Listening to your Mum

Bible reading: Luke 1:46-55

46And Mary said,

I’m bursting with God-news;

47I’m dancing the song of my Saviour God.

48God took one good look at me, and look what happened — I’m the most fortunate woman on earth!

What God has done for me will never be forgotten,

49the God whose very name is holy, set apart from all others.

50His mercy flows in wave after wave on those who are in awe before him.

51He bared his arm and showed his strength,

scattered the bluffing braggarts.

52He knocked tyrants off their high horses,

pulled victims out of the mud.

53The starving poor sat down to a banquet;

the callous rich were left out in the cold.

54He embraced his chosen child, Israel;

he remembered and piled on the mercies, piled them high.

55It’s exactly what he promised, beginning with Abraham and right up to now.

The theme for our lent series is pod-destrian.  Based on those people who are so engrossed in listening to their ipods or mobile phones that they can walk into things or into the path of oncoming traffic.  For the 6 weeks in the Christian calendar known as Lent we’ll be asking the question who or what are you listening to?
Tonight we explore – Listening to you mum
  • Who listens to their mum?
  • Who does not listen to their mum?
  • What phrase do you remember that you mum says or said most often?
  • Can you still hear it?

Windows and mirrors

Around the hall are a number of mirrors and windows with some paper next to them.  All you need to do is follow the simple instructions.

Throwing stones

Everyone needs to pick up a stone.

Now things that don’t tend to mix are windows and stones.

Mirrors and stones don’t tend to mix either.

Things, well, things just seem to get broken very easily.

It is true that the people we grow up with have a profound influence on us.  Some of us even get stuck with looking like our parents for the whole of our life.

I wonder if Jesus looked like his Mum.  I wonder Jesus could still hear the words of his mum when he was 30 years old?  “Jesus put that down”, “Jesus will you listen to me?” “Jesus will you please tidy your room”, “Jesus I love you”, “Jesus how did you do that?”

The reading we had at the start of our presentation tonight is from Jesus’ mum, It was Mary at the start of Luke’s gospel.  We only get a glimpse of what she was like, she drifts in and out of the Gospel story.

But look at what she says in this song;

46And Mary said,

I’m bursting with God-news;

47I’m dancing the song of my Saviour God.

God did something in her life that caused her to be bursting with God-news. She was so excited she was dancing.

It is very easy to throw stones.

It is very easy to throw stones, they can break windows and mirrors.

Stones can disfigure, they could mar the looks we have, the looks we might have inherited from our mum,

They can break the pictures we have

Don’t throw stones.

Give flowers.

Come and put your stones down and pick up a bunch of flowers.

Go and give them to someone today.

Say thank you, forgive someone, tell someone you love them.

Say it with flowers.

Flowers look great in a window.

Flowers look far better reflected in a whole mirror than a broken one.

Mary responded to the God’s voice and what he was doing in her life.  It became a beautiful thing.

God is calling you, how will you respond?

Will you throw stones or give flowers?

“Oh what a shame!”

Bible reading – Matt 1 18-21

The birth of Jesus took place like this. His mother, Mary, was engaged to be married to Joseph. Before they came to the marriage bed, Joseph discovered she was pregnant. (It was by the Holy Spirit, but he didn’t know that.)  Joseph, chagrined but noble, determined to take care of things quietly so Mary would not be disgraced.

While he was trying to figure a way out, he had a dream. God’s angel spoke in the dream: “Joseph, son of David, don’t hesitate to get married. Mary’s pregnancy is Spirit-conceived. God’s Holy Spirit has made her pregnant.  She will bring a son to birth, and when she does, you, Joseph, will name him Jesus—‘God saves’—because he will save his people from their sins.”

Joseph felt ashamed, he was trying to work out how make things right.  He was probably also not quite sure whether to believe Mary. Was she telling him the truth?

Perhaps today we lose some of that shock and embarrassment.  I mean people don’t get married any more to have sex, children are conceived without people being married, families are often made up of people who do not share the same father or mother for a variety of reasons.

So what would Joseph have felt so ashamed about?  To understand this we need to get inside the culture of the first century world.  Joseph lived in a shame/honour culture which is difficult for us to get our heads round as we tend to live in a guilt/innocence culture.  Those living in Asiatic, Latin American, Mediterranean or Islamic countries have considerable advantage in their reading of the New Testament in this regard, since many of those cultures place a prominent emphasis on honor and shame.

So what would that have looked for Joseph?  If taken in strong doses the honor-shame code can seem suffocatingly oppressive.  If you think about the honor-culture of rape and suicide in India and Pakistan:  ”The use of rape in tribal disputes has become, one might say, normal. And the belief that a raped woman’s best recourse is to kill herself remains widespread and deeply ingrained.”

How can this be condoned, especially when the woman is not at fault? Our objections, however, appeal to innocence, and the honor-shame code often has little to do with innocence or “who is at fault”. Women in this context are irrevocably shamed, regardless of their innocence, because of the nature of female honor. Unlike male honor, which is macho and won in verbal or physical contests, and which can be restored after loss in a later conflict — female honor is fundamentally sexual.  If a woman fails to protect her honor, for example by engaging in extramarital intercourse or by displaying “looseness” by providing males outside her family with her company or her words, she actually brings shame upon her husband or father.  It’s absolute: once lost, it’s forever gone.

Honor signifies respect for being the kind of person and doing the kinds of things the group values.  Shame signifies being seen as less than valuable because you have behaved in ways that run contrary to the values of the group.  Shame and honour cultures have a very strong sense of belonging and acceptance but at a high price.

We live at some distance from the honor culture of the first-century Greco-Roman world. In our culture the bottom line for decision-making is not always identifying the honorable thing to do. In the corporate world, for example, the “profitable” frequently acts as the central value. Considerations of right and wrong are also prominent, but this is no longer based on the moral code of society.  Its our own individual code.

Typically we do not talk about honor and shame much, but we do wrestle with “worth,” with “self-esteem,” with the push and pull of “what other people will think.”  Our culture is now much more based on individualism as a result  we are less likely to communicate openly with each other, especially those beyond our circle of acquaintances, friends and kin.  We are less likely to openly challenge others or to openly censure them where they go against the values we consider to be central to our group or to the society.  How many of you would ask a fellow traveller on the train or the bus to turn down the music on their ipod?

We can, however, get under the skin of the cultural environment of the first-century world when we think about peer pressure.  We are aware, for example, of the effects of peer pressure, particularly on teenagers. Those who do not conform are ostracized, insulted and often the targets of physical violence (or at least the threat of violence). All of this is unofficial from the standpoint of the authority figures, but it is nevertheless a potent force in the lives of teenagers today.  And maybe so for adults too.

Belonging to one group or other — conforming to its culture and finding affirmation there — often means conflict with another group. The “Geeks” vs “football crowd”. There is also the artsy crowd, the social crowd, the rebel crowd, the drug crowd and so forth.

Within each group, peer pressure forces each individual to conform and difference is punished.  Those who are deeply influenced by this pressure may change their whole image to secure approval rather than ridicule.

This gives us an insight into the honor/shame culture but the rules for belonging in the first century were related to a strong moral and ethical code, not just wearing the right clothes.  We need to think about our memories or experiences of peer pressure to understand the bible reading we have tonight.

So this is where Joseph is at.  He’s ashamed and dishonored.  He’s looking for a way out!  How often do we feel that way?  Are there things that you feel ashamed or dishonored about?  Maybe things from this week, maybe things in the past.  Joseph was ashamed that his fiancée was not a virgin, her honor had been taken away and that reflected on him.  He was in turmoil because he knew he had to take action.  If he disassociated himself from Mary to protect his honor then Mary would become an outcast and her family would disown her in order to protect themselves as well.  But Joseph was also a noble man, he wanted to do right by Mary.

This is shame.  And it lives alongside fear.  Fear of what others might say or do.  And so as Joseph wrestles with what to do, God steps in to offer him advice.  God confirms the truth of Mary’s story in by doing so he offers Joseph the chance to step beyond that fear and the shame.  We often recognize that Mary was amazing girl (and she was a girl, only in her early teens) and that she was faithful to God but here we see Joseph also stepping out and taking a risk.  Just because God had told him the truth – what if the rest of their community ostracized him as well as Mary?

Whilst the concept of honour/shame has reduced considerably within our culture, we still want to know that we are valuable, worthwhile people, and we want to give the impression of being such.  As a result we often live with shame and with fear.  The culture we live in makes us think that we are not good enough, safe enough, certain enough, perfect enough, extraordinary enough.  The culture we live in tells us that an ordinary life is the same as a meaningless life.

We probably carry a lot of shame around in our lives.  Do you feel that you haven’t lived up to expectations?  That you’ve missed out on the best bits of life?  When you look at others do you see people who are “together”, “sorted”?  Do you keep on wearing the mask so that no one will know that you are not as sorted as they are?

We fear that if people really knew us and the messy lives we have then actually we wouldn’t be in their group.  Peer pressure!  It’s out there at school, at work, at home, here in the Bridge.  How many of you have ever said “I’m too much of a mess to go tonight, my life is too upside down, people might see me not coping, not looking bright and cheery, or needing their love and care instead of being able to offer it to them?

This shame keeps us from being real and honest with each other.  And its connection with each other that gives purpose and meaning to our lives.  Connection, the ability to belong is how we’re wired, how we’re made.  In order for connection to take place we have to be seen and known.

Well amazingly God has a solution!

Summing up – shame not sin!

Our performance song is about the freedom from shame and fear that can often enslave us.  Just like it enslaved Joseph until God stepped in

Oh my Lord… You sent your son to save us

Oh my Lord… Your very self you gave us

Oh my Lord… That sin may not enslave us and love may reign once more

The bible reading concluded with

‘She will bring a son to birth, and when she does, you, Joseph, will name him Jesus—‘God saves’—because he will save his people from their sins.”

Tonight for sin read shame.  In Jesus we are saved from the shame which keeps us apart from each other and from God.  Jesus being born as a baby tells us how worthy we are to him.  He values our very birth, our lives and all the potential that we have.

If we can trust that we are worthy because Jesus loves us then our ordinary lives will give us great joy and contentment.  If we can allow God to help us hold onto the worthiness that he sees in us then our relationships with others will be transformed.

Best 60 Minutes – The Extended Family

Game of cards
And then the disciples are trying to prevent Jesus from going back because they are worried for his safety. He was chased out of town last time he was there.

There are several packs of cards on your tables.  Some of them are normal cards, others are happy families.  Please play a game using them.

I don’t know about you but sometimes families are anything but happy

Activity

Everyone will need a piece of paper and a felt tip pen.
Please draw round your hand.  Make it so you can see the pen line on the other side of the paper. Then turn the piece of paper over and trace over the hand you should just about be able to see on the other side. Mark an L and an R on one side of the paper and the other to show which is left and which is right.

Now everyone knows that sometimes the hand that we get dealt is not the one we always would want it to be.  Sometimes we look at the hand of cards we have and really wish we had someone else’s.

Life sometimes deals us a hand that we are not very impressed with, it might be the way we look or feel about a part of our body, it might be about some people that are in our life, it might be some circumstances in which we find ourselves.  It might an arch enemy or a team your team has to play against and always get beat by…

We would like you to come up with 5 things, one for each digit on your hand that you wish had not been dealt to you.  You might like to talk someone else about it or you are happy just to write down the 5 things that you are not impressed with.

When you have done that, turn your piece of paper over and write down 5 things that you are glad have been dealt to you, Things, people, teams, looks, circumstances that you are glad to have In your life,…when you have finished just share with someone else on your team.

Take the piece of paper and match up your right hand, now match up your left hand…

It looks like you are all praying.
Remember no matter what happens in life, which hand you might have been dealt, God is always more ready to listen to us than we are ready to talk.

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….
A man was sick, Lazarus of Bethany, the town of Mary and her sister Martha. This was the same Mary who massaged the Lord’s feet with aromatic oils and then wiped them with her hair. It was her brother Lazarus who was sick.  So the sisters sent word to Jesus, “Master, the one you love so very much is sick.”  When Jesus got the message, he said, “This sickness is not fatal. It will become an occasion to show God’s glory by glorifying God’s Son.”
Jesus loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus, but oddly, when he heard that Lazarus was sick, he stayed on where he was for two more days.  After the two days, he said to his disciples, “Let’s go back to Judea.”  They said, “Rabbi, you can’t do that. The Jews are out to kill you, and you’re going back?”

John 11;1-8 (The Message)
 
Sometimes people in our family do not do things how we would like, or at the speed we would like,…Can you imagine how Martha and Mary might have felt?  Jesus said, Oh don’t worry I will be along in a bit…But Lazarus is sick, and we are not sure how long he will last…!

Why is it that we think we can treat our own family members worse than a stranger sometimes?

Sometimes we are dealt a bad hand – people will not do as they are asked. Sometimes we get to see the real person inside and begin to wish that we hadn’t.

Can you ever remember saying in the playground to the bully that My Dad is bigger than your Dad, and if you don’t stop it I am going to go and get him…
We use it in our house, but it is not my dad or Jack and Daniel’s dad.  You see our family extends to a Dad who is powerful and resourceful beyond our own. Our Dad is the same Dad that Jesus knew.  The same dad that meant he could deal with whatever hand he was dealt.  The same Dad who was always more ready to listen than we are talk.

You see with the extended Christian family we can “My Dad is bigger than your Dad”

And if you think that means you can go around bullying other people because of the size of your dad read this;

So, chosen by God for this new life of love, dress in the wardrobe God picked out for you: compassion, kindness, humility, quiet strength, discipline.  Be even-tempered, content with second place, quick to forgive an offense. Forgive as quickly and completely as the Master forgave you.  And regardless of what else you put on, wear love. It’s your basic, all-purpose garment. Never be without it.  Let the peace of Christ keep you in tune with each other, in step with each other. None of this going off and doing your own thing. And cultivate thankfulness.

Col 3;12-15 (The Message)

Being part of God’s extended family, with having the Father of all creation as dad comes responsibility.



Visitors – Mary and Joseph

1About that time Caesar Augustus ordered a census to be taken throughout the Empire. 2This was the first census when Quirinius was governor of Syria. 3Everyone had to travel to his own ancestral hometown to be accounted for. 4So Joseph went from the Galilean town of Nazareth up to Bethlehem in Judah, David’s town, for the census. As a descendant of David, he had to go there. 5He went with Mary, his fiancée, who was pregnant.
6While they were there, the time came for her to give birth. 7She gave birth to a son, her firstborn. She wrapped him in a blanket and laid him in a manger, because there was no room in the hostel.

Luke 2;1-7 The Message

I don’t know about you but I like my home comforts.  It is good to know where things are, it is good to be in your own home with your own things around you.  It is familiar, it is comfortable and in the middle of winter it is especially welcome.  Dark and cold nights, people are out and about but tend to be glad to be back home.
Unless of course home is an uncomfortable place.  Family disagreements, the weight of expectations, relationships struggling to communicate effectively, misunderstandings, external pressures.  Maybe home is about failure and disappointments, wishing things had turned out differently, wishing that you had not said and done what you have.  Maybe home is too quiet and you wish for the noise and hustle and bustle of how things used to be, if only those days would come back.
I think Mary and Joseph must have known exactly how you felt.  They would have liked home, the familiar, the known, to be surrounded by their friends.  But they also knew what it was to be uncomfortable at home.
Mary was pregnant, they were not married, she could hide it no longer.  People laughed and sniggered as she went down the street, she could feel the staring eyes on her back.  The net curtains twitched at the windows and heaven knows what they were saying on Facebook and MSN.  She didn’t go there is was too uncomfortable.
Joseph had tried.  At one stage it didn’t look like the relationship would make it.  He was unsure, he tried to do his best but somehow it never quite seemed to be enough.
And, now, now we have to go to Bethlehem for a silly census.  The Romans are never happy unless they are making life uncomfortable for us.  It is all about the money and taxes.  They had talked about her not going, she didn’t need to go but, but,..she did want to stay at home on her own  – it was simply too painful, too hard, maybe getting away for a while would be good.
It was an Angel that had visited her, a messenger from God and now look at what was happening.  It wasn’t what God had done it was the consequences of what he had done.  It was other people.
Mary and Joseph were visitors.  They knew what it was to have to make plans for the journey, to make sure they had everything, to check that everything was in order.  They knew what it was to have to be on the road.  They knew what it was to live out of suitcase.  They knew what it was to have the inconvenience of the a 3 day journey at the beck and call of someone else.  All for the sake of the taxes.
But more than that they knew the pain of home being an uncomfortable place, family disagreements, relationships strained, disappointments,
And into all of that, being visitors, strange places, and circumstances, being unsure and nervous about what will happen.  In all of that stuff of life, God himself visits.  Despite the mess and such inconvenience God visits.
Watch out this Christmas as you visit others, that God might be visiting you.  In the suitcase packing, in the making plans, in the journeying, have eyes and hearts to see and respond.  Despite the circumstances,

Meditation

She was thirteen or thereabouts,
pregnant,
still a child herself.
No vote, no rights, no husband,
no education,
in a small village in an occupied land.
So why would you,
the Great God of the Universe,
pick this peasant girl?
Why not some queen
dressed in blue and gold
like those statued madonnas?
I think we’ve had it wrong all along.
It’s not that she was so saintly,
so pure,
so serene, so special,
but that she wasn’t special at all.
Maybe she even had zits.
It was God picking someone mundane,
to show that we are all special,
God choosing what is simple
to confound the wise,
the banal
to shock the glitterati,
the castdown
to shame the exalted.
Mary understood,
Why has God chosen me, a handservant?
To pull the mighty down from their thrones,
and raise up the lowly,
to fill the hungry with good things
while the rich walk away empty-handed.
She could have been any downtrodden woman,
broken,
child of oppression.
In fact,
that is who she always is,
always has been,
and those peasant children of hers
have been messiahs,
but we  were too busy
with our census, our mutual funds
our wars
to notice.

Silence

We can scarcely believe it, God,
this story of love’s birth in the world.
We rationalise and reason,
we read the headlines and we doubt
and yet, oddly, we hope, desperately,
that it just might be true.
If we’ve come here disbelieving, God
unwrap our doubt to make a space for love
If we’ve come here despairing
unwrap our grief to make a space for joy
If we’ve come here angry
unwrap our resentment to make a space for peace
If we’ve come here nostalgic
unwrap our sentimentality to make a space for life
If we’ve come here cynical,
unwrap our scepticism to make a space for hope
Let your story be real in this space tonight.
Amen.