Thursday, 19 January 2017
Thoughts on the Eve of the Trump Presidency
Eight years ago I had the extraordinary experience of attending the 1st Inauguration of President Barack Obama - It was a hope-filled historic occasion and it is no exaggeration to say that being there on that day was both inspiring and uplifting.
Eight years later and looking back on the Obama presidency I have to confess that I am disappointed that it did not live up to all my hopes and dreams but then with the advantage of hindsight it was perhaps inevitable that it could never live up to expectations which were bordering on messianic. The odds were heavily stacked against a president who sought to overcome the divisiveness of partisan and adversarial politics and to undercut the very divisions on which the American and many other political systems thrive.
And yes I am also disappointed that he failed to close Guantanamo Bay, tackle gun control, and extract the USA from the drone warfare which so many including myself find deeply disturbing.
And yet I could not but be continually impressed by the gracious and dignified humanity of a president and First Family who visibly bore heavily the weight of his office.
And indeed there were many aspects of his presidency that deserve positive acclaim and mention. His empathy towards the victims and families impacted by gun violence, his sincere attempts to bring affordable healthcare to those on the margins of society, his willingness to be converted to the cause of marriage equality, and his nuanced understanding of the importance of inter-religious dialogue and understanding and international and inter-Nicene relations were all groundbreaking and had a hugely positive impact on the USA and arguably the western world.
So what comes next? Sadly it would appear that despite the experience of the presidency of Barack Obama the USA has voted for a 'hopeless' future based on a bankrupt vision of our world which sees enemies everywhere and seeks to build walls and barriers to protect the selfish interests of the privileged minority.
Some will protest that no - this is all about 'change' but in reality it is nothing more than looking after No. 1 and that is no vision for any society. It is traditional that the President elect would end his speech by requesting that God would bless the United States of America - On this occasion we should perhaps pray that God will help the United States of America! :(
Thoughts on the retirement of Martin McGuinness
I am conscious that many within my own Protestant tradition (especially in Northern Ireland) will find it hard to empathise with Martin McGuinness in his illness and forced retirement, not least those who have lost family and friends at the hands of the IRA. Not having had that experience I do not think it is right that I or others who have been spared such suffering would demand or expect otherwise from those whose lives have been forever damaged and even destroyed by terrorist violence.
In that respect while initially annoyed and disappointed by the dispassionate response of Arlene Foster to Martin McGuinness' illness I subsequently learnt of the horror she had experienced as an eight year old girl when her father was shot and seriously injured by the IRA and how she herself cheated death in a bus bombing when she was sixteen. She demonstrably did not rise above what happened to her but being brutally honest I am dubious that I would have been able to overcome such trauma at a formative age. Knowing my temperament indeed it is entirely possible I would have gone further and involved myself in a violent and illegal retaliation. There for the Grace of God went I!
But that was not my experience (and I am grateful for that) and while my mother grew up in Norther Ireland and my wife is from there the 'Troubles' were not a part of my formation and so I look at the retirement of Martin McGuinness with different eyes.
Yes I see in Martin McGuinness one who is a self confessed terrorist and one who may well have been responsible (either directly or indirectly) for the murder of those who through an accident of birth found themselves in the wrong place at the wrong time.
But that is not the end of it - I also see one who was able to move from the path of violence to the way of peace and in so doing was able to acknowledge the journey on which he had travelled. It is that which sets him apart from Gerry Adams whose disingenuous disavowal of his violent past undermines his credibility and his ultimate potential to help others make the transition from violence to peace.
Martin McGuinness came a long way on his political and life journey and in doing so did rise above his formative experience and brought a lot of people with him. As I have said already that is more than I believe I would have been able to do and so he has earned my respect and also my empathy. I do not condone everything that he did, especially in his younger years, but as a priest of the Church I cannot but commend one who turned from the path of violence to the way of peace. Martin McGuinness should not be defined by his worst days unless we are all prepared to be so judged. I wish him well and pray for his healing.
Sunday, 12 June 2016
A response to Orlando - No more excuses!
Like so many people around the world I am physically sickened by the news of the massacre in Orlando. It seems to me there are two principal factors that contributed towards this horrible event.
The first is the ongoing ease of access to guns in the United States which makes such massacres a regular headline on our news cycle.
The second, and the one in which I feel somewhat complicit is the ongoing failure of Christian churches including my own Church of Ireland to be totally unambiguous in its welcome of people of all sexuality to participate fully in the life, witness and leadership of our church.
Yes it was a Muslim extremist that carried out this appalling crime but it could just as easily have been a Christian. The scale of this atrocity is perhaps unprecedented but there are no shortage of gay people who have been murdered by so called Christians in the name of God. And if we consider the tens if not hundreds of thousands of people who have committed suicide because of the rejection of their sexuality by their churches then we are talking about a genocide and one which is certainly not confined to foreign shores.
This is a problem for all of us who call ourselves religious - The Orlando massacre may have been an act of terrorism but there is little doubt that the choice of target was in no small part due to the ongoing and historic negative and pejorative portrayal of those who are gay by people of religious faith
For too long and at incalculable cost we religious have hidden behind misguided legislation that protects our right to discriminate against people on grounds of their sexuality.
We have also attempted to fool ourselves by insisting that we 'love the sinner and hate the sin' while ignoring the fact that what we perceive to be sin and thus licensed to hate is something that those who we talk about but not to, see as integral to their identity and their humanity. Our dishonest semantics if anything add to the impact of this hate.
Some within my own Christian tradition will argue that this is a matter of principle and indeed of Gospel principle which they must stand for. To stand up for ones principles is indeed a worthy thing and even more so to be prepared to die for ones principles but when others die because of our principles we need to reconsider those principles!
I as a Christian priest who longs for the day when my church is fully inclusive find it hard to contemplate that God would wish us to defend our personal religious principles at the expense of the life of another child of God. For me the Gospel message is life-giving and liberative and anything that gives people an excuse to hate and hurt another human being is not of God.
Being a Christian does not absolve us from difficult choices - We in the Christian churches have a choice to make and it is one between life and death. We can no longer afford the luxury of principles that allow us to perpetuate the culture of them and us and as long as we do we will be complicit in the hatred and fear that leads however indirectly to events like the massacre in Orlando. It is time to stand up and be counted not only for our principles but for the lives of those that are taken in our name.
The first is the ongoing ease of access to guns in the United States which makes such massacres a regular headline on our news cycle.
The second, and the one in which I feel somewhat complicit is the ongoing failure of Christian churches including my own Church of Ireland to be totally unambiguous in its welcome of people of all sexuality to participate fully in the life, witness and leadership of our church.
Yes it was a Muslim extremist that carried out this appalling crime but it could just as easily have been a Christian. The scale of this atrocity is perhaps unprecedented but there are no shortage of gay people who have been murdered by so called Christians in the name of God. And if we consider the tens if not hundreds of thousands of people who have committed suicide because of the rejection of their sexuality by their churches then we are talking about a genocide and one which is certainly not confined to foreign shores.
This is a problem for all of us who call ourselves religious - The Orlando massacre may have been an act of terrorism but there is little doubt that the choice of target was in no small part due to the ongoing and historic negative and pejorative portrayal of those who are gay by people of religious faith
For too long and at incalculable cost we religious have hidden behind misguided legislation that protects our right to discriminate against people on grounds of their sexuality.
We have also attempted to fool ourselves by insisting that we 'love the sinner and hate the sin' while ignoring the fact that what we perceive to be sin and thus licensed to hate is something that those who we talk about but not to, see as integral to their identity and their humanity. Our dishonest semantics if anything add to the impact of this hate.
Some within my own Christian tradition will argue that this is a matter of principle and indeed of Gospel principle which they must stand for. To stand up for ones principles is indeed a worthy thing and even more so to be prepared to die for ones principles but when others die because of our principles we need to reconsider those principles!
I as a Christian priest who longs for the day when my church is fully inclusive find it hard to contemplate that God would wish us to defend our personal religious principles at the expense of the life of another child of God. For me the Gospel message is life-giving and liberative and anything that gives people an excuse to hate and hurt another human being is not of God.
Being a Christian does not absolve us from difficult choices - We in the Christian churches have a choice to make and it is one between life and death. We can no longer afford the luxury of principles that allow us to perpetuate the culture of them and us and as long as we do we will be complicit in the hatred and fear that leads however indirectly to events like the massacre in Orlando. It is time to stand up and be counted not only for our principles but for the lives of those that are taken in our name.
Friday, 1 April 2016
Easter Sermon 2016
I
don't need to tell you that the hour changed last night - The fact you are here
means that either you changed your clocks or alternatively you were so eager to
come to church today that you came an hour early to make sure you got a seat!
I
used to get confused as to which way the clocks went until I heard the little
memory jogging phrase – spring forward and fall back (Fall as in the American
word for the Autumn).
It
seems to me that that is not only a useful reminder as to which way the clocks
go but also a pointer towards the meaning of Easter – It is a time when we can
spring forward in our faith because of the wonderful event that we celebrate at
this time. After the pain and suffering of Holy week, now in the light of the
Resurrection we have a new hope and a new sense of purpose which allows us to
go out with a spring in our step, or at least it should do.....
Very
often however we find it hard to do this – perhaps the drudgery of the past has
taken its toll and sapped our energy and taken away our self-confidence.
Perhaps rather than springing forward we feel like falling back (I know I did
when the alarm went off this morning for the dawn ecumenical service in
Castletown)! Falling back or retreating is something that we do when the future
is too difficult to face.
There
are a lot of people who find the future a difficult place - I am sure like me
you are still thinking of the McGrotty family involved in the Buncrana drowning
tragedy and that little baby and her mother (Louise Daniels) who has to come to
terms with a future without her children, her husband, her sister and her
mother - She would be forgiven for feeling like falling back and retreating.
Or
indeed the families of those murdered last week in the Brussels bombings and
those who will carry lifelong and life altering injuries - they too must feel
like falling back and retreating.
During a visit to New York a few years ago
I came upon an unusual sign mounted on the wall of a Church. It read ‘Fallout
Shelter’ and was a legacy of the Cold war days when certain buildings were
identified throughout the United
States as appropriate places to seek safety
in case of nuclear war. On one level it was quite consistent with the role of
church buildings through the ages where they have been used as sanctuaries for
those fleeing persecution and danger of various kinds. However it did strike me
that even in times of no overt persecution or danger we Christians are far too
comfortable sheltering inside our church buildings. What was once meant to be a
base from which to go out into the world has become a very comfortable home in
which we all have our favourite seats, a place in which to fall back
After Easter we will find the
disciples also sheltering in their ‘fallout shelter’ as they come to terms with
the traumatic events of Holy Week and Easter. However it is only a temporary
shelter as when Pentecost comes they go out into the world, filled with the
Spirit and respond to the call to make disciples of all nations.
I wonder sometimes are we in the
institutional churches, like spiritual couch potatoes, stuck in our fallout
shelters in that space between Easter and Pentecost?
It is alright to fall back for a
time to replenish our energy and to take stock but the message of Easter is that
we should now be preparing to Spring Forward again – We are a Church with a Mission , and Mission
means Motion! The Apostolic commission talks about GOING OUT, not falling back
but reaching out into our world and sharing God's love and compassion and healing
with everyone we meet.
There will be times of retreat,
times to fall back and recharge the batteries but we need a balance. If all we
do is fall back then our clocks will soon be so far behind that we will find
ourselves totally out of step with Gods purpose for our lives.
God knows that we struggle – God
knows that sometimes we do need to fall back for a while but God in Christ has
come to tell us that we have a sure ground for hope – for moving forward – for
sharing the Good News – Let us this Easter overcome all that is holding us back
and enter the future prepared for us with a spring in our step.......
I could end the sermon there -
perhaps you thought I was about to but that would be too easy and tidy and life
isn't like that. Things get in the way and sometimes even though we know what
the right thing to do is we find ourselves unable to act - unable to spring
forward - It is as if we are in chains!
And sometimes the Church doesn't
help - sometimes the Church is part of the problem! There is a mistaken
impression which we in the Church do not do enough to dispel that to come close
to God and to be a follower of Jesus we have to jump through lots of hoops and
live lives that are righteous and pure.
John
Hill Aughey, a clergyman who fought
against slavery and was imprisoned for his beliefs twice during the American
Civil war knew better when he wrote these words:
'The
church is not a select circle of the immaculate, but a home where the outcast
may come in. It is not a palace with gate attendants and challenging sentinels
along the entrance-ways holding off at arm's-length the stranger, but rather a
hospital where the broken-hearted may be healed, and where all the weary and
troubled may find rest and take counsel together."
In the Resurrection Jesus
broke the chains of death and offered us a new Hope and a new future. He is
inviting us all to partake in this new reality but to do so we must bring not just us all, but all of us to the
Table, not just the good bits, the attractive bits but the bad and the broken
and the hurt for it is here in his fellowship that we can find that healing and
hope for the future.
And there is good news -
we don't have to do it by ourselves - Jesus has gone ahead and shines his
resurrection light back into the darkness that sometimes overwhelms us - That
light comes to us in many forms and invites us to share in the Resurrection -
For Louise Daniels it came in the form of a young man who saved her infant
child from certain death and gave her something to hold onto - a cause for hope
and the possibility of new life and for those caught up in the Brussels
atrocity it came in the form of total strangers who helped the wounded to
safety without considering the possibility of further explosions or attack.
The power and meaning of
the Resurrection comes from its ability to transform our darkness into light.
It comes from the historical reality of the Crucifixion in which God in Jesus
entered into the darkest place of all: Death - and in his Resurrection
transformed the reality of death and made for us to a life beyond, a new dawn,
a new Hope, a new life with God, a reason to Spring Forward!
Amen.
Saturday, 14 November 2015
After Paris? - Sermon for Sunday 15th November 2015
Sermon for Sunday 15th
November 2015 - After Paris ?
' When you hear of wars and rumours of wars, do not be alarmed; this must
take place, but the end is still to come. For
nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom; there will be
earthquakes in various places; there will be famines. This is but the beginning
of the birth pangs. ' - Mark 13, 7-8
It
would be very easy to take today's Gospel reading which is known as the Little
Apocalypse and apply it to the horrible and tragic events of Friday night in Paris .
I have already heard it said in some
circles that this event and others like it are signs of the end times. Some others
say the passage refers infact to the now historic destruction of the Temple in
Jerusalem and others that it refers to Jesus 2nd Coming in glory but at the end
of the day we don't know and to indulge in such speculation unduly is a
distraction from the very real and pressing responsibilities we have as
Christians in the wake of such senseless
and brutal events.
For almost 2000 years scholars and
people of faith have debated this passage and frequently predicted its immanent
fulfilment but we are still here! So what is our response to the massacre on
the streets of Paris ?
And respond we must because even if as the passage suggests there is a certain
inevitability in war and violence we are not mere spectators but followers of a
God who has acted and continues to act in human history and very often that
action is exercised through us, his people, the Body of Christ. We have work to
do!
Let
me backtrack a little - I had another sermon in mind for today (the World Day of remembrance for Road traffic victims) and it was
precipitated by the chaos of last Wednesday morning when Dublin was paralysed by a traffic jam on the
M50 which was caused by the collision of a car and 2 trucks. At the centre of this disruption was a woman badly
injured in the crash and who has subsequently tragically died.
But
like many my first reaction was not to dwell on the plight of this woman but
rather to feel frustration and anxiety about how this incident was going to
effect my plans for the day. I got caught up in the gridlock as I brought our
son Aaron to his college in Maynooth and found myself getting unduly stressed
about being late back to Celbridge to celebrate the midweek Holy Communion. I
was late but the sky didn't fall in and nobody minded. During the service it
struck me how wrapped up I was in my own needs and agendas and that the really
important thing at the centre of this was the life of fellow human being then hanging in the balance and so when we came to the intercessions I added a
prayer for her and I hope regained a sense of perspective. As any driver
will I am sure agree it really is a case of 'it could just as easily have been
me' when we consider all the 'near misses' we have on the roads in a lifetime
of driving. It has certainly reinforced my belief in Angels (especially of the
Guardian variety).
But
back to the traffic and that morning when things did not go according to plan.
It strikes me that it as good an illustration as any of the interconnected and
interdependent nature of all our lives. It only took an accident involving only
three commuters among tens of thousands to bring our city to a standstill! Strangely
enough this shared experience of inconvenience on Wednesday morning actually
brought us all closer together in a world where there is so much choice in
terms of networks and relationships that we can very easily live lives that
rarely intersect with those around us. It was what is sometimes called a 'watercooler
moment'... something that everyone talks about - even to total strangers!
As Christians though we do believe in the centrality
of relationship in our lives and one of our foundational metaphors is the
Church as the Body of Christ, emphasising that same mutuality and
interdependence where each member needs the other to function properly and that
if one member is hurt then we all feel the pain. Life should therefore be one
long 'watercooler moment'.
But
increasingly that does not reflect how we behave as Church! When the behaviour
of another brother or sister in Christ disrupts our lives and our agendas our
first instinct is to cut ourselves off from them without even asking the
question whether they too are hurting and if they are outside the Church it is
even worse! We are so wrapped up in our own rightness and righteousness that we
automatically assume that we are better off without those with whom we
disagree, no matter what their situation.
This mirrors the way we relate to each other in wider
society. In a world dominated by social media we are increasingly inclined to
build relationships only with those who are of a like mind and often at the
expense of meaningful engagement with those around us, especially if they don't
agree with us. It seems that it is a basic human instinct to narrow the circle
of those who we are prepared to relate to and by implication those who matter
to us, all at the expense of our common humanity.
Like
the events of last Wednesday morning the horror of Friday night created another
of those 'watercooler moments' - it is the only thing we are talking about and
yet again in a cruel irony it is a sad and in this case horrific event that
unites us as human beings. We are all
horrified by the slaughter of ordinary citizens out on a Friday night enjoying
themselves until their lives were ended in such a callous and random fashion!
And it is right that we should be horrified but let us pause for a moment and
ask this question: Are we equally horrified by what happened in the 'Paris of the East', Beirut
on Thursday night when 50 people were killed in an ISIS
suicide bombing? Are we even aware of it? I hold my hands up and say 'NO!' -
For whatever reason it doesn't have the same impact! Why is that? Well like
most of you I suspect I have been to Paris ,
I learnt French at school - I even have a cousin living very close to the
events of Friday night and I am a European. But is that really an excuse? At
the end of the day all those who died were human beings created in the image
and likeness of God and all their deaths were blasphemy.
We have
a huge responsibility as people of religious faith to ensure that we are not
unwittingly contributing to the alienation and marginalisation of those who are
driven to such appalling acts of violence. There are many people today who are
blaming religion for what happened on Friday night and there is a very real
danger that we will prove them right if we allow ourselves to be sucked into a
them and us mentality. This is not a religious war between Christians and
Muslims or Muslims and Jews but rather a distortion of religion which suggests
that for any religious identity to thrive it must destroy all alternatives. Most
of those who died in Beirut were Muslims and
indeed some of those who died in Paris
were Muslim.
This is not the age of the Crusades with the Christian
armies marching against Islam and if we buy into that narrative we will only be
perpetuating the culture of death and mutual destruction. In a nuclear age this
is something we need to consider very carefully - we are living in very
dangerous times and the Christian Church worldwide can be an agent for peace or
catastrophic conflict!
But it
is not easy - Violence comes naturally to us - I was delighted at the news that
the British Islamic terrorist Jihadi John was likely blown to bits by a drone
strike earlier this week - his actions in the decapitation of numerous hostages
over recent months were unspeakably evil and yet one must ask what was it that
made him hate so much? And also how many more terrorists were created by the
deaths of those who died alongside him this week? Violence is not the answer
and I am disappointed in myself for celebrating yet another act of violence
however justified it may be argued to be.
As Martin
Luther King Jr put it so well: ' The ultimate weakness of violence is that it is a descending
spiral, begetting the very thing it seeks to destroy. Instead of diminishing
evil, it multiplies it. Through violence you may murder the liar, but you
cannot murder the lie, nor establish the truth. Through violence you may murder
the hater, but you do not murder hate. In fact, violence merely increases hate.
...
.... Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper
darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out
darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do
that.'
As
Christians we should never be comfortable with hatred - If we are to be a force
for good in the world we must overcome
our base instinct for vengeance and retribution - Someone has to stop the
madness and as those who follow the Prince of Peace, Jesus Christ we cannot
shirk our responsibility. We need to
widen our circle of care and compassion - We need to stand up and say that those
who die on the streets of Beirut and Baghdad matter every bit as much as those
who die in Paris or New York whatever their faith or ethnicity.
Our
silence in the face of the suffering of our fellow human beings on whatever
corner of this planet only contributes to the culture of suspicion and hatred
which has brought us to where we are today. It is extraordinarily ironic that
the so called global village created by communications technology has actually
further alienated us from our fellow human beings who we wilfully choose not to
relate to.
Why? Because we have been conditioned to believe that
choice is everything, that it is our right but the reality is that with choice
comes responsibility! Our choices have consequences and if we choose to make non-persons
of those who are different from us then we should not be surprised when these
same people treat us with less than the humanity we believe we deserve. I am
not for one moment condoning the horrific acts of Friday night but I am saying
that we can and must and can do something to reverse this spiral of death and
destruction. We must affirm our common humanity and recognise in all our fellow
human beings the creative impulse of a God who loved us all into being and
wishes only the best for all that he has created.
Tuesday, 5 May 2015
Marriage Equality 2015 - Waking up to the Importance of the issue
I have tried very hard not to get sucked into the current Marriage Referendum debate - I have often spoken out from an inclusive standpoint on human sexuality issues both within the Church and in the public square - I voted with my feet in attending the Consecration of my friend Gene Robinson's (1st openly gay bishop) consecration as Bishop of New Hampshire USA in 2003 which was one of the highlights of my life to date - I am conscious that for many this event is seen in a very different light but for me it was Spirit filled and inspirational despite having to pass through a demonstration by the hate filled Westboro Baptist Church and Airport level security (due to death threats against Bishop Gene) to attend the Consecration service. The consequences for me in supporting my LGBT brothers and sisters have not always been entirely positive - I have experienced vile personal abuse both verbally and through hate mail and have been driven to some intemperate and less than constructive comments and responses to 'the other side'. That is probably why I haven't really engaged publically in the current referendum but tonight a threshold was crossed. I was watching the RTE Prime Time debate and realised that this is not a discussion I am free to opt out of - This is a social justice issue and I cannot as a Christian priest opt out of justice issues - As I listened to the No protagonists trot out one dishonest, irrelevant and cynical argument after another I knew I could no longer sit on the fence or I would be complicit in this dishonesty. The God I believe in isn't black or white, gay or straight, liberal or conservative but a God who is able to embrace a greater diversity than any one human being can contemplate - who am I to define the limits of Love when I am loved unconditionally and who am I to stand by when others seek to define the limits of that Love?
Thursday, 19 March 2015
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