Sunday, April 29, 2018

JN 15: 9-17 
Jottings on John…Easter 6…Revised 2018 

Jesus is making a last pitch to His disciples. Not to ‘the’ disciples. They’re His disciples. So important to Him! And to His mission! He’s only hours away from His Passion & death. What does He feel He still needs to get through to those still with Him? What’s vital to Jesus here is helping His disciples grasp what’re discipleship’s all about; how deep & personal it is. (Is there such a person as a ‘theoretical disciple’?  So He expands on last week’s true vine & branches imagery; with its imagery of discipleship being a matter of remaining in Himself as the True Vine; living in Him & through Him. Using ‘imagery’ recalls to heart & mind that we’re made in the image of God. As basic a theology as one can get! Here are three thrusts I see that stem (!) from today’s passage. Perhaps you can see more? The ones I see are: a) Loving one another; b) Being called Jesus’ friends; &, c) Being chosen so we may bear fruit. They’re all a matter of relationship with God & each other, & each relies on the other!

Let’s start with c) : Being chosen so we may bear fruit. To live in Jesus. The initiative is taken by God. This, & our response of choosing to live in Him - are gifts of Grace. As we bear the fruits of right living, the effect of this is to bring Grace to others, too. This gift of Grace to us (& through us, to others) hangs on (!) our continuing in that relationship with God that living in Jesus by His Spirit makes possible. As we hang in there on the Vine & bear fruit. In every-day life at ground level. On earth as it is in Heaven. This Way Holy Spirit keeps Jesus’ imagery alive & well & ongoing. In us & for others. 

To take a), now: Loving one another, like living in God, is a further re-statement of the Two Great Commandments Jesus has already distilled from the Ten YHWH has given Moses long before. It’s the ongoing response to the question ‘But what does God want me to do?’ 

With regard to b): Being called Jesus’ friends, somewhere I once came across mention of a person who felt so honoured to have been counted a friend by a certain noted & godly person that they directed that when they them-self died, all that was to appear on their grave-stone was, ‘Here lies a friend of ……’ . Let’s respond to the honour Jesus bestows on us in calling us His friends by letting that show in our lives, rather than one day on our gravestones.

Societies of all stripes are becoming more & more unstuck & unstable. ‘Commandments’ of any kind are being more & more poorly observed except by extremists who bring neither their God nor themselves credit. For a good society, a God society, is what we need not so much cutting God’s commandments down to our size, but instead, letting God stretch us up to His size? There’s nothing bigger or better than Love as God sees it & practises it.

In a recent book, Bp. Tom Wright1 says, our present challenge is to see the world with different eyes. To see God with different eyes. To see our neighbour with different eyes. To see ourself with different eyes. This is the challenge of the good news for today & tomorrow.’ A good summing up of today’s passage is that not?


1 N.T.Wright, Simply Good News, HarperOne, NY, 2015, pp.4-5, 150-151.

Monday, April 23, 2018

JOHN 15: 1-8
Jottings on John…Easter 5…Revised 2018 

Jesus’ "I am the true vine" has more than one cutting edge to it. Pruning is important in our gardens & in our faith journey. We’ve given up growing grapes. It’s not the pruning that’s the trouble! It’s the parrots that abound where we live getting most of the grapes. As they still do our Olives; with a goodly share of mulberries & pomegranates thrown in for good measure. All in due season, of course! Maybe spiritual journeys, faith journeys, have seasons, too? A time to prune, a time to carry out other nurture? Might that be a useful question to ask of ourselves & our flocks?

As important a thrust of today’s passage as pruning, is, ‘remaining’ in Jesus. However we may interpret that; including remaining in His earthly Body, the Church. Even if we find the latter hard going sometimes! Ten times in ten verses Jesus uses, ‘remain’, one of the more frequent translations. (‘Abide’ smacks too much of a certain hymn often sung at the funerals of older people!) Are we helping our hearers understand that everything in our Gospels is translation? And a matter of interpretation?

 The translation I respond to most positively is, ‘live in’. Sydney Carter put this particularly well in his hymn, ‘Lord of the dance’.  Jesus, Himself the ‘Lord of the dance’, has it: “I’ll live in you as you live in me…” In another work, though, ‘The Present Tense’, Carter says, ‘Your holy hearsay is not evidence, Give me the good news in the present tense. So shut the Bible up and show me how The Christ you talk about is living now’. Some may find this a bit too radical; but for me, in these two contributions, Carter is helping us come to grips with both thrusts of today’s passage.

Another helpful insight comes from Luigi Gioia, OCSO, 1 who tells us that praying the Lord’s Prayer (he stresses it is the Lord’s prayer, not ours) introduces us into ‘His relation with the Father through the Holy Spirit’. What Fr. Luigi, appears to be telling us from his own experience here, is that praying then becomes an ‘inside job’; not that of an outsider. We find ourselves participating in that Relation-ship that is God’s own Life, that Love that flows between the Father & the Son by the Spirit. Jesus doesn’t say, ’I Am the Life’ just for the sake of having something to say! What’s at stake here is the difference between talking about living, & actually experiencing being alive! When we live in Him & pray in Him as He teaches us, we are embraced in a God-us relationship. Dare one say, a kind of Holy Quadrilateral? That way we become more & more ‘insiders’ as God - all of God - becomes more real as we live in Him.


1 ‘Say it to God’,  Bloomsbury, London, 2017, p. 78 

Monday, April 16, 2018

JOHN 10: 11-18
Jottings on John…Easter 4…Revised 2018.  

When is a gate not a gate? When it’s a shepherd! Our passage is alive with nuances of the stories of Israel of old. Over time I’ve come to think of Jesus, the gate of the sheep & at the same time their Good Shepherd, as One with Attitude. An Attitude flowing  from the heart of God & expressing itself in aptitude. Do we sometimes expect the reverse in our flock; aptitude finding expression as attitude? Does that work?

What started me off down this track long ago was a painting of Jesus the Good Shepherd above the altar of the parish I joined when I was a teenager. The Jesus of that painting has no attitude. I began to question, even then, whether a Jesus with no attitude has any aptitude for dealing with His sheep? My case firmed up just a few years ago, when a magazine published on its cover a photo of an OZ shepherd in oilskin coat & with a waterproofed bushman’s hat jammed down on his head, carrying a bedraggled lamb to shelter in his arms during a storm. This time, a portrait of a shepherd full of attitude; demonstrating his aptitude for the job! On many of our vast sheep runs the situation is of course much changed today. Shepherds ride trail-bikes, quad-bikes, & fly helicopters for round-ups! The quality of shepherding, though, even the mass-production kind, still depends on these modern driving / flying shepherds having the right attitude to their sheep. (Or, more likely, someone else’s sheep; or some big company’s sheep!)

How do we translate Jesus' Middle Eastern imagery (still alive & well, & still hard-going, in some parts of the world) into shepherding the sheep of today’s congregations? How to turn Jesus’ imagery into relevance for the many sheep astray & lost in the world’s wildernesses, shying clear of being corralled within organised religion? I’ve no specific answers. But let’s have Faith to expect & find some. When we & our flock are given the Grace to be shepherds with a Jesus-like Attitude & a Jesus-like Aptitude we will reach out to each other, & beyond our closed ranks. Making not just Jesus' imagery, but Jesus Himself a reality. 

The H.B. with its host of references to shepherds, sheep, & shepherding, & the often great if flawed figures involved, is a sound basis for the new understanding of shepherding Jesus Himself personifies & spells out. Is that Attitude of Love that flows between Father, Son, & Spirit flowing on & into us, & our relationships with God & each other? That One-ness of the Trinity embodying the Attitude & Aptitude we need to minister to today’s sheep inside & outside our churches? So there is more & more redeeming love for more & more ‘sheep’?


Be confident God’s Grace will point a way to counter the over-supply of ‘cowboys' we often seem to be lamenting! When we preach this passage let’s work positively with Attitude towards the building up of a greater supply of shepherds with godly Aptitude!

Sunday, April 1, 2018

JN 20: 19-31 
Jottings on John…2nd S. of Easter…Revised 2018. 

How Jesus 'broke into' that room isn’t nearly so important as how you & I break out from it. Are broken out! From behind whatever’s locking us in & preventing us becoming the person God knows we could become. Jesus, resurrected from behind that great rock door of Joseph of Arimathea’s tomb is our freedom, too, from our various prisons. Or, as Paul says, 'we are of all people most miserable'. Perhaps that's why so many of us are miserable today! Help is at hand!

‘Breaking & entering’ is an everyday crime these days. Cracks-people break in to steal things of value. Imagine God as the Great Cracks-person, though One who only has our well-being in mind! Breaking into Jesus’ tomb as He does; breaking Jesus out from death to new, raised life in a new dimension. God in Jesus then breaks into the room the disciples have shut themselves up in, & breaks them - or at least begins to break them - out from behind doubts & fears.

Another form of ‘breaking & entering’ today is ‘hacking’. Breaking into our computer programmes to steal personal information, including our credit card details! The programme we use will from time to time offer us ‘up-dates’, including ‘fixes’ for security issues; fixes that will keep us a step ahead of those who would break & enter our I.T. world. Imagine God as the Great Hacker, but only so as to be our spiritual up-date! 

God not only breaks & enters, hacks into Jesus’ tomb. God breaks into & hacks into Death itself! Plants a virus into its programme so its power to hold is destroyed. The disciples go on to be freed in a variety of ways, & raised to a new quality of life as a result. The same goes for us. Sure, we expect to be raised at that ‘Last Day’, but we don’t have to wait till then. Choose to be raised with Christ to a new quality, a new dimension of life, here & now.


No-one, says JN, could 'write down all the signs in this book'. Someone else, though, does choose to add another chapter later! Easter is both reminder, & opportunity, for us all to be writing new chapters of our own by becoming those new chapters as we’re all raised by the Spirit of Jesus.