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November 2011
One of the benefits of having to drive regularly as part
of my Episcopal ministry is that I get the opportunity to
listen to the radio. Sometimes the journey and the hour coincide
affording me the pleasure of listening to the Today programme
and catching up on current affairs. Those of you who listen
to that programme will know that topics stretch far and wide
from concerns over growing obesity levels, to bankers' bonuses
to environmental concerns, to the latest parliamentary concerns
or political intrigue. John Humphries and James Naughtie seem
to me to be particularly good at asking the penetrating and
hard questions of those who come their way. Theirs is the
knack of exposing what might be mere rhetoric or political
posturing. At the heart of the questioning or debate is a
challenge to integrity and right action. In an information
saturated age we desire wisdom.
The Oxford English Dictionary defines wisdom as a combination
of experience and knowledge with the power of applying them.
Euripides a 5th century BC Greek playwright wrote: Cleverness
is not +wisdom. In a not to dissimilar vein Nelson Mandela
is reputed to have said: A good head and a good heart are
always a formidable combination. We live in an age, more than
most where information abounds and access to it is speedy
if not instant. Knowing what is required is no longer the
fundamental concern. The issue instead is whether those who
know what is right have the will or strength to do it. Sadly
wisdom is often in short supply.
In the Church's calendar we are entering what is known as
the Kingdom season culminating on Christ the King Sunday just
before Advent. The gospels are full of wisdom much of which
comes through the teaching of Jesus. He, in so many ways,
embodies wisdom. It is one thing to say; follow that, it is
quite another to do it. We might fairly ask is such wisdom
attainable and if so how? The gospels and indeed the Bible
suggest that we cannot on our own. Instead we need and are
offered God's life and strength. William Temple, Archbishop
of Canterbury in the 1940s, gets to the point using Shakespeare
as an illustration: It is no good giving me a play like Hamlet
or King Lear and telling me to write a play like that. Shakespeare
could do it - I can't. And it is no good showing me a life
like the life of Jesus and telling me to live a life like
that. Jesus could do it - I can't. But if the genius of Shakespeare
could come and live in me, then I could write plays like this.
And if the Spirit could come into me, then I could live a
life like His.
+Alistair
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