24/07/2024
Trinity 8, 2024, Jeremiah, Eph 2, Mark 6.30-34 53-end.
Keir Starmer, after being announced as Prime Minister, said about wanting to continue his weekly five a side football with his friends and also ensuring that he is with his family on a Friday evening so the family can share the Shabbat meal together, as is custom with the Jewish faith. I hope that he is still able to do both of these but I do wonder how easily he is going to fit these activities into his schedule, which I’m sure will only get busier and busier. He may be in charge but that doesn’t mean he will get to write his own diary.
In today’s reading from Mark’s Gospel we get a strong sense of the enormous pressure Jesus and his disciples are now feeling as they get into full stride with going out and preaching and teaching. Jesus’ diary is filling up, if not full to bursting, he is at the height of his popularity and has started causing waves amongst the religious authorities, which just adds to the pressures of his life. He is trying to persuade and teach others to go and tell the surrounding population about his teaching, and God; he is then having to pick up the pieces when they come back tired and either elated or deflated, he is the one man leader of a business that is growing day by day, and like the rest of us would, Jesus is beginning to feel the pressures.
Jesus knows that the people come to him as a preacher and teacher and they want to be taught and healed there and then, and he probably knows that if this isn’t what happens then they will go away disenchanted and share the news that Jesus isn’t all he has been built up to be. He realises that the people are living in the now and not looking into the future, they, like sheep, live a day to day existence, waiting to be told what to do in their lives, waiting for others to make the difficult decisions. Most of them will be labourers and are forced to go and wait for somebody to want them to work for them for the day. They are, and always have been, reliant on others, told what to do and when to do it.
They are very much like sheep, reliant on a shepherd to keep them fed, watered and safe. Sheep don’t worry about what is going to happen after they have eaten all of the grass, or when winter comes, they just follow the command of their shepherd. When Jesus looks around him that is what he sees, sheep with no shepherd, people with no structure or reason to their lives, with no hope for the future. Jesus doesn’t want to become the shepherd to them, he wants them to become independent, he wants them all to become shepherds, which is why he began to teach them many things, and not make decisions for them like a shepherd would, Jesus teaches them things so that they can be independent human beings and not sheep anymore.
Jesus is doing all of this in the knowledge that the disciples want his time. Want to share their joys in all that they have been able to do in his name, want to be encouraged, perhaps, because they hadn’t been as successful as they wanted to be. They were tired and hungry and just wanted to sit and eat with each other and Jesus and share their news; but Jesus prioritised the needs of others, he put their needs above the needs of the disciples. He too would have been hungry, tired, stressed and in need of rest and a time of recuperation, he felt the needs that we all feel in our life, and we can take some comfort when we can’t ever seem to get on top of things, Jesus suffered in this way too.
In Ephesians we also hear that it is in the fleshiness of Jesus we are to find help and salvation, it is not just though his death on the cross. The work we hear about Jesus doing in the passage from Mark can help us build an understanding of the belonging and wholeness that he wants to portray. Through our belonging and understanding of Jesus’s message we should be able to find comfort and a feeling that all will be well.
Because Jesus came in the flesh we can more easily feel a part of God’s family, and through this, more easily build up together the place where God lives and is present on earth. His earthly life showed that whoever we are, wherever we live, whatever preconceptions or differences we have, Jesus is in us and is to work through us, and we are to find the strength through this knowledge to stand on our own two feet and do his work.
Jesus shared his life with those followers so that he could empower them and make them feel wanted and important and to break down walls of hostility between them, he wants to do the same with us. The only way in which our bodies can be built up into the temple of God is if we stand together, forget our differences and go out as shepherds into the communities we serve.
Like the first disciples, we are sent to continue Jesus’ mission in the world. A mission that involves theory and practice, faith and works, evangelism and pastoral care. All of these elements of Christianity are not to be separated if we are to remain faithful to the example Jesus himself set us. The word pastoral comes from the word for a shepherd, and it is often seen as the practical side of our faith, and sadly by some,y as the lesser side of the faith when you compare it to evangelism. If we can always remember that our good shepherd himself combined teaching and doing, then hopefully, we will never think one is greater than the other.
We carry our faith into the world in ways that are best suited to our own gifts and situations. As we look around our congregations we can witness the different skills and gifts people have. Whatever form it takes, practical support of others, when carried out in the name of Jesus Christ, is effective evangelism. Just turning up on a Sunday, unaccompanied by doing and being, is no better than an armchair expert. Our faith is about others and not about us, and Jesus’ practical ministry is what we are to follow in our daily life, if his life is to be kept alive.