Reflections...

Meditations, Reflections, Bible Studies, and Sermons from Kowloon Union Church  

A sermon preached at Kowloon Union Church on 25 December 2022, by Rev. Phyllis Wong. The scripture readings that day was Luke 2:1-14.

“Didn’t you see me?”

 

Merry Christmas! May I wish you all a loving and peaceful Christmas.

 

Thank you, sisters and brothers, from OBIC and KUC for presenting such a meaningful drama. Thank you, sisters, from UCCP and KUC’s three choirs – KUC Singers, the Harambe Choir and the Named For God Junior Choir. Your beautiful dance and voices have transformed “Martin the Clopper” become a musical, made it richer and more attractive.

 

Let us go back to the musical. What have impressed you most by the musical that you’ve just watched?  

 

How does the story of Martin inspire us to reflect on the meaning of Christmas?

 

1.     Martin prepared a gift to Jesus as his birthday present. When we are coming to church service, having parties and gifts to celebrate Christmas, have you ever thought of preparing a gift to Jesus? If you have not thought of it, it is ok. Think of it now.

 

2.     Christmas is a season people giving each other presents to show gratitude.  Martin prepared for Jesus a pair of shoes that was from his masterpiece – very precious. He was poor and yet he presented the best that he had. What is our best and precious gift that we are willing to offer to God? Our money, our time, our talents, or simply our heart or our prayerful presence?

 

3.     Interestingly Martin did not keep the shoes until he thought he met Jesus. He gave the shoes to the baby who needed it.  It reflected that Martin was a very compassionate and kind man.  Martin has a very good heart. 

 

4.     The most profound of the story to me is this question at the end of the drama -  “didn’t you see me?” While Martin was so sad and disappointed for Jesus did not visit him, the images of the scavenger, the widow and her boy appeared. They all bear the image of Jesus. Jesus had in fact visited Martin. Jesus was revealing himself in different form. Jesus said if we did any loving acts to a little brother, we did it to him.  I remembered also St. Mother Theresa shared once she saw Jesus when she was taking care of the poor who were dying. 

 

5.     Jesus Christ, the incarnate God bears the image of God, full of glory! God is powerful and creative. On earth nothing can limit God. No fix image or form can contain him. 

 

6.     In the biblical story, Jesus revealed himself as a fragile baby born in a poor family. In the drama of Martin the Clopper, Jesus revealed himself as a scavenger, widow and little boy. Jesus was always staying with the little, the weak, the poor and the vulnerable.

 

7.     Some people who resist suffering and pain, poverty and life adversities may not be happy and ask – why a God reveals himself in such a weak and terrible image? Many people in the world would be very likely to prefer a God that is strong and powerful to save the world by putting an end to war and violence, discrimination and persecution, manipulation and injustice with a magic stick, to bring an instant change. Would you think of the same?

 

8.     I am sorry to say Jesus Christ is different. What God offers through Christ to the world is he insists to be with people in the midst of illness and death, separation and division, disappointment and sadness….Jesus refuses to offer an easy way. That is the reason he came to our human world in a baby form born in a humble manger and ended his earthly life on the cross. The salvation Jesus gives is his presence, his warmth, his compassionate love and kindness to those who are in need. From the drama, I saw it how it was brought by Martin’s loving act. From our Church I saw it with our selfless efforts to provide space to shelter the migrants who had contracted Covid in the 5th Wave, to share food and medicines with refugees who have been sick, to call and make donation for people in Pakistan and India suffering from the deadly floods.     

 

9.     When Jesus asked Martin, “Didn’t you see me?” Martin the Clopper, without his knowing he has met God. Jesus had visited him in an ordinary and extra-ordinary way. When Martin shared his love and gave what he has with the needed, Jesus was right there. 

 

10.  Where there’s love, there is God. Martin the Clopper did not only meet Jesus through the scavenger, the widow and the child. In a more remarkable way, Martin himself has revealed Jesus in his life. I saw Jesus in Martin when he lived out the core of love in the people in need.

 

11.  Today Jesus asked us, “Didn’t you see me?” My dear sisters and brothers, can we do something and live a life to let people see Jesus in us?

 

12.  Christmas is not just about receiving; it is about giving as God has first given us his life with deep love.  

 

13.  “Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace among those whom he favors!” (Luke 2:14) Amen!


# posted by Kowloon Union Church : Sunday, December 25, 2022

 

A sermon preached at Kowloon Union Church on 11 December 2022, by Hope Antone. The scripture readings that day were Isaiah 35:1-10, Matthew 11:2-11.

From Great Expectations

 

Sisters and brothers in Christ, good morning! Greetings of joy on this third Sunday in Advent!

 

If everyone has had a chance to share their joyful expectations this Advent season and the causes of sorrow/sadness that may be preventing them from experiencing joy, we would probably have a long list of such expectations. Well, let me guess…

 

Joyful expectations can include a gift that addresses a real need; a family reunion; a new job opportunity or a promotion; an improvement in one’s health. Sorrow/sadness can be due to a sickness or death in the family, loss of a job, the ongoing pandemic, the ongoing wars in different places, the worsening climate change, or the realization that humanity has sadly become “a weapon of mass extinction,” according to the Secretary General of the United Nations. These joyful expectations, or lack of them, can range from personal to communal expectations, depending on one’s passion or commitment.

 

The expectation of joy during the Advent season is traditionally associated with Mary who sings the Magnificat, rejoicing in the coming birth of the Christ child who would transform the world – so that the mighty may be cast down from their thrones and the rich sent away empty; while the lowly may be lifted and the hungry filled with good things.

 

This year, however, the lectionary reading from the gospel according to Matthew challenges us to reflect on the question of John the Baptizer for and about Jesus: “Are you the one who is to come, or are we to wait for another?” The question seems to be asked from great expectations to a great disappointment, even doubt.  

 

It may sound strange that John would ask such a question. He knew Jesus so well from young, and he had been testifying that Jesus is more powerful than him. Some scholars believed that John had great expectations of Jesus as the long-awaited Messiah of the biblical Jews. But unlike John’s expectation of the Messiah who would pronounce judgment, Jesus proclaimed the in-breaking of God’s kindom of love and salvation. Unlike John who lived a life of an ascetic prophet, living in the wilderness, eating locusts and honey, Jesus mingled, ate and drank with the so-called sinners. Unlike the expected Messiah who’s believed to be a warrior king/ruler like the famous King David, Jesus demonstrated non-resistance, turning the other cheek, and self-sacrificial love.

 

Could it be that John’s imprisonment for speaking truth to power, also caused this shift from great expectations to disappointment and doubt? It’s like John is asking: 

“Jesus, are you really the one? Otherwise, were my efforts as your forerunner and testifier, preparing the way for you, all in vain?”

 

Jesus does not directly respond with a “Yes” or a “No.” Instead, he tells John’s disciples: “Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have good news brought to them...”

 

Jesus’ response is very similar to the prophecy of Isaiah that was read earlier (35:1-10). At a time of exile, Isaiah prophesied rejoicing, through images of the blossoming desert wilderness; of the healing of infirmities or disabilities like blindness, deafness, speechlessness, lameness; and of the promise of security of life without the lion or ravenous beasts preying on other animals or people. For decades of living in exile in a foreign country, the biblical Israelites were longing for a return to their homeland where they could once again live as a free people. Isaiah’s images of rejoicing were both literal and metaphorical images of a life beyond their bondage in exile.

 

What this means is that great expectations of joy develop or form in situations where there is no joy. A world in darkness, distress, desolation, and danger feeds and breeds deep longing for and great expectations of hope, peace, joy and love.

 

Yesterday was Human Rights Day. Peace activists and human rights defenders are like our modern-day prophets who keep reminding us of the great expectations of a life beyond bondage, even when the reality seems too gloomy and foreboding. Like John, peace activists could end up being persecuted, arrested, imprisoned for speaking truth to power. Like John, they too could feel disappointed or doubtful about their comrades or the movement as a whole. Which is what the powers-that-be would like to happen. Powers-that-be want to break the spirit of the activists in order to quash the cause or movement.

 

We do not know what John thought of Jesus’ response. We can only try to understand what it means for us today. For indeed and in fact, John’s question is really our question, which we are just too embarrassed or afraid to ask, lest we will be seen as losing faith, or backsliding.

 

And so, strengthened by John’s original question, perhaps our question would sound like this:

Jesus, if you are the one, what signs are there that a great transformation is truly underway? For things seem to be the same, if not even worse than what we’ve known before. Why should we hold on to our great expectations that things will get better?

 

Like John, we ask these questions not because of lack of faith, but because we take our faith seriously. Like John, we too have to assess our great expectations. For when we do, we just might come to understand the prisons that confine, restrict or limit our understanding and imagination about God.

 

Some of our usual prisons are greed or selfishness, self-centeredness, or apathy. But our narrow theological perspectives can be our prisons, too. For example, we may hold a linear, one-directional view of the Christian life as a journey from being lost to being found, from darkness to light, from despair to joy. But John's story goes backwards – from certainty to doubt, from boldness to hesitation, from what seems to be a heavenly light to his jail cell darkness.

 

But as the saying goes, “It is okay to not be okay.” Episcopalian minister Debie Thomas reminds us that worshiping the Crucified One means being in the presence of extreme doubt, despair, or suffering. In a sermon on this same gospel passage, she wrote: 

“Maybe we are invited to honor doubt, despair, and silence as reasonable reactions to a broken world. To create sacred space for grief, mourn freely, and rage against injustice. To let joy be joy, sorrow be sorrow, horror be horror. To feel deeply, because God does.”[1]

 

And then, like John, we too have to discern the meaning of Jesus’s response: tell what you hear and see – life-giving deeds are happening, touching and changing the lives of those who have been deprived and excluded; the kindom of love and mercy is not just for a select few; it includes the least, the last and the lost.

 

I like a paraphrase of Jesus’s response to John, by renowned author and preacher, Barbara Brown Taylor. It goes this way: 

“People who were blind to the love loose in the world have received their sight; people who were paralyzed with fear are limber with hope; people who were deaf from want of good news are singing hymns. And best and most miraculous of all, tell John that this is not the work of one lonely Messiah but the work of God, carried out by all who believe, and there is no end in sight. Tell him I am the one, if you must, but tell him also that yes, he should look for another, and another, and another. Tell him to search every face for the face of God and not get tripped up on me, because what is happening here is bigger than any of us. What is coming to pass is as big as the Kingdom of God.”[2]

 

Sisters and brothers in Christ, if we believe that we are part of the body of Christ, we are called to be his hands and feet today, called to participate in the in-breaking of God’s kindom of love, mercy, justice and forgiveness. 

 

May that be our common joyful expectation this Advent season. Amen.

 

 

By Hope Antone 



[1]Debie Thomas, “Are You The One” (2016) and “Has It All Been For Nothing?” (2019); both are available online. 

[2]Barbara Brown Taylor, “Are You the One?” Mixed Blessings, (Cambridge MA; Cowley Publications, 1998), p. 92. 

# posted by Kowloon Union Church : Sunday, December 11, 2022

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