This Is Me
These blogs are the true and unedited me. They are spiritual, religiously liturgical, honest, and transparent. This is me.
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
A Review of the Book "In the Courts of the Lord" by James Ferry
Monday, February 2, 2026
A Review of the Book "Animal Farm" by George Orwell
Friday, January 30, 2026
Finding Hope in Suffering: A Sermon for the Presentation of the Lord
O God, take our minds and think
through them. Take our lips and speak through them. Take our hearts and set
them on fire. Amen.
February 2nd
is a holy day called the Presentation of the Lord, or in Catholic circles, the
Purification of our Lady. Bringing your attention to Leviticus chapter 12, it
says,
“The Lord spoke to Moses, saying,
“Speak to the Israelites, saying: ‘If a woman conceives and bears a male child,
she shall be unclean seven days; as at the time of her menstruation, she shall
be unclean. On the eighth day the flesh of his foreskin shall be circumcised.
Her time of blood purification shall be thirty-three days; she shall not touch
any holy thing or come into the sanctuary until the days of her purification
are completed… When the days of her
purification are completed, whether for a son or for a daughter, she shall
bring to the priest at the entrance of the tent of meeting a lamb in its first
year for a burnt offering and a pigeon or a turtledove for a purification offering.
He shall offer it before the Lord and make atonement on her behalf; then she
shall be clean from her flow of blood. This is the law for her who bears a
child, male or female.’”
Under the Mosaic Law, a
woman was ritually “unclean” for 40 days after childbirth, when she was to
present herself to the priests and offer sacrifice for her “purification.”
Contact with anyone who had brushed against mystery, whether that be birth or
death, excluded a person from Jewish worship.
In today’s gospel
reading, we find Mary and Joseph respecting the Mosaic Law by offering the
sacrifice prescribed for the poor: a pair of turtledoves or two young pigeons.
We also discover a number of people who have been waiting for a very long time
for their great hope to arrive. First of all, Simeon, who’s described as
waiting for the consolation of Israel. Secondly there’s Anna and the people
that she speaks to who are looking for the redemption of Jerusalem. All these
people are looking for the same thing. They’re looking forward to the fulfilment
of prophecies such as Isaiah’s that told of the restoration of Jerusalem, of
the coming of the Messiah to restore the fortunes of Israel, and to establish
God’s Kingdom here on earth, bringing salvation to all peoples.
All these people were
waiting for God to act. Most of them had been waiting for many years. We’re not
told how old Simeon was, but the implication is that he’d lived beyond the
normal span of years as he waited to greet the coming Messiah. He’s certainly
ready to go once he’s seen Jesus. Anna we’re told, is 84, which was a great age
for the time. But notice that their time hasn’t been wasted. Rather they’ve
spent their time in worship of God. Simeon is described as righteous and
devout. That is, his life was exemplary. He was a regular worshipper of God. He
was open to God speaking to him and responded when he heard God’s voice. We’re
told the Holy Spirit rested on him. Presumably that means that he’s a prophet,
like the prophets of old. God, it seemed, had been silent for 400 years. There
had been no prophets since Malachi. But now here is Simeon, waiting for the
Messiah to be revealed. In fact, Luke tells us that it had been revealed to him
by the Holy Spirit that he wouldn’t see death before he had seen the Lord’s
Messiah.
Similarly, there was
Anna. She too was a prophet. She never left the temple but worshipped there
with prayer and fasting night and day. What a great example of a godly woman.
And what a great example of a woman who acts as a mouthpiece for God. Anna is a
great example of a woman whom God uses to teach his people about who Jesus is.
Simeon and Anna had each
spent long years at prayer in the temple. In that time, they must have seen
countless babies. But, by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, some special
quality in Jesus aroused in them the conviction that this child was the
Messiah. Their long years of faith-filled yearning were over. They recognized
him. The Anointed of the Lord had come.
This Feast of the
Presentation of the Lord is a celebration of that extraordinary moment of
recognition. It is a moment worth thinking about, because we are all invited to
experience it. Each one of us is called upon to recognize Jesus. We won’t have
that forty-day old baby to gaze at, but the same Holy Spirit who inspired
Simeon and Anna is with us, enabling us to recognize Jesus in the Scriptures,
in the hungry, in the stranger, in the prisoner, and in the Eucharist we share.
In Luke’s account, Jesus
was welcomed in the temple by two elderly people, Simeon and the widow Anna.
They embody Israel in their patient expectation, both living in a world of
patient hope where suffering has become a way of life. They acknowledge the
infant Jesus as the long-awaited Messiah, God’s appointed redeemer who will
deal with the suffering by sharing it himself. Luke also tells us that to love
Jesus is to suffer with him when Simeon tells Mary, “A sword will pierce your
own soul, too.”
When we look at the world
around us, we can see the suffering. People are hurting, hungry, sick, and
dying. Violence is rising. Politics are becoming destructive. God’s people are
suffering. How do we recognize Jesus in this suffering? Where is God in this
suffering? From theologian and author NT Wright,
“Everybody has their own role in God’s
plan. For some, it will be active, obvious, working in the public eye, perhaps
preaching the gospel or taking the love of God to meet the practical needs of
the world. For others, it will be quiet, away from public view, praying
faithfully for God to act in fulfilment of [God’s] promises. For many, it will
be a mixture of the two, sometimes one, sometimes the other.”
Keeping Wright’s words in mind, what
is our role in this suffering?
In Simeon’s and Anna’s world,
suffering was an everyday thing, with no end in sight. But they were able to
hold out hope that God’s promises would come true one day. They found that hope
in Jesus. When we look around, it feels as if this suffering will go on forever.
There doesn’t seem to be an end in sight. In fact, it just seems to get worse
on the daily. But we can have hope, too. Our hope lies in the knowledge that
God is sitting with us through it all, shedding the same tears and feeling the
same grief, while also presenting to us, in Jesus, the knowledge that the Kingdom
of God is confronting the Kingdom of the World.
I will end this time of teaching with a
prayer for grieving by Cole Arthur Riley,
“God
who is moved to tears,
Lead us into a kind of solidarity that
reminds us that in pausing to bear witness to suffering, we do not center
ourselves as the rescuer. We do not become the voice. Free us from the responsibility
to understand every tragedy at once. Help us to discern our capacity for
solidarity, lament. Help us to learn when to stand and when to rest and allow
others to do so, remembering that our activism is shared among a collective. We
don’t have to hold it alone.”
Amen.
Friday, January 23, 2026
Has Christ Been Divided?: A Sermon for the 3rd Sunday After Epiphany
O God, take our minds and think
through them. Take our lips and speak through them. Take our hearts and set
them on fire. Amen.
Things were not going
well in the fledgling Corinthian Christian congregation and matters seemed
serious enough to occasion a letter from the Apostle Paul. In-fighting and
clique-forming were the norm. Factions were splintering the congregation as
people claimed allegiance to one leader over another instead of following God’s
way in the central message of the gospel of Christ. Paul is urging the people
to cease their divisions and quarrels and to remember that they were all united
by their baptism in the name of Christ. Paul argues that the central message of
the gospel is the cross of Christ, and it is through the lens of the cross that
Christians are called to regard one another and to treat them accordingly.
We are called to do the
same. We are all one in Christ being connected to each other through our
baptism in Christ’s name. Like the religious people so fiercely denounced by
the biblical prophets, some Christian believers have been or continue to be
complicit in supporting or perpetuating prejudice and oppression and fostering
division. History shows that, rather than recognising the dignity of every
human being made in the image and likeness of God, Christians have too often
involved themselves in structures of sin such as slavery, colonisation,
segregation, and discrimination which have stripped others of their dignity on
the spurious grounds of race, gender, sexuality, and so forth. So too within
the churches.
Churches must
acknowledge how they have been silent or actively complicit regarding social
injustice. Racial prejudice has been one of the many causes of Christian
division that has torn the Body of Christ. Toxic ideologies, such as White
Supremacy and the doctrine of discovery, have caused much harm, particularly in
North America and in lands throughout the world colonized by White European
powers over the centuries.
Christians throughout
history have excluded, persecuted, and killed those they deemed to be different
– Jews, Muslims, gays, witches, heretics, and so on. Today, separation and
oppression continue to manifest when any single group or class is given
privileges above others. The sins of racism, sexism, homophobia, and
transphobia is evident in any beliefs or practices that distinguish or elevate
one type of person over another. As Christians we must be willing to disrupt
systems of oppression and to advocate for justice. Christians have failed to
recognise the dignity of all the baptised and have belittled the dignity of
their siblings in Christ on the grounds of “difference”.
Reverend Dr Martin
Luther King Jr memorably said, “It is one of the tragedies of our nation, one
of the shameful tragedies, that 11 o’clock on Sunday morning is one of the most
segregated hours, if not the most segregated hour in Christian America”. This
statement demonstrates the disunity of Christians. This division runs counter
to the unity that God desires for the whole of creation. Tragically this
failure to recognise the dignity of all people is part of what has divided
Christians from one another, has caused Christians to worship at separate
times, and in separate buildings, and in certain cases has led Christian
communities to divide.
Now, not all Christians
distrust, demonize, fear, caricature, and separate themselves from each other.
We can also find voices of inclusion, embrace, toleration, and even
celebration. How can we live our unity as Christians so as to confront the
evils and injustices of our time? How can we engage in dialogue, increase
awareness, understanding and insight about one another’s lived experiences?
Let us be open to God’s
presence in all our encounters with each other as we seek to be transformed, to
dismantle the systems of oppression, and to heal the sins of racism. Together,
let us engage in the struggle for justice in our society. Oppression is harmful
to the entire human race. There can be no unity without justice.
We need to confront all
instances of oppression and bring forth justice for all. We are all human and we
all deserve the dignity of living the truth of our lives, to live as we are, to
embrace our differences in the knowledge that we are all children of God
deserving of love, peace, and salvation. And, in this unity, we all belong to
Christ. It is the gifts and the life experience of the people of the church
that gives the most complete picture and witness of the body of Christ and
where the gifts of the Holy Spirit are experienced and exercised.
It is not an act of
charity to reach out to those different from us or our way of being Christ’s
person in the world, or who have been taught the faith differently. It is an
act of faithfulness, an extension of the faith of Jesus, to seek communion with
all those who call upon the name of Jesus. If we belong together to Christ, we
must belong to one another.
Our church is divided.
But it doesn’t have to be. It is up to us to bridge the divides and bring unity
as baptized people of Christ. We must find ways to work together as the
undivided Body of Christ, not with the goal of all being the same, but to
embrace all humanity as they are, in all their differences, and as loved
Children of God.
Amen.






