Sunday, October 31st, 2021 – “All Saints Sunday”
Philip’s Reflection: “Do the little things in life” (St. David)
Sunday, October 31st, 2021 – “All Saints Sunday”
Philip’s Reflection: “Do the little things in life” (St. David)
Who are the Saints in your life – who do you think of today, the day we celebrate the
lives of the Saints? How might they guide us in how we are to live our lives?
The first thing to say is that there are many different understandings of “saintliness” –
some of them formed in our childhood – you probably remember singing the children’s
hymn by Lesbia Scott -
“I sing a song of the saints of God,
patient and brave and true,
who toiled and fought and lived and died
for the Lord they loved and knew.
And one was a doctor, and one was a queen,
and one was a shepherdess on the green:
they were all of them saints of God, and I mean,
God helping, to be one too.”
Our brothers and sisters in the Catholic Church take, shall we say, a more nuanced
view of sainthood. Yes, the Vatican permits the use of term “saints” (lower case s) for all
who have gone before us, who are in heaven – in the Reformed tradition we tend to
refer to them as “the great cloud of witnesses” – while the Catholic designation of a
“Saint” (upper case S) means one who has been officially canonized by the church, a
process that may take many years. We’ll be considering one of the Saints in a moment.
This distinction, between what we might call a “small s” saint and the great Saints – is
helpful when we think about the “saints” in our own lives – whether they have gone
before us or are still among us, and what we might learn from them – because the great
Saints of history often seem so distant and far-removed, and their actions so holy, so
sacrificial and uncompromising, so devoted – so “Saintly” if you like – that it’s quite hard
for us to relate to them. But whatever the reasons for their canonization, the important
point to note is that none of them was born a Saint – whether the great Saints of the
Bible – Paul or the first Apostles or Mary or Martha – or the early martyrs – Polycarp,
Perpetua or Felicity – or Francis of Assisi or Joan of Arc – or, in our lifetimes, Mother
Teresa of Calcutta (2016) or Archbishop Oscar Romero (2018) – all of them, even the
most “Saintly” of them, had aspects of their lives, we know, that were far from “saintly”,
attributes we might identify more with than the qualities that led to their canonization.
They illustrate one of the messages I want to leave with you, which is that “saintliness”
is not so much a goal to be realized – or in the words of the children’s hymn “to be toiled
and fought” for – but it is best thought of as a journey, from the ordinary people that they
often were, towards the people that they became at the end of their lives. To view
saintliness as a goal, or even as a paradigm for how we are to live lives, of utter
selflessness, extreme devotion or absolute self-sacrifice – is an impossible dream for
most of us; surely, compared with those I’ve mentioned, doomed to failture?
But if we view “saintliness” as a journey, a continuous process of sanctification, towards
a more selfless and generous life, one in which we love and care for “the other” more
than for ourselves, one that voluntarily places the needs of others, and for all of
creation, ahead of our own wants and consumption, then we can begin to understand
that our lives, and the lives of the Saints, are continuous even if they are not the same.
As religious philosopher John Hick says - saints are not “a different sort of being,
travelling a different road, but are simply persons who are farther ahead of us on the
same road.” Farther ahead, on a road we can all travel.
One of the great Saints, who is close to our hearts as a community here – is St. David,
now the patron Saint of Wales, born around 500 CE. There was nothing ordinary about
David’s birth – legend has it that he was born in a fierce storm on a Pembrokeshire
clifftop, the grandson of the king of Cardigan, one of several Welsh kingdoms that
emerged in 5th Century post-Roman Britain. David became a renowned preacher and
founded monastic settlements and churches throughout Wales and south west England,
including (it is believed) the great Abbey of Glastonbury. Bishop David lived a life of
extreme austerity, we might call him today an extreme vegan teetotaler – reputedly
eating only leeks (of course) and unusually for a Welshman, drinking only water!
David’s only recorded miracle happened when he was preaching to a large crowd, when
someone shouted from the back of the crowd “we can’t hear you”, and the ground on
which he was standing was said to have miraculously risen up to form a small hill,
providing a pulpit from which he could be heard more clearly, and a white dove was
seen to came down and land on his shoulder. If you’ve visited that mountainous area of
Wales you’d have to agree with the Welsh historian who wrote that one could “scarcely
conceive of any miracle more superfluous” than the appearance of a new hill!
One of Bishop David’s best-known legacies is his closing sermon, on the Sunday before
he died – “Be joyful, keep the faith, and do the little things that you have heard and seen
me do” – and as some of you probably know, “Do the little things in life” has become
one of the best-known Welsh sayings.
And it’s these words, “Do the little things in life”, from our patron Saint, that give us the
best insight into how ordinary people, like us, can move further along the same road as
the saints who have gone before us. Yes, of course, heroic acts of self-sacrifice – what
Jesus calls “denying yourselves and taking up your cross and following me” (Mark 8:34)
– are more impactful than gradual measures and we all know of those who have made
major or sudden changes in their lives, voluntarily or involuntarily, through illness or the
loss of a job, or even a “pandemic epiphany”, that has indeed involved a significant
sacrifice. But for most of us it’s doing the “little things”, intentional acts of self-giving or
caring or generosity, or sharing, of putting the needs of others ahead of our own,
exercising self-restraint, leaving a smaller carbon footprint, that lead each of us further
along the path towards a more caring, authentic and life-giving existence, perhaps even
to be remembered as saints by those we will leave behind.
And if we now think of these saints, those who have gone before us, the loved ones, as
well as those who have shaped our lives from afar, it is often “the little things in life” that
set them apart; and as I reflect on my own life these “little things” often have most to do
with love, and particularly unconditional love. The love expressed by a grandmother
who hugs a small child after a tough day at school; a neighbor who drops by with a
casserole at a time of loss, when cooking a meal is the last thing on our minds; a
mentor who listens attentively to a confession of self-doubt or inadequacy; the
forgiveness of one who has been wronged; or one who has shown courage or faith in
the face of unexpected adversity; another whose sense of gratitude seems to shine
through the darkness of any personal difficulty, like a beacon, giving hope and raising
spirits. Individually, these acts may be “little things” but when taken together they make
a lasting impact on our lives and, to my mind, define what we understand by saintliness.
They show us a glimpse of a “new heaven and a new earth, where every tear will be
wiped from our eyes, death will be no more and there will be no more mourning and
crying and pain” (Rev. 21:4).
The “little things” are, you might say, the relative rather than the absolute way of
saintliness and although we think of them in Christian terms they are also true for all
faiths and traditions. It was Confucius who said “It doesn’t matter how slow you go, as
long as you don’t stop.” In other words, saintliness is not an absolute quality to which we
aspire; but a way of living, doing the little things of life, that inspire – in the Christian
understanding this inspiration is the work of the Holy Spirit – and it is because we have
been blessed and loved as children of God, that we are called to share these blessings
with all others in our lives, even in small ways.
So today we celebrate all the saints in our lives, who have shared their blessings and
love with us in large or small ways, who have impacted the world in which we live, and
enriched our lives, in so many ways – either who have gone before us, or the saints
whose lives bless us with their love each day – through their little gifts that keep on
giving. And as a community, we give thanks for the saints of St. David’s – saints who
quietly water the planters on the steps of the memorial garden; or who prepare the
communion elements; or who decorate the sanctuary; who greet or make coffee; who
set up and take down, and wash up and clean up after a meeting; who arrive early and
stay late; who chair the Board and serve on its committees; who produce a newsletter to
keep us connected; who help us balance the books; who bring or deliver flowers; who
write cards and make phone calls and send get well messages; who deliver food to the
needy and who cook and serve meals on the coldest nights; and who fix and replace
and repair and maintain, sweep, shovel and sanitize, to keep us safe and well. St. David
says “Be joyful, keep the faith, and do the little things in life” – and we are blessed that
there are many saints at St. David’s who do just that.
Let us prayGracious God, “for all the saints, who from their labours rest”, who have given us a
glimpse of a new heaven and a new earth, to which you summon us, we give you
thanks and we sing “Hallelujah, Hallelujah”.
Amen.
October 31st, 2021