Passion That Stays

Ezekiel stands in a valley of dry bones. Jesus stands at a tomb that smells of death. Neither turns away. This sermon explores a quieter, deeper meaning of passion—not as feeling, but as staying. And what might happen when we remain present in the places where hope seems lost.


Perhaps I should not ask what comes to mind when we hear the word passion.

We often hear the word passion and think of strong feelings.
Intensity. Emotion.

But the scriptures speak of something deeper.
Our scriptures give meaning to the word.

Passion is engagement.
Passion makes you stay with something,
with someone,
refusing to walk away.

It is remaining present
even where everything feels lost.


Our scriptures are not lifeless words on a page.
They are not dry bones,
or dead leaves,
pages in a book.

They have a life of their own.

It is passion that brings them to life,
and it is their life that inspires passion.

These scriptures have been carried through the generations:
people who have known defeat, exile, grief, and despair.

They belong to such people.

They cling passionately
to our experiences of devastation and annihilation.

They will not let us go.


Such is the character of our scripture,
such is the passion of scripture
for those who feel abandoned, lost.

They cling to them,
and they belong
to the people
in those places
at those times
when hope seems lost.

They’re not nice reading.
They’re not polite texts.

They are full of grit,
full of determination,
full of passion,

because they come from the valley—
the metaphorical valley
that stands in the shadow of death.

They belong to those who have stood in the valley
and wondered if anything could live again.


The vision Ezekiel shares with us this morning
comes straight from that valley,

a bleak valley
of bleached bone,
dried and scattered,

in a scene so devastating
that we’ve hardly been able to contemplate it
without making light of it—
turning it to comedy:
dem bones, dem bones, dem dry bones.


From the devastation
comes the question:

Can these bones live?

It’s a question Ezekiel hears from heaven.

How else could he have heard it?

It’s a question none of us would ever think to ask,
because the evidence of an ending
is so overwhelming.

We can almost feel him hesitate.

“What a question…”

“I don’t know.”

“Can these bones live?”

“I don’t know.”

And yet—he stays with it.

He does not turn away.

He remains.

“O Lord God, you know.”

And the wind begins to stir.

From all directions,
through all times,

the breath moves—

clinging to dry bones,
wrapping them in a love that will not let go,
stirring hope
where everything seemed lost.

We stay in the valley in the gospel reading.

The valley in the shadow of death.

As John tells us about Lazarus,
and the passion of Jesus for his friend,
and the passionate mourning of his sisters.

Lazarus has been dead four days.

John does not soften it.

The grief is real.
The loss is final.

This is a passage that stinks.

“Lord, already there is a stench.”

And again, there is no hurry to escape.

Jesus stands there—
overwhelmed in all his senses by loss,
in the midst of wailing,
with the stench of death.

And he weeps.

That is passion.

Before anything is changed,
before anything is restored,

passion is remaining—
particularly at the point
when all seems lost.

And it is there—
in that place—

that something happens.

Not an explanation.
Not an answer.

A call.

“Lazarus, come out.”

No one expects this.

No one is ready for this.

Because nothing in that place
suggests that life is possible.

And yet—

life does not wait
for another time,
or another place.

It comes here.

Into the tomb.
Into what has already been given up for lost.

And then—almost quietly—

“Unbind him, and let him go.”

The life is given.

But the unbinding—
the restoring, the freeing—
is given to others.

To those who stayed.

That call of Jesus—
“Lazarus, come out”…
and, “Unbind him, let him go”—

has echoed far beyond that tomb,
into every place
where people feel bound:

by grief,
by fear,
by the weight
of what others have said about them.

That voice still calls.

Jesus calls—
but leaves the unbinding
to others.

And perhaps we recognise this.

On a Radio 5 phone in,
I heard a cancer survivor—
speaking about what brought her through.

She spoke about treatment.

But more than that, she spoke about people.

The doctors who cared for her.
The nurses who stayed with her.
Those who sat alongside her.
Those who did the small, unnoticed things—
even making tea.

And she spoke about someone
whose vision and determination
had built that place of care over time.

They weren’t speaking about religion.

They simply spoke about people
who did not walk away.

People who remained
in a place most of us would rather avoid.

People through whom, slowly, patiently,
life was given back.

And perhaps this is what begins to happen
when we stay.

When we do not turn away.

When we remain present
in the places that feel like the end.

Something of that same passion
begins to take hold of us.

Not a loud passion.
Not a dramatic one.

But a steady, quiet refusal
to let go of life.

It becomes a passion for people—
for their dignity, their healing, their wellbeing.

A passion for the fragile life of this world—
for all that can so easily be lost.

A passion for justice—
that what is broken might be made right.

A passion to take our place
in the work of restoring life.

And perhaps we do not need
to name it too quickly.

Perhaps it is enough
to recognise it—

in the valley,
at the tomb,
in those who stay,
in those who serve,
in those who help unbind
what has been bound.

Because this is where the scriptures live.

Not far from us.
Not above us.

But here.

In the places where hope feels thin,
where loss is real,
where the ending seems certain.

And here—
not somewhere else, not later, but here—

breath begins to stir.

A voice is heard.

And where people will not walk away,
where they stay, and serve, and love,

even now,

the dead begin to live.

Are the rich fit for the kingdom of God? Here’s the test.

A sermon for September 28th 2025 – the 15th Sunday after Trinity (Proper 21C)

All three readings, (Amos 6:1a, 4-7, 1 Timothy 6:6-19, Luke 16: 19-end) address the issue of wealth. (There is far more in the Bible about wealth and riches than about sexual morality, though that is hard to believe when we listen to the politics of the church).

Amos condemns those who are at ease in Zion, those who feel secure in Samaria – the notables of the first nations.
He condemns those who lie on beds of ivory, and lounge on their couches, who drink wine from bowls and massage themselves with the finest oils, but who don’t give a fig about those whose lives are ruined.
For Amos, they will be the first to be exiled.
The revelry of the loungers shall pass away – and we will be all the better for that.
Now, there’s a phrase to conjure with. “They shall pass away” –
dead, no more, nada – thank God –
and those who are the victims of their indifference will breathe a sigh of relief.
What use are the loungers to the world?

The kingdom of God does not belong to the comfortable and secure,
but to the last, the least, and the lost.

Then Paul, in his letter to Timothy talks about the great gain in godliness combined with contentment.
He doesn’t condemn people for having things but warns against wanting more and more.
True wealth is “godliness with contentment”.
That’s the way to be happy.
Paul warns Timothy about the dangers of desire.
“Those who want to be rich fall into temptation and are trapped by many senseless and harmful desires that plunge people into ruin and destruction.”
The danger of desire is that it makes us restless, blind to our neighbour, and forgetful of God. When we chase being first we often step over those who are last.
When we crave more, we forget those with less.
When we seek security in wealth, we leave others lost.

Paul warns that desire blinds us to our neighbour.
And Jesus shows us the tragic result – a rich man so blinded by wealth that he couldn’t see Lazarus at his own gate.

Isn’t it interesting that nobody knows the name of the rich man?
But we all know Lazarus.
The rich man has been forgotten.
That phrase again – he is passed away. He is no more. He is dead.
He is in torment for the torment that Lazarus went through at the rich man’s gate.
He was covered with sores,
and was so hungry he’d have gladly eat the crumbs from the floor of the rich man’s table.
See how the dogs came and licked his sores.
The compassion of the dogs is such a contrast to the indifference of the rich man.

The rich man was at his gate, on his doorstep.
Compassion was surely in his reach.
But he’d made wealth his wall,
and when death came, that wall turned into an unbridgeable chasm.
He passed away into torment, dead to the kingdom of God.
Whereas Lazarus is carried by all the angels to be with Abraham – carried as one of the people of God.
“The loungers shall pass away” says Amos.
And in this parable, the rich man – nameless, forgotten – has passed away.
Dead to God’s kingdom, dead to compassion, dead to life.

We are a rich nation.
And yet, how often we choose not to see the plight of the poor.
The men, women and children arriving in small boats —
are they not Lazarus at our gate?
They lie at the threshold of our common life, in need of compassion.

And here’s the Gospel twist:
Lazarus means “helped by God.”
God helps the poor, the overlooked, the forgotten.
They are not abandoned.
And in God’s strange mercy, they are also sent to help us.
Lazarus is not just a man to be pitied — he is a gods­end.

How the rich man needed Lazarus.
At the end of the parable, he begs Abraham to send Lazarus back to warn his brothers.
But Abraham replies:
They already have Moses and the prophets — they should listen to them.
He could also have said:
They already had Lazarus — lying at their gate.
That was their opportunity. How many more chances do they need?

Lazarus is the examiner of compassion,
who stands at the door and knocks to see if any love of God lives in this household.
This is where the kingdom of God begins: in the last, the least and the lost whom God helps.

The rich man failed the test.
He failed the test to help the ones God helps.
He was like those condemned by Amos – a reveller, a lounger,
and he becomes one of the first in the gospel to go into exile, into torment, into unending death.

Can a rich man ever enter the kingdom of God?
Yes, but only if they help the ones God helps.

The tragedy for the rich man was that he never recognised Lazarus as the gift God had sent him. Wealth had become his wall against him.
When death came, that wall turned into an unbridgeable chasm.
The rich man passed away nameless, forgotten, as Amos warned.
“The revelry of the loungers shall pass away.”

But Lazarus —
helped by God, sent by God —
was lifted up and carried by the angels to the bosom of Abraham.

Pope Francis reminded us that the poor are our evangelisers.
They proclaim the gospel to us.
They show us the face of Christ.
They test our compassion
and teach us where the kingdom of God begins (and where it ends).

So the question is this:
will we see these godsends at our gate,
within our reach, and open the bridge of compassion?
Or, will we, like the rich man, turn away and pass away?

Lazarus Sunday

israel-125year-old-man-laughing
laughter of a 125 year old Israeli.
Source unknown.

Lazarus’s laughter brought a challenge to yesterday’s sermon (April 10th 2011). “Doesn’t God only laugh at the wicked?” was my tight-lipped challenger’s question.

According to the Lazarus’s post-mortem report I had picked up from Eugene O’Neill’s play, Lazarus LAUGHED. Lazarus had replied to his sisters’ question about what life was like after death by saying that God’s laughter resounded round heaven. Lazarus too in his post-mortem life could only laugh. That is how he came out of the tomb, with laughter welling up from his whole being.

I thought. Maybe God does laugh at the wicked (though I think he probably takes them more seriously than that), but I am sure he laughs along with the righteous (sorry, theological correction – those he has made righteous).

Two points intrigued me with the Lazarus’s story.

Firstly – it’s what’s in a name. Lazarus isn’t a name you hear much about – would his nickname be Laz-y (we often shorten names to the first syllable and then add a “y”). If we pronounce it Lazzy, his friends would be members of the Lazzy band. Lazarus means “God helps”. He’s from a village called Bethany. Bethany means “house of affliction”. So the story of “Lazarus in Bethany” is the story of “God helps in the house of affliction”.

Secondly, Lazarus stands for all of us. Laz ‘R’ Us. We can’t establish Lazarus’s cause of death for his post-mortem report from John’s gospel (11:1-45). But we know what causes ours – pick any from poverty, abuse, disease, anger, anxiety. We all get  bound up with these, with deadlines, with expectations of others. They all suck the life from us. When Jesus called “Lazarus, come out” he is calling us out of our bind, so that we can have post-mortem life. (How that phrase “coming out” has gained new liberative meaning in recent decades!) No longer bound by his ego, no longer with death on the horizon, Lazarus stands for all of us.

God helps Lazar/us in the house of affliction to laughter and life. When Lazarus laughs, he laughs with all who enjoy post-mortem life, whose date of death is not some time in the future, but a moment in the past.

I was struck by the beauty of this Lazarus blessing by Jan Richardson from her beautifully Painted Prayerbook.

The secret
of this blessing
is that it is written
on the back
of what binds you.

To read
this blessing,
you must take hold
of the end
of what
confines you,
must begin to tug
at the edge
of what wraps
you round.

It may take long
and long
for its length
to fall away,
for the words
of this blessing
to unwind
in folds
about your feet.

By then
you will no longer
need them.

By then this blessing
will have pressed itself
into your waking flesh,
will have passed
into your bones,
will have traveled
every vein

until it comes to rest
inside the chambers
of your heart
that beats to
the rhythm
of benediction

and the cadence
of release.