SENATOR PUDENS & ALL SAINTS
SERMON PREACHED BY FR. TONY NOBLE ON NOVEMBER 2nd, 2008
Revelation 7: 9
"After this I looked and behold, a great multitude which no man could
number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and tongues, standing
before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed in white robes, with palm
branches in their hands."
What is heaven like?
The New Testament contains various images. Jesus
spoke often of heaven as a banquet, and as a wedding banquet. He also spoke about separating sheep from
goats when it comes time for the end. And in the parable of the rich man and
the poor man, Lazarus, he indicated there was a great gulf between heaven and
the other place.
Today's readings on this festival of all the saints
in heaven have none of these images.
The first reading from the book of Revelation has numerous chapters
describing heaven in some amazing images.
Rev 7:9 sums it up very nicely: "A great multitude impossible to
count". And what they are doing is worshipping the Lamb
enthroned. It seems almost too poetic,
too fantastic to believe.
I don't know about you - but I don't want to spend
eternity standing in a white robe holding a palm branch!
It is of course an image. This image of heavenly
worship begins in chapter 4 of the book of Revelation, where Saint John the
Divine says this: "After this I
looked, and lo, in heaven an open door!". There through that open door
Saint John the Divine sees one seated on the throne who looks unreal, and the
Lamb who symbolises the resurrected Christ.
Around this throne there are 24 elders wearing crowns and the famous
four living creatures.
What are all these people doing? They are singing a song: "Holy,
Holy, Holy, Lord God of hosts".
It's familiar isn't it? We sing
it at the heart of the Eucharist Sunday by Sunday. "Sanctus, Sanctus,
Sanctus" they sing - from which
we get the words "Sanctuary", "Sanctify" and
"Saint".
You see when John came to describe heaven, he chose
the nearest thing to heaven and earth - and that was the celebration of the
Eucharist. So at the heart of heaven all this assembled company are singing the
same song that we sing at every Eucharist: "Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God
of hosts, heaven and earth are full of thy glory".
In describing heaven as worship of God by the saints,
St John looked no further than the weekly gathering of the first Christians to
celebrate the Eucharist. That is what
he is describing - for in the first centuries when they came to celebrate the
Eucharist, the architecture was just as Saint John described - the bishop
usually sat on a throne with an altar forward and flanked in a circle were the
deacons and priests. This is the image
for the 24 elders who are seated around the throne.
If you go to many of the ancient basilicas in the
Mediterranean area, particularly in Italy, you will see basilicas with their
curved sanctuary and the seats around the throne.
And what about the four living creatures? These are four great creatures symbolizing
the four Gospels. The lion symbolizes
Saint Mark, the Ox symbolizes Saint Luke, the Man symbolizes Saint Matthew, and
the Eagle symbolizes Saint John the Evangelist.
So when Saint John the Divine portrays these four
living creatures as part of the worship, he is giving an image of the
proclaiming and reading of the Gospel - the highlight of the first part of our
Eucharist. That is the sense in which
we understand the four living creatures in this great worship in heaven. So we have the reading of the Gospel,
together with the singing of the Sanctus, which is the heart of the Eucharist -
a refrain we still sing 2,000 years later.
If you continue to read Revelation, you will come to
a part where he also describes incense being burnt and offered. Saint John
refers to this as the prayers of the saints rising up to heaven. Indeed it could be said that heaven is one
continuous Anglo-Catholic High Mass.
Now that would be something I would be prepared to stand around in a
white robe for!
This image of Heaven contains two essential
truths. Firstly, at every Eucharist
whether it's now in San Diego, or the first century in Rome - we stand at the
door of heaven - an open door - and at the Sanctus we are there with the angels
and saints sharing in their heavenly worship. We are carried beyond this
building.
Secondly, just as at every Eucharist we gather with
our friends, so in heaven we have friends - the saints of God. People not
unlike us. What the Apostles Creed refers to as "The Communion of
Saints", and we have communion with them particularly when we meet to
celebrate the Eucharist.
We know some of these saints by name - they have days
set aside in the Church's calendar. Many of us have been baptised with the name
of a saint. Today, on our festival we
honour all the saints - those that we know, but mostly those who are unknown. All
the saints in every age, and in every generation.
That's where the people in white robes holding palms
comes in. The palms are the ancient
symbol of martyrs - those who gave up their lives as Christian - and the white
robes symbolize holiness and goodness.
In Revelation it says that the martyrs have washed
their robes white in the blood of the Lamb. This refers to the fact that their
deaths were a participation in Christ's death. That by their death they somehow
shared in Christ's death. But it is
more than a participation. They died for their faithful witnessing to Christ -
indeed, the word "martyr" comes from a Greek word meaning
"witness".
In the early Church these martyrs were often thrown
to the lions, or in the time of Nero, burned on crosses in his garden as
entertainment. They are a large number,
many of them unknown by name. That is how this day in the calendar came to be
started - as a commemoration of all those early martyrs. Indeed to be a saint
was to be a martyr.
All this came home to me back at the end of July,
when I was in Rome on my way to Sicily.
I spent three days in Rome, and there is a church literally on every
corner. Each day as I walked around that
great city, I delighted in going in and out of the various churches, many of
them dedicated to saints I had never heard of - saints from the first couple of
centuries of the Roman Church, who probably suffered in the persecutions.
Sometimes a note would tell me that the Church was
actually on the site where they were killed, or it was on the site of their
home in the second century, or it was the place where the Christians met for
the Eucharist in those days of persecution. It was if I was there with them all
those centuries ago. Their presence was tangible, and their example led me to
my knees and pray.
Then on my last day I came across an amazing saint
who I had never heard of.
In the shadow of the great basilica of Saint Mary
Major, there is a church dedicated to Saint Pudentia. It is below street level,
with an underground crypt - you have to go down a few levels, because it's from
the street level of the first century.
Here in the first century lived a Roman Senator "Pudens" who
allowed Saint Peter to stay with him. You can find a reference to Pudens in the
very last line of the second letter of Saint Paul to Timothy, where he sends
greetings to a number of people - including to this Roman Senator, Pudens. We
don't know if he was actually a baptised Christian, all we know is that he gave
safe lodging to Saint Peter.
The following century, some baths were erected over
the home of Pudens, and in the fourth century (after Christianity was no longer
persecuted) a church was erected on the site and called "Ecclesia
Pudentia" - literally "The church of Pudens".
The church of Pudens marked the place where the Roman
Senator had given lodging to Saint Peter.
But if you know your Latin, you will know that "Pudentia" can
also be seen as feminine - and some centuries later an early feminist (probably
an Episcopalian!) assumed that Pudentia must have been a woman - and so become
Saint Pudentia. She appeared in the calendar complete with a holy life. And not
only that - she had a sister called Saint Prassede. I'm sure it's no
coincidence that Saint Prassede's Church is just two blocks from Saint
Pudentia's Church!
Thus by a linguistic accident the Church produced an
imaginary saint. Fortunately in 1969,
when the Roman Calendar was revised, Saint Pudentia was removed along with
Saint Christopher, Saint Catherine of Alexandria, and a few other
notables. As I stood there in Saint
Prudentia's Church, looking at this mosaic of Saint Pudentia along with her
sister, Prassede, it occurred to me that even if she was imaginary - an accident
of history - never-the-less Pudens, the Roman Senator, is indeed a worthy
saint. For in extending hospitality and providing lodging to Saint Peter, he
was indeed providing hospitality for Christ.
If we provide in our lives hospitality for Jesus,
then we also are worthy to stand with Pudens and be called a saint of God. We are worthy even be changed from Pudens to
Saint Pudentia - for such is the vocation of all who welcome Christ into their
hearts.
This process begins here - as it did for the first
martyrs and the early Christians - when we come together for the Eucharist.
When we come to join as they did in singing: "Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord
God of hosts, heaven and earth are full of thy glory".
And as we come here, to the Altar, we will see a door
opened in heaven.