Readings: 1 Chronicles, chapter 29.10-12
David blessed the Lord in the presence of all the assembly; David said: ‘Blessed are you, O Lord, the God of our ancestor Israel, for ever and ever.
Yours, O Lord, are the greatness, the power, the glory, the victory, and the majesty; for all that is in the heavens and on the earth is yours; yours is the kingdom, O Lord, and you are exalted as head above all.
Riches and honour come from you, and you rule over all. In your hand are power and might; and it is in your hand to make great and to give strength to all.’
and
Mark 6.7–13
Jesus called the twelve and began to send them out two by two, and gave them authority over the unclean spirits. He ordered them to take nothing for their journey except a staff; no bread, no bag, no money in their belts; but to wear sandals and not to put on two tunics. He said to them, ‘Wherever you enter a house, stay there until you leave the place. If any place will not welcome you and they refuse to hear you, as you leave, shake off the dust that is on your feet as a testimony against them.’ So they went out and proclaimed that all should repent. They cast out many demons, and anointed with oil many who were sick and cured them.
Sermon
So – we’ve heard the story, again. Jesus sends them out. Two by two. No bread, no bag, no money, no spare coat. Which is either a beautiful picture of radical trust… or the worst packing list in human history.
When Clare and I go for a weekend break in our caravan, it takes three lists to make sure we’ve got all the food, bedding, clothes and toiletries we need, to say nothing of the tools, chemicals and spanners required to make the caravan function. I keep a permanent checklist, which I have to tick off, item by item, before hitting the road.
So if I were organising this training exercise that Jesus initiated, there would be a spreadsheet. There would be columns. There would be a risk assessment. There would be a contingency plan, a back‑up plan, and a plan in case the back‑up plan failed.
Jesus, on the other hand, says: go light. Travel as if God might actually show up.
And that, I think, is the first thing that makes us nervous. Reliance on God sounds lovely until it means giving up the comforting illusion that WE are in control. Until it means admitting that our clever strategies, our persuasive arguments, even our lovely Mission Development Plans printed on thick paper with reassuring headings, might not be the thing that finally does the work.
Don’t misunderstand me. Planning matters. Thinking matters. Being intentional about what we do matters. But Mark 6 is very clear about what doesn’t get to be the engine in the motor car of mission. Not charisma. Not technique. Not packing an extra cloak ‘just in case’. The disciples are sent out slightly under-prepared on purpose. Jesus made them do it. So they have no choice but to lean on God.
Which is awkward, because most of us would rather lean on literally anything else. A leaflet. A course. A slogan. A vicar. Possibly a PowerPoint.
And then there’s the second bit. The bit we don’t put on the mission posters. ‘If any place will not welcome you and they refuse to hear you, as you leave, shake off the dust that is on your feet as a testimony against them.’
In other words: sometimes you have to stop trying to haul people into the Kingdom. Yes. You have to stop.
That’s not the bit we like, especially if we’ve spent years being told that faithfulness equals persistence at all costs. Try harder. Explain it better. Pray more intensely. If they’re not listening, perhaps you just haven’t found the right words yet.
And that lands very close to home for some of us. Parents. Grandparents. People who baptised their children with hope in their eyes and a candle in their hand, who now watch those same children roll their eyes at the very word ‘church’. ‘It’s lovely that you enjoy church, Grandma. But it’s not for me.’
Often, we are people who have prayed, nudged, hinted, invited, bribed, until we get to the point of exasperation: ‘Well, I just don’t understand it. What am I doing wrong?!’
Jesus’ instruction here is not cruel, and it’s not dismissive. It’s merciful. It says: your job is to witness, not to coerce. To offer, not to persuade. To speak, but not to chase people down the street waving a clever theological argument and shouting, ‘Just one more thing!’
There is a point at which continuing to push stops being faithfulness and starts being anxiety. A point at which our persistence is no longer about love, but about our need to feel that WE have done all that’s humanly possible to drag our loved ones to Jesus.
And this is where the first theme of the reading — leaning on God — answers the second — worrying about others.
If it all depends on us, then of course we never stop. Of course we carry the weight. Of course we lie awake rehearsing clever persuasive words we wish we’d said. If salvation is basically down to our performance, then every refusal feels like a personal failure.
But if it depends on God, then space opens up. Real space. Space for God to be God.
Jesus says elsewhere — and this is the line worth hanging onto — ‘And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself.’ That’s John, chapter 12 if you want to look it up. Notice what Jesus doesn’t say. Not ‘I will be assisted by your excellent communication skills.’ Not ‘I will draw those people you’ve successfully argued into submission.’ Just: I will draw all people to myself.
Which is either deeply comforting… or deeply annoying, depending on how much you enjoy feeling useful to God.
The disciples go out without any resources because THEY are not the point. And they are allowed to walk away because God does not need them to force the outcome. Their task is obedience, not success. Faithfulness, not control.
And that might be the word some of us need to hear today. Especially in a season of planning and vision and discernment. Especially when we care deeply about the future of the church. Especially when we care about those we love who are not here in church with us. Especially when we are worrying about whether any of this will ‘work’.
What if reliance on God is not a last resort, but the whole point? What if shaking the dust from our feet is not giving up, but trusting that God’s reach is longer than ours, and God’s patience far greater?
Which brings us, rather beautifully, to that canticle from Chronicles. ‘Yours, O Lord, are the greatness, the power, the glory, the victory, and the majesty… You are exalted as head over all.’
God’s is the greatness. Not ours. Not the PCC’s. Not even the Rector’s, which will come as a relief to everyone.
So go lightly. Love honestly. Speak when invited. Be silent when it’s time. And trust — really trust — that God is doing far more than we can see, often in places we can’t reach, with people we love dearly, even when we’re not in the room.
And that, oddly enough, is not a counsel of despair. It’s freedom.






