• People Of The New Song

    People Of The New Song

    And they sang a new song, saying:

    “You are worthy to take the scroll
        and to open its seals,
    because you were slain,
        and with your blood you purchased for God
        persons from every tribe and language and people and nation.
    10 You have made them to be a kingdom and priests to serve our God,
        and they will reign on the earth.

    Revelation 5:9-10, New Testament, The Bible.

    An outraged Daily Telegraph headline sometime in the summer last year demanded to know why a church had decided to drop the word “Church” from its name. At about the same time, one of the congregations I had initiated at my last church had set about renaming itself.  This set me off on a train of thought concerning the significance of names, particularly in relation to churches. Why do people choose the names they do for their churches or congregations? What does it mean for them and why does it matter? I tend to lean towards the functional and utilitarian with a quirky twist, hence, simply using the time at which the new congregation met on a Sunday as the name (7:15!) seemed perfectly adequate to me and when it started meeting at a new time it simply added a little quirkiness and mystery to the congregation! Clearly, this did not sit so well with others who, well, need something more approachable and human? (My wife thinks the Big Bang Theory’s Sheldon and I bear some remarkable affinities, although not, perhaps, in brain power!).

    Names are to do with identity and, so, outraged of Tunbridge Wells above presumably felt some attack on their communal identity when the local church decided to drop the word “Church”. When it comes to groups or organisations, names need to communicate something about what they are, and people need to be able to identify with these groups or organisations. What should a church or congregation seek to communicate as it describes itself? What should Christians seek to communicate about themselves? For good or bad “church” and “Christian” are themselves names deeply embedded in our culture  and loaded with thousands of years of meaning – some of it not very flattering – but once, they were new, freshly minted, communicating something vibrant and fresh and unexpected to the wider culture. The Bible itself testifies to this newness in its very division into the Old Testament and the New Testament. The “New” Testament is the book about the church, about the Christians – something new and unimagined. Is there a way of re-capturing this freshness and newness?

    The book of Revelation – the last book of the Bible – has, as one of its threads, the depiction of worship in heaven. It is about the songs that thread eternity and underpin the fabric of creation. In this sense, it is nothing new in the literature of the Bible. Worship in heaven is timeless and universal, never ending and never changing, but then Revelation introduces something quite remarkable, quite stunning: a new song is heard! The timeless, unchanging worship of heaven is changed! What has brought this about? It is Jesus Christ, His death on the Cross and His resurrection has caused heaven to break into new song, new worship, and the writer of Revelation leaves us in no doubt as to the significance of this as he ends his book with the description of a new heaven and a new earth – a new creation taking the place of the old because a new song is sung.

    In choosing names for themselves, Christians have not, as far as I know, ever chosen the name “People of the New Song” but that is what they are, and it is an identity that perhaps would help them to be as new and as fresh as they were all those centuries ago.  What song will Christians sing going on into the New Year?      

  • The NHS and Christ’s Return

    … that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to decay and will obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God.

    Romans 8:21

    What has the UK National Health Service  (NHS) got to do with the Second Coming?  The Apostle Paul’s somewhat enigmatic passage in the middle of chapter 8 of his letter to the Romans reminds us that salvation is not just about us – human beings – it is about the whole of creation. Moreover, it implies that that salvation is, in some sense, in the hands of the saved – followers of Jesus. In other words, what we do, what we make and build and institute here on earth matters for the salvation of creation. It isn’t just a matter of the apocalyptic destruction of the old and the descent of the new from on high. 

    The NHS is intended to provide the best healthcare to everyone for zero cost to the patient. The NHS does not make judgements as to how you come to require its services, if you need healthcare, you get it. So, if you’re a smoker and need care for lung cancer you get it – no questions asked. You get it not because you deserve it, but because you need it. You get it not because you can afford it, but because you need it. And you get the best. It is funded through general taxation. Everyone contributes to the cost according to their ability. Everyone benefits. In Christian terms, the NHS is a ministry of grace. As such, it is most certainly an expression of the Kingdom of God. Of course, in the same way that Christians are not yet perfect, so the NHS is not perfect, it is a work in progress, just as an individual Christian is. But it’s end-point is the tree of life in the heavenly city pictured in chapter 22 of the book of Revelation where the leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations and can be gathered by anyone whenever they have need.

    Christians often ask how long it will be before Christ returns, especially at times when turmoil seems to dominate the world. How long will it be before He returns and brings with Him the New Creation and the lion sits with the lamb? Romans 8 suggests that this is partly in our hands! The more we are able to put into place those things that are of the Kingdom the sooner will Christ return. So, if you are one of those longing for the return of Christ you should be fiercely protective of the NHS.  You must resist the worshippers of Mammon who would seek to disable, dismantle it; who seek to alter its fundamental nature and premise. The NHS must remain an institution of grace else Christ’s return will continue to be delayed.