Message of Abbot Paul - Monday - 8th January 2024
Abbot Paul • January 8, 2024
What a joy it is to see the days lengthening and to observe the longer sunsets. Everything appears to be springing back to life. I hope this isn’t a false alarm and that nature isn’t in for a nasty shock with some unexpected deep-winter week of heavy frosts and penetrating cold before Easter. Our first snowdrops aren’t as yet nodding their delicate heads, but our first daffodils are and, no doubt, will soon be joined by a colourful army of varicoloured primroses, the quintessential flower of Spring, that, unlike snowdrops, seem to last until Autumn’s end.
Today we keep the feast of Our Lord’s Baptism, one of the three theophanies of Jesus as the Messiah, God incarnate, that we celebrate at the Epiphany. Obviously, it’s not just the manifestations at the time of happening that matter, but what they mean for us today in our journey of faith. Let’s look at the Baptism of Jesus and today’s Gospel account from Matthew, (Mt 3: 13-17). I’ll take Matthew as I wrote about Mark on Saturday. Jesus has decided that he wants to be baptised by John the Baptist and, although John tries to dissuade him, he insists. He says, “Leave it like this for the time being; it is fitting that we should, in this way, do all that righteousness demands.” What is the Father’s will? That Jesus, his incarnate and sinless Son, should descend into the waters and thereby sanctify the waters of Baptism for all those who with faith seek to follow Jesus in their lives as the way of salvation. Jesus might even have become a disciple of John for a while. It is once the Baptism has taken place that the Theophany happens, a Theophany of the Holy Trinity.
Matthew tells us, “As soon as Jesus was baptised, he came up from the water, and suddenly the heavens opened and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and coming down on him. And a voice spoke from heaven, ‘This is my Son, the Beloved; my favour rests on him.’” What always strikes me when baptising babies or adults, is that what we are told about Jesus is exactly what happens to us at our baptism, in which we become Christians, clothe ourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ, become temples of the Holy Spirit and children of the God who loves us, as we are conformed to Christ and become members, living stones, of his mystical Body. It would be a good idea to find out the date of your baptism and then celebrate it each year, rather like a second and more important birthday.

Good Shepherd, Good Priest “I will seek the lost and bring back the strayed; I will bind up the injured, and I will strengthen the weak.” Those words, spoken by the Lord God through the prophet Ezekiel, describe the heart of God, the Good Shepherd — but they also describe the life and ministry of a good monk and priest. They could well be written of Fr Stephen’s years of service as a pastor in Abergavenny, Swansea, Hereford, and Weobley. In each of those places, he shared in the Shepherd’s work: seeking out the lost, binding up the wounded, strengthening the weary, and leading God’s people with quiet faithfulness. And like Jesus, the Good Shepherd, who came close to his people, Fr Stephen did not serve from a distance. He knew his people; he was among them. He shared their sorrows and their joys, their hopes and their disappointments. He bore their burdens with prayer and patience he brought the joy of the Gospel and the grace of the Sacraments. His mission amongst us is complete. He has served God’s good purpose. So today we ask Christ the Good Shepherd to take Stephen on his sacred shoulders and carry him home to the house of the Father. Bind up his wounds, give him eternal rest and lead him at last to the green pastures and still waters of eternal life.













