About Saint James

Books on preaching by the Rector

Steeped in the Holy: Preaching as Spiritual Practice
Cowley Publications, November 2007

Steeped in the Holy seeks to reclaim the spiritual foundations for preaching, inviting clergy and students to see preparation and preaching not as an intrusion, but as an opportunity to engage with God, and to develop practices that deepen our relation with God and feed our preaching.

Get Up Off Your Knees: Preaching the U2 Catalog
edited with Beth Maynard
Cowley Publications, 2003

"It will stretch you, inspire you, make you think—but perhaps most important, bring you to prayer in an active and engaged way. . . . Raewynne and Beth have put together a beautifully concise, but well argued rationale for meeting God in popular culture, and provided some ideas of how to go about helping us do it."—Mary Hess, Luther Seminary

Get Up Off Your Knees is a thoughtful and provocative collection of sermons by a group of preachers from across the international church spectrum who have been moved to theological reflection on the art and work of U2. This book will appeal to fans of U2, students of homiletics, and everyone interested in the intersection of art, popular culture, and religion.

November 20 - Proper 29, Year A (RCL)
Preached in Hillsboro Beach, FL

The gospel today is full of striking images. The son of man separating people like sheep and goats, one being pushed one one way and one the other, one this way and one that, and so on, until we have all the sheep on one side and the goats on the other.
Then there is the image of Jesus, standing and saying those memorable words that , “I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.” Words that have inspired many Christians to great acts of mercy and justice.
And of course the final, kind of frightening image, of a bunch of people who have failed
being thrown into eternal fire and punishment.

But sometimes
the power of those images
obscures, gets in the way of us hearing
other parts of the reading that are just as important,
but not quite as loud.

And today, it’s the quiet words
that are so unexpected.
Not the sheep and the goats, not the hungry thirsty Jesus, not the ravening fires of hell,
but a few quiet words of promise.
The king said, “Come, you that are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world.”
The kingdom prepared for you
from the foundation of the world.
From eternity, from before all things began
God has been preparing a kingdom, a realm
a place
for his people. God has been preparing
a kingdom, a realm
a place.
Think about it.
Here we are
living in the twenty first century, a world of technology
and complexity and uncertainty.
And the future looks much the same.
We don’t know for sure
where we will be living, what we will be doing.
Health is uncertain, life sometimes precarious.

But here is some certainty. Here is something to hold on to. Before we were even imagined as individual people
God was preparing a place for us.
We have a home
that is unlike any other.
It can’t be sold, or torn down.
The area won’t go bad.
We have a home
waiting for us
safe with God.

But there’s more.
Because if God has prepared a place for us
then God has known about us from the very beginning. We aren’t just accidents,
the random result of successful genetic evolution. We have been known and loved by God
from the time this world of ours
was made.

A few years ago
I was talking with my sister-in-law.
She had just been given a book to read - you may have heard of it.
It’s by a Californian pastor, Rick Warren, and it’s called
The Purpose Driven Life.
It’s been a bestseller for years, and has spawned all sorts of other merchandise.
Now I have to admit to being pretty skeptical about it all.
After all, we’re not in California, and I’m always a little suspicious of churches that become business empires. And I’m wary of anything that looks like a simplistic answer. Life is too complex and ambiguous for that. So I’ve always been a bit suspicious of this kind of book.

But I changed my mind. Because my sister-in-law had started to read it. It has forty short chapters, one to read each day for a little over a month. And at day 2,
she began to cry.
Day two is called, “You are not an accident.”
And what she was reminded, something that she maybe had never even really known
was that her birth
was no accident. It wasn’t just a matter of chance, of luck, even of planning on the part of her parents. It was in the mind of God
from the very beginning.
It’s something that is echoed in the bible a bunch of times,
that God knew us even before we were born,
that God planned for us
before we were conceived.
Rick Warren’s book is right.
It echoes those quiet words in our gospel today.
We were known, loved, planned for
from before we were born, in fact, from the very time of creation.
We are not mistakes.
Our lives matter.

And they matter now,
and they will matter always.
Even when we die.
God has a place for us, a home for us,
just waiting.
At the end of life,
and even now.
Even now, God has a place for us, God is a place for us
and invites us to come and find safety and security and love
even in the middle of life as it is.
Because God loves us.

It’s so easy to forget it.
To get distracted by sheep and goats and hunger and thirst and fears of fire and judgement,
by the economy and politics and the general messiness of life.

But sometimes
we have to listen beyond the shouting
for the whispers of God to us.
Listen to God
whispering to us,
“I love you. I love you so much.
And I have a place ready for you, a place of safety
just waiting for you.
Welcome.”

© Raewynne J. Whiteley 2010

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