Saint Peter and Paul (BAS) [i]
29 June 2025
Church of the Epiphany
Surrey BC
In the late autumn of 1981 I sat in the basement of my parents’ home in Colorado Springs sending out invitations to my ordination to the priesthood scheduled for the 21st of December 1981. I had spent more money than I could really afford on having the invitations printed by a local printer. After I had sealed and addressed about fifty out of two hundred invitations, I realized that I had printed the date and the place of the ordination but not the time.
It was too late to have new invitations printed and I did not the money to pay for re-printing. So I pulled out my trusty fountain pen and wrote ‘7.00 p.m.’ in black ink on two hundred and fifty invitations. About ten days after I had mailed them, I received a telephone call from a classmate of mine from theological college. ‘Congratulations!’ he said, ‘You’ve learned some humility!’
In theological college I was known to be a bit of a perfectionist. As one of the school’s six paid sacristans, it had been my job to care for the vestments and the chapel, to prepare for daily services, to train the students for their liturgical duties and to plan major festivals. Some ten years after I graduated, I visited my college. When I was introduced to some of the current students, one of them said, ‘Oh, you’re Richard Leggett, the last of hard-nosed sacristans!’
My hand-written correction to the invitation to my ordination was a gift to my friends and colleagues. They were pleased to see that I could be public about an omission and that I had been wise enough to take a simple way of remedying that omission. I did not hide my failure to proof-read before printing. And it was okay!
There is a saying in English: Perfection is the enemy of the good. Aidan Kavanagh, a Roman Catholic scholar and teacher of worship, puts it this way: The fear of making a mistake is the biggest mistake of all. Some of us, perhaps every one of us from time to time, can be paralysed by our fear of making a mistake. There is no denying that our mistakes can have serious consequences for ourselves and for others. Throughout our lives we have to think before we act. But we can never know everything. We can never guarantee that what we do will be successful or that there are no risks or that we may discover we’ve made a mistake. But not acting can be more costly than acting.
One of the mysteries of the story of the Christian movement is this: God uses imperfect human beings as the messengers and agents of the good news that in Christ Jesus we are shown how to be fully alive and fully ourselves as creatures made in God’s image and called to live into God’s likeness.
Today we celebrate the feast of Peter and Paul. It is because of these two men and all the other women and men who were among the first apostles and disciples of Jesus that we owe our presence here today. But none of them were perfect. All of them made mistakes. But their imperfections did not prevent them from helping to create a movement and communities that have the power to transform ourselves, our friends, families and neighbours, and even the world itself.
Let’s look at Peter for a moment. How many times in the Gospels do we see Peter getting things wrong? How many times does he ask the wrong question only to be corrected by Jesus? Who in all four Gospels is described as abandoning Jesus on that long Thursday night that stretched into Friday morning? Who hides himself away as Jesus is hanging on the cross?
And yet in today’s reading from the Gospel according to John, it is Peter to whom Jesus comes and drags him away from finding safety in his boat and his nets. It is Peter to whom Jesus, knowing all Peter’s faults and failures, confides the care of the community of disciples. It is Peter who risks social exclusion and accusations of consorting with the enemy who goes to Caesarea Philippi to preach to the household of Cornelius, a non-Jewish officer in the Roman army of occupation. It is Peter who convinces the Jewish-Christian leadership in Jerusalem that God was reaching out to the non-Jews as well as Jews. And we are here.
Then there’s our old friend Paul. Who is the man who guards the outer garments of those who stone Stephen, the first Christian martyr, to death? Who travels to Antioch in order to arrest and illegally extradite the followers of Jesus for trial and possible execution in Jerusalem?
And yet it is Paul to whom Jesus appears and leads him on a new and unimagined path that will end in Rome and martyrdom. It is Paul who will challenge the prejudices of Jewish Christians towards Gentile Christians and the prejudices of Gentile Christians towards Jewish Christians throughout all of his correspondence with the first Christian communities. It is Paul who will welcome the many Gentile women who find freedom in following Jesus and who become the benefactors of the Christian communities in the Roman Empire.
In Japan there is a tradition known as kintsugi or ‘golden repair’. Broken pottery is repaired by mending the areas material using gold, silver or platinum. Kintsugi treats ‘breakage and repair as part of the history of an object, rather than something to disguise’. [ii] From the very beginning of the human race, from the very beginning of the revelation of God to Moses, from the very first days of the Christian movement, God has treated our failures, our betrayals, our incompetence, our misunderstandings of the good news, our mistakes as part of our history and not as something to disguise.
The Canadian songwriter Leonard Cohen in his song, ‘Anthem’, writes: ‘Ring the bells that still can ring. Forget your perfect offering. There is a crack, a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in.’ [iii] Friends, we will not be perfect, but we can be good. We all have a few cracks, but that’s how the light of God’s grace has come into us and how the light shines out from us into our world.
Will the Search Committee choose the ‘perfect’ Rector? Probably not, but they’ll choose a good one. Will the Property Development Committee identify a ‘perfect’ re-development plan? Probably not, but they’ll choose a good one. And God will repair any cracks with silver, gold and platinum, so that the world will see and know that God raises up what has fallen, makes new what has grown old and is at work bringing about the world as God imagines and loves it to be.
[i] Ezekiel 34.11-16; Psalm 87; 2 Timothy 4.1-8; John 21.15-19.
[ii] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kintsugi accessed on 28 June 2025.
[iii] https://genius.com/Leonard-cohen-anthem-lyrics accessed on 28 June 2025.