Sunday after Christmas – what I said


The Sunday after Christmas is also the Sunday following the feast of Saint John the Evangelist, so we celebrate Saint John and Chrismas combined! We used the readings for the feast of Saint John, hence the gospel reading. I should also add that I am grateful to The Times Newspaper for its reporting over the Christmas period, without which this sermon would not have been possible, as the quotes from newspapers of the past came from its pages – well worth the subscription!

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John 21.19-end

As we gather here today, we look back over a week that has seen three special birthdays.

This week saw a momentous birthday, one very important one for us to remember today. 131 years ago this month the foundation stone of our church was laid. And a year later, on 27th December 1882, the new parish church of Saint John the Evangelist was consecrated – 130 years old this week. And how times have changed over the years for the Church – both for St John’s and for the Church of England as a whole. Today perhaps our biggest issue is when we are going to get women bishops. We already, of course, have women priests. Yet even relatively recently such concepts would have baffled the people who sat in the pews at St John’s.

Let’s go back to the early days of Saint John’s, over a hundred and twenty years ago.  A woman’s place was most definitely in the home, and not in the house of bishops. In 1895 the Isle of Man Times gave the following advice:

Don’t argue with your husband; do whatever he tells you and obey all his orders.

The writer went on:

Don’t worry him for money and don’t expect a new dress oftener than he offers to buy you one. Don’t sit up till he comes home from the club; better be in bed and pretend to be asleep. If you must be awake, seem to be glad he came home early. He’ll probably think you an idiot; but that’s inevitable anyway.

Move on to halfway through the life of St John’s, to the Second World War and 1940, and not much has changed. The Bath Chronicle published advice to both wives and husbands.

Wives: The man earns the living, so render to him all the understanding you give him because he is shielding you, more or less, from the world. Give honest appreciation, and remember women, all men are little boys at heart.

Husbands: Do you still court your wife, bring her an occasional gift of flowers and remember her birthday and the wedding anniversary? Remember those – and this is the bit I like – and she will darn your socks until she is blue in the face.

Those who have sat in these pews and worshipped here since 1882 would, until relatively recently, had no concept of the equality of men and women in life – not in the workplace, nor at home, and certainly not in the Church. What a good thing that things have changed and on the whole for the better – still a way to go, and issues that need to be addressed, but on the whole we now have a far more just and equal society in this country.

The second birthday was on December 25th. Yes, on December 25th in 1912 The Times published a Christmas Day edition for the very last time. I’ve no doubt that there were those who thought that not getting their newspaper on Christmas Day was definitely not progress. And it was published in a very different world from that of today, and readers of the time would have been amazed at the size and breadth of coverage of today’s newspapers – the football coverage on that occasion was just nine lines – and they would have been amazed as well as the news coverage from across the globe. They would have been staggered to see The Times being delivered again on Christmas Day this year – if, of course, you had an iPad. Times have changed. In 1912 the newspaper reported on the Queen’s gift of some pheasants to the Grosvenor Hospital for women. There had been an assassination attempt in Delhi, with a bomb being thrown at the Viceroy’s elephant. And in the letters pages, a letter from someone appealing for an end to the massacre of albatrosses for hat decorations.

The world has changed unrecognisably since 1912 – in many ways for the better, though of course in 1912 people had not experienced the horror of two world wars, or knew much of the problems of rising populations or famine. And the technological changes we have seen – they would have been flabbergasted. And as for labour saving devices – I wonder what those who worked downstairs, as in Downton Abbey, would have thought of such things as automatic washing machines, dishwashers, and Dyson vacuum cleaners. What changes we have seen.

The third birthday we have celebrated this week is, of course, the reason for the season as the saying goes. Jesus – whose birthday we celebrate on 25th December. But – unlike the other two – we actually don’t know the right year. Since the Bible tells us that Herod the Great was still ruling, it must have been before 4 BCE, but it’s hard to be exact. And it certainly wasn’t on December 25th – we don’t really know the actual day of the year.

We’ve just been thinking about how the world has changed over the last hundred or so years. Just think how it’s changed over two thousand years. And yet, here we are, because a baby was born to Mary and Joseph. Here we are, two thousand years later, gathered in worship of this tiny baby who came into the world from God. Gathered in worship on the first day of the week just as Christians have gathered for nearly two thousand years since Jesus was raised from the tomb.

Yes – the world has changed over the years – and what a good thing. Yet isn’t it a good thing that what hasn’t changed is Jesus, and the reason for his coming. For Jesus came into the world to show us the way to God – from heaven to earth to show us the way from earth to heaven. He came to teach us how to live, and to remind us that living a full life is living a life spent in the worship of our Father in heaven and in the service of one another. He came to explain to us and to show us by example the importance of living out God’s attributes of love and peace; of equality for all and justice for all; of care for the sick and the disadvantaged and of service to the poor. And these things never change. The world may change around us but Jesus is the same yesterday, today and forever, and the reason for his coming is just as important now as it was when he came all those years ago.

This Church has stood for a hundred and thirty years as a testimony to our local community of the faith and commitment of those who built it and those who have worshipped in these pews over the years. And the message of the Good News that Jesus offers is just the same now as it ever was, it is just as necessary for people to hear. And it is just as necessary for us in the Church to speak out when society as a whole needs to hear what Jesus has to say. And because Jesus and his message never changes, as we listen to the baby who came from God and who died and rose again for us, we must seek to live out that message – and allow it to change us so that we may change the world.