Isaiah 11.6-9, Mark 9.33-37
In early September 1939 the
largest mass movement of children that has ever taken place in the UK got
underway. It’s estimated that at the start of WW2 something like 1.5 million
children were evacuated from their homes to areas thought to be safer. I know
that there are people here this morning who have personal or family experience
of being evacuated or receiving evacuees. Some children were even sent
overseas. My grandmother thought very seriously about sending my mother, aged
7, and her 5 year old sister from Plymouth to family members in South Africa,
to escape the bombing in Plymouth, only changing her mind when several ships
carrying evacuees were torpedoed. There were agonising choices to be made.
For some who were evacuated,
their time away from home was wonderful; new experiences, perhaps better homes
and lives than they had known, fresh air and space. For others it was misery, put
more or less at random in the homes of complete strangers who might or might
not treat them well. Many evacuees were brought home within weeks; their
families missed them too much. But others never really came home at all. Family
bonds were broken during the war, parents were killed, homes were destroyed.
There was no one and nowhere to return to.
At home or evacuated, war
left its mark on the children who lived through it. Food was rationed. Nights
were interrupted by air raid alerts, and you never knew what the next day would
bring. A clergyman I worked with, who’d
been a child in London during the war, once told me how it became routine for
him to go into school in the morning and find a desk empty, a friend no longer
there, killed in the previous night’s raids. He recognised the impact it had
had on his ability to form friendships for ever after.
Mercifully, children growing
up in the UK don’t have to endure things like this now, but that’s not the case
for children in other parts of the world. UNICEF estimates that there are
currently something like 28 million children around the world who have been
driven from their homes by war. 28 million children. I’ll repeat that number
because you may wonder whether you heard it right. Some have become refugees in
other countries. Others have been internally displaced, seeking shelter in
other parts of their own countries, often in overcrowded camps, without access
to health care and education. And of course many more children are still in
warzones, some of them even forced to fight themselves. That 28 million is just
the ones who’ve got away.
It’s natural and right, on
Remembrance Sunday, to think of and give thanks for members of the armed forces
who gave their lives in war. Their names
are the ones recorded on our War Memorials. In modern wars, though, far more
civilians are killed than military personnel. While wars were once
predominantly fought between armies on battlefields, or warships on the ocean,
now they are often fought through aerial
bombardment and drone strikes carried out from a distance, or by guerrilla forces
fighting street to street in towns and cities. It’s estimated that something
like 80 – 90% of the casualties of modern warfare are civilians – and many of
them are children. Adults declare war, but children suffer the effects. And as
they grow up, the things they’ve seen don’t leave them. The trauma of war can
leave them anxious and insecure or bitter and angry, fuelling another cycle of
violence in the next generation.
Children are often overlooked
in times of war, but the Bible readings we heard today both put children right
at the centre of the story. In the reading from Mark’s Gospel Jesus takes a
little child and literally stands it in the middle of his fractious, squabbling
disciples. They’ve been arguing among themselves about which one of them is the
greatest, and Jesus was obviously very aware of this.
His disciples had imagined
that the Messiah, God’s chosen leader, would be a great military or political
leader. They’d come to the conclusion that Jesus was this Messiah, and they
were longing for him to show his hand. They were sure that through him God
would throw out the occupying Roman forces, and usher in God’s new kingdom, a
kingdom like the one their great King David had ruled over. They imagined
crowns and thrones, and power for those who were closest to the new king. But
who would be greatest among them when that day came, the right hand man?
They’re obviously embarrassed
when Jesus calls them out on this. They didn’t realise he’d been listening.
Deep down they know it is a silly thing to argue about – as most of our
arguments are. “What were you arguing
about ?” he asks them. But he
doesn’t press them for an answer. Asking the question is enough. Instead he
simply takes a child, a small child, and puts it in the middle of them. Look at
this child, says Jesus. The kingdom of God isn’t about sitting on thrones and
wearing crowns. It’s not about throwing your weight around and having people
bow down to you. If you want to know what the kingdom of God is about, what
really matters in it, then this child is it.
What did Jesus mean?
The key thing we need to know
is that, at the time of Jesus, children were even more vulnerable than they are
today. There were no child protection laws. There was no United Nations
Declaration of the Rights of the Child. Childhood wasn’t sentimentalised, or
regarded as a special, more innocent time of life. Children were entirely at
the mercy of their fathers, who had power of life and death over them. They
weren’t really counted as of much worth until they got to an age when they
could work. I am sure that many were
loved, but they were essentially powerless, and whenever they are mentioned in
the Bible that’s what we’re meant to keep in mind. The Gospels sometimes call
them “little ones”, but that phrase doesn’t just include children. It is anyone
who is disempowered in some way – by old age as well as youth, by disability,
gender or social status. “Little ones” are the ones at the bottom of the heap,
left to fend for themselves.
It’s sometimes said that you
can tell how civilised a nation really is by the way it treats people like
these. In the Kingdom of God, says Jesus, they come first - not out of
kindness, or worse still, pity, but because they are the place where God’s work
starts. The Kingdom of God isn’t built
by mighty armies that conquer and subdue by force and terror. Its greatness
isn’t shown by splendid robes and golden crowns. It is seen when the needs of
the marginalised and vulnerable “little ones” are centre stage, rather than
being shoved to the periphery.
Jesus tells stories in the
Gospel about the Kingdom of God being like a tiny seed or a grain of yeast,
something almost too small to see, but which can grow into a great tree or raise
an entire loaf, given time. Littleness matters to him. He pays the ultimate
price for standing up for the “little ones” in his society when he’s crucified
like a worthless criminal on the waste ground outside Jerusalem. But he never
turns back from his commitment to them. Miss these people out, says Jesus, and
you miss out on God, because they are where he is at work, they are where his
kingdom begins.
Detail from “The Peaceable Kingdom” by Edward Hicks 1780-1849 |
“A little child shall lead them,” said Isaiah, in the passage our Cubs and Beavers read
to us. That passage is often called the vision of the “Peaceable Kingdom”. It
was written at a time of great conflict and turmoil for the Jewish people,
who’d been crushed by the Babylonians. It looked like it was all over for them,
but God hadn’t forgotten them, says Isaiah. There could be a better future. But it wouldn’t
be a future in which the powerful lorded it over everyone else. It would be a
time when rivalries and divisions were put to an end, even in the animal
kingdom. Wolves and lambs would live in peace. The picture on the service sheet
is a detail from a painting of this
scene by Edward Hicks , a Quaker living
in Pennsylvania in the early 1800s. He despaired, as we all do sometimes, when
he looked at the world around him. Even among his Quaker brothers and sisters,
bitter squabbles and rivalries often took hold, as they do in any close
community. He painted many versions of
this scene – he’s famous for it. But each one is slightly different, and
experts reckon that the differences between them probably represent the ups and
downs of the relationships in the community around him.
On this Remembrance Sunday, may
we keep in mind God’s children, his little ones, and the littleness that is in
each of us if we are honest, the part of us that’s afraid, insecure, not sure
which way to turn for help. And may that
little child, outside us and within, lead us in the paths of peace, for all our
sakes.
Amen
No comments:
Post a Comment