environmentalism.
A symbol of the nation - we pray the King fulfils this important role in national and international affairs, that he may be an example of the wisdom, justice and care that we all seek in our lives.
And we pray that at this time of national celebration we may be upheld in love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness and gentleness, the characteristics of a faithful and inclusive Christian community. And to end, a prayer of celebration for community:
Living God, you bring us
together in community
and teach us to love one another
as you have loved us.
May we be beacons of your light
in the communities
in which we are set,
that through truth,
justice and action
we may see your Kingdom
come upon earth,
in Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.
May God bless His Majesty The King, The Queen and us all.
Every blessing,
Paul.
Paul Writes
"Warning, if you are reading this during Passiontide, the ‘'A word’ has been used!"
Warning, if you are reading this during Passiontide, the ‘A word’ has been used. I make no apology as this is a message about Easter Joy, but I do hope you will forgive me!
Rejoice, heavenly powers. Sing choirs of angels. O universe, dance around God’s throne! Jesus Christ our King is risen. Sound the victorious trumpet of salvation. These are opening words of the Exsultet, the special song for Holy Saturday Night; and through them I can imagine the heavenly powers rejoicing, the choirs of angels singing, the universe itself dancing around the throne of God. It may well be ‘mind blowing’, but it is exactly what happens!
Holy Saturday Night truly is the most holy of all nights, a night where the heavens and the earth are joined in excitement and joy, shouting out He is risen. He is risen! And each year, it fills my heart afresh with such joy and enthusiasm, and hope.
And my heart gets a double portion of joy because not only is He risen, but on that first Easter morning, it was the women who first knew. It was the women to whom the revelation came. On going to the tomb to do what they needed, what they wanted, to do, they found no body. Instead, they found the angel in dazzling clothes telling them he is not here. “Do not be afraid; I know that you are looking for Jesus who was crucified. He is not here, for he has been raised as he said”. He is not here!
But even though Jesus had said it would happen, they had lost hope, they were so eaten up by grief that they’d forgotten. But these faithful women friends of Jesus heard it first, and even though they were at first frightened, after all, who wouldn’t be? They remembered what Jesus had said to them and they went off to tell the men.
I’m sure there have been times in all our lives when a piece of good news has knocked us for six, so amazing that at first you can’t believe it. It takes a while to sink in, and then you start to process it. Maybe getting a job you thought you didn’t have a real chance of getting, or some good health news when you had feared the worse.
Using that experience, just think how those women must have felt on finding Jesus gone. We might forgive them for being confused, for not joining the choirs of angels in songs of praise. It would have taken a little time to sink in. Then think about the conversation they must have had once they had left the tomb, helping each other to process it. What will we do with these spices now? How do we tell the others? Where has he gone? I can’t believe it – He is Risen! But they didn’t have to wait long because their beloved Lord met them on the road where they took hold of his feet and worshipped him.
The women now believing their eyes went to tell the apostles and they didn’t believe them. How could it be true? They would not have considered the women to have been thinking straight, too emotional, overwrought with their grief, hysterical! And that makes me feel really mad at them, how dare they not believe the women, how dare they think them hysterical? It was the women after all that stayed with him as he died, they were there, they saw and now they had seen him risen.
But to be fair to the men, it would have been a truth that was difficult swallow, just as it would have been for the women who actually saw it and received the news first hand, so perhaps we shouldn’t be too hard on the men, we ought to give them a break? After all, according to Luke’s account, Peter went to look for himself and was amazed, in John’s account, Peter and the disciple Jesus Loved went together to see. They were amazed, they were shocked, and I am sure they were afraid.
The days following the death of a close loved one are surreal, aren’t they? It seems odd that the world is still turning, everyone continuing with their daily lives whilst your own world seems to have been turned on its axis and is spinning in a way you can’t fathom. They were all in that place, the women, and the men; but they had the added dimension of having now to make sense of Him rising from the dead and all that that meant, all that would bring.
So, I do think the men, on this occasion can be forgiven for not believing. We though, have the benefit of being recipients of the resurrection news on good authority, it has been handed down to us through the ages, enshrined in scripture and doctrine, and yet, we too may sometimes find it hard to understand. For many of course it is just an unbelievable story; and like I can forgive the men in Jesus’ life, I can also understand the people who cannot and will not believe. And this is even more reason why those of us who do believe, despite how hard it may be at times, must bask in the awe and wonder of what has happened. He is risen!
Because his rising is the true sign of his promise to us of eternal life, when all will be made new, and we will with the heavenly hosts sing out in utter joy. He is Risen, He is Risen indeed. And so, friends, we must believe enough for everyone, and have hope for them too.
Rejoice, heavenly powers. Sing choirs of angels. O universe, dance around God’s throne! Jesus Christ our King is risen. Sound the victorious trumpet of salvation. Christ is risen from the dead, His peaceful light shines upon us, He lives and reigns for ever and ever. Alleluia!
Every blessing,
Paul.