Sermon by Fr Peter Wolton Sunday 1st May 2016 – Easter 6, at St George’s Campden Hill and St John the Baptist, Holland Road

Sermon by Fr Peter Wolton Sunday 1st May 2016 – Easter 6, at St George’s Campden Hill and St John the Baptist, Holland Road

Love, peace and the gift of the Holy Spirit.
That is what today’s Gospel is about.
As some of you know, this is my first service at St. George’s since returning from holiday in Ethiopia. Incidentally, the patron saint of Ethiopia is St. George. He is depicted in every church that my wife Joanna and I visited.
Ethiopia is surrounded by troubled neighbours (Somalia, Kenya and Sudan). The country we experienced was peaceful with remarkable landscapes.
But there is an uneasy peace along the northern border, maintained under UN supervision between its previous federal state and now independent neighbour Eritrea, which followed a war between the two countries.
The country of Eritrea is very much in the hearts and minds of our United Benefice as 400 of our Eritrean Christian brothers and sisters worship each Sunday in our church of St. John’s.
To return to peace and today’s Gospel. Jesus, living in a Roman colony understood the true meaning of peace.
“Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid.”
The “peace” Jesus is talking of, as we have come to learn through the gift of the Holy Spirit, is not peace of this world. It is not the peace put in place by treaties following resolution of armed conflict. Jesus’ peace is achieved by sacrifice rather than surrender, and by love rather than conquest.
It is the type of peace that enables Christians not to be afraid and not to let them be troubled.
What Jesus says is even more remarkable when we remember the timing of this discourse, the night before his death, just before he and his disciples leave the Upper Room for the garden of Gethsemane. He knew that he was going to be handed over and would die. In less than 24 hours he would suffer the most horrible of deaths. His calmness in face of impending death is enabled by the knowledge of the love of God and the peace that the world cannot give.
It is a peace which is life sustaining for many people and possibly also lifesaving, not least Eritrean refugees and our Christian brothers and sisters who are persecuted in Eritrea, where according to “Christian Today” more than 300 Christians are languishing in Eritrean jails because of their faith. Furthermore 130,000 have fled the one party state where there is no independent press and are living in refugee camps in Ethiopia.
In June 2015, a year-long UN inquiry into human rights in Eritrea found the "systematic violation of an array of human rights to be on a scope and scale seldom witnessed elsewhere in the world."
"Interference in religious structures and affairs is rampant," the report said. "Religious materials are confiscated. Adherents are arbitrarily arrested, ill-treated or subjected to torture during their detention, and prisoners are coerced to recant their faith. Many religious followers have been killed or have disappeared."
We are urged by Deborah, an Eritrean refugee in Ethiopia, to pray for those suffering for their faith.
"Please pray for protection for us as we share our faith under enormous pressure. Pray for wisdom and for the Holy Spirit to lead us. Pray for Christian prisoners that God would strengthen their faith while in jail. Pray too for good health in spite of the terrible conditions and that they would be released soon. Pray for the church here to be strong in faith, not to be in fear but to keep on declaring the kingdom of God and sharing the gospel with others" requests Deborah.
"Pray for justice to come to Eritrea."
So let us remember persecuted Christians around the world and pray that they may be fortified by the Holy Spirit and receive God’s peace.
I turn now to love. We also give thanks for the gift of Jesus’ commandment that we should love one another. Our visit to Ethiopia provided many examples of the love of God and Holy Spirit at work. There was the CURE hospital (https://uk.cure.org/ethiopia/) run by the UK Christian charity we visited in Addis Ababa, which specialises in paediatric orthopaedic surgery repairing damage done to limbs at birth, and also cleft palates. Children with club feet are able to walk. Last year 1750 operations were provided free of charge at the hospital to people of all faiths and none.
Words are inadequate to describe the impact on these children’s lives. On the sermon blog I will put a link to a video, titled in keeping in this sermon “Jesus loves me” so you can see the before and afters at CURE:
Then there was Norman and Carole in Lalibela, the town of wondrous rock hewn churches surrounded by the arid Wollo region.
Over 300,000 Ethiopians live in the Lalibela catchment area, dependent on subsistence farming, struggling with the inhospitable landscape, infertile rocky topsoil, floods and droughts. This is the landscape of the 1984 Ethiopian famine.
Great progress is being made. Water harvesting techniques are being put in place, which also prevents water erosion. We went on a two night trek to remote villages (no electricity or running water) arranged by TESFA tours (http://www.tesfatours.com/tour/community-trekking-in-wollo-lalibela/)
sleeping in specially constructed houses. This brings responsible tourism and money into the villages. The landscape is breathtaking but water is often situated far from the village and has to be carried.
Norman and Carole are a retired British couple from west London, except they are not retired. Since 2000, working with the Lalibela Trust, http://www.lalibela.org.uk/ they have overseen the completion of more than 60 spring improvement projects around Lalibela in villages where NGOs and charities do not operate.
And then there is the remarkable Susan, a retired teacher from Scotland, except she also is not retired. She has built with a local partner the Ben Ababa restaurant (Ben as in Scottish mountain):
It looks like a cross between an international space station that has lost its way and our own beloved Spaghetti Junction, and has breath taking views for miles, a pink view of hills at sunset and has rave reviews on Trip Advisor.
Susan employs over 40 people and the look of love on their faces when she spoke to them as we toured the restaurant and kitchens was something to behold. Mary, who served coffee, had recently returned from maternity leave. Susan first met Mary in 2008 when she was working as a labourer building the restaurant. Her beaming optimistic presence made Susan determined to find a role for her. The problem was that Mary had no education. Susan put her in charge of cleaning and this was successful. One morning in the autumn of last year, Mary’s husband rang Susan in a great state. He could not get in touch with his pregnant wife. Susan knew Mary had arrived at work but no one in the restaurant could find her. Susan eventually found her resting on a fence in the garden. Mary explained that her waters had burst that morning. She had walked two hours to work and now she was in labour. Susan, in the best traditions of a Scottish teacher, took charge of the situation. The baby was born, is healthy and Mary has returned from maternity leave, undertaking the not too arduous role of taking after meal coffee to diners.

In two weeks’ time we will celebrate Pentecost. In today’s Gospel, as well as learning about love and the true meaning of peace, Jesus introduces and explains, the role of the Holy Spirit, the Comforter and Advocate.
For the disciples who were still anticipating a very different culmination of the Messiah’s mission in the forthcoming days, it was very easy for Jesus’ words to be overlooked. Jesus was all too aware of this. He underlines his message thus: “The Holy Spirit will teach you everything, and remind you of all that I have said to you.” It would make those last days in Jerusalem live again and yield up their life changing secrets for time eternal and to us today.
For many of us, we have a hazy understanding of the Holy Spirit, compared the Father or the Son. But we know that it is only through obedience, built on love, to Christ, that we can recognise the work of the Holy Spirit in the world today. Everything we are called to do as Christians comes from the Holy Spirit.
The tales of our Eritrean brothers and sisters remind us of what Jesus’ gift of peace, given by the Holy Spirit, can do. And the work of the CURE hospital, of Norman and Carol with their water harvesting programme, and Susan with her restaurant, show us this too and also that age is no barrier to displaying love.

We give thanks to God for the examples of all these people, and pray that we, inspired by the Holy Spirit, may also play our roles in bringing Earth closer to Heaven.