Lectionary readings: Hebrews 9.24-28
and Mark 1.14-20
Jesus and his first followers lived
under the occupation of the Roman Empire. Indeed, Galilee had been successively
occupied, over a period of seven hundred years, by the Assyrian, the
Babylonian, the (Persian) Achaemenid, the Ptolemaic, Greek-Seleucid, and Roman Empires.
Around the time of Jesus, the Roman
Empire invaded Britain, defeating the indigenous tribes with whom they had
previously traded, and whom they had unsuccessfully invaded, twice, a hundred
years earlier.
The Romans ruled over us for four
hundred years, bringing Christianity with them. Then they were summoned home to
defend Rome, though many simply refused to go.
In their wake we had two centuries of
Germanic migration – pagan Saxons, Angles, Jutes, and Frisians;
followed by two centuries of
consolidation into around a dozen Anglo-Saxon kingdoms competing for dominance
(Northumbria, Mercia, and Wessex among them) and efforts to convert them to
Christianity by both their neo-Celtic British neighbours – the fabled Northern
Saints – and by missionaries from Rome;
followed by two centuries of Danish
migration.
Then, in the eleventh century, the
Norman invasion, the most comprehensive dispossession and replacement of the
ruling class.
For the next three hundred years, the
boundaries between English and French were blurred and bloody, while England
also laid claim to Wales, Scotland and Ireland.
The fourteenth century saw the Black
Plague wipe out half the population of England.
The fifteenth century saw the War of
the Roses.
The sixteenth century saw Tudor
England, and a violently contested break from the Church of Rome, pulling the
country back and forth, Catholic and Protestant factions fighting for dominance.
The seventeenth century saw Union
with Scotland; Civil War and the state execution of a king; a restoration of
the monarchy; and the Glorious Revolution, the deposition of a Catholic king.
The eighteenth century saw the upheaval
of the Industrial Revolution;
the nineteenth century saw the Napoleonic
Wars and expansion of the British Empire;
the twentieth century saw the First
World War – as German expansion in Europe threatened Britain’s global Empire – and
a Second World War, followed by rapid decolonization, and new – ongoing – waves
of migration from nations we had claimed our own.
What does it mean to be British? What
does it mean to be British and Christian? What do these things mean, at any
given point in time?
Jesus and his first followers lived
under the occupation of the Roman Empire. The emperor in Rome justified his
claim to their land, and to their lives, by declaring himself to be the bringer
of Good News, the herald of universal peace, the Pax Romana.
And Jesus arrives on the scene
proclaiming a different kingdom, the kingdom of God, a divine rule that is not
concerned with claims over nations or nationalities but is demonstrated in addressing
the needs of those who experience crushing poverty, in healing the sick,
feeding the hungry, standing with those marginalized by their communities.
I have a confession. I find
Remembrance Sunday the most uncomfortable day of the year, because it is a day
on which we are reminded of how utterly addicted we are to violence in defence
of a moment in history we cannot hold on to. We have done this every year for
the past hundred years, and still we are surrounded by war, and still we see
the rise of neo-fascism around the world as strong men declare themselves to be
anointed by God to defend Christian values, with bloodshed if necessary.
And I have absolutely no skin in this
game. I am not looking for the downfall of this nation, I just know – history
shows us – that it will continue to change, as will all the other nations. But as
I get on with my life, as best I can, in the moment in history that has been
allotted to me, Jesus comes to me and says, Follow me.
Follow me, and together we shall
scoop others up into this utterly different kingdom, with this utterly
different king, whom Empire put to death but whom God raised again to life.
An early follower of Jesus wrote to
Christians scattered by the ebb and flow of Empire, saying the signs and
symbols we see now are at best pale imitations of reality. Today we wear
poppies, a flower that grew in fields that had been soaked with the blood of a
generation. A symbol of life returning again, even after utter and
comprehensive destruction. A symbol of the unimaginable goodness of God towards
us. But the poppy can become an opiate, numbing us to good as well as pain. So,
I shall wear my poppy, but I shall look to Jesus, and choose to follow him, to hold
out good news to those on the underside of our society, including those maimed
physically and scarred emotionally by war.
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