Sunday, 2 July 2023

Patronal Festival: The feast of St Peter and St Paul

 

Patronal Festival 2023

 

Today is our Patronal Festival. Like a lot of the words we hear and say or sing in a church context, Patronal isn’t a word you’d be likely to encounter in casual conversation in the supermarket. It comes from the word Patron, of course, which in turn comes from the Latin Pater, a father. in the ancient Roman world, where this language of patronage developed, patrons weren’t necessarily actual fathers. They could be anyone who took you under their wing - who encouraged and supported you, who took notice of you, looked out for your interests and promoted you. It was a formal relationship, with set obligations on both sides, and a vital part of how their society was organised. Having a powerful patron was vital to success.

 

The patrons we celebrate today in church aren’t wealthy business people or politicians, though; they are saints. Today is the feast of St Peter and St Paul, to whom this church is dedicated. When a church was first built, and its people chose a dedication for it, they were consciously putting it and its people under the protection – the patronage - of those saints, declaring a particular relationship to them, looking to them for inspiration and guidance. They hoped, too, that they might be “friends in high places”, speaking for them before the throne of God. I’m not sure that courtly imagery works so well for us these day: perhaps thinking of Peter and Paul as companions on the journey is more helpful.  We don’t pray to the saints, still less worship them, we pray to God, but I like to think of the saints as people who pray with and for us, just as a living friend might do, offering us company and encouragement.

 

The Creed talks about the “communion of saints” reminding us that being a Christian isn’t meant to be a solitary endeavour. It’s something we do together – with our church community, with our brothers and sisters across the world, and with those who have gone before us, who have shone with the light of Christ. Sometimes when I pray, it’s just me and God, and that’s fine, but sometimes its good to picture myself surrounded by that great team of well-wishers. It’s like turning up to a party and finding that there are friends there you didn’t know were coming, or having a buddy go along with you for moral support when you are doing something difficult. The saints remind us that being a Christian isn’t a solitary thing. We are called to discover and explore it together, helping each other along the way.  

 

Our readings today, which feature Peter and Paul, illustrate that. They aren’t portrayed as heroes, rugged individualists, but people who needed others, and to whom community was important.

 

St Paul is one of the giants of Christian history. He left a legacy that that changed its course, through the letters he wrote to the churches he founded around the Mediterranean. But at the beginning of the reading we heard today, no one would have predicted that. When we first meet him he is going by his Hebrew name, Saul; it was common for people to use more than one name, in different situations, so that they fitted into whatever the local culture was, just as immigrants today sometimes Anglicise their names if they feel it will make it easier for others to pronounce them. He was Saul to his Hebrew friends, but Paul to the Gentile Romans and Greeks. When we first meet him, he is hell-bent on rooting out anyone who followed the way of Jesus, who he saw as a troublemaker, who’d got his just deserts when he’d been crucified for his radical interpretation of the Jewish faith, an interpretation Paul thought was completely wrong. But on the way to Damascus, Paul heard the voice of that same Jesus speaking from the right hand of God, evidently favoured, not condemned, and suddenly his world was turned upside down. Blinded by the light, he could no longer see the way ahead – spiritually and emotionally as well as literally, and had to be led into the city. Left to his own devices he might simply despaired, but God didn’t leave him to his own devices; he sent Ananias, a local Christian, to him. Ananias knew of Paul’s reputation. He knew he’d had Christians imprisoned elsewhere. He has to have wondered whether he was simply walking into a trap.  But he went anyway, and thank God he did, because if he hadn’t perhaps we wouldn’t be here today; it was Paul’s ministry which enabled the Christian message to spread westwards into Europe, and eventually to these damp islands at the edge of what was then the known world.

 

Paul’s ministry, from the very earliest moment was one which was rooted in community, recognising that we needed one another, just as he had needed Ananias,  and that shines through in his letters. He describes the church as a body, with every part essential to the whole. He speaks of the primary importance of our love for one another, which reflects the love of God for each of us.  

 

St Peter, too, doesn’t get where he needs to be on his own in the story we heard today. Jesus has been raised from the dead, but now what? It’s all too much for Peter – the roller-coaster of his denial of Jesus, Jesus’ death, and then, just when Peter thought it was all over, his resurrection - so he goes back to what he knows, or thinks he knows: fishing. Except that even that goes wrong. He and his friends fish all night but catch nothing. Fortunately, a stranger calls out from the beach that he should cast his nets on the other side of the boat, and he does, and catches a catch like he’s never caught before. But it takes one of his friends, “the disciple Jesus loved” as he’s described here, probably the apostle John, to point out what Peter has missed.  “It is the Lord!”, he says. Peter jumps into the water and swims towards him, into a new life and a new commitment as a leader in the church.

 

Peter and Paul; our Patron saints – two giants in the Christian story, but could only become so because of the communities they were part of, because of the other saints around them, the people who might seem like bit part players, but whose contribution made all the difference.

 

That’s what distinguishes saints from superheroes. Saints don’t have superpowers; they’ree just people who are open to the call of God, whether it is to something apparently great or something that seems insignificant at the time. Today as we celebrate our Patronal Festival, we remember Peter and Paul, but we also remember those who were so vital in their story, Ananias, who bravely welcomed Paul, and the unnamed disciple who saw Jesus and pointed him out to Peter, and all the others who made up the communities they were part of, encouraging and helping them along the way. Their stories hold up a mirror to our own, inviting us to play our own part in that great communion of saints through whom the light of Christ shines in the world, yesterday, today and forever.

Amen

 

 

 

 

 

 

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