Sermon
for Sunday 28th December 2014 Christmas 1
Revd Alan Horner was a Methodist minister who
inspired many people during his time as a circuit minister, superintendent and
district chair (including chairing the Methodist church in Scotland). I was
privileged to know him in his retirement when he lived in Milton Keynes and was
involved with the Living Spirituality Network. Over the Christmas period I have
chosen some poems written by Alan to share with you as we consider together the
wonder of Christ’s coming among us. Today, I would like to share with you a
poem called
Backwards
to the future
We row
backwards,
only seeing
where we have been -
the wake of our
passage,
the rings in the
water,
the small
splashes of the oars -
not seeing where
we are going,
simply pulling
as we are pulled,
trusting our
direction, destination,
and unable to
look without losing
rhythm, speed,
grace;
while those with
us,
with their own
dreams,
join in the drag
and drip of oars,
sharing the
journey.
Alan Horner
I find Alan’s image of life being like rowing very helpful. We in the
West tend to think of the future as ahead of us and the past behind us. Other
cultures think of the future as behind us, because we cannot see it or know what
it is, and the past ahead of us, because we know what it looks like. That
makes a great deal of sense, but what Alan’s rowing metaphor adds is a sense of
movement. We don’t stand still and look at the past. We are always moving into
the future – backwards. And it is important that we concentrate not on the
imagined future, but on the present. We will reach the future smoothly and
safely if we concentrate on what we are doing now – on the quality of our
rowing and the people who are sharing the rowing task with us.
Of course, when rowing certain kinds of boats – the sort used in
racing, for example, there is one person in the boat who is facing the
direction of movement, seeing where the team is going. That person is the
coxswain, and for the purpose of this metaphor, I invite you to imagine that
the cox is Jesus. Jesus came, the word made flesh, in order to make this human
journey with us. He got into the boat (literally on some occasions, I know, but
please stay with the metaphor for me!) – he got into the boat with us to share
in our journey, and he remains in the boat that is our life through his Holy
Spirit. If we will listen to him and follow his direction, we will travel the
right way.
Allowing Jesus to be our guide in this way may bring unexpected new
vistas into view. The shepherds never expected, I am sure, to see a host of
angels or to find themselves in the presence of the child who is God. But
listening to the instruction of the God, given through the angel, changed their
lives – they travelled on from their visit to Mary and Joseph’s child, praising
God and telling everyone what they had seen. Likewise, Mary, growing up as an
ordinary young woman in Nazareth, would not have seen how her future would turn
out. If she had known, saying yes to God would have been so much harder. Mary
knew when she agreed to bear God’s son that it would not be an easy path to
walk, but if she’d known the detail, seen just how much fear and hurt and pain
were connected to the decision she was making, would she have agreed? Perhaps
she would, but I thank God for sparing her that knowledge and allowing her only
to see and experience what she needed to at any one time. Mary had to deal with
the hardships and the joys of the present moment, and she treasured in her
heart that view of the past, holding on to the special and wonderful things
that she saw and learned.
So for us, as we prepare to head into a new year, we too can treasure
the things that we have learned and found joyful in the view that we can see –
the view of our past. We too can trust that the coxswain, Jesus, will guide us
wisely into our futures and give us the strength we need to deal with whatever
is coming when we need to – and not before. And we too can focus on the present
moment, playing our part as we row into the future, trusting our saviour and
listening to his instructions for us.