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The Very Rev. June Osborne May I begin this morning by bringing the greetings of Salisbury Cathedral in England to the National Cathedral here in Washington. Weve built up some strong links over the years between our two cathedrals, including a memorable visit of your own Fabric Committee, not long ago, and we value very much the bonds of affection which have developed between us. Also, on behalf of my musical colleagues, let me say a very sincere thank you for your welcome on this first weekend of our tour of the East Coast. Were, indeed, very grateful to be able to share worship and fellowship with you. Many of you will know Salisbury Cathedral because of John Constables paintings which display its beauty. Done in the 1820s one of the best of them now resides in the Frick Museum in New York. But rather than visiting that, we hope that we might be able to encourage you to come and see, or maybe to visit again, the real thing. As for us, we are greatly fortunate to be able to call that cathedral our home. Its one of the most visible signs of Christianity in England. Built in a single Gothic style and finished in the year 1258, you know well that the cathedrals of a nation are one of the great resources of the Church. And in England, they have never been more popular. It was also our privilege a couple of years ago to have your new dean and his family as part of our community for several months while he was on sabbatical leave. Sam Lloyd is away on duties this weekend, but may I say in his absence that we hold him in great affection and esteem, and we wish you well as his new ministry begins here in three weeks time. Be assured that as you celebrate that, we will be praying for him and for this cathedral as you go forward together. Well, back to this morning and to the readings we have just heard, which themselves speak of going forward. That Gospel from Luke was read because in fact today we begin the celebration of the Feast of the Annunciation when Mary, as you heard, was told by Gabriel that she was to become a mother. It has to be said, doesnt it, that its rather strange in these first days of Easter tide to be reminded that its only nine months until the birth of Jesus Christ on another Christmas Day. But given that the dedication of our cathedral is to the Blessed Virgin Mary, it couldnt be more appropriate. And since this is a story about women and the way women walk with purposeful compassion through our world, let me tell you of two women in Salisbury: one who walked in, and one who walked out. Dorothy was brought up to be a devout Christian. In her childhood and young adulthood, her faith meant a great deal to her. She trained as a nurse and eventually went to work in Beirut in the 1980s, when Lebanon was really a war zone. You and I probably remember that time for the Western hostages which were taken by militant groups. But Dorothy remembers a whole nation consumed by hatred and violence, much of it having a religious face. She went to work each day tending to the victims of that religious enmity. She could sense the faith of her upbringing being eroded. And then one day, a thirteen-year-old girl was brought into her hospital. The girl was a Muslim and a Christian Falangist gang had cut out her tongue and raped her and tied her to the back of the car and dragged her through the streets. Despite the best and long efforts of the medical team, she eventually died. And Dorothy says, as her life expired, so did my faith. As I walked away from the operating table, I knew that my faith had gone. Dorothy didnt go into a church again, except for her mothers funeral, for twenty years. That was, until a month ago, when she walked into our cathedral. As it happened, I saw her on the edge of our evening worship, and I introduced myself. And since that time several of my colleagues have also reinforced the message that she is welcome, that she is not going to be asked to be something or to believe something which she cant manage. As I talked to her again last weekend, she was aware that a new stage of her journey had begun. When Mary experienced an encounter with an angel, she knew that she was hearing the call of God. And Gabriels message to her couldnt in one sense have been clearer. But what were told about Mary was that she was much perplexed. I find it interesting that exactly the same wordmuch perplexedis used to describe the reaction of the group of women who at the end of Lukes Gospel discover the empty tomb. We know what it is like to be much perplexed, dont we? You dont have to be in Beirut, or encountering angels to find life challenging. But being perplexed doesnt mean that we dont know what is true. Mary tells Elizabeth very clearly whats happened to her. The women who were witnesses to the Resurrection were quick to remember what Jesus had told them, that when they try to tell the other disciples what theyve discovered, it seems to the men an idle tale and they didnt believe them. It didnt stop the women knowing that what they had seen was true. No, we can recognize what is true, but still be perplexed. Indeed, it seems to me that the claims of truthfulness upon us often themselves leave us muddled and feeling unsure of our way. No, Mary doesnt claim to have understood or assimilated all that she was told by God. She simply began a new stage of her journey. And lets face it. Journeys arent very tidy affairs, are they? You turn corners, and you find a new set of circumstances that you werent expecting. And the weather goes and changes on a journey. Theres often uncertainty about the route as well. My husband is fond of telling of a time when I navigated him up a Greek mountain, only to find that the road that the map promised just didnt exist. No, journeys across a landscape arent always straightforward. And human journeys arent any more tidy. You certainly need truthfulness to travel well. But let me repeat: that may not reduce your perplexity. Marys perplexity meant that she asked the Angel Gabriel, How? How will it happen? How will I cope? And the only answer given to her is that God will go with her. For her part, she needs to be true. True to herself, true to God. Our friend Dorothy walked into Salisbury Cathedral, and now knows that if she is ever to rediscover a faith worthy of the name of God, she has to be true to all that she is and all that shes been through. But we know thats not easy, dont we? And then there was the woman who walked out. I should say, shes always walking out, because by the main entrance to our cathedral, on the path which leads into the city of Salisbury, we have a statue of Mary striding purposefully away from the cathedral. Shes called The Walking Madonna, and shes the work of Elizabeth Frink, the British sculptor, who almost exclusively produced only male figures. So our Madonna is of particular interest in the world of fine art. And also in the world of our cathedral. For this Mary is middle-aged and life-sized. This isnt the teenaged Virgin, but an older Mary who has held her sons dead body. Her face portrays that suffering. But its not actually her features you notice. Its her posture. She is walking with great determination out of our building and into a wider world. Perhaps its she who went looking for Dorothy. She has business to attend to, but its not in the church. Again, theres a truthfulness here. You can tell her story is authentic simply by looking at her. What she also communicates is her tenacity. In these last days, havent we all admired the tenacity of Pope John Paul II as hes maintained his responsibilities and his dignity in his walk with frailty and with death? And we must pray for our Roman Catholic brothers and sisters as now they mourn, and themselves enter a new stage of their journey. But tenacity is also the gift of many individuals who are quite anonymous. For instance, women who have held themselves and their families together in troubled times. Women of the Sudan or other war-torn countries who maintain their communities through conflict. Those people whom perhaps you can think of in your community who, like the women walking away from the tomb of Jesus, stick to their story and their convictions. As the Madonna is the embodiment of a faith journey. When she gives the angel her reply and says, Here am I. Let it be with me according to your word. That wasnt a statement of resignation. Its pure tenacity. So the angel left her. For she had all that she needed. Do you have a sense that your experience of faith is a journey? What are the twists and turns that have brought you to this place, and that still lie ahead of you? They may not be as dramatic as Dorothys, but theyre no less a search for an authentic faith, true to who we are and what we know of the world. What resources do you think you will need? In the nature of things, you cant carry much when you travel. But dont worry about what you leave behind. And dont even worry if you occasionally feel lost or perplexed. There will be times to stay in the place of comfort, and there will be times when you should strive away from it. Know only that God goes with you every step of the way. What he asks of you are the same qualities that he illustrates through the women at the beginning and at the end of Lukes Gospel. Those women were much perplexed. But there was a willingness to set out on a new journey. So remember with us in Salisbury that Mary was a walking Madonna. And that we walk a journey of faith, needing truthfulness and tenacity if we are to say yes to God. Amen. |