Teddy - A Memory with a Special Story |
Tene koutou, tene koutou, tene tatou katoa
So whanau, for those of you who have been journeying with us
regularly, are you ready to dive straight into the book of Mark?
Brilliant, okay, let’s go. Turn with me to Ruth 1, verses
16-17. The book that is just before Kings in the Old Testament where we are
introduced to one of the mighty women in the whakapapa of Jesus.
"Don't urge me to leave you
or to turn back from following you. Where you go I will go, and where you stay
I will stay. Your people will be my people and your God my God. Where you die I
will die, and there I will be buried. May the LORD deal with me, be it ever so
severely, if anything but death separates you and me."
These powerful words can be found in the book of Ruth as she
swears an oath to always be with Naomi and to walk in the ways of Naomi, even
if that involved following a foreign God.
When Eric and I got married, on two separate occasions, we
wrote our own vowels to each other, I chose these words. To me they are so
powerful as they tell us about a promise relationship, when we commit ourselves
to each other to live with each other no matter what. It is this promise
relationship that God has sworn over us – one that is exemplified at the cross,
where he became broken for us, to carry our brokenness and bring us healing. The
Biblical word for a promise relationship is covenant. And, it should not be
broken.
"Don't urge me to leave you
or to turn back from following you. Where you go I will go, and where you stay
I will stay. Your people will be my people and your God my God. Where you die I
will die, and there I will be buried. May the LORD deal with me, be it ever so
severely, if anything but death separates you and me."
Folks, we live in a world of broken promises. We live in a
world where it is okay to speak the words but walk another way. We make
promises to each other that we just don’t have to keep because it is okay to
take any reason to break a promise. You have probably guessed it, but I have
really felt prompted as we journey into Mark, to preach on something really
tricky today.
The passage I have been given in Mark to share from is
Chapter 10, verses 1-32. And the verses start with a topic that is all too real
today. Now, as a team, we are encouraged
to pray into what God wants us to share. And as I prayed and prepared into this
week’s message, I felt a prompting to talk into the topic that Jesus is
challenged on by the Pharisees. Because you see there is danger in these
verses; and, yes, the word of God is dangerous, you can’t have an upside-down
Kingdom without putting the current status quo into danger. There is danger in
these verses, as they challenge us and remind us of the power of promise relationships,
and, at times, they have been used to condemn others, and, at times, they have become verses of self-condemnation;
but if we were to read these verses with the heart of God, we would see that
they speak first into the brokenness of this world, they speak so much into it,
and they also speak into the profound love of a God – who says to us “where you
go, I will go” even if it means going into the pits of hell to save you.
From there he went to the area of
Judea across the Jordan. A crowd of people, as was so often the case, went
along, and he, as he so often did, taught them. Pharisees came up, intending to
give him a hard time. They asked, "Is it legal for a man to divorce his
wife?" Jesus said, "What did Moses command?" They answered,
"Moses gave permission to fill out a certificate of dismissal and divorce
her." Jesus said, "Moses wrote this command only as a concession to
your hardhearted ways. In the original creation, God made male and female to be
together. Because of this, a man leaves father and mother, and in marriage he
becomes one flesh with a woman--no longer two individuals, but forming a new
unity. Because God created this organic union of the two sexes, no one should
desecrate his art by cutting them apart." When they were back home, the
disciples brought it up again. (Mar
10:1-10)
Whanau, today I am going to talk into the topic of divorce. The
topic that Jesus is confronted with here. Before we even start I want you to
know the key points of this message:
1)
God’s desire is for each of us to recognise that
the important of promise relationships, sealed with an oath, are deeply a part
of who we each are as humans;
2)
Relationships of promise are not based on a
feeling of love and choice;
3)
When things are so difficult that the only
option is separation, the pain is real, and the brokenness is real too;
4)
And hear me here, God’s condemnation does not
sit in this brokenness;
5)
As a church, as the Bride of Christ in
preparation for the wedding, we have to respond to the brokenness that is
occurring in our society today.
And at this point, while I am not going to venture too much further
into the verses of Mark 10:1-32, I will capture some of the themes as I share a
spoken word, or poem, of the experience being in amongst divorce, in a
situation that divorce was called for – it was the only choice, unfortunately
it was the right choice, for my parents to make. But the brokenness and the
pain for all of us, my parents, my sister and I, was, and still is, still real.
I was only four
I was only four and I remember the fights
Frypans, fists and words
Thrown around the house
Bruises, blood and hurt
It wasn't a safe home for anyone
But I loved them both
I dreamed of becoming a nurse like my mum
I dreamed of hunting big stags with dad
Then one day dad would break his back at work
And while he stayed in Rotorua hospital mum would care for us in Turangi
She had just won a battle with cancer which would leave her at a loss
She would soon lose her battle to save her marriage
I was only four and I remember the fights
Frypans, fists and words
Thrown around the house
Bruises, blood and hurt
It wasn't a safe home for anyone
But I loved them both
I dreamed of becoming a nurse like my mum
I dreamed of hunting big stags with dad
Then one day dad would break his back at work
And while he stayed in Rotorua hospital mum would care for us in Turangi
She had just won a battle with cancer which would leave her at a loss
She would soon lose her battle to save her marriage
I was only four
I was only four and I remember the waiting
I loved my cowboy granddad but I wanted my dad
Each day I would wait for dad
I would go to the end of the driveway after breakfast
Grandma would get bring me in for lunch
I would go to the end of the driveway after lunch
Granddad would get me for tea
I would wait for my father to return
My dad, my hero - I missed his hugs
The Bible tells us in Mark that in marriage two become “one flesh”
For me, at four, I didn't know that; but something was wrong
I lived with a mum that saw my father in me and struggled
I felt the rejection of a father who forgot my birthday and struggled to save the $800 needed to
bring a child from the West Coast to the Bay of Plenty
Now, even as an adult, the pain of divorce is real for all of us.
I was only four and I remember the waiting
I loved my cowboy granddad but I wanted my dad
Each day I would wait for dad
I would go to the end of the driveway after breakfast
Grandma would get bring me in for lunch
I would go to the end of the driveway after lunch
Granddad would get me for tea
I would wait for my father to return
My dad, my hero - I missed his hugs
The Bible tells us in Mark that in marriage two become “one flesh”
For me, at four, I didn't know that; but something was wrong
I lived with a mum that saw my father in me and struggled
I felt the rejection of a father who forgot my birthday and struggled to save the $800 needed to
bring a child from the West Coast to the Bay of Plenty
Now, even as an adult, the pain of divorce is real for all of us.
I was only six
I was only six and the only bus service in Westport was the Salvation Army
Every Sunday it would come around the state housing block
All of us kids wanted a free ride on the bus
And at Sunday school more money went out of the tiding plate than in
It was like the feeding of the five thousand West Coast State Housing styles.
I was only six and the only bus service in Westport was the Salvation Army
Every Sunday it would come around the state housing block
All of us kids wanted a free ride on the bus
And at Sunday school more money went out of the tiding plate than in
It was like the feeding of the five thousand West Coast State Housing styles.
I was only six
I was only six when I heard the words of Mark "Let the children come to me. Don't stop them, for the kingdom of God belongs to them''
These words washed over the rejection of divorce I felt
There was a Father and Son who cared
I wasn't thought about in divorce but I was thought about in the words of Jesus.
I understood that kids have no place in divorce - I was last, but at that moment in the Salvation Army I was first.
I was only six when I heard the words of Mark "Let the children come to me. Don't stop them, for the kingdom of God belongs to them''
These words washed over the rejection of divorce I felt
There was a Father and Son who cared
I wasn't thought about in divorce but I was thought about in the words of Jesus.
I understood that kids have no place in divorce - I was last, but at that moment in the Salvation Army I was first.
I was only sixteen
I was only sixteen when I gave my life to Christ
And I read the words of hope in Mark "everyone who has given up house or brothers or sisters or
mother or father or children or property, for my sake and for the Good News will receive in return a hundred times as many houses, brothers, sisters mothers, children, and property...”
I didn't read "along with persecution” because these words gave me an excuse
I could now reject my family and have Christ in return
I was only sixteen when I gave my life to Christ
And I read the words of hope in Mark "everyone who has given up house or brothers or sisters or
mother or father or children or property, for my sake and for the Good News will receive in return a hundred times as many houses, brothers, sisters mothers, children, and property...”
I didn't read "along with persecution” because these words gave me an excuse
I could now reject my family and have Christ in return
I was only in my twenties
I was only in my twenties when I was challenged by God
To honor God is to honour my father and my mother
To honour God is not to find the parent to blame
To honour God is to understand that divorce is a condition of our broken world
If my parents stayed together, one would have died
My childhood fantasy story was just that – a fantasy
But Jesus does love all the children of the world – even children of brokenness
And when a relationship of promise has to be broken, we all become broken
The pain is real, and in the upside down Kingdom, some healing can begin
I was only in my twenties when I was challenged by God
To honor God is to honour my father and my mother
To honour God is not to find the parent to blame
To honour God is to understand that divorce is a condition of our broken world
If my parents stayed together, one would have died
My childhood fantasy story was just that – a fantasy
But Jesus does love all the children of the world – even children of brokenness
And when a relationship of promise has to be broken, we all become broken
The pain is real, and in the upside down Kingdom, some healing can begin
Here’s some figures for you. Currently in Aotearoa New
Zealand, 43% of all marriages end in divorce. That means that four out of every
ten marriages break up. That is close to half of all marriages. And there is
even research on divorce now. Researchers, Richard Rahe (Ray) and Thomas Holmes
created researched the most distressing life events that can happen to people. They
were interested in both the emotional stress of these events and the physical
effects. They found that divorce and martial separation feature in the top
three, just after the death of a spouse.
What does this mean, for any one here who has had to make
the hard decision of separation or divorce, the pain that you have felt, the
physical distress you have endured, it is real. It is not something you can
easily get over. What you have gone through in terms of turmoil and brokenness
inside yourself is normal. It is not something that you dreamed up. And, if you
have had to make this decision as a Christian couple, it has been hard as well.
And if you are, or were, a kid in this it
is okay, feeling like rubbish is normal. Your confusion is real.
And this is why we have to recognise that first key point I
mentioned, God’s desire is for each of us to recognise that the important of promise
relationships, sealed with an oath, are deeply a part of who we each are as
humans. When we find ourselves in the pain and trauma of the decision of
breaking up, we have to ask ourselves why? We live in a society of choice, why
is the pain so real?
I really believe, that the relationship of promise God has
for each of us is imprinted on our hearts. But I believe we are a deeply
spiritual species. And as deeply spiritual, our spirit cries out – relationship
is central to who we are. And we know deeply within ourselves, that a promise relationship
sealed with an oath should not be broken. We know that as we lay with our
partner, two become one and we feel the pain of the father when we separate.
So, church, this is why it is so important that we journey
together. We need to carry each other. We need to be intentional in our church
relationships, so that we are there for each other before everything turns to
custard and there is no other choice. Church for us, to demonstrate Kingdom
living, is to find ways to support each other so that families can ride through
the hard times rather than find the vehicles they are on derailing
all-together.
And this takes us to the second point, Relationships of
promise are not based on a feeling of love and choice. Dr George Blair-West is
an Australian psychiatrist on a mission. He is not a Christian, but he has
worked in the field of relationships for so long that he knows the effects of
divorce and separation. His aim is to see divorce no longer a condition of our
contemporary society. Dr Blair-West points out that the high divorce rates of
today are based on a contemporary idea of marriage.
He notes that divorce rates really started to shoot up from
the late 1960s, and he says this is because we have based our relationship
decisions on feelings and emotions. He calls contemporary marriages – love
marriages. He notes that laws were changed in western countries like Aotearoa
NZ in the 1960s to enable divorce to be based on no rational decision at all,
you could divorce, simply because the romance had died off. He points out that
before the 1960s, marriages weren’t happier than they are today, but people
were committed to each other because marriage was a promise relationship sealed
with an oath.
Often the times that Jesus walked in were so much different
to today, and often we as preachers and teachers talk into this difference. But
when it comes to divorce, the times of Jesus and the times of today are very
much the same. When the Pharisees were trying to trip Jesus up with the Law,
they were very much trying to justify their mis-use of the scriptures of Moses
in Deuteronomy 24: 1-2. Moses did set out conditions for divorce, but these conditions
were designed to protect a wife in the situation that a husband divorced her and
she was not in the wrong. By the time of Jesus, these scriptures were used to
justify any context for divorce.
So, we need to see that love is not a feeling, it is a verb
that involves commitment. There will be times when the romance is not there, and
we have to soldier on. As a church we need to work proactively with each other
in ‘prevention mode’ so that all of us are supported in these tough times. But
we also have to recognise that there will be times, just as Moses did, when
separation has to occur. And we have to be there for the 43% of the families
who experience divorce – for the children and the parents. Because God’s
condemnation does not sit in this brokenness, the response of his heart does.
So how can we respond to this brokenness?
The answer here is demonstrated in the one key action of the
Father and the Son. The Father’s key response to our brokenness was to send his
only son. And he didn’t just send his son to die for us. That is one aspect
yes. But if the death and resurrection of Christ was the only response to our
brokenness our gospels will be much shorter; and given that Mark is very light
on this part of the ministry of Christ, we would not be reading Mark today. One
of the key actions demonstrated by Jesus in the bulk of the gospels is that he
came here, to this earth, to have an intentional relationship with us. Not just
any relationship, he came to have an intentional one. This relationship would
be one of love and compassion and it would demonstrate the Kingdom of Christ on
this earth right now. This needs to be our response to the brokenness right
now. It is the same response we need to have to the prevention aspect as well. We
need to grab hold of our relationships with each other and build the intentional
right now. There are three ways that we can do this. We can intentionally give
time to others. We can intentionally open our lives to others. And, we can
intentionally give to others.
Grandparents are a great example of the intentional giving
of time. Many of us have had the joy of grandparents – the heroes in our lives,
storytellers and cool babysitters. I have been very privileged myself to have
amazing grandparents. But some of us, and some of our children don’t. So, how
can we sit in the gap? A couple of weeks ago I was out-of-the-blue invited to
be an honoury grandchild and to be taken on my own train trip. On the day I
realised that while Christians are part of my life everywhere, I had not
intentionally spent time with a fellow Christian until that day for at least
two years outside of movies with Andy. My life had just got so busy. We got to
talk about God, we were able to acknowledge his greatness and, in that, bless
each other. Please friends, if you have planned to give time to someone and
haven’t yet – do it. Time is too short to miss the opportunity of intentionally
giving time.
So what about the intentional opening our lives to others. I
grew up in the State Housing Block of Westport. The State Housing Block in
Westport had an interesting culture. All of our neighbours were Aunties and
Uncles, even if they were not related. We were taught to respect all adults as
family. And these adults became our family. And after school, if there was no
food in my house, there would be in one of my aunties. Many of us in church
open our homes and our lives. We need to intentionally keep doing things
together as a church that involve us coming together. Whether it be a family
day, life group or shared occasions, the more we intentionally open our lives
to each other, the more we can start to prevent and speak into the brokenness.
We need to intentionally give to others. Out of brokenness
can come some real stories of hope. When my family lived in Turangi, my father
was working for the prison service. He would often bring me home gifts – my
favourite were all the keys. I kept these for many years – especially when I
realised that they could open many doors. The keys are gone in an act of
repentance, but there is only one gift that remains. It is this hard, solid
leather bear. I never remember it with ears – I dragged it around everywhere
and the ears broke off. Later the arms broke off but my Grandfather fixed it
with curtain wire. I never knew where this bear came from until recently when
talking with my dad. My bear was made for me especially by a prisoner serving
time. He would never see his children again and he made the bear for a child he
had heard about through my dad. He loved his child so much he wanted to express
it. This bear is the love of this prisoner to his child – through the
expression of love to another child. It is the love that Jesus calls us to. It
is giving without without conditions or
knowledge of the recipient of the gift. It is the giving of the cross.
No rei ra
Church, we need to intentionally respond to the 43%. We need
to be a space of prevention. We need to be a space of healing. We need to be a
place of non-condemnation. We need to
remember that:
1)
God’s desire is for each of us to recognise that
the important of promise relationships, sealed with an oath, are deeply a part
of who we each are as humans;
2)
Relationships of promise are not based on a
feeling of love and choice;
3)
When things are so difficult that the only
option is separation, the pain is real, and the brokenness is real too;
4)
And hear me here, God’s condemnation does not
sit in this brokenness;
5)
As a church, as the Bride of Christ in
preparation for the wedding, we have to respond to the brokenness that is
occurring in our society today.
And I think this is an opportunity. [guide only now] I know
right here, right now, today there are people still in pain. There are fathers,
mothers, children, wives and husbands who have felt the emotional and physical
effects and still experience it today. Come to the cross and lay down this
burden from your heart. There may be some families who are struggling and there
is still hope, please, you can come up the front, but I would encourage you to
talk to our elders, seek counsel, and intentionally walk with our leaders and
other families through this time. The love of the cross is real, I really
believe the only real healing that comes from separation is to be joined with
Jesus, not just at the cross, but after the cross, in his resurrection where he
again intentionally returned to demonstrate to us all that there is hope, there
is hope even after the darkest of times.
No rei ra
Tene koutou, Tene koutou Tene koutou katoa
No comments:
Post a Comment