01 Sep 2016

Faith Matters

Upside Down

Have you ever been in a two dollar shop and found a real treasure? Not merely something that is useful but something of great worth? Probably not!

The philosopher Kierkegaard tells of a vandal who breaks into a department store at night. In the darkness he moves through each department, each floor, deliberately, carefully.  Just before dawn breaks and the light will reveal him, he exits the way he came. The amazing thing is he does not steal anything but rather rearranges all the price tags. The next day shopkeepers, not to mention the delighted customers, encounter such oddities as diamond necklaces on sale for a few dollars and cheap costume-jewellery earrings costing thousands.

The gospel, God’s Good News, is like that says Kierkegaard: it changes around all our normal assumptions about worth and value. Hence Jesus can say of a poor widow who puts a few cents in the temple treasury bucket, “I tell you she has put more in than all the rest!” Her gift from poverty is a real treasure compared to the tokenism of apparently rich benefactors. Jesus values the motives of the woman highly.

God’s kingdom is a strange upside down economy where poverty is blessed! Jesus says, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”

Peter Morphew
Chaplain

Newington, Wyvern House

115 Cambridge Street
Stanmore NSW 2048
+61 2 9568 9444

contact@newington.nsw.edu.au
www.newington.nsw.edu.au

Subscribe to eNews

wyvern@newington.nsw.edu.au

Absences

+61 2 9568 9444
wyvern@newington.nsw.edu.au

Wet Weather

+61 2 9432 1222