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  • The Good Samaritan: Compassion as Default Social Attitude.

    The Good Samaritan, after Delacroix, 1890 - Vincent van Gogh - WikiArt.org

    Monday

    Luke 10.25-27 “On one occasion an expert in the law stood up to test Jesus. “Teacher,” he asked, “what must I do to inherit eternal life?” “What is written in the Law?” he replied. “How do you read it?” He answered, “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind’; and, ‘Love your neighbour as yourself.

    So a lawyer cross-examines Jesus on the law. Jesus replies with his own questions, and the scribal expert on the law answers exactly and correctly. Before jumping ahead it’s worth weighing that answer. Love God, unequivocally and with all that you are, and love your neighbour as your very own self. That’s a big ask. But a vertical God-directed love that is wholehearted, and a horizontal love directed at those wee meet on the road that is our life – there’s the basis for a life pleasing to God!

    Tuesday.

    Luke 10.28-29 “You have answered correctly,” Jesus replied, “Do this, and you will live.” But he wanted to justify himself so he asked Jesus, ”And who is my neighbour?”

    Trust a lawyer to insist on a clear definition of terminology! As soon as we ask “Who is my neighbour?” we are on the hunt for excuses, exclusions and evasions. Jesus will have none of it. So he tells the story we know as The Good Samaritan. One of the conditions of obedient discipleship is the refusal to reduce the demand of what God requires. Love your neighbour. No ifs and buts, no qualifiers. Just get on with it!

    Wednesday

    Luke 10.30 “In reply Jesus said: “A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, when he was attacked by robbers. They stripped him of his clothes, beat him and went away, leaving him half dead.”

    Bad things happen. None of us are immune to unexpected hardship, whether illness, loss of a job, times of low income and anxiety about how to manage, loneliness and depression. It’s a long list. “Love your neighbour as yourself” is one of those social and personal principles that can make the world safer, life less hard, and can produce in our communities a safety net of kindness and compassion for those who are struggling. In various ways life beats up people. They, in their need, each one, is our neighbour. A follower of Jesus can never ask, “And who is my neighbour?”

    Vellotton

    Thursday

    Luke 10.31-32 A priest happened to be going down the same road, and when he saw the man, he passed by on the other side.  So too, a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side.” 

    “Passed by on the other side.” The person who doesn’t want to get involved. The ‘not my problem’ brigade. We shouldn’t assume this was only about religious scruples. The Law id full of instructions to care for the stranger, show mercy, provide refuge and practical care for those who are suffering. The motives don’t matter. The injured man matters. Levite and priest both saw the man, and walked on. Don’t miss the shock that those words had on the first hearers. If those supposedly closest to God don’t love the neighbour, then nobody else needs to bother either.

    Friday

    Luke 10.33-34 But a Samaritan, as he travelled, came where the man was; and when he saw him, he took pity on him.  He went to him and bandaged his wounds, pouring on oil and wine. Then he put the man on his own donkey, brought him to an inn and took care of him.”

    Follow the verbs – saw him, took pity, went to him, bandaged, poured oil and wine, put him and brought him. This is compassion in action. Verbs are what obedience is about, they are doing words. Love your neighbour as yourself is about what we do!

    Saturday

    Luke 10.35 “The next day he took out two denarii and gave them to the innkeeper. ‘Look after him,’ he said, ‘and when I return, I will reimburse you for any extra expense you may have.’”

    Loving your neighbour is about doing words, including the verb ‘to give’. This isn’t small change which will never be missed. This is signing up to someone else’s need, and honouring the promise. “Love your neighbour as yourself” is miles away from feelings of sympathy, or ‘thoughts and prayers’! In the acts and gifts of agape love, there is an open-endedness that replicates the compassion of Jesus.

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    Sunday

    Luke 10.36-37 Which of these three do you think was a neighbour to the man who fell into the hands of robbers?” The expert in the law replied, “The one who had mercy on him.” Jesus told him, “Go and do likewise.”

    Question answered. Terminology defined. The neighbour is whoever needs our kindness, compassion, practical support. Neighbourliness is a sign of the Kingdom, no need to ask (WWJD) “What would Jesus do?” – you know perfectly well! Just do it!

  • Intercession as a Process of Kenosis, and a Lesson in Unselfishness.

    20230321_122210Last night we met for an hour in church to pray for and with our asylum-seeking friends, and to pray for a more just, compassionate and efficient system of responding to those who arrive on our shores, often traumatised, alone and in desperate need of a safe place to recover, and rebuild their lives.
     
    The Scottish theologian P T Forsyth wrote important words about what happens when we pray for others and with others: “Trusting the God of Christ, and transacting with him, we come into tune with men [and women]. Our egoism retires before the coming of God, and into the clearance there comes with our Father, our brother.”
     
    Intercession is a process of kenosis, a relinquishing of our own claims, and in their place a commitment to sponsoring the needs of others. Intercession is practised unselfishness in the presence of God. I and others prayed in English – a number of our Iranian friends prayed in Farsi, the one word we all recognised being 'Amen!'
     
    That single word of "May it be so", said together and responsively, welded hearts together in shared hope and human sympathy. I know that migration is a huge issue facing our world, and immigration is a complex and controversial issue facing our country. But those shared times of prayer touch deeply into who we are as a community of Christians seeking to be the presence of Christ in our City.
     
    "He has shown you O man what is good, and what does the Lord require of you? To act justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God." (Micah 6v8) For myself the question mark is the criterion for judging how I look at the world, and those I meet on the road – what does the Lord require of me? The answer informs my prayers – I pray that our Government, of whatever colour, will act justly, love mercy, and walk humbly in a world that belongs to God before any of the rest of us.
  • TFTD May 27-June 2: Spirit of Truth, Counsellor and Advocate.

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    Monday

    John 3.5-7 “Very truly I tell you, no one can enter the kingdom of God unless they are born of water and the Spirit. Flesh gives birth to flesh, but the Spirit gives birth to spirit.”

    New beginnings cannot happen without radical change. Jesus is describing the new creation of the human heart, mind and will, by an inner transformation of our identity. We become God’s children because we are born again because born of God. This is John’s way of saying that to believe and trust and follow Jesus as the Son of God, is to be made a new person, born of God by the Spirit of God; or as Paul would day, “if anyone is in Christ – new creation happens!” (2 Cor. 7.17)

    Tuesday

    John 3.8 “The wind blows wherever it pleases. You hear its sound, but you cannot tell where it comes from or where it is going. So it is with everyone born of the Spirit.”

    God can’t be pinned down to our categories. The work of the Spirit is as invisible and mysterious as the wind blowing through a forest. And when we are once touched and made new by the Spirit, we too are called to a freedom of movement that is at the call and calling of Jesus. There will always be something incomprehensible about the love and grace and mercy of God, and how the Spirit shapes our lives in ways we cannot predict or control. That’s the adventure of discipleship!

    Wednesday

    John 4.24 “God is Spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and in truth.”

    Truth lies at the very heart of John’s Gospel. The work and ministry of the Spirit of truth leads us into the truth of who Jesus is. Jesus even says “I am the Way, the Truth and the Life.” So when it comes to our worship and service to God, what is essential is “truth in the inward parts”, integrity, a complete connection between what we believe and what we do. God sees to the deep core of who we are, and we are called to live up to the truth that we are born of the Spirit, children of God.

    Thursday

    John 14.15-16 “If you love me, you will obey what I command. And I will ask the Father and he will give you another Counsellor to be with you forever – the Spirit of truth.”

    These words were spoken to disciples dreading a future without Jesus. Two things will keep them faithful and keep them going. Love for Jesus, shown in their willingness to live into and out of Jesus’ teaching. And the gift and presence of the Holy Spirit who will make Jesus real and present with them. The words Paraclete, Counsellor, Comforter – they are all attempts to translate this ministry of coming alongside to strengthen, to guide, and yes, to make possible the very obedience that marks out every disciple of Jesus as a follower of the truth as it is in Jesus.

    Friday

    John14.26 “All this I have spoken while still with you. But the Counsellor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you.”

    The Spirit is sent in the name of the Son. The triune love of God is expressed and expressly shared by the generous outgoing gift of the Holy Spirit. It is the ministry of the Holy Spirit to educate the Church in the truth of all that Jesus means as the gift of the Father’s love. It is the Spirit who guides us in our reading of Scripture, deepens our understanding of our own hearts, and sends us into the world. The Spirit of Truth opens our eyes to interpret the culture we live in, empowers us to embody and speak the truth that in Jesus is the fuller life we crave, and who is the guiding luminous light we need, who tells us the God’s honest truth that sets us free.

    Saturday

    John 16.12-13aI have much more to say to you, more than you can now bear. But when the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all truth.”

    Just as with the disciples, there are truths we are not yet ready to hear. They couldn’t know what it would be like when Jesus was crucified, then risen, then no longer with them. But when that time comes, the Spirit who is the guiding comfort of God, will bring them to trust and peace. And we cannot know all that lies ahead of us, but we have Jesus’ promise of the Spirit who is ahead of us as the Counsellor-Comforter.

    Sunday

    John 20.21-22 “Peace be with you! As the Father has sent me, I am sending you. And with that he breathed on them and said, “Receive the Holy Spirit.””

    The Holy Spirit is not mere gift, but gift that brings purpose, responsibility and mission. The Spirit is the breath of Jesus in the church, the source of energy and life. That energy is to be expended in becoming the living, loving community of Jesus in the world. In Jesus was life, and the life was the light of all people. That life is now flowing through the Body of Christ, energising the community of the Spirit, overflowing with the Father’s love to a God-loved world.

    Breathe on me breath of God, fill me with life anew;

    that I may love as Thou dost love, and do as Thou wouldst do.

  • Trinity Sunday: The Triune God of Love.

    A preview ne of the TFTD entries for the coming week, because it's appropriate too on Trinity Sunday. The tapestry, titled "Perichoresis", is the first theological abstract I ever attempted (2011). See the wise counsel of George Hunsinger below!
     
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    John14.26 “All this I have spoken while still with you. But the Counsellor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you.”
     
    The Spirit is sent in the name of the Son. The triune love of God is expressed and expressly shared by the generous outgoing gift of the Holy Spirit. It is the ministry of the Holy Spirit to educate the Church in the truth of all that Jesus means as the gift of the Father’s love.
     
    It is the Spirit who guides us in our reading of Scripture, deepens our understanding of our own hearts, and sends us into the world. The Spirit of Truth opens our eyes to interpret the culture we live in, empowers us to embody and speak the truth that in Jesus is the fuller life we crave, and who is the guiding luminous light we need, who tells us the God’s honest truth that sets us free.
    ……
    "God's cognitive availability through divine revelation allows us…to predicate descriptions of God that are true as far as we can make them, while God's irreducible ineffability nonetheless renders even our best predications profoundly inadequate."
    George Hunsinger, 'Postliberal Theology' in Cambridge Companion to Postmodern Theology, ed. Vanhoozer, (Cambridge, 2003) p.47
  • I am the Good Shepherd: In Defence of Stained Glass

    St Michael Window 1
    We had just driven for miles through a landscape of valleys and hills, passing flock after flock of sheep, most of them with lambs. After the cup of tea and fruit loaf in a busy Hawkshead Tea Room, a wander around St Michael and All Angels.
     
    A single panel stained glass image of the Good Shepherd, with a transparent panel each side looking across the village to the fields. A coincidence of image and the real world, of art and story, and a moment in which spirituality becomes a fusion of our own experiences, a remembered story, an artist's imagination, a biblical text, and a world in which sheep and lambs are crucial to the local economy.
     
    Oh I know, the stained glass window can be dismissed as Victorian sentimental wish it were so; and quite right, it isn't high art, though I personally think it is both naive and effective.
    But on a May afternoon,
    in a church that has stood here since 1300,
    and recalling my own background in farms that had cows and sheep,
    and that meandering car journey along single lane roads,
    there I was,
    looking at and through this window which was itself a moment of prayer –
    not of words, but of memories and mood,
    emotion and remembered experiences
    of being one of those the Good Shepherd knows, and calls by name.
     
    Now all I needed was an organist to play Bach's "Sheep May Safely Graze." But not to be, so I hummed it a bit
  • St Michael and All Angels, Hawkshead 1. Visitor and Host.

    St Michael hawkshead
    Today we visited St Michael's and All Angels in Hawkshead. It has been there since around 1200. It was enlarged in 1300 and again in 1500, and the building today is much as it was 500 years ago.
     
    The latch on the door is a bit tricky, but I got inside and loved the silence and peace of the place. Then the latch rattled, and rattled again, followed by a knocking on the door. I went over and opened it from the inside and in the unlit vestibule the gentlemen said "Thank you Father." Then he saw me and smiled, and went and lit a candle, which he placed next to the one I had just lit, and then to the pews to pray.
     
    St Michaels 2
     
    There's much to say about the church interior, another longer post later. For now, it was one of those interludes that was unscheduled (we'd gone looking for the tearoom), but there's something amusingly poignant about opening a church door from the inside when someone is so audibly rattling and knocking, to get in. There's a parable there, somewhere, which I leave you to find
  • TFTD: The Spirit of Life and Life in the Spirit

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    Monday

    Romans 5.5 “Hope does not disappoint us, because God has poured out his love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit whom he has given us!

    The Holy Spirit is God’s giving gift; the Gift that keeps on giving. Faith, hope and love are the foundation pillars of Christian character, and the greatest of these is love. Why? Because it is the divine love poured out upon us and within us, as God’s gift. We love because he first loved us; and we love with the love that is the overflow of the Spirit of God within us. We are conduits of love, channels through whom God’s love flows out in blessing, compassion and life-giving service in Jesus’ name.

    Tuesday

    Romans 8.1-2 “There is now therefore, no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit of life set me free from the law of sin and death.”

    The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of life, the vivifying, energising, creative power of God. Paul says elsewhere, “For freedom Christ has set us free.” Here Paul is celebrating the work of the Holy Spirit in setting us free from the guilt and shame of sin, and from the fear of death. The law of the Spirit of life is the truth that, by faith in the faithfulness of Christ on the cross, and in the renewing power of the risen Christ, we are liberated, heart and mind set free to love and serve and worship God.

    Peace

    Wednesday

    Romans 8.15-16 “The Spirit you received does not make you slaves, so that you live in fear again; rather, the Spirit you received brought about your adoption to sonship. And by him we cry, “Abba, Father.” The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God’s children.”

    The Spirit is God’s confirmation that we belong to God. When we feel we have failed God or others, or even ourselves, or when life’s harder journeys raise doubts and overshadow our faith, the Holy Spirit is our closest friend and strongest advocate. Yes we hold on in faith and trust, but that’s because we are held on to by the faithful strong Comforter. In our own hearts the Spirit of life, freedom and love reassures us: Yes, no matter what, you are, you absolutely are, God’s children.

    Thursday

    Romans 8.26 “In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groans that words cannot express.”

    The same Spirit who assures us we are God’s children, gives us the language and the capacity and the confidence to pray to the Father. Our stumbling and stuttering are translated into the beautiful and intimate language of worship and devotion. Our inadequate prayers are like light passing through a stained glass window, so that our heart’s desires and our longings for peace and justice and the healing of our world, are transmuted and translated by the Spirit, finding their truest and clearest words.

    Friday

    Romans 12.11Never flag in zeal, be aglow with the Spirit, serve the Lord.” (RSV)

    There’s a three point sermon if ever there was one! Give the Holy Spirit freedom, live the life God gives, use generously the gifts God gives. Let the Holy Spirit ignite everything in you that is fuel for service. This is also a three point team talk, Paul the motivator is encouraging believers in Jesus to go out and express themselves with all the talent, energy, experience and positivity of those who know they can win. 

    Saturday

    Romans 14.17 “For the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking, but of righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit.”

    The Kingdom of God is about all that makes for obedience to the ways of Jesus. Righteousness is a rich cluster of being right with God, seeking justice, making and building peace, and celebrating the goodness and mercies of God with joy in the Holy Spirit. Righteousness, peace and joy are parts of our spiritual barcode, essential identifying marks of Christians in love with Christ. And in that love, serving Him in the power of the Holy Spirit with hearts and hands open towards a God-loved world.

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    Sunday

    Romans 15.13May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.

    We are living through a time when hope comes hard, when there seems to be a deficit of joy, and when peace would be a fine thing if the world could find it! But remember – it was the Spirit of God who brooded over the chaos, and by God’s word brought creation to be. That same Spirit of Life, is the One by whose power Christ was raised from the dead, and yes, that same Spirit pours love and hope into our hearts until they overflow. We are a people called to embody the hope of the Gospel, to enact and proclaim the love of God, to be ‘ministers of reconciliation and Christ’s blessed peacemakers. And all this in the power of the Holy Spirit. Why not try Romans 15.13 as the prayer to regularly start your day?    “May the God of hope fill us with all joy and peace as we trust in him, so that we may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.” AMEN

  • TFTD May 13-19: Come Holy Spirit – Towards Pentecost.

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    Monday

    O Thou who camest from above,

    the pure, celestial fire to impart,

    Kindle a flame of sacred love,

    on the mean altar of my heart.

    When the flames of Pentecost rested on the heads of the Apostles they learned how to speak of Jesus to the international crowds of pilgrims in Jerusalem. Wesley is a theologian of the heart, knowing that it is on “the mean altar of my heart” that love and gratitude are kindled. They too are gifts of the Spirit, just as much as the words and courage to speak about Jesus to others. Come Holy Spirit and ignite my heart.

    Tuesday

    Creator Spirit, by whose aid

    the world’s foundations first were laid,

    Come visit every waiting mind,

    Come, pour Thy joys on humankind;

    From sin and sorrow set us free,

    and make Thy temples worthy Thee.

    From the brooding Spirit of Creation in Genesis 1 to the Spirit of the Churches in Revelation, the Holy Spirit is the active presence and creative agent of God’s purposes. The Christian mind and heart are made new in Christ, each indwelt by the Spirit of truth and love. Only the self-giving love of Christ and the renewing power of the Holy Spirit can make us worthy recipients of the indwelling gift of the living Christ in us, the hope of glory. “Come Creator Spirit and renew me in thought and action.

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    Wednesday

    Breathe on me breath of God:

    fill me with life anew,

    That I may love as Thou dost love,

    and do what Thou woulds’t do.

    Edwin Hatch who wrote this beautiful prayer-hymn, was a brilliant scholar and academic. He produced a huge Concordance of the Greek version of the Old Testament. Yet his spirituality is in such simple devotional prose. To love as Jesus loved, and do as Jesus did, is the fruit of a God-breathed life. “Come Holy Spirit, breathe on me the breath of God, and fill me with the love of Christ.”

    Thursday

    Spirit of holiness, wisdom and faithfulness,

    wind of the Lord blowing strongly and free;

    strength of our serving and joy of our worshipping –

    Spirit of God bring your fullness to me.

    Holiness, wisdom, faithfulness, freedom, strength, joy – yes the fullness of God poured into our emptiness, igniting all that will burn within us. The Holy Spirit is the gift and grace and generosity of God, poured out and poured into those who in Christ are a new creation. The Holy Spirit is the fount of blessing, the conduit of the grace that strengthens our hearts and fills them with joy. Come Holy Spirit, bring your fullness and freedom to me.

    Friday

    Spirit of God unseen as the wind,

    gentle as is the dove

    Teach us the truth and help us believe,

    show us the Saviour’s love.

    Jesus told Nicodemus the wind blows wherever and whenever, you can’t see it but you can see its influence. The gentle dove descending on Jesus at his baptism, and later Jesus described himself as ‘gentle and lowly of heart’. But gentleness is not weakness. In Jesus it is strength harnessed to purpose, disciplined power expressed in love to the Father. The Spirit of God is unseen, gentle, shaping and forming us in ways we don’t always realise. Come Holy Spirit, show us the Saviour’s love.

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    Saturday

    We sing the Holy Spirit, full of love,

    who seeks out scars of ancient bitterness,

    Brings to our wounds the healing grace of Christ:

    Come radiant Love, live in our hearts today.

    The Holy Spirit is not the Church’s personal possession. The Spirit is God’s active presence throughout the world, in the sustaining of creation, and in the structures and systems of human life. That means where there is systemic injustice, chronic poverty, wastefulness of Creation, violence between peoples and nations, hatreds that are centuries old – to such brokenness the Holy Spirit, full of love brings to the world’s wounds the healing grace of Christ. Come Holy Spirit, live in our hearts that we may be couriers of the healing grace of Christ in our wounded world.

    Pentecost

    Pentecost Sunday

    Thou Christ of burning, cleansing flame, Send the fire!
    Thy blood-bought gift today we claim, Send the fire!
    Look down and see this waiting host, give us the promised Holy Ghost,
    We want another Pentecost, Send the fire!

    William Booth’s hymn is the Salvation Army anthem. The passion and fire of the Spirit at Pentecost are the essentials of mission and evangelism. They cleanse the church, inspire our worship, make us urgent in loving a broken world, hold us true to Christ in our discipleship, push back the limits of our vision, and make real in the life of the church the gift and promise of the Father, in the Son, through the Spirit. Come Holy Spirit, send the fire; then send us “to live a dying world to save.”

  • “Gie’s Peace!” Some Thoughts on Praying When We’re Annoyed.

    P1010575"Gie's peace!" The phrase is a Scottish contraction of "Give us peace". It's a plea, but the tone is an urgent demand! Usually it's a clear sign of frustration, impatience, even exhaustion. It mostly arises from anger and powerlessness, and usually means "I've had enough!" 

    "Gie's peace!" is always an interruption of a conversation, a signal that whatever is happening or being said should stop. In more formal language it is a "cease and desist" order. 

    "Gie's peace!" is an expression of a person's need for respite, relief, and time for recovery of inner equilibrium because somehow the world out there, with its tirade of words coming at us, the conveyor belt of happenings that keep on coming and that we have to cope with, they're all too much.

    And here's the thing. "Gie's peace!" is often said to those who are nearest to us, a cry of the heart to those who care about how we feel. It erupts in the context of a relationship of trust, the best place for a cry for peace to be heard, and understood.

    At heart "Gie's peace!" is a cry for help, support and understanding. It's a desperate response to whatever is coming at us, other people's words, demands, criticisms, or just the cumulative impact of too many expectations. And so the prayer is uttered, "Gie's peace!"

    There. I've said it. "Gie's peace!" is a prayer. Short, to the point, from the heart, to God. It arises from pain, frustration, and a heart pushed to its limits. It can even be used as a prayer response.

    Really? With the full range of meanings and situations just described? Telling God we've had enough? That it's all too much? In the face of life's too-muchness, can we really tell God to "cease and desist"? Perhaps not. But then again, perhaps.

    Hands-interracial-1000x556If we ask God for peace we should be careful and care-filled with what we ask.

    Peace isn't, and cannot be a self-preserving inner immunity to the world's suffering.

    Peace isn't, and cannot be, contentment and passivity in the face of injustice and cruelty, or indifference and complacency about poverty and oppressive systems.

    Peace isn't, and cannot be, about my personal piety and spiritual wellbeing; there are communities out there, indeed a community of communities, but riven by division, not helped by divisive rhetoric and fuelled suspicions.

    Peace isn't and cannot be, for the church but not for the world, for us but not for them, for our way of life to be protected while others' ways of life are devastated by market forces, climate change, long term enmities and wars, and oppressive persecutory regimes. 

    "Lord, gie's peace!" is a prayer that respects the apostrophe. It means "Lord give us peace". In prayer before "The Father from whom his whole family in heaven and in earth derives its name",  'us' is a universal; just as "Give us this day our daily bread" is a prayer for a hungry world just as much as for our own table.

    "Lord gie's peace!" There's a case to be made for a responsive prayer, written out of our frustration and exhaustion in the face of a suffering world. An honest and emotionally freighted prayer, impatient, angry, trustful but struggling, pleading and yet a demand, peremptory and yet persistent. The One we address is the God of Peace; the world we live in is facing a huge peace deficit; we connect those two poles of our existence together when, standing in our place in the world, we dare to pray, "Lord, gie's peace!" 

     

     

     

     

  • This Week is a Johannine Week.

    This week is a Johannine week for three reasons.

    First, I will finally get to meet someone I've come to know on Facebook, Professor Paul Anderson. Paul is a leading Johannine scholar, who has written widely and edited dozens of books in  the prestigious series produced by Brill. Paul will be leading a seminar here on the Aberdeen campus on “Jesus in Johannine Perspective—Inviting a Fourth Quest for Jesus.” 

    ChristologyI first came across Paul's name when I read his major monograph The Christology of the Fourth Gospel, which is based on his doctoral thesis at the University of Glasgow, which is another connection, as we share Glasgow as our alma mater.The magisterial Johannine scholars Raymond Brown, D. Moody Smith and C. K. Barrett wrote admiring and appreciative reviews of Anderson's study of John 6 as a primary text in exploring the Christology of John.  

    Beyond that Paul has been an encouraging friend to those of us likewise fascinated by the gospel of John. Questions, requests for guidance in reading, and at times a generous sending of some of his own articles, all combine to make him a reliable go-to friend and senior scholar. I look forward to meeting him in person.

    Paul is a Quaker and his faith commitment both disciplines and enriches his academic work. He is in the tradition of Elton Trueblood and Richard Foster, committed to an expression of Quaker spirituality that is engaged with contemporary life and thought, while seeking to be faithful in understanding and applying the insights of his own tradition. 

    Continuing the Johannine week theme, secondly, on Sunday past, my long time and very good friend Ken Roxburgh was preaching on John chapter 4, and the Samaritan woman at St Paul's and St George's church in Edinburgh. He told me he would be taking a positive view of her, and offering an alternative interpretation to the pervasive view of her as an immoral woman in an atypical marital situation, and the source of much local scandal. Ken argues that the woman was one of the first couriers of the good news, commissioned by Jesus to push the message of the gospel into the wider and furthest margins of Jewish first century faith. That chimes exactly with where my own interpretation has come to rest, and such an interpretation opens up a whole range of new insights. You can hear Ken's sermon by clicking here. 

    SamariaUnconnected to these two friends tackling Johannine texts in different ways and for different purposes,  a couple of weeks ago I borrowed The Woman at the Well, by Janeth Norfleete Day, a scholarly monograph published by Brill in 2002, some time before Paul became an editor for the publisher. It is a careful, clear thinking analysis of the text and its reception in sermons, commentary and art through the centuries. This is the kind of biblical scholarship that one way or another preachers are required to read as present day exegetes and expositors of the text, entrusted with exploring its meaning and its significance for our understanding and practice of faith. I think it would not be possible to read this book and weigh its evidence, and then be content to continue to slander one of the first women entrusted with the good news as an apostle to her own neighbourhood. More of that when I write a separate post on the argument of the book and on that central text of John  on how God's good news can't be pinned down to our limited expectations. 

    So this week I finally get to meet Paul who kens stuff (a lot of stuff!) about John; I was able to listen to my close friend Ken, preaching on a key text for Christology and mission (and he also kens stuff!). And in addition, I'm finishing reading a Johannine monograph on The Samaritan Woman, that satisfyingly destabilises an interpretive tradition that does scant justice to the importance and truth of a long conversation by a well in Samaria, between Jesus and a woman whose life experience and spiritual alertness were life transforming for her and her community, as she sees and responds to the revelation of the One who came to her as Living Water.

    Aye, a Johannine study week, of a gospel that like the living water it describes, "is like a well of water, springing up to eternal life."