Sunday, 8 December 2013

A Sermon for Advent 2, 2013



A Sermon for Advent 2, 2013

Recently in the news some science has come out declaring that men’s and women’s brains are wired differently.

Male brains appeared to be wired front to back, with few connections bridging the two hemispheres.
In females, the pathways criss-crossed between left and right.

These differences might explain, the scientists speculate, why men, in general, tend to be better at learning and performing a single task, like cycling or navigating, whereas women are more equipped for multitasking, say the researchers in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

The only problem with all this is it gives permission to bring up all those stereotypical male female differences that we think exist, whether the science supports them or not, and all that results in is a kind of separatism between men and women, something that, in my generation at least, we’ve been trying to work away from for all sorts of human rights reasons.

Even the scientists admit that so called brain hardwiring can evolve and change as people learn and develop, thus undermining these so called differences.

This week in the season of Advent we think of the prophets who, according to the biblical recorders and our tradition, were mostly men.  There are, however, a significant number of women in our scripture, who deserve the description of prophet but get masked by a long tradition that only seems to hear the male voice.

Isaiah, perhaps the most well known of the prophets, considered the mother of his children to be a prophetess (Is8:3) and both Hannah, mother of Samuel, and Mary Mother of Jesus are well known for their songs which contain powerful prophecies about materialism being overthrown by poverty, and the poor and weak having their day and being blessed by God.  Those words alone make them prophets.
Miriam, sister of Aaron and Moses, is described in exodus as a prophetess, and in the book of Judges, Deborah, a judge over Israel, displays all the qualities and duties of her male prophet counterparts, and there are many more.

A prophet is someone who is sent, someone with a message, someone who is a mouthpiece for a truth, and ethic and a belief.  Many prophets come out of suffering and hardship,  Indeed you could argue that such harsh experience can be a catalyst for prophetic ability and inspiration.  You see, as I have said many times before, prophets are not fortune tellers or future tellers. 
Prophets don’t tell you what is going to happen, they tell you what will happen if…….
they tell you what consequences will befall if…….
and they tell you what can be achieved if……

The most startling of these prophecies, which humanity has yet to fully achieve is that shared by Micah and Isaiah where they say:
They will beat their swords into plowshares
    and their spears into pruning hooks.
Nation will not take up sword against nation,
    nor will they train for war anymore.
Everyone will sit under their own vine
    and under their own fig tree,
and no one will make them afraid,
    for the Lord Almighty has spoken.
All the nations may walk
    in the name of their gods,
but we will walk in the name of the Lord
    our God for ever and ever.

Most if not all of the prophets, in their different ways, spoke out against separatism, against oppression and against violence and for an inclusive humanity under the God of love.

And most, if not all prophets were ordinary people who somehow found themselves caught up with a cause, a direction or a truth, and decided to follow it.

Archbishop Desmond Tutu described Nelson Mandela as a prophet of tolerance.  And as, in the wake of his death, Mandela’s story is recounted and assessed, his place as a modern day prophet is starkly clear.

Mandela’s motivation was powered by an opposition to the most abhorrent form of separatism, that of race and colour:
Apartheid – from an Afrikaans word meaning ‘The state of being apart’ became a great crime as it manifested itself in both major and trivial ways, etching away at human dignity at an everyday level, and causing conflict and retaliation at other levels as people and organisations were banned and declared illegal and people imprisoned and life taken.
When Mandela was eventually freed from his imprisonment, after some 27 years of captivity, he remarked that true freedom only comes with forgiveness.

For him, to be entrapped in dispute, in revenge or in conflict was no better than being in that small cell on Robben Island.  It has been said of Mandela that for him and enemy was a friend waiting to be made.

And it was these powerful attitudes that fuelled his optimistic understanding that reconciliation was the only way forward, and was the solution to this aberrant segregation and humiliation of his fellow human beings.

All the nations may walk
    in the name of their gods,

He had been scrupulous to ensure that he demonstrated a profound respect for all the faiths to be found in his country. After he was elected by Parliament as the first democratically elected President on 9 May 1994, on the Friday he went to a mosque and on the following day he attended a synagogue and on the Sunday attended a larger inter-denominational service at the FNB Stadium in Soweto. At his inauguration, prayers were offered by Muslim, Jewish, Hindu and Christian ministers.
Everyone will sit under their own vine
    and under their own fig tree,
I heard a sports reporter on the radio remember Mandela making a surprise visit to a football stadium, at the anxiety of his security, wandered through the crowd talking to people.  One man in a wheelchair shouted out’ your achievement has been great’ and his answer was, yes it has been great hasn’t it, but its your achievement.

His self deprecation was part of his power. He once addressed the labour party conference, describing himself as an unemployed pensioner with a criminal record, and the went on to speak of tolerance, forgiveness and reconciliation.

And so on this second Sunday in Advent, when we remember all those who cried out from various wildernesses, about the truth of a loving God and a capable humanity,

may our second Advent candle glow with their prophetic voice, and for now help us remember the gift of Nelson Mandela’s life, prophecy and example.

Archbishop Tutu’s prayer

"We offer a prayer of contrition. We come with humble and broken hearts for all the ways we have fallen short of the glory of God.

"We come carrying our sorrow for all of the ways that we have fallen short of the example that Madiba offered us; an example of integrity, of reconciliation, of leadership in the service of the people.

"So we thank God for Rolihlahla. We thank God that this man had the courage to learn and to grow.