Pilgrim Traveller

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Holy Week, Monday…Meanwhile

Posted by David Ward on 21/03/2016
Posted in: Bible, Lent, Mission, Personal thoughts, Spirituality. Tagged: basin and towel, betrayal, bread, breaking of bread, communion, empathy, Eucharist, failure, KIngdom of God, leaders, no waste, preparation, remember, servants, wine. Leave a comment

[14] When the hour came, Jesus and his apostles reclined at the table. [15] And he said to them, “I have eagerly desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer. [16] For I tell you, I will not eat it again until it finds fulfilment in the kingdom of God.”

Luke 22:14 (NIV)

Jesus loves his followers. As he gathers us together on that last evening before he is so brutally taken from us he has a number of things that he needs to say. Look at the things he speaks about during the meal.

“Remember me”.

remember-meWhen we come to communion our focus is upon the things that Jesus achieved, what he did for us when he gave up his life for us. For the disciples it would have been very different. When they ate bread and drank wine they would remember a flesh and blood friend, who shared life with them, who laughed and cried, told stories, showed up hypocrisy and loved the people no one else did. Perhaps we should try to get beyond the benefits of Jesus death and think about our experiences of him in our lives and in the lives of others.

No meal with other followers of Jesus in future would ever be the same. No loaf now is just bread, no cup is just wine.

John Pritchard in “The Journey”

“I’m going to be betrayed”.

30 piecesBetrayal is an ugly thing. It sets aside love and trust for some personal gain. Many of us will experience the bitterness of betrayal, often from those closest to us. And more of us than will like to admit it will have betrayed the trust of someone else…we all have our price. Maybe we’ll even betray Jesus because following gets just too hard, too dangerous at times. I wonder what my 30 pieces of silver looks like…

“Be servant leaders…copy me”

basin and towelGod’s Kingdom looks so different to any other. Those who are called to the responsibility and privilege of leadership need to be able to lead as Jesus did. They need to be prepared to teach and tell stories to win people’s hearts and take them along on the journey. They need to be prepared to love their followers even to the point of dying (whatever that might mean for them). And there will be more than a little work with a basin and towel, washing the feet no one else has bothered to wash. Take a long look at how leaders lead before you join a church…or decide to stay.

“Failure is important”

Empathy Map GraphicEspecially for those destined to lead, like Peter. When you fail, and experience the sweetness of Jesus’ forgiveness and find that he still gives you work to do, it’s meant to make you more empathic towards other failures…you’ve been there, you know how it feels. Even the strongest among us may plunge confidently into abject failure.

“Be prepared”

be-preparedNothing is wasted in God’s economy. Our failures and successes in education. The dreams that wither and the dreams that thrive. The journey to a pig sty in a far country and the return to home and father when we finally come to our senses. The people who receive us and our message gladly and the ones who misunderstand, marginalise and persecute us. The prayers we pray, the answers we receive and the petitions as yet unanswered. Yes, sometimes Jesus provides what we need and more, but equally we need to make the most of the resources we can contribute to the relationship too.

Until the Kingdom comes in all its fullness we have much to do. It won’t always be easy. Jesus wants us to know the score.

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Day 46 of 40…Confusion

Posted by David Ward on 20/03/2016
Posted in: Lent, Personal thoughts. Tagged: 40 days of Lent, Holy Week, liturgical calendar, mistakes. Leave a comment

Day 46 of 40…what’s that all about?

lent-40-daysWell, it’s just that it finally dawned on me that if I continued with my current numbering of these posts I’d end up posting day 46 of 40, rather than Day 40 of 40, on Easter Saturday.

My mistake was a simple one. I did not grow up in a liturgical tradition, it’s something I adopted later in life. How could I be expected to know that during the traditional fast of Lent…Sundays were not fast days, so when you remove the 6 Sundays between Ash Wednesday and Easter Saturday you get…40, as required!

Palm Sunday croppedToday is Palm Sunday…I wrote a post on the events of that day on ‘Days 30 and 31 of 40’…which begins what is traditionally known as Holy Week, leading up to the events surrounding the death and resurrection of Jesus.

So, what I’ve decided to do is, rather than try to adjust my faulty numbering, start a new series on “Holy Week”. Tomorrow you can read “Holy Week-Monday”…I’m done with number sequences!

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Day 37 of 40…Partnership

Posted by David Ward on 17/03/2016
Posted in: Bible, Lent, Mission, Personal thoughts, Relationships. Tagged: "A More Christlike God-a more beautiful Gospel", Brad Jersak, co-operation, Desmond Tutu, God, Jesus, mission, mite, partnership, redeeming, restoring, sacrifice, two small coins, widow. Leave a comment

“For whatever reason, since humankind showed up on the scene, God does nothing without a human partner.” —Bishop Desmond Tutu —

quoted in “A more Christlike God-a more beautiful Gospel” by Brad Jersak

fish-n-breadTake a walk through the Bible and you see the truth of it.

From shy, tongue- tied Moses following God’s initiative to rescue the people of Israel from captivity in Egypt to an arrogant, anti-Christian Pharisee called Saul who worked with God to free people everywhere from the chains of sin and self-centredness. Some joined in willingly, some had to experience the equivalent of being knocked off their horse by a blinding flash that temporarily blinded their physical eyes so they could catch a glimpse of the way things really where.

And, right through history, God has gone on inviting people to work with him in the great ‘project’ of redeeming and restoring people and the world to the way it was meant to be. God rarely chooses to step in and sort things out directly…he chooses to mediate his grace, healing and forgiveness through us.

Jesus who, among other things, walked among us to show what a life lived in partnership and loving relationship with God could look like, is our prime example.

Brad Jersak comments, following an exposition of Acts 2: 2, “When Jesus performed miracles, he didn’t turn on his ‘God switch’ for a few moments, then turn it back off when he went for lunch.Rather, in his humanity, he modelled the life of a mediator who emptied himself so that the power of God’s love could work through him.” (From “A more Christlike God” chapter 8)

God chooses to work in the world through people like you and me, who are prepared to ‘empty themselves’, making whatever sacrifice it may take, experiencing the joys and sorrows of being part of God’s mission in the world.

MIOtesToday’s reading from Luke’s Gospel is about a bunch of people who appeared to give an enormous amount to God but we’re actually working on a more personal project…their own image and prestige. Then, in contrast, there is a poor woman who thinks she has nothing to offer, but gives it all anyway, demonstrating a love for God and a trust in him that marks her out as one in partnership with God.

[1] As Jesus looked up, he saw the rich putting their gifts into the temple treasury. [2] He also saw a poor widow put in two very small copper coins. [3] “Truly I tell you,” he said, “this poor widow has put in more than all the others. [4] All these people gave their gifts out of their wealth; but she out of her poverty put in all she had to live on .”

Luke 21:1-4 NIV

The question today, I think, is not about ‘what am I giving to God’…it’s more about who am I investing my time, my money and my life on. Am I busy building my own world or have I truly become God’s partner at work in the world, the cosmos, that he loves through me?

littlepencil2

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