They
say that time heals all wounds.
That
isn’t true. The truth is that time itself is wounded, in many places brutally
so; and is being healed and made whole by the Wounded One in whom all of God's
creatures, including time, are being restored.
They
say that time heals all wounds.
That
isn’t true. The truth is that time itself is wounded, in many places brutally
so; and is being healed and made whole by the Wounded One in whom all of God's
creatures, including time, are being restored.
We
long for good things to happen to good people and bad things to happen to bad
people. I am an avid reader and viewer of crime fiction, and long for the
villain of the piece to receive their comeuppance.
God
longs for good for all people. This is the desire of God, the one true desire,
the one true will of the sovereign Lord of all creation. Ultimately, no false
desire can resist this true desire, that none should perish but all be
reconciled to God in Jesus and their find healing and wholeness, the salvation
of their souls.
There
are various villains at the foot of the cross. Pilate, Herod, Annas and
Caiaphas, Judas, even Peter. And over each and every one, the verdict is
spoken, ‘Father, forgive them.’
Each
villain is drawn to Christ on the cross, and there, if not in the chronological
moment but (beginning with Peter) in the cosmic event, they are reconciled to
God, to their own shattered selves, to their neighbour, to the one they lifted
high through whom the desire of God has been fulfilled and is being fulfilled
and shall be fulfilled.
Everything
that exists is a creature of God. And because creation is so interconnected and
interdependent, everything is caught up, to a greater or lesser extent, in the
estrangement from God that resulted from the independence rebellion of a third
of the angels.
Death
is one of the creatures of God. As the hymn All Creatures Of Our God And
King puts it:
And thou, most
kind and gentle death,
waiting to hush our latest breath,
O praise him, alleluia!
Thou leadest home the child of God,
and Christ our lord the way has trod:
O praise him, O praise him,
alleluia, alleluia, alleluia!
Death,
too, has been caught up in the estrangement; and death, too, is caught up in
the reconciliation of all things in Christ.
Paul,
writing to the church in Corinth, states that those whom Moses led out of
bondage in Egypt two thousand years before the time of Jesus nonetheless
participated in his life-giving life. Even though they made choices that led to
their death, to a gracious limit on the effect of estrangement, death is not
the end. As Paul writes to the church in Rome, he is utterly convinced that
nothing in all creation, including death, is able to separate us from the love
of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. A great many Christians today do not share his
confidence, but there we are.
Likewise,
we who, from a chronological perspective are separated from Jesus by two
thousand years in the other direction, are drawn to him, to the reconciliation
of all things in him, which is won on the cross.
On
one occasion, Jesus was asked about the deaths of some Galileans at the hand of
Pilate. They died, Jesus responds, because of the estrangement between Jew and
Gentile. And those who died when a tower collapsed on them died because of the
estrangement between neighbours that allows one to put profit before the common
good. Yet death is not the final horizon.
In
response, Jesus told a parable about a fig tree that had failed to produce figs
for the past three years and was threatened with being cut down. In the Bible,
trees represent people. The fig tree stands for Israel, and beyond that the
human condition, and under all of that the life of the human god Jesus. For
three years, it has not produced figs. At this stage, Jesus has been going from
place to place healing the sick, driving out demons, and teaching both the
crowds and his disciples. Yet the restoration of Israel has not come about, as
far as his critics can see. He has had his opportunity. Let him now be removed.
But Jesus gently but firmly insists that his time has not yet come. Will not
yet come for another year. For now, he continues with the unglamorous,
painstaking, slow work of digging in fertiliser.
A
year from then, Jesus would be hoisted up on an execution scaffold. Yet this
was not the end, for he would transform the cross into the tree of life, the
fruit-bearing tree. Here we see the true cry of humanity, ‘Father forgive,’ and
the true response of God in giving the Son the gift he asks for, the
life-giving Spirit. Here we see the Son glorify the Father through the Spirit,
in loving humanity even to the extent in sharing in their death and returning
the Spirit to the Father. And here we see the Father glorify the Son through
the Spirit, rewarding his faithfulness with the life of the Spirit returned to
him.
And
all creation, whether it lies on the chronological horizon before or after this
event, is being drawn to the cross, where all things are reconciled in Jesus,
never to be estranged again.
This
is a slow and hidden work, that takes as long as it takes. It takes in your
history and mine, the healing of every wound you have suffered and every wound
you have inflicted. To the naked eye, the fig tree of your life, or mine, may
look barren, nothing to see here. And yet, the gardener has not given up. Still,
he digs around us, gets deep into our roots. For those with eyes to see, it is
possible to watch him at work, healing those parts of us that, chronologically
speaking, are no longer present, our childhood, our past.
He
will not lay down his tools until all creation is restored. All creation.
If
you want to know the judgement of God on sinners – on all who, from time to
time, fail to trust in God's goodness towards them – we find it on the lips of
the human god Jesus on the cross: ‘Father, forgive them; they do not know what
they do.’
This
is both the true cry of humanity, in response to our common condition, and the
true declaration of God, in response to our common condition.
All
contrary utterances (‘Father, punish’) speak falsely, of both human nature and
divine nature.
Whenever
you come across a king in one of Jesus’ parables, you are NOT coming across
God.
Christ
is the true king, and he chooses to take the form of a servant. Indeed, he most
often appears in his own parables as a servant – and often mistreated by a king
who does terrible things. Like Aragorn in The Lord Of The Rings, Jesus moves
through the Gospels incognito.
The
kings represent, in the first instance, men who exercise earthly power over the
lives of others. Also, by extension, the ways in which we seek to be the king
of our own lives, rejecting the servant heart of God, the love of God for us in
Jesus.
Therefore,
the kings inflict violence. And whenever we proclaim that these kings are
revelations of the nature of God, we demonstrate that our god is violence,
control over others guaranteed by coercive force. Such proclamation is
spiritual abuse; and underpins most if not all forms of abuse we see, from time
to time but with monotonous regularity, in the Church.
Bad
things happening to people is not evidence of God judging them. Indeed, death
is not divine judgement, nor should we ever threaten it.
Once
upon a time some people told Jesus that Pilate (the governor of the Roman
province of Judaea) had violently put down some Galilean-led disorder at the
time of a Passover. This raised questions for them, about the nature of God.
Had God allowed this to happen because he did not approve of the men in
question? Jesus refuted such a view; and added that unless they were prepared
to change their understanding of God, they themselves would be caught up in
human violence and not be able to understand it as such. Jesus himself would be
killed at Pilate’s orders, and this would not be a sign of his sinfulness.
Jesus
cited a further example: eighteen debtors who were killed when the tower of
Siloam fell on them. These, Jesus insisted, were no worse debtors than anyone
else living in Jerusalem, and this tragedy was not divine judgement. Unless
they could understand that they would not be able to construct any sense when
tragedy befell themselves.
Then,
as Jesus habitually did, he told them a parable. A story thrown out to disrupt
their thinking and, perhaps, enable them to see things from a different
perspective. A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard. Having given it three
years to take root, he looked for fruit and found none. And so, he instructed
his vinedresser to cut it down, so that the soil might be put to better use.
But the vinedresser asked for one more year, that he might dig manure around
the roots, and see if that might make all the difference.
Parables
lead us down an easy path, only to turn us onto a different Way. Here we have a
vineyard, a symbol of the nation of Israel. And so, the owner must be God. God
has had enough of the apostasy of his people, of their fruitless lives, and
calls for their destruction. But the prophet intercedes for his people,
successfully persuading a vengeful God to show uncharacteristic albeit
temporary mercy.
But
this easy path will not do. The vinedresser is, indeed, Jesus. But Jesus does
not pacify an angry Old Testament God. Jesus is the revelation of God. When we
see Jesus, what we see is what God is like. And what humans are to be like.
What
we see is that to be a sinner (a debtor, among debtors) in the hands of God is
not to suffer terror; it is to suffer care: to be handled with care.
The
man in this parable is not God, but us; and the fig tree is not Israel, but
also us. (By us, in the first instance I mean the original heaters of the
parable, and by extension all who hear the parable.) This is a parable about
how we see others (the man considers the tree useless, as we often see others
as useless) and how we see ourselves (often we consider our lives to be
fruitless, which may result in despair, or may result in pleading with God to
give us one last chance to turn our lives around).
Jesus
is the vinedresser, who stands up to our violent tendencies towards others or
towards ourselves, and who states his intention to dig in manure. To use the
seemingly worthless reality of waste to produce fruitfulness. Committing to
slow processes. Absorbing humiliation and transforming it into glory.
Unless
we are able to see this, we will suffer much violence at our own hands and
inflict much violence on others. The spiritual abuse of holding the threat of
divine destruction over people. Such a stance is utterly anti the posture Jesus
adopts.
To
be a sinner in the hands of God is to be loved, to be nurtured, to be
transformed by the tender heart and worn hands of Jesus. To surrender to his
life reviving us from our dormancy.
Bad
things happen. But all things are being reconciled to God in Christ Jesus.
Including you.
A
year after this exchange, Jesus will be cut down by men who did not approve of
the fruit his life produced. He will suffer their violence, and God will reward
his faithfulness even unto death on the cross with glory, a glory countless
others receive a share in. Including you.
Luke
13.1-9
At
that very time there were some present who told him about the Galileans whose
blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices. He asked them, ‘Do you think
that because these Galileans suffered in this way they were worse sinners than
all other Galileans? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all perish
as they did. Or those eighteen who were killed when the tower of Siloam fell on
them--do you think that they were worse offenders than all the others living in
Jerusalem? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all perish just as
they did.’
‘Then
he told this parable: ‘A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard; and he
came looking for fruit on it and found none. So he said to the gardener, “See
here! For three years I have come looking for fruit on this fig tree, and still
I find none. Cut it down! Why should it be wasting the soil?” He replied, “Sir,
let it alone for one more year, until I dig round it and put manure on it. If
it bears fruit next year, well and good; but if not, you can cut it down.” ’
At
St Nicholas,’ the church where I am priest-in-charge, we have a large
collection of stained-glass windows by the twentieth-century designer Leonard
Evetts. Four of these depict northern saints: Columba, Aidan, Bede, and Hilda.
Several of the classrooms in our church halls are also named for northern saints,
but there was nothing other than a name plate on the door to indicate any
significance to this decision.
Recently
I was approached by a group of sixth formers (final two years of secondary
school education) who were looking for a project volunteering in the community.
I invited them to help me reclaim a room on the church halls (the Columba room)
that had had various uses over the years, most recently as a storeroom, but
that I wanted to use as a space for quiet reflection or prayer, and study.
First,
they helped clear the room of everything that was stored in it. Then I took
photos of the stained-glass and projected them onto the walls. The students
helped me trace them out in pencil, and colour-block them with acrylic paint,
and I added the detail.
I have already used the room for Lent conversations on living hope, and baptism preparation with families. The door is kept on the snib so anyone can make use of the room for prayer whenever the halls are open to the community throughout the week.
We
ask the wrong question of time.
How
will you use the time you have (wisely)? What will you do with it?
(This
is the question behind clocking on early, and off late; the question behind
career advice and bucket lists.)
But
time is – as we are – one of God’s creatures. And I do not want to be used
(even by someone who thinks they are acting wisely). So why would time? I am
not a utility, or a tool, and neither is time.
Better
questions to ask of time:
How
might we receive time? respond to time? cherish time? hold time lightly?
‘But
our citizenship is in heaven, and it is from there that we are expecting a
Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ. He will transform the body of our humiliation
so that it may be conformed to the body of his glory, by the power that also
enables him to make all things subject to himself.’
Philippians
3.20, 21
When
we read the Bible, we are invited to find ourselves in the story, and to do so
honestly, in Christ. He is the interpretive key to the story, the resurrected
Jesus who appears to his followers and says, ‘Peace be with you.’ Whatever you
are going through, peace be with you.
This
Sunday when the church gathered to meet with Jesus, we read from a letter Paul
wrote to our brothers and sisters in Philippi.
Around
forty years before the birth of Jesus, the brilliant Roman general Julius
Caesar took for himself emergency powers to save the Republic. Not everyone
agreed that this would save the Republic. Some, even former friends of Caesar’s,
believed it would destroy the Republic. Caesar was assassinated (on what our
calendar calls 15th March, 44 BCE) and the Republic thrown into civil war.
Caesar’s friend Mark Anthony and adopted son Octavian chased Cassius and Brutus
around the Mediterranean, catching up with them just outside Philippi, in
Macedonia. Mark Anthony and Octavian won a decisive battle and rewarded many of
their legionaries for faithful service by giving them Philippi as their
pension, also making the city a colony of Rome, that is, Rome in another place.
Around
fifteen years later, Mark Anthony and Octavian had fallen out, Octavian had
defeated his former friend, and declared himself emperor, taking the title
Augustus, or venerable, and rewarding more soldiers with retirement in
Philippi.
Paul
will turn up in town around seventy-five years later. By now the original
generation of Roman citizens is gone, but the current residents enjoyed Roman
citizenship as a participation in the reward of someone else.
This,
too, is the basis on which we are citizens of heaven, of the rule and reign of
God in the world which is the reward given to Jesus for being faithful even
unto death, and which we benefit from. Not on the grounds of our own
faithfulness.
Paul,
Silas and Timothy were seeking to establish new communities of followers of
Jesus in what today we would call Turkey. But every way they turned, they felt
God say, not here, not yet.
Perhaps
you know what it is like to seek guidance for a decision you need to make or an
action you are looking to take and feel only confusion and frustration.
Eventually,
one night Paul has a dream. A man from Macedonia stands before him, saying,
Come over to us; we need to hear the Gospel too.
The
next morning, over breakfast, Paul tells his friends about his dream, and they
agree this is what they need to do. So, they head to the nearest port, take a
ship across the Aegean Sea to Neapolis, and make the short walk inland to
Philippi.
Wherever
Paul went, his first move was to seek out the Jewish community, those with whom
he had a common history. But at Philippi, there was no Jewish community.
Perhaps there were some Gentiles who worshipped the Jewish god, and if so, they
would probably be found on the Sabbath, a little way outside the city walls, by
the river where there was flowing water to wash in before praying. And this is
where they do find such people, including Lydia.
Lydia
was a businesswoman, an immigrant to Philippi from Thyatira, perhaps what we
would call a fashion designer. She invited Paul and his companions to be her
guests; they told her about Jesus; and she asked to be baptised. Then for
several days they shared stories of Jesus.
But
as they walked through the city, they would be followed around by a slave girl
who was possessed, or oppressed, by a demon that purported to tell your
fortune. As many people want to know what is going to happen, or think that
they do, or want to find a hack to swing chance in their favour, this slave
girl made her owners, her pimps, very wealthy. And she started following Paul
and his companions around, telling anyone in earshot, ‘These men are servants
of the Most High God, who bring you a message of salvation.’
The
endorsement of a demon is not the kind of publicity Paul is looking for, for
Jesus. At first he tries to ignore her, but eventually it is too much. He turns
around and performs an exorcism. The girl returns to herself, and her owners
realise that they have lost their income stream. This makes them angry.
They
drag Paul and Silas before the magistrates and accuse them of inciting public
disorder. The magistrates decree that, accordingly, they should be stripped and
beaten with rods in the public square, then spend the night in the cells before
being run out of town. And this is what happened.
Paul
and Silas find themselves in stocks in the innermost cell. And their response
is to sing hymns of praise. Behaviour that intrigues the other prisoners. Who
does this?
During
the night there is an earthquake, and the prison doors fail. The jailer
despairs. He sees a future in which he is held accountable for the escape of
his prisoners, where he suffers the public shame of trial and execution; and he
decides that it would be more honourable to take his own life.
But
Paul calls out, ‘Stop! No one has escaped.’ You might feel that you have no
options, but you do have options. And the jailer chooses to take Paul and Silas
into his home, wash them, tend to their bruised and bloodied bodies, feed them.
And he asks these extraordinary men, ‘Sirs, what must I do to be saved?’ And,
like Lydia, he and his household are baptised.
The
next morning, the magistrates send the word to expel Paul and Silas from the
city. But Paul does not think so. They are, he claims, Roman citizens. This
terrifies the magistrates. It is not legal to punish a Roman citizen without
trial, yet they had not taken the trouble to establish who was brought before
them or their side of the story. They saw only a foreigner whose presence was
an offence. Paul could be Nigerian, and Philippi, Sunderland. But for this
failure, the magistrates could lose their jobs and be banned for life from
holding any public office.
Instead,
they find themselves humbled before Paul. Paul and Silas rejoin their
companions, return to Lydia’s home to say their farewells, and leave town on
their own terms.
Later,
Paul writes to the brothers and sisters in Philippi, about (among other things)
their primary citizenship (a colony of the rule of God) and the hope that the
humiliated body will be glorified.
So
where do you find yourself in this story of citizens and migrants, of feeling
oppressed or of being exploited, of miscarriages of justice, of deep despair,
of burning humiliation?
Where
does Jesus suddenly appear before you, saying, ‘Peace be with you?’
I
am witnessing a lot of anxiety at the moment. And in response, I want to say:
[1]
The world is not going to hell in a handcart. The world is being drawn into the
reconciliation of all things to God in Jesus. All movement that enlarges the
distance between people, or between people and the rest of creation, is an
aberration, a temporary state of affairs, where we have yet to respond to
grace. Keep choosing to move with the grain of history, not against it, by the
grace of God.
[2]
47 is not God’s man appointed to bring about God’s purposes. The man God has
appointed, who has brought about, is bringing about, and will bring about God's
purposes, is Jesus. No one else. Not 47, not you, not me. Christian Nationalism
is idolatrous.
[3]
On the other hand, nothing that 47 or anyone else can do can derail the
trajectory to reconciliation in and with and through Jesus. Nothing that falls
short of Love has the power to defeat Love.
[4]
You are not reading about Putin and 47 in the Book of Revelation. Revelation is
an apocalypse, a genre of work that lifts the veil on present events to reveal
what is going on in a deeper reality. The present events in question being the
end of what we now refer to as the first century of the Common Era. Revelation
was written to encourage Christians living under the seemingly all-powerful
Roman empire to remain faithful to Jesus, even to death, for through their
faithful witness Rome would fall. Everything we see in Revelation concerns
events that took place long before our time. Because Jesus is the same
yesterday, today and forever, we can extrapolate truth about the nature and
action of God, and our vocation to remain faithful to Jesus in the face of
empire, just as we can do with the texts that make up the Old Testament. But to
claim that we are living in the events depicted in Revelation is an
aggrandisement of our time, a foolish self-importance.
[5]
Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return. Turn away from sin
and remain faithful to Christ to the end of your days.
As
you were.
In
his Gospel—good news story—concerning Jesus, John records an incident in the
temple at Jerusalem, a building that stands for a convergence of national, religious,
cultural identity and power. On this occasion, Jesus is visiting the temple and
is speaking in front of a gathered crowd who are taking an interest. But the
scene is hijacked by a group of men who are important in their own eyes. They
thrust a woman in front of Jesus. She has, they say, been caught in the very
act of committing adultery. She is, one may surmise, not dressed in a manner
they consider appropriate for the hallowed space in which she now finds
herself. She has forgotten herself. She has not shown the expected deference.
She has no cards in her hand, and without the help of those who are exposing
her to public humiliation, it will all be over for her very quickly. She is
silenced.
She
is somewhat collateral damage, for their true intention is to push Jesus to do
as they want. Will he refuse to show mercy, and so place himself in their debt,
a debt they may choose to call in at any moment of their own choosing? Or will
he refute them, in which case he will invalidate his credentials against their
interpretation of founding documents? And who, exactly, are these men trying to
impress?
Jesus
ignores the men. He stoops down and draws in the dust on the ground with his
finger, moving it around, so that it settles in a new configuration, so that it
lies differently now.
Most
Saturday mornings, I take part in the local parkrun, and afterward we go to the
café in the sports centre. Near the door to the centre is a banner, a
larger-than-life size photo of a smiling middle-aged woman with the text ‘Be the
best version of you.’ I am sure she is a lovely person, but I cannot help but
think that the best version of me looks somewhat different. But being the best
version of you is quite the thing to be these days, involving self-discovery
and self-improvement. We might even be tempted to coopt the Season of Lent into
this programme.
But
self-discovery and self-improvement are treacherous goals. Our identity is not a
fixed given we discover, nor a project we construct for ourselves. When we
embark on such activities we become to ourselves like Pharaoh conscripting the Israelites
to hard labour or condemn our future selves to excavating and robbing the
graves of our past selves.
In
his letters to early congregations of Jesus-followers, Paul proclaims that our
identity is in Christ. It is he, who died and rose again for us, who is the eternal
convergence of our past, present and future, the givenness of our identity. And
as John records, Jesus is the one who writes on the ground, who re-orders the
dust of which we are made—dust animated by the breath of God—including in ways
that reveal his unassuming mastery over events that befall us. Paul goes so far
as to say that we are hidden in him—that is to say, our identity, which is kept
safe by him for all eternity, is at least partially hidden from others and also
from ourselves. For one thing, who among us could know, at four years old, what
we would be at fifty, or at eighty? There is both continuity and discontinuity—the
same dust, reconfigured many times.
On
Ash Wednesday, I press my finger into a mash of ash and fragrant olive oil and
trace the pattern of the cross on the forehead of those who find themselves
standing in front of me. They may feel humiliated by the circumstances of their
life, by their shortcomings, by their inability to take and keep hold of the
best version of themselves. They may very well have been wounded by the actions
of others, whether old wounds that have left scars or fresh wounds that have
left bruises. The cross I trace says you have died with Christ. Not only are
you mortal, but you have already died: you share in his death, and in his rising,
in his glory, for your identity is in him, and only in him. You are hidden in
him. His past, present and future are your past, present and future; and your
past, present and future are his and in him. Nothing can separate you from the
love of God which is in Christ Jesus. Nothing that has changed or is changing
or will change your very partial understanding of yourself; nothing you have experienced,
are experiencing, or shall experience. And in him, one day you shall fully know
yourself, and be fully known.
And
with the sign of the cross in ash, words of invitation: ‘remember you are dust,
and to dust you shall return; turn away from sin and be faithful to Christ to
the end of your days.’ Such action—turning away from sin and returning to
Christ, which, if it is true that we are in him is also to return to ourselves—achieves
nothing for us. It is not a process of self-improvement, of becoming the best
version of you. It is simply the expression of a thankful heart, for what has
already been done. The best version of you—the version that has been set free
from the hold of sin over us; the version that is the righteousness of God—has
already been called into being through Christ and with Christ and in Christ,
along with the rest of humanity. We do not need to strive for perfection, or
wrestle with existential angst. We may, indeed, lament aspects of the past,
present or future, but even as we are treated—by others, by ourselves—as dying,
we are alive; as punished, and yet not killed; as sorrowful, yet always
rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet possessing
everything. This Lent, may we rest secure in this amazing grace, and know
ourselves afresh to be reconciled to God.
Like
many, I have been watching global political events unfolding over recent weeks.
We are witnessing a major change in approach—at least official approach—by
the US, with consequences that run far wider. I have a friend who often says
that people are alright, wherever they are from; it is the politicians who are
the problem. Respectfully, I disagree, for several reasons: firstly,
politicians are people, not some other category of being; moreover, many
politicians are good people, working hard for the communities they represent;
and politics can be a helpful way to share resources for the common good.
But
politics, and politicians, cannot address our most fundamental problem, which
is that at the deepest level we are alienated from, and fearful of, the Other,
those who are not accepted/acceptable within our family or group or tribe. Some
Christian traditions call this original sin; some Christian traditions call it
the original wound. Politics cannot bridge that divide; indeed, politics
reflects and can deepen the divide.
Christians
believe that the arc of history is irrevocably moving towards the bridging of
that divide, the healing of that wound, in the person of Jesus; and that,
whatever the times we find ourselves in look and feel like, in Jesus now
is always the auspicious moment in history to be reconciled with God and our
neighbour. To discover that we are acceptable/accepted.
That
same trajectory passes through me and carries me, an arc that originates in God
and will return to God. An arc that moves through time, which, like me, is
itself one of God’s creatures, and is held within God—specifically, Christians
believe, in Jesus. A path that, viewed close up, as I trace it, often appears—and
is experienced as—tangled, heading in the wrong direction, or even blocked.
This is real, but not the ultimate reality. When tempted to despair, at
ourselves or on account of the actions of those Others we fear—including where
we, or they, attempt to co-opt that arc, to co-opt Jesus, to the purposes of
division—we need to zoom out, to see the bigger picture.
These
are dark times, and there are those who take advantage of the darkness to harm
others for their own gain. This is also the time we have been given, the
fitting time to choose for Life, for Light, for Love. For peace, with
guaranteed security. Accept no substitutes.