Abraham
was seventy-five when he set out on a great adventure with God. He had already
seen seventy-five winters. (So have I; but then, we squeeze more than one
winter into each year around here.)
God
invites Abram to get away — to distance himself — from his country, his
kindred, and his father’s house, exchanging these securities — the soil and the
people who have formed him — for uncertainty, and for his descendants to become
a foreign (goy, or gentile) people wherever they reside.
Like
Jews and Muslims, Christians trace their faith heritage back to Abraham. And
while there are voices today claiming that Britain must reclaim its Christian
heritage, there is no such thing as a Christian geo-political nation, or
national people group. Land and neighbour and family matter to Christians, but
don’t define us. We are foreigners in the midst of whatever nation we live in;
foreigners positioned there to bless this ‘other’ soil and people we live
among.
The
word used to describe Abram’s father’s house can also be translated ‘palace’ or
‘dungeon,’ and when we seek to elevate the historic palace of Christianity in
this nation — its beautiful buildings and music; its position of privilege in
the corridors of power — it becomes, for us, a dungeon.
God
speaks to Abram about both blessings and curses. Blessings are expansive, words
— and actions — of life-giving affirmation. Curses are temporary constraints
applied to those whose actions towards others steal life, make their world
smaller. Being under a curse — for example, spending time in prison — is
intended, in part, to create space to change minds and amend ways, ultimately
opening the door to blessing that outstrips the curse.
If
anyone is truly concerned that we, as a national society, have lost our sense
of identity, confidence, and direction on account of forsaking the Church, the
best advice I can offer is that you commit yourself to being found among the
local church community that gathers week by week in your neighbourhood; that
you submit yourself to learning, alongside neighbours of various origins, the
Way of Jesus. That you might move from being under a curse to being blessed,
and a means by which others are blessed too. You are not yet too old.
But
if you are simply looking to co-opt Christianity as a weapon against other
faiths, you won’t find support here.
Genesis
12.1-4
‘Now
the Lord said to Abram, ‘Go from your country and your kindred and your
father’s house to the land that I will show you. I will make of you a great
nation, and I will bless you, and make your name great, so that you will be a
blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you I will
curse; and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.’ So Abram
went, as the Lord had told him; and Lot went with him. Abram was seventy-five
years old when he departed from Haran.’

