Archbishop of Canterbury:「能以愛心服事的人在各行各業都很少見。能以愛心服事的領導者更是罕見。但在任何情況下,那些服事的人會被愛戴、被記住,那些執著於權力和特權的人則會被遺忘。」People of loving service are rare in any walk of life. Leaders of loving service are still rarer. But in all cases those who serve will be loved and remembered when those who cling to power and privileges are long forgotten.
Corinthians
15:20-26, 53 – End
Psalm 42:1-7
John 14:1-6
Come Holy
Spirit, fill us with the balm of your healing love. Amen.
The pattern for many leaders is to be exalted in life and forgotten after death. The pattern for all who serve God – famous or obscure, respected or ignored – is that death is the door to glory.
Her Late Majesty
famously declared on a 21st birthday broadcast that her whole life would be dedicated
to serving the Nation and Commonwealth.
Rarely has
such a promise been so well kept! Few leaders receive the outpouring of love that
we have seen.
Jesus – who
in our reading does not tell his disciples how to follow, but who to follow – said:
“I am the way, the truth and the life”. Her Late Majesty’s example was not set through
her position or her ambition, but through whom she followed. I know His Majesty
shares the same faith and hope in Jesus Christ as his mother; the same sense of
service and duty.
In 1953 the
Queen began her Coronation with silent prayer, just there at the High Altar. Her
allegiance to God was given before any person gave allegiance to her. Her service
to so many people in this nation, the Commonwealth and the world, had its foundation
in her following Christ – God himself – who said that he “came not to be served
but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many.” 1
People of
loving service are rare in any walk of life. Leaders of loving service are still
rarer. But in all cases those who serve will be loved and remembered when those
who cling to power and privileges are long forgotten.
The grief
of this day – felt not only by the late Queen’s family but all round the nation,
Commonwealth and the world – arises from her abundant life and loving service, now
gone from us.
She was joyful,
present to so many, touching a multitude of lives.
We pray especially
for all her family, grieving as every family at a funeral – including so many families
round the world who have themselves lost someone recently – but in this family’s
case doing so in the brightest spotlight.
May God heal
their sorrow, may the gap left in their lives be marked with memories of joy and
life.
Her Late Majesty’s
broadcast during Covid lockdown ended with: “We will meet again”, words of hope
from a song of Vera Lynn. Christian hope means certain expectation of something
not yet seen.
Christ rose
from the dead and offers life to all, abundant life now and life with God in eternity.
As the Christmas
carol says “where meek souls will receive him, still the dear Christ enters in.”
2
We will all
face the merciful judgement of God: we can all share the Queen’s hope which in life
and death inspired her servant leadership.
Service in
life, hope in death. All who follow the Queen’s example, and inspiration of trust
and faith in God, can with her say: “We will meet again.”
1 Matthew 20:28,
NRSV
2 O Little
Town of Bethlehem
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