Sermons – Lent & Holy Week 2026
- Theme: “Remember Me Through Love and Service” within the Maundy Thursday context of upper room, meal, commandment, and transformative love.
- Three readings (Exodus, 1 Corinthians, John) form one story: God saves, God gives, God serves—and calls us to do likewise.
- Exodus: Passover instituted before liberation; remembrance is active trust shaped into practice for generations.
- Contemporary note: Passover began April 1; Jesus shares his final Passover with disciples, transitioning remembrance into divine presence.
- Eucharist: “This is my body…this is my blood”—remembrance becomes participation in Christ’s life, death, and ongoing saving work.
- John’s Gospel centers on foot washing: Jesus assumes a servant’s role; Peter’s resistance highlights God’s kneeling, cleansing love.
- Mandatum: “Love one another as I have loved you”—self-giving, not convenient love; echoed by Archbishop Sarah Mullally’s emphasis on serving love.
- “Table and towel” are inseparable: Eucharist transforms and commissions us to feed, forgive, serve, and love the overlooked.
- Discipleship is recognized not by buildings or programs but by cruciform, revolutionary love in a divided world.
- Invitation: Remember (trust God saves), Receive (Christ’s grace), Respond (serve humbly)—to not just remember Christ but reveal him through love.
- The preacher offers brief reflections due to a busy week, inspired by a conversation with Frank over breakfast for Eid and St Patrick’s Day.
- Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem on a donkey is both a humble, accessible image and a deliberate, provocative political and religious challenge.
- Echoing King Jehu in 2 Kings, the donkey and palm branches signal Jesus being hailed as a liberating king—specifically, a king of peace.
- This royal symbolism confronts oppressive rulers (then Rome, and rulers throughout history), exposing power that suppresses and self-serves.
- The crowd’s later manipulation (“We have no king but Caesar”) and the mockery on the cross highlight the clash between God’s kingdom and worldly power.
- Jesus also enacts a priestly role, paralleling Judas Maccabeus: both ride into Jerusalem, are greeted with palms, and proceed to cleanse the temple.
- Temple cleansing critiques corrupt religious systems that misuse God’s name to control and harm; Jesus reveals what God is truly like.
- A modern example of distorted morality: post-WWII forced adoptions of children from unmarried mothers, which the preacher condemns as contrary to Jesus’ heart.
- “Hosanna” means “Save us,” likened to cries of “Gorby, save us” in East Germany; Jesus’ mission is liberation—rescue and freedom.
- Despite attempts to bury him, Jesus’ resurrection shows that sin, death, and corrupt power are defeated; nothing can separate us from God’s love.
- The sermon reflects on the story of Martha, Mary, and Lazarus, highlighting their close relationship with Jesus and the crisis of Lazarus’s death.
- Jesus delays coming to Bethany, prompting Martha and Mary’s lament—“Lord, if you had been here…”—echoing our own struggles with God’s timing.
- Though compassionate and moved to tears, Jesus’s ultimate aim is the Father’s glory; he walks with us through suffering rather than always removing it.
- The passage points to both future resurrection hope and a present, renewed life with Christ marked by guidance amid life’s real pains and complexities.
- “Remove the stone” becomes a call for the Church to enter messy places, bringing light, hope, healing, and freedom to those outside our comfort zones.
- Jesus’s call “Lazarus, come out” is applied personally: step out from fear, habits, guilt, and self-protection into Christ’s restorative life.
- Christ’s invitation—“Come to me… and I will give you rest”—offers gentleness, learning, and soul-rest as we follow him.
- Community is essential: after new life is called forth, others must “unbind” us; spiritual growth often requires the Church’s help, not solitary effort.
- Practical unbinding includes forgiving and seeking forgiveness, allowing expression, embracing differences (disability, ethnicity, sexuality, marital status), and encouraging rather than criticizing.
- Our witness is lived: as we emerge from our own tombs and unbind others, people see Christ’s ongoing work and come to believe that he is the resurrection and the life.
- Opens with reflections on hidden roots and stories, including a local evacuee from the London Blitz whose rescue echoes Moses’ journey.
- Speaker shares her late husband’s refugee background from the Solomon Islands to New Zealand and England, highlighting themes of rescue, danger, faith, and family vocation.
- Recounts Moses’ rescue from Pharaoh’s decree, his flaws and exile, the burning bush calling, and God’s covenant—showing God’s strength through humble beginnings.
- Draws parallels between Moses and Jesus: both born amid danger and poverty, both rescued, and both affirmed by God’s covenantal presence.
- Frames Mothering Sunday through the lens of God’s mother-like qualities—compassion, nurture, forgiveness—and the Church as “Mother” that forms and supports faith.
- Emphasizes communal responsibility (it takes a village) and asks how the church can help raise and guide its young people.
- Honors maternal sacrifice, courage, and trust—exemplified by Moses’ mother and Mary—and the painful love of letting children become independent.
- Uses the image of Moses in the basket as a metaphor for believers adrift at times, trusting God to rescue and anchor them.
- Notes the commercialization of Mothering Sunday versus its Christian roots; recalls traditions (mother church visits, wildflowers, simnel cake) and affectionate family memories.
- Acknowledges mixed emotions for many; invites the church to be a caring family to all, recalls our roots in the Mother Church, portrays God in nurturing terms, and concludes with a blessing.
- Thirst is both physical and spiritual; Scripture uses physical thirst to reveal our deeper spiritual longing that Christ alone satisfies.
- Israel’s desert journey illustrates grumbling in scarcity: at Meribah God brings water from the rock, prefiguring the “rock of salvation” who gives living water.
- The preacher links current global conflicts to a widespread spiritual thirst for peace and courageous, Christlike leadership.
- Jesus, as the new Moses, resists testing God in the wilderness and leads God’s people toward true salvation.
- At Jacob’s well, Jesus crosses social, religious, and gender barriers to engage a Samaritan woman, exposing and healing spiritual thirst.
- The woman’s heavy water jar symbolizes her burdens and exclusion; Jesus receives what she can offer and offers “living water” that wells up to eternal life.
- Her encounter transforms her into an unlikely, persuasive evangelist—paralleling Mary Magdalene’s role in proclaiming the Resurrection.
- On the cross, Jesus’ cry “I thirst” expresses both physical suffering and the profound spiritual desolation of feeling forsaken, borne for our sake.
- St. Paul affirms that God’s love is proven in Christ’s death for sinners; at the Last Supper, the cup becomes a sign of ongoing spiritual refreshment and union with Christ.
- In Lent and at the Eucharist, believers bring their burdens and receive Christ’s renewing love—praying with the Samaritan woman, “Give me this water, that I may never be thirsty.”
- Lent is a season not just of solemnity but of renewal, inviting honest self-examination and openness to the Holy Spirit’s refreshing work.
- While tradition holds wisdom, the church risks decline without growth; the unchanging gospel must be expressed freshly in changing cultures.
- Faith is dynamic, requiring continual renewal across generations; today’s readings (Genesis and John) highlight faith as active and evolving.
- Nicodemus, a learned and respected Pharisee, seeks Jesus at night, reflecting both caution and sincere spiritual hunger.
- Jesus teaches being “born from above” by water and Spirit—signifying God’s cleansing and transforming work that brings true new life.
- Faith is not mere heritage, knowledge, or status; it is radical inner transformation—less about information, more about Spirit-led change.
- John 3:16 reveals God’s self-giving love to a broken world; grace precedes worthiness, and the cross discloses God’s heart for all.
- Abraham models trusting obedience amid uncertainty; righteousness comes by faith, not achievement—stepping into the unknown with God.
- Nicodemus’s journey progresses from private curiosity to public courage, showing renewal unfolds over time through encounter and response.
- The church’s Lenten call is to embody the unchanging gospel anew—through Spirit-empowered lives, fresh language, and compassionate action—centred on Christ’s love and the hope of new creation that begins now and culminates in eternal Shalom.
- Highlights the biblical significance of the number 40 (e.g., flood, Israel’s wandering, Moses on Sinai, Jesus’ 40 days), symbolizing trial and preparation.
- Jesus, led by the Spirit after his baptism, fasts 40 days in the wilderness, facing temptation at his weakest.
- Temptation 1: Turn stones to bread; Jesus cites Deuteronomy, prioritizing God’s word (spiritual sustenance) over physical needs.
- Temptation 2: Test God by jumping from the temple; Satan misuses Psalm 91, but Jesus again quotes Deuteronomy, rejecting putting God to the test.
- Temptation 3: Worship Satan for worldly power; Jesus affirms exclusive worship of God, after which angels minister to him.
- Connects Jesus’ obedience with Adam and Eve’s disobedience in Eden; clarifies the serpent as Satan and notes the text never specifies an apple.
- Describes Satan as a fallen angel (Lucifer) and contrasts his eternal rebellion with Adam and Eve’s sin in time; Jesus, the “second Adam,” remains sinless.
- Frames Satan’s tactics as the “three Ds”: deception, distraction, discouragement; only Jesus fully resists, securing salvation (echoing Romans).
- Offers the “three Cs” as a response: conviction, confession, conversion; cites 1 John on confessing sin and God’s faithful forgiveness.
- Encourages Lent as positive spiritual discipline—either giving up or taking on practices—praying for strength to continue beyond Lent as a life-giving habit.
