[Propertalk] Fwd: [propertalk.topic] 3rd of Easter, New Testament reading

Joe Parrish joeparrish at compuserve.com
Wed May 4 19:35:47 EDT 2011


Forwarded:





-----Original Message-----
From: Fr HC Smith <howard.smith at anglican.org.au>
To: Propertalk <propertalk.topic at ecunet.org>
Sent: Wed, May 4, 2011 4:30 pm
Subject: [propertalk.topic] 3rd of Easter, New Testament reading


Friends,
ere are my notes from the southern hemisphere towards a sermon on the 
eading from Peter for this Sunday.  Use whatever suits you.
oward
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    Today we start the 3rd week of Easter - the 3rd week in which we keep 
n remembering the great events on that first Easter Day in the 1st century, 
ow Jesus rose to new life;
    And as we celebrate this great happening, the Church keeps on
   helping us to discover what it means for us now in the 3rd millennium.
    This week we are reminded of God’s gifts of faith and hope
   again, and are told about another gift which grows out of our
   faith and our hope: the gift of love.
    Hope is a gift which keeps us looking to the future, so that we
   don't allow ourselves to be overwhelmed by all the bad things in the 
resent.
    But nevertheless we do still have to live in the present, so
   Peter addresses the question: how can we do that better?
   -    Peter’s advice today is to "keep on loving with all your heart".
    And whom are we to try to love with all our heart? God's
   answer seems to be we are to "love one another".
    I reckon that means the people who are around about us, to start with,
   -    and then perhaps when we have done that we can try to
       reach out to people on the other side of the world;
   -    but if we can't love the people we come across every day,
       then it's not really going to be possible to love the people on
       the other side of the world.
    Now when we find it hard to love those nearby people, God
   doesn’t leave us floundering, but gives us a little bit more help;
   -    we are told today that we have been given a ‘new birth’ by
       God's message which lives on for ever.
    What on earth do those strange words mean?
    Well, this letter of Peter is thought to be the bones of a sermon
   used at the baptism of new members of the family of God back
   at the end of the 1st century.
    So, the “new birth” referred to here most probably is referring to our 
aptism.
    I reckon this is telling us that because Jesus rose from the
   dead, and sort of had a new beginning, all the rest of us who
   have been baptised into his death and resurrection, have
   been given another chance, a ‘new birth’:
    But so we don’t let that make us despair - I mean we’ve all
   slipped a number of times since we were baptised,
   -    the Church has always taught us that repenting and making
       confession is a way of refreshing the effects of that ‘new birth’ of 
ur baptism.
    Just think what being born is all about: "Birth" is all about
   starting life: babies get born and their life is waiting for them to get 
oing.
    Now applying that to our situation, it means that whenever we
   let God's message into our hearts,
   -    whenever we wash away the mistakes by confessing our sins,
   -    God gives us another opportunity to start living the life of
       the Heavenly Kingdom, the life of God’s New World, once
       more: the life of loving one another with all our heart.
    Everyone knows that we need to do something about making
   the world a better place to live in:
   -    Well, that's just what we are doing when we love one another,
   -    like when we do good to others, rather than pushing people around,
   -    like when we don't try to force people to do things, but
       persuade, invite, encourage them;
   -    like when we hold back from being violent or abusive towards other 
eople,
   -    but do all we can to understand where they’re coming from
       and do all we can to help them.
    So God’s gift of love is all about bringing the gift of hope, the gift 
f the future, into the present: making this world more like the Kingdom of 
eaven, letting our vision of God’s great future invade the places where we 
ive, work and play, in the present
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
he Rev'd Dr H.C. Smith
etired Anglican Priest
range NSW
 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 


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