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‘I am about to do a new thing; now it springs forth’ – The Very Reverend Dominic Barrington, Dean of York

Do not remember the former things, or consider the things of old. I am about to do a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?

I was pondering this morning whether the editor of the BBC Sunday programme had been disregarding that instruction from the prophecy of Isaiah – the instruction to disregard ‘the former things’. There was a fascinating account of an important local story, as you may well have heard yourselves, or you may have read in the local press. The Bar Convent has unearthed a quite remarkable treasure: an Arma Christi scroll, dating from around 1475. A scroll – one of only eleven now of its kind extant in the modern world – that is in essence a meditation on the ‘instruments of the Passion’ – Christ’s ‘arms’, if you like. A meditation on the instruments of the Passion and of the true image of Christ, associated with Saint Veronica mopping his face on the way to his crucifixion.

On the report of this in the Sunday Programme, Sister Ann, the redoubtable Superior of the convent, remarked that, in today’s world, ‘the Passion is the last place people want to go, and yet,’ she said, ‘it is the place we need to go.’

Rather interestingly, in terms of a juxtaposition, this item on the programme was followed immediately by a report about a woman called Paula White-Cain, who is the Senior Adviser on Faith to the White House. We heard a report about a video that she has put out through her ‘Ministries’ (she’s a very successful evangelical preacher in the United States), which was talking (I thought, perhaps, rather strangely, to my ears as a Christian) about the fact that this is time for ‘God’s divine appointment with you’, because this is ‘Passover Season’.

And on offer to the faithful in Passover Season are seven ‘supernatural blessings’ that are available to us. Blessings including the assignation of a personal guardian angel, as well as also having an enemy to fight your own enemies; very predictably, giving you prosperity; taking away sickness; assurance of a long life of increase and plenty; and ensuring that it is going to be an all-round special year of blessing.

There was, of course, a slight catch to this. Quoting a verse from Exodus 23, she, and those who work with her, are very keen that you don’t appear, to use the Biblical term, ‘empty-handed’, and for donations of a minimum of at least $1,000, not only will you be in line for the seven supernatural blessings – you’ll also get a 10” Waterford Crystal cross!

 

I am about to do a new thing. Now it springs forth do you not perceive it?

Possibly those two extraordinary stories from the Sunday programme are old hat – medieval piety and Pentateuchal pre-Christian practice. But if we wanted to see something new ‘spring forth’ this past week, it has certainly been on offer in the world of global trade, in the big announcement of ‘Liberation Day’ by Mr Trump. He, at least in modern times, is up to something new with the introduction of tariffs, and I think it’s a pretty safe bet to say that the whole world has perceived what he’s up to.

We all saw the great scoreboard. China hits us 67% – we’re hitting back with 34%. The European Union hits us with 39% – we’re hitting back with 20%. Japan hits us with 46%, we’re hitting back with 24%. He is nothing if not confident of the rightness of his course of action. If he were to paraphrase that prophecy from Second Isaiah that we just heard read, I’m certain that he believes that he will be giving ‘drink to his chosen people’…and doing so, quite possibly, ‘so that they might declare his praise.’

I was wondering, as I watched this news unfold and I looked at that poignant reading from the gospel, what Judas might have made of the economic blessings of Mr Trump’s tariffs, let alone the supernatural blessings on offer from Paula White-Cain’s ministries. I think he might have felt that he was in good company, because Judas, of course, is the ultimate ‘transactionalist’ (if that’s a word) – the ultimate transaction-maker of the New Testament narrative: Why was this perfume not sold and the money given to the poor?

Judas’s choice, Judas’ outlook is a ‘tariff outlook’. It’s framed with the language of economic value: ‘we could have done something better with this fruit of the work of 300 days labour – we could have done something better than squander it like this.’

‘We could,’ so he claims, ‘have done something more effective with the poor’. And, of course, as the evangelist allows us to understand in a side note, the real thing that’s going on for Judas isn’t so much the economic waste of the product, as the self-interest – the question of how you personally exact the best outcome. And, just possibly, that is something we can see in more modern-day transactionalist approaches.

Certainly, Judas’ outlook is in sharp contrast to that of Mary. She is not remotely interested in economic value or in what can be obtained by a transaction. If we ought to think about ‘doing a new thing’ and making sure we ‘perceive’ it, it is, I believe, Mary who is offering us the role model that is important as we enter the season of Passiontide. For she is, quite simply, giving a gift – an extraordinary, outlandish gift, if, indeed, that perfume was worth 300 denarii. And she’s giving it without any sense of receiving anything back in return.

That’s a gift that as, we enter Passiontide, is iconic – because it is a gift iconic of God’s relationship with the world. And the challenge, as we enter these last two weeks before Easter, is absolutely to make sure that we perceive it. So how, indeed, are we going to do that? How, indeed, do we manage to do this when we are surrounded by the world of transaction in so many ways, from global economics, to the self interest that we recognize when we look honestly in the mirror at ourselves.

How will we perceive anew what God is doing? What God has always been doing, and which is, in its way, always new? Well, I have a suggestion that those of us who claim to be disciples might want to take seriously in Passiontide. Next Sunday is, of course, Palm Sunday, and we enter then into Holy Week. And Holy Week is the crowning glory of Lent. And if Lent is the time to spring-clean our discipleship – our Christian commitment – our lives – then Holy Week is the absolute nub and focus of that.

With us next Sunday morning will be Canon James Walters, the Director of the Faith Centre of the LSE, and, to my mind, one of the best thinkers, writers and preachers in the Church of England today. Jim is with us not just on Palm Sunday, but throughout Holy Week, preaching for us day by day by day.

If you’ve looked at the notice sheet you’ll see that he is preaching on the title Bearing Fruit from the Seed that Dies – a reference to Galatians 5, and the fruits of the Spirit that are showered on the disciples of Jesus. The fruits of the Spirit that are love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. Those fruits of the Spirit will be set in the context of the last days of Jesus’ life.

I want to suggest, and I hope that people won’t take this the wrong way, that it might be just a little bit transactionalist if we turn up on Palm Sunday and sing ‘Hosanna’, and then live out an ordinary, normal week, and the next time we set foot in church is Easter Sunday, when we sing ‘Alleluia’ and celebrate the Resurrection.

That feels to me sightly transactionalist, because it doesn’t give us the chance to take advantage of what the Church offers in Holy Week – it doesn’t give us the chance to walk alongside Jesus, to recognize what it really means to say God is doing something new, and give us the chance to perceive it. To perceive it in the little services on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of Holy Week, and in the great dramas of the liturgies of Maundy Thursday and Good Friday, and when we strike the first light of Resurrection in the darkness not of Easter Sunday morning, but in the darkness of the Saturday night.

In the world in which we live today, when transactionalism is so much the guiding stuff of secular life, I want to suggest we need to get our eye in and refocus if we are indeed going to perceive what God is up to – what it means to focus again on God’s grace, and God’s generosity as we walk towards Easter.

Really, it is about choices – about the choices disciples make. Do we chose the Arma Christi and Sr Ann’s advice that, actually, the Passion is what we need – or do we choose the great supernatural blessings that can be ours, complete with the 10” Waterford cross, if you’ve got $1,000 to spare?

Judas and Mary, in the story we heard read just now, they both make their choice. The curious thing – the coincidental thing – is that both their choices lead to a death on Good Friday. And, in one case, that death is the final chapter in the book. Judas dies, having realised the emptiness of his transactional life; Judas dies despairing of that 300 denarii he could have got his hands on, and the lack of value of thirty pieces of silver.

Mary’s choice leads to someone else’s death, for she had, indeed, bought that precious ointment for the day of his burial – but in her act of grace, iconic of God’s act of grace, that story does not end on Good Friday. This Passiontide, as I look in the mirror, I urge myself and I urge each one of you to make the right choice and perceive anew all that God is doing. Amen.

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