Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Blogging Back... But Moving

I have decided to try and reactivate my blog, but the time has come to move on from this site. My new blog is here.

Thanks for reading.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Easter

Our first Easter at Failsworth was surreal in many ways, but good. A real sense that God is moving among us, and He is starting to work in some of the areas we have been concerned about.

It was a great privilege to be able to lead a Holy Week series, based this year, mostly, on Matthew's gospel, tracing some of the teaching of Jesus about Himself and the Kingdom from Palm Sunday through to the events of the Passion. Meetings every evening of Holy Week plus Good Friday and, of course, Easter Sunday, meant a great deal of preparation. Next year I will need to carve out a week much earlier to produce Easter material.

My own Easter journey has been helped greatly, however, in the disciplne of study and preparation. I am constantly struck by the way in which Jesus redefines our narrow human understanding of Kingship, love, service, humility. I'm still working on Volf's "Exclusion and Embrace" but in thinking about the events of the Last Supper we are confronted with a Jesus looking across the intimacy of the shared meal table at His friends who will run away, at the one who will betray Him. Jesus who embodies "embrace" and we who can so easily embody "exclusion".

I've been much helped by Tom Wright's, "Surprised by Hope". This from chapter 4 which is entitled, "The Strange Story of Easter":

"Thomas, like a good historian, wants to see and touch. Jesus presents Himself to his sight, and invites him to touch; but Thomas doesn't. He transcends the type of knowing he had intended to use, and passes into a higher and richer one... Thomas takes a deep breath, and brings faith and history together in a rush. 'My Lord,' he says, 'and my God.'" (p81f)

May we all have the courage to pass into higher and richer ways of knowing our Risen Lord Jesus.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Brueggemann on Isaiah

Isaiah calls upon us to attest to both the grandeur of God in compassionate sovereignty and the pastoral reality of being God's people who are mandated to be unafraid in the world (as in 43:1), because the world belongs to the God who is doing a new thing (43:18-19). May the book of Isaiah empower us to be unafraid of our calling.

Brueggemann, Walter - 'Isaiah' in The Spiritual Formation Bible, London: Harper Collins: 2005:984

I dip into Isaiah quite frquently. Sovereignty, Kingdom, Justice, Compassion and Grace all in one place. Fantastic.