Bible Reading
The people who walked in darkness have seen a great
light; those who lived in a land of deep darkness—on them light has shined. You
have multiplied the nation, you have increased its joy; they rejoice before you
as with joy at the harvest, as people exult when dividing plunder. For the yoke
of their burden, and the bar across their shoulders, the rod of their
oppressor, you have broken as on the day of Midian. (Isaiah 9. 2-4)
Meditation
The
people who walked in darkness have seen a great light. Following Homelessness
Sunday this passage from Isaiah, which we have heard throughout Advent and
Christmas, provides a paradigm through which we can consider our current
experience of homelessness. It enables us to reflect on the journey that those
leaving the streets make from darkness to light and to consider what the
breaking of the yoke of oppression in a nation in order that all people
experience abundance and joy might mean today for those who are homeless.
To be
homeless is in a very real sense to walk in darkness. Those who are rough
sleeping are exposed and vulnerable in the darkness of the night. It is
difficult to avoid slipping into hopelessness and despair. In the dark you are
invisible and that cloak of invisibility is what seems to cover people who
embarrass society (us) with their need, their lack of a place to be, their
unbelonging. The Christmas Appeal at St Martin-in-the-Fields told the story of Richard,
whose story shows how quickly and easily people can move from relative stability
and security into the dark place that is homelessness. Two and a half years ago
Richard was a stay at home dad living in a nice apartment, in a nice complex in
a very nice part of town. His relationship with his wife broke down and he
started sleeping rough over the road from where he had been living so he could look
after his children and take them to school. From that point onwards, he says, “Things
started going downhill.”
When
people are in this dark place it is very hard to then move back into the light.
It has taken Richard over two years to get to the point where he is leaving the
support of The Connection at St Martin’s in order to stand on his own two feet.
With the help of staff at The Connection, Richard is now living in Building
Prospects, affordable housing managed by The Connection in Westminster, where
he sees his children regularly. He has also worked hard to gain skills to be able
support himself in the future. Richard’s next step is to work as a trainee in a
hostel for homeless women, putting into practice some of the skills he’s learnt
while at The Connection.
Richard’s
story shows how agencies like The Connection can make a real difference in
helping those trying to leave the darkness of homelessness. Churches make a
significant difference: "For example, there are 12,000 people working as
volunteers in church-run winter shelters right now. We also have a great
history of churches initiating housing associations and other responses to
housing need." However, the paradigm provided by our passage from Isaiah
suggests that by themselves these organisations and services are not enough to
prevent homelessness occurring.
For
that to happen, our society and our social and political structures need to be
transformed in ways that prevent homelessness happening in the first place. The
passage says that before a sense of abundance and joy in which all can share
can be seen and felt within the nation, a yoke or rod of oppression has to be
broken. That yoke or rod of oppression is the social and political structures which
cause homelessness within our society. The extreme growth in the numbers rough
sleeping across the UK and in London is not attributable simply to the
individuals themselves but also to political policies that have left those
individuals unable to remain in the security and stability of their homes.
Shelter
recently claimed that two families in London are made homeless every hour.
Their prediction, based on government homeless statistics, is that 1,260
families in the capital will lose their home in the next month and 7,370 over
the next six months - the equivalent of a household every 34 and 35 minutes
respectively. While political policies are not the only factor causing
homelessness in the UK, the combined effect of welfare reforms, austerity cuts,
immigration controls and a lack of affordable housing has come at a time when
there has been a considerable increase in rough sleeping across the country and
especially here in London. This combination of government policies acts as a
yoke of oppression causing homelessness and making the journey back from
darkness to light more difficult to achieve. As Isaiah states, the yoke of
oppression must be broken before there is any widespread prospect for rough
sleepers and sofa surfers to experience abundance or joy within our nation.
Churches
and Christian charities are seeking assurances from the government over what
they're describing as the "shame" and "political failure"
of rising homelessness levels and are calling on the state to develop a
"comprehensive, long-term" plan to wipe out homelessness. Were that
to happen, we would see in our own day and time the light of hope, the lifting
of burdens and the smashing of oppression of which Isaiah spoke. We would
enable the journey, from darkness to light, that those sleeping rough, like
Richard, have to travel, to become less burdensome and difficult.
Intercessions
Heavenly
Father, we pray for the Government and all people who take decisions which
affect the lives of people who are homeless.
Guide them to follow your will and make decisions for the common
good. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.
Loving
God, encourage all people who work for and with homeless people. Give them the
gifts and skills they need. May they be a listening ear and a witness of your
presence. Lord in your mercy, hear our
prayer.
Spirit
of God, protect all people who are homeless. Shelter them from all that is
harmful, enable them to seek out your face and build their lives anew. Lord in
your mercy, hear our prayer.
Risen
Lord, we pray for those services that support people who are homeless. Social
services, health services, the benefits agency and the many voluntary groups
and organisations including The
Connection at St Martin’s and Church-run winter shelters. May they be
professional, efficient and always have the needs of those they serve at the
forefront of their work. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.
The
Blessing
May the
blessing of light be on you, light without and light within. May the blessed
sunshine shine on you and warm your heart till it glows like a great peat fire,
so that the stranger may come and warm himself at it, and also a friend. Amen.