Author: alibates (Page 5 of 8)

Lent 2025 Reflections on John’s Gospel

Introduction

This series of reflections for Lent are going to take us on a journey through John’s gospel. It is a gospel I have always loved, maybe, dare I say it, more than the synoptics. Each gospel has its own strengths, and they are all incredibly important in giving us a full picture of Jesus’ life and ministry.  John does not attempt to tell us everything, he says as much at the end, but he carefully curates what he is going to draw from Jesus’ life so that we might understand, believe and so find eternal life. He creates wonderful imagery with his seven ‘I am’ sayings of Jesus, and the miraculous signs that explain who Jesus is. John is the ‘beloved disciple’ of this gospel, a young man at the time of Jesus’ ministry, he had many years to reflect on his faith before writing this beautiful gospel. It is likely that it was written in Ephesus around AD 80-90. Traditionally he is believed to be the son of Zebedee, the brother of James.

Lent runs for 40 days up to Easter Saturday , but does not include Sundays.

Lent Reflection Day 1,  5th March

John 1:1-28

John starts his gospel at the beginning of time with Jesus’ pre-existence as the eternal Word. He tells us of his involvement in creation, with language that is reflective of Genesis 1. Jesus is the source of life and light, the light that overcomes the darkness. He is the one who is full of grace and truth, and his glory has been revealed to us through Jesus. The meaning of ‘Word’ in this passage is of an idea that finds a concrete expression. Jesus is the culmination of God’s revelation to humanity. He is the revelatory word in human form, the absolute expression of God, his nature and salvation plan, and the means of rescuing humanity.

Everything that has happened from Genesis 1 to now has been about this: God’s heart for the salvation and redemption of humanity. He has revealed God’s glory to us so that we might be saved. This glory, grace, truth, and light is about to be revealed in this person, who is the son of God. John is not bothered to retell the stories of Jesus’ birth; it is more important for him that we understand the magnitude of who he was and what he has done for us. When Christ comes into the world something utterly stupendous is happening the ramifications of which will never end.

Response: After each reading choose a word, phrase, idea or action that strikes you as significant at this moment in your life and spend a few minutes reflecting on it.

Starting a new season.

Today is 3rd March and officially according to the MET Office Spring has come. It does feel like it during the day while it is beautifully sunny, but at night it is really cold, below freezing. So, I am resisting the temptation to put anything outside, apart from the peas and sweet peas which are in a cold frame. I chitted these in damp compost first as they were old seed, but they all came good.

Currently still in the ground, at the allotment, are leeks, celery, chard, spring broccoli, spring cabbage, and a few sad white and savoy cabbage. Everything else is either perennial planting or green manures. The celery doesn’t look like it survived the chill we had in January, the cabbages are not looking good and the green manure is largely eaten by the deer! I still need to find a deer resistant green manure. The Purple Sprouting Broccoli is doing well, and I have had a few pickings, and the 9 Star is still to come. The leeks still look a bit thin, but they are coming on OK. I dug up the remainder of the parsnips and was surprised at how thin a lot of them were given how much rain we had last year.

The garlic finally went in, quite a bit later than I would have wanted. These are replanted cloves from this year’s harvest, bought as Solent Wight 3 years ago. They were in modules in a small plastic greenhouse at home. Storm Bert shook them all off their shelf and upside down onto the floor. Ah well, they are planted out now and they seem to have recovered and forgiven me!

The onion germination was mixed. The Red Baron were great, the Zebrun about 80% germination but the Bedfordshire Champion was about 60% successful. These were old seed, so I bought some new seed and chitted them first to make sure they were good. So now there are about 40 of each, which should be enough.

Every windowsill is covered in seedlings, there is no more space. As soon as the nights warm up a little the hardier plants will go to the cold frames to make room for the next succession of sowings. In front of me now there are chillis, aubergines, dahlias, tree spinach, tagetes, and herbs. All small seedlings. Upstairs are the onions, cabbages, caulis, calabrese, and lettuces. Still to germinate are the moment are beetroot, chard, spinach, more herbs, Agastache and calendula. In the fridge the Korean celery is still chilling!

I am thinking that this year I won’t grow parsnips but try some other root veg like oca and sweet potato. It’s always interesting to try new varieties. Well, it’s begun and will only get busier over the next few months.

If you are growing your own food however much or little I wish you all the best, and don’t be fooled by this false spring!

Advent Reading Day 25

Happy Christmas!

So, we arrive at the day we have been anticipating when Christ is born, and God begins his ultimate work of redemption. The main characters in this story were looking forward to a day when they hoped the Messiah would come. Along with Paul we have the great privilege of looking back at these past events, knowing that the Messiah has come, and that salvation is now available to all peoples. God’s plan for his Church will continue to be worked out until the day when Jesus returns.

I leave you with this simple verse:

Titus 2:11 ‘’the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation to all’.

Thank God for his plan!

Advent Reading Day 24

Phil. 2:6-11

Yesterday’s passage focussed very much on Jesus pre-existent state with God and his involvement in creation. Todays’ focus is more on the giving up of that position. Though he was God he did not hold on to his privileged position but humbled himself to human form to be born in a manger. All this happened voluntarily. He allowed himself to be emptied of his proper place and glory, and emptied himself into a human form. You could also read this as he ‘poured’ himself out and into the form of a slave. This perhaps reflects Isaiah 53:12 ‘he poured out his life unto death’. Yet he is still divine, the God/man choosing to live in our human frailty but without sin.

Divine nature is encased in human nature

Divine privilege exchanged for the form of a servant

Divine glory is relinquished for obedience to death. For us death is a necessity, for a divine being it is not, it is an obedience.

Paul declares that because of all this God has elevated him to the highest position of honour. He is looking forward to the day when every knee shall bow and tongue confess that the baby born in a manger is Christ the Lord.

God’s plan is set in motion: birth death, resurrection and ascension have happened. The Spirit has been poured out and the Church begun. There is one more step to come, the return of the Saviour.

Reflection

Another passage written as a poem or hymn. This hymn celebrates the reason for the baby coming, the path of his life on earth and the one he now lives in heaven again. Take a moment to pray through this passage giving thanks to God that all this happened for your salvation, and that you are part of his plan.

Advent Reading Day 23

Colossians 1:15-20

This passage tells us something about Jesus’ relationship to the Father, creation and the Church. We read in it about how Paul understood the pre-eminence of Christ, expressed in who he was and who he is to us as believers, and the purpose for which he came into this world. It’s starting point is not unlike John ch.1 declaring Christs pre-existence and involvement in creation. Paul elaborates on what that included: not just the seen, but the unseen world as well. This involvement of Christ in creation helps us understand the verse in Genesis which speaks of God making man in ‘our image’ (Ge. 1:26), the whole Godhead is involved.

Whilst the image in us is broken, in Christ it is the precise image of God (Jn.14:9). If we want to know God, we find him in Jesus. Everything exists in him, for him and through him. He has now become head of the Church and the first to rise from the dead. Jesus can do what no mere human can do – he can reconcile us to God. God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, so in Jesus rests the sum total of all divine power and attributes. Only one who has reconciled being God and man in himself is qualified to bring us back to God, and because of this he has the pre-eminence. In ways we cannot comprehend this baby in a manger was the one who flung stars into space.

God is creator and redeemer, he is a God of mercy and love, and one who has a plan to rescue people from death to life.

Reflection

Some theologians think these verses are part of an early church hymn or poem, some would disagree. Either way it is often written out as a poem. Perhaps we could think of it as a NT psalm? Take a few moments to read it through again and use it as the vehicle for your time of worship and thanks to God for Christ, our redeemer.

Advent Reading Day 22

Matthew 2:19-23

Once again Joseph is given instructions in a dream to ensure the safety of the Christ child. Initially it must have been comforting to know that Herod was dead, and they could go home.  It seems he planned to go back to Bethlehem in Judea where they had been living. Then he hears that Herod’s son, Archelaus, is reigning there and he is afraid, and for good reason. Whilst disputing his father’s will, Archelaus had overreacted to some trouble that occurred during the Passover and had killed around three thousand pilgrims. He was as dangerous as his father.

So, Mary, Joseh and Jesus go to back to Nazareth and there they stay, and the child Jesus becomes a man and ready to begin his ministry. Nazareth is in the south part of Galilee on a major trade route where travellers from across the world could be seen.

Through all this Jospeh has kept an open heart to hear from God. It suggests he is a devoted man of faith who God could trust to take care of his Son. He has been landed with a great responsibility, but he doesn’t resent it and keeps an open responsive heart.

Reflection

Once Jesus begins his ministry we do not hear of Joseph again, only his mother and brothers. So it would seem as though by the time Jesus is about thirty years old that Joseph has died. He does not get to see the outstanding ministry this Son will have. I wonder what sort of reception he receives in heaven?  Often we don’t get to see the fruit of our labours, we might imagine then that there isn’t any, but God asks us to serve by faith. The important thing is that we have done what he asked and that is enough.

Day 21 Advent Reading

Matthew 2:13-18

Here we see Jospeh caring for his family and being given instruction to move them to Egypt for their safety until he is told it is safe to return. He is made aware of just how dangerous Herod is; something which the end of this passage makes horribly clear.

Egypt has often been a part of Israel’s history as a place of sanctuary during persecution or famine, and of course it was also a place of slavery from which they needed to be delivered by Moses. Because of this there is quite a sizeable Jewish community living in Egypt. The full text that Matthew quotes says ‘When Israel was a child, I loved him, and out of Egypt I called my son.’ Once again Jesus, the Christ child, is not living in comfort or ease but now is a refugee fleeing from persecution with his parents.

Herod is a dangerous, violent and paranoid man who has already murdered his wife and two sons and is now very angry. He has worked out from what the wise men told him that the baby would be under two years old and so, mercilessly, he preserves his power by murdering every baby boy in Bethlehem who is under two. Herod perhaps personifies the devil’s hatred of Jesus and determination to destroy the Messiah. Joseph’s obedience is key to their survival.

The son of God has been born into a world full of evil and pain, from which even he is not safe. He will become the man of sorrows, acquainted with grief. But evil will not win, Herod will die, the baby will become the saviour of the world. God’s plan will prevail.

Reflection

One imagines that Joseph’s life is definitely not going as he might once have imagined! A pregnant fiancée, a birth in poverty, a baby in a manger (and he’s a carpenter), shepherds and wise men, and now he is a refugee. Yet at no point are we told that he rebels or complains at what is happening to his life. May God give us the grace and strength to embrace what is asked of us in life and remain open and obedient to the voice of the Spirit.

Day 20 Advent Reading

Matthew 2:9-12

After months of searching the wise men have found what they were searching for. Joy at the safe arrival of a baby is our natural response, and it is no different in this story. The angels have announced news of great joy, the shepherds have rejoiced, Mary has praised God and rejoiced in the Magnificat and the Magi have expressed joy and worship on finding the baby. That is the right response to this Christmas story.

Mathew tells us that these men fell down and worshipped the infant Jesus. The word he uses implies that a person prostrates themself in homage, as to a king. It must have been an extraordinary sight to see these Magi face down on the floor in front of a little child. As part of their worship, they have brought gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh. Because of the three gifts it has become traditional to think of them as three wise men, but scripture doesn’t tell us how many, there may have been a lot more than three. Gold is a traditional gift for a king, frankincense which was part of the incense used in the Temple is seen as a gift for a priest and myrrh, which was used at Jesus’ crucifixion and burial, is a sign of his death. These spices can be used for other things and indeed myrrh in the OT is a symbol of joy but here it points us forward to what is to come.

We know very little about where these wise men came from exactly, or how it long it took them, how long Mary and Joseph had been at Bethlehem when they arrived or how long the wise men stayed. It probably wasn’t for long as they are warned to leave and avoid Herod who is on the war path. The hearts of these Gentile worshippers were open to God who was able to direct them and keep them and the baby Jesus safe. We cannot underestimate through whom and how God may speak.

Reflection

The gifts the Magi brought were costly. Our worship too should cost us something. Jesus calls us to take up our cross and follow him. Worship that is flippant and shallow is no worship at all, true worship that is lived out in life will cost us at times. True worshippers, Jesus tells us, worship in Spirit and in truth.

Day 19 Advent Reading

Matthew 2:1-8

It is Matthew who gives us the story of the Kings or Magi who came from a distant eastern land to visit the newborn king of the Jews. They are astronomers and astrologers; they read the skies and believe that what they see in creation is speaking of what is happening in the human world, they are serious people.

Expecting a king to be born in a palace, they arrive in Jerusalem to see Herod, the king. They explain their intent is to worship this new king. This was not a great move on their part. Herod is bothered by this threat to his position and power. Calling together the priests and teachers of the law he asks where this king is to be born. They know the answer, the Christ is to come from Bethlehem, so that is where the Magi go. Astonishingly, even though the Jews are looking for the Messiah to come they apparently show no interest in going with the Magi to find out for themselves, a big contrast to the response of the shepherds.

These Magi are Gentiles, they have travelled a very long way, and it must have been costly in many ways but they have seen a sign for the ‘King of the Jews’. What was the sign? Many people have tried to work this out from examining the sky as it was at that time. The most likely explanation seems to be that it was an alignment of planets; Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. Their arrival is our first indicator that this Messiah is coming for the salvation of the Gentiles as well as the Jews .

The declarations of Mary and Zechariah in Luke were focussed on Jewish salvation and deliverance, and the first to worship are the poor shepherds. Here, Matthew, a very Jewish writer tells us of these Gentiles who, like the shepherds, have seen a sign and set out to find a saviour. God is coming for the foreigner, the outcast and the poor. Jesus is King of the Jews but as Son of God he will become Saviour and King for the whole world.

Reflection

The difference between those who have journeyed across countries to seek the Saviour and the local priests who won’t go to the next town is stark. Why do you think they wouldn’t go? Let us pray that we do not become indifferent to the celebration of the Saviour’s arrival this Christmas.

Day 18 Advent Reading

Luke 2:15-20

After the shock of what has just happened to them these irreligious, tough shepherds behave just as you would hope. Instead of sitting around their fire keeping warm and discussing what just occurred until they talked themselves out of responding they get up and go.  They leave in a hurry, urgently, to find this baby. There may not have been many babies born that night but finding the right one probably took a little while. They don’t give up until they have found him.

We have no sense of the time scale of this part of the story, but as soon as they have visited with this family and shared what happened they go and tell everyone what they’ve witnessed, and who the angel said this baby was. Everyone is astonished, as well they might be. I wonder what Mary and Jospeh thought when these rough men turned up to find the baby with this incredible story. Mary ponders all of this in her heart – it is another confirmation of this baby’s identity.

Finally, the shepherds go back to their flocks with joy in their hearts, glorifying God for what he has done. The shepherd’s response contrasts strongly with that of Herod and the Jewish priests’ response to the wise men. They showed no desire to go and see for themselves, as we will find out tomorrow.

Reflection

Maybe you have already found Jesus or perhaps you are still on that journey, either way we can follow the shepherd’s example. If you are searching, then do it urgently and don’t stop until you find him. If you have already encountered him then the shepherd’s act of bearing witness to what they experienced, and worshipping God is an example for us to follow.

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