Monday 22 December 2014

High and lowly



Somewhere recently I read an article about how the birth of Jesus brought together both high and lowly in society. The shepherds, probably simple folk, were keen to hurry and see the sight that a revelation of angels had told them about. The wise men, altogether different, of aristocratic line and steeped in the learning and wisdom of the East, stuck to the convictions their researches had led them to. They travelled far and displayed steely determination in reaching the new King who, they calculated, must have come to the land of Judah.

High and lowly. I sometimes worry about the likelihood that the life of any given church might appeal to one class but be off-putting to another. I think to myself, “This church is too middle class. They can never expect to appeal to the residents in that rough and ready estate across the way.” Yet we must never underestimate the power of the Gospel to jump across social boundaries.

At the moment I am excited to be reading a major biography of George Whitefield. The writer is recounting the career of this eminent 18th-century Christian preacher and evangelist, who exercised a hugely influential ministry on both sides of the Atlantic. The social divide in his day, certainly in Britain, was in many ways more acute than it is today. Yet all sides, rich and poor, clamoured for preaching visits from Whitefield.

Arnold Dallimore, Whitefield's biographer, reports this about Whitefield’s early ministry: "Charles Kinchin, Rector of Dummer in Hampshire, expecting to be at Oxford for some time, asked him to officiate in his stead, and he accepted.

Kinchin's parishioners were poor and illiterate, and Whitefield learned a valuable lesson among them. He was becoming too fond of his University associations and admits that, at first, he was ill at ease among the Dummer people and longed for his Oxford friends. But this attitude was soon changed and he wrote, 'The profit I reaped from … conversing with the poor country people was unspeakable. I frequently learned as much by an afternoon’s visit as in a week’s study.' The experience among the Dummer villagers proved effective, for never again was there the least suggestion that he was not equally happy in ministering to the poor and illiterate as to the wealthy and learned."

Truly those were times the people of Jesus’ day would have recognised. Jesus undoubtedly appealed to the more thoughtful of the ruling classes in Israel. But as we are told in Mark 10:37 when Jesus taught in the Jerusalem Temple, “... the common people” [or, “the crowds”] “heard him gladly” (KJV).

This, I must admit, is a challenge to me when I begin to imagine that the religious “gene” in British people has somehow died out, that hardly anybody is capable any more of responding to the good news of Jesus the Saviour, and that I must content myself in the cosy company of the few that have. No, God has promised us that He has His people from “those who dwell on earth, ... every nation and tribe and language and people” (Revelation 14:6 ESV).

He speaks, and, listening to His voice,
new life the dead receive,
the mournful, broken hearts rejoice,
the humble poor believe.”

- Charles Wesley, 1707-1788

Rich or not, influential or not, wise-man-like or shepherd-like, have you heard and thrilled to the voice which is for you this Christmas time? And have you let yourself be blessed by talking to someone from a level of society you don’t normally associate with?

Just a reminder, by the way – please view my Christmas broadcast, a new venture for this year. You can watch it by clicking on this link:

https://www.dropbox.com/s/5hu43eamq9x68ak/bcast.m4v?dl=0

It’s quite safe and you don’t need to install any software.

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