Thought for the Day, Choral Evensong, Sunday 16 July 2017 by Clare Heard, at St John the Baptist Church, Holland Road
Thought for the Day, Choral Evensong,
Sunday 16 July 2017 by Clare Heard, at St John the Baptist Church, Holland Road
Gifts
What gifts
have you been given in life? What blessings have you received?
The reading
from Samuel is all about David recognising the blessings he has received from
God. Not only recognising them but also seeing that he has been blessed in
order that the whole Israelite nation may be blessed. This is about the
blessings we receive overflowing beyond our immediate families and friends, to
entire nations. David clearly sees this, and is aware that all he has comes
from God as gift, as part of his plan for the Jewish people.
But then in
Luke, we see Jesus weeping over Jerusalem. It is like the gift from God has
been forgotten, the people have turned away and rather than using their
blessings to bless others, have turned the temple into a place of profit, have
stopped listening to God. The leaders do not recognise Jesus for who he is.
They have shut their eyes and ears and tried to keep God’s gifts for
themselves.
And thinking
this through made me wonder whether we recognise the many blessings we receive
from God, and whether we use them to bless others. And so I want to ask today, what
are the greatest gifts you have been given? Maybe a particular talent or
vocation? Maybe material wealth? Maybe a love for a certain part of God’s
creation – children, animals, our planet?
Have a think
about the many blessings you have, pause to recognise your gifts – because we
all have gifts and talents, even if some are more obvious than others.
And then ask
yourself how you are using them to bless others in our world. What are you
doing to bring God’s kingdom here?
Because being
a Christian is not simply about being nice to people – it is a fundamental
shift in the way we view our world. Christians recognise that the most
important thing we have is loving relationships – relationships with God,
relationships with each other and with our creation.
Everything
we do, everything we say, should be concerned with building and affirming these
relationships – blessing our world however we can.
This may be
through giving to charity, or volunteering in poorer communities, but it will
also be through the choices we make every day. Choices over how we spend our
money, choices over the things we buy, choices over the way we treat people who
are different, or difficult.
And these
can be difficult choices – sometimes the things that are best for our world are
not the things that immediately give us what we want. Sometimes the right
choices involve doing without and making sacrifices.
The readings
today remind us that we have received many blessings – they call us to be
thankful, and also thoughtful over how we use them, remembering that we are all
called to share God’s love with our world in any way we can.
What are
your greatest gifts? How will you use them?