Third Sunday Before Lent: Between the Blessing & Woes (Exeter College Evensong)

Exeter College Evensong
16/2/25
3rd Before Lent

Psalm 66
Jeremiah 17:5-10
Luke 6:17-26

‘There is always Love’


On this weekend that celebrates the Feasts of St Methodius & St Cyril – and of course St Valentine, I hope you have experienced more blessings of love than woes of the world.

At the start of a new week and especially Week 5, I hope there are more love and blessings than woes. At some point the realisation may come that all of life is lived between the blessings and the woes. Jeremiah contrasts life in the uninhabited desert to being planted next to the streams of living water. Luke plainly speaks about actual hunger, thirst and poverty; material issues over spiritual ones. Ahead of Lent we can be preparing to reflect, repent and reconcile ourselves to the love (the blessing) poured out for us in the suffering and death (the woe) of Christ.

In my role as Lead Chaplain of Gatwick Airport, blessings and woes are shared with me daily. At their core, airports carry out the mundane task of moving people and cargo from one place to another as safely and efficiently as possible while aiming for profit maximisation. This is achieved through charging the airlines various fees and clever marketing so passengers part with their holiday cash before they leave this fair isle. Fortunately it is the people, passengers and staff, who bring life and their blessings and woes to the airport.

The chaplains are the repositories and the memory, as I am sure Andrew is here, of shared blessings and woes.

Jesus had his own lists; blessed are you who are poor, hungry, sad, and expendable. Woe to you who are rich, full, happy, and popular. This week’s Gospel in a nutshell. What are we supposed to do with this?!

Those of us who are comfortable and privileged might want to question what Jesus means, maybe edit or rationalise until we can tolerate what is being said. We may prefer Matthew’s Beatitudes; they are a little less gritty than Luke’s. However, if we want to know where God’s heart is and who receives blessing then we need to to look to the poor, the wretched and reviled.

Jesus prefaces this teaching with the alleviation of suffering as he healed a man with a withered hand in the synagogue. He also called his twelve disciples to follow Him; those whom he loved the most yet let him down so badly.

It is helpful to hold that we are not being told how to behave or think; Jesus is telling his audience simply how it is going to be. Every blessing and every woe is addressed to every person. This is very much a human pattern of where we live: between woes and blessings. We invite blessing when we are hungry and weak and mourning. We invite woe when we are prideful, forgetful and distance ourselves from God.

Through the prophet Jeremiah, God’s message to his people was to trust Him alone. So determined is God to have their trust he is prepared to curse those who trust in mere mortals and make human strength their only strength. Over time the Jewish people had gradually come to trust in other things: in themselves, in novel religious rituals, small ‘g’ gods and idols and in their own wealth. Basically anything but God and they are paying a terrible price.

People like these live, according to God, ‘like heath (shrub) in the desert.’ There is no water, nothing to nourish them. They will not be able to see relief when it comes. Think for a moment about when you are hungry or thirsty to the point of distraction. This can be expanded from the physical to the emotional, spiritual and psychological. Can you think clearly? Living like this results in constant worry, anxiety and inability to focus on anything other than survival.

Jeremiah uses water as the image of God. God is as essential to life as water is, and to choose to live without him is as dumb as it would be to choose to live without water. Instead of being cursed, those who ‘trust in the Lord are blessed, like trees planted by water, sending out roots by the stream.’ These people are constantly being fed and watered by the stream that is God. They do not have to fear and be anxious when things get difficult; they bear fruit always. They knew where their roots are; by the stream, planted by the water that is God.

If the roots are a little shallow, the woes are weighing down and blessings seem far off. Fear not, there is always love. Showing love to others invites blessing and it really does not take much effort. Receive love when it comes to you.
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The message of the Gospel and teachings of Jesus are difficult at times. The hard messages often require us to change, to live beyond our natural conveniences and desires. First and foremost they are about love. The love between God the Father, Jesus the Son and the Holy Spirit – all equal parts. This is the love that we are invited into, that we were created for.

Jesus is standing with people who are hungry to benefit from the power that streams from him, and he announces through his healings and his words that God cares for the poor, the hungry and the suffering. The power of God is a power that is used to comfort and renew. It is the power of love in the cross and resurrection.

Ever so fortunately, God’s power and love is not contingent on how we might be feeling in a particular moment. There is no better alternative to his power. Until we are powerless ourselves; we cannot truly understand his power. Find your roots again today and stay close to the waters where fear and anxiety are taken away.

Blessings will come and the woes will follow you; no need to run up to them. I offer some of the blessings and woes that I experience at least weekly at Gatwick.

Blessed are those who delight in love of reunions and reconnection at arrivals. Blessed are those who weep at impending disconnection at departures. Blessed are those being deported or removed for reasons within and beyond their control; they shalt be comforted.

Blessed are the emotionally dysregulated children and adults as they lose their minds at the sensory overload of being in the liminal space of an airport; they shalt find peace. Blessed are the colleagues who support each other with genuine care and compassion when it all goes wrong; laughter wilt be restoreth unto them.

Woe to those who forget their passports at home, fail to check expiration dates, or grasp the complexities of transit visas, ETA’s and ESTA’s. Woe to those who leave their phones in the Uber. Woe to those whose luggage is over the weight limit or wrong dimension; mercy shalt be withheld from them. Woe to those who arrive late regardless of the reason; computer saith no. Woe to those who leave their bags unattended or ‘joke’ about what is inside their luggage; no good will cometh unto them.

Those who are poor, hungry, sad, and expendable have everything to look forward to. Because the Kingdom of God is theirs and yours. Because Jesus came, and comes still, to fill the empty-handed with good things. May the God who gives and takes away, offers comfort and challenge, grant us the grace to sit with woe, and learn the meaning of blessing.

Author: Sue Lepp

I am currently the Lead Chaplain of Gatwick Airport and the Priest-in-Charge of Charlwood St Nicholas and Sidlow Bridge Emmanuel in the Diocese of Southwark. I served my curacy in the Parish of Langley Marish and trained at Wycliffe Hall, Oxford. Former Nurse in both Canada and the UK. Specialised in Palliative Care, Gynaecology-Oncology and a bit of Orthopaedics (just to keep me travelling). Worked as a MacMillan Nurse Specialist in a few specialities in London.

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