Wednesday 31 March 2010

Lament

Lent is not over until Easter day. There remains time to examine our lives and find God's guidance.

At our cell last night the astute point was made that, for some, Lent is a time of self-reflection and examination, which in turn leads to changes from Easter. Rather than give-up or take something up for Lent should, we not have the approach that Lent is a time to discover, through prayer and Bible study, those things that need permanent change.

The readings for evening prayer yesterday (Tuesday of Holy Week) included the following:

'Let us examine our ways and test them, and let us return to the LORD.
Let us lift up our hearts and our hands to God in heaven, and say:
"We have sinned and rebelled and you have not forgiven"' (Lamentations 3:40-42)

'My eyes will flow unceasingly, without relief, until the LORD looks down from heaven and sees' (Lam. 3:49-50)

As Jesus draws closer to the cross, and we are confronted with the enormity of His sacrifice, we must consider afresh those sins committed which are placed on Jesus. An unexamined life is not a life at all.

In a world that is so emotion averse, or more specifically, where negative emotions are shunned we must be a people that live close to tears and joy. Jesus, reports Luke, comes to Jerusalem to joyful acclaim (Luke 19:28-40), but is immediately driven to tears when he looks upon the city (Luke 19:41ff). Do we have this attitude? Are our tears heard by God, and seen by demons? Do we weep for our sin, for the sin of our loved ones, and our nation?

Tomorrow is Maundy Thursday. Many of us will be propelled along until Easter is upon us - will we grasp the opportunity to come to the cross, stop, be quiet and resolve to submit our lives to God?

Friday 26 March 2010

Annunciation implications for feminism

As I've been reading around on the topic of the annunciation I have profoundly moved by the following two articles:

http://www.desiringgod.org/ResourceLibrary/TopicIndex/47_Abortion/3528_The_Baby_in_My_Womb_Leaped_for_Joy/

http://julieclawson.com/2010/03/25/silence-women-and-the-annunciation/

Genuinely thought-provoking on two fronts:

1. Is the annunciation implicitly stating that women are just vessels? Is there something overtly rape-like with God's activity here?
2. To what extent do the texts concerning Jesus (and JtB) in the womb stand as pro-life texts? The John Piper article has a fantastic reference to The Didache!

I'm certainly warming to the idea that churches should speak out more on the matter of life choices.

Annunciation articles

I've found this useful article on annunciation. Like me, the spirit is very much one of protestant reclamation:

http://blog.christianhistory.net/2010/03/from_jesus_to_mary_and_back_ag.html#more

Enjoy!

The Annunication

I was amazingly struck yesterday at the importance of reflecting regularly throughout the year on the humanity of Christ.

The Annunication sounds so Catholic it may seem peculiar to try and claim back the passage from Luke 1 for protestant ears, but there are clear messages for us in 2010.

Jesus is THE superlative.
Just listen to the things Gabriel says about Jesus:
- He will be GREAT
- He is THE SON OF THE MOST HIGH, THE SON OF GOD
- He will sit on THE THRONE OF DAVID
- The throne will be GIVEN TO HIM BY GOD
- He will REIGN FOREVER
- His kingdom will HAVE NO END
- He will be HOLY

This message is so important in Lent. Just as we turn our faces to Jerusalem and consider afresh the betrayal, the denial, the Last Supper, the sham trial, the cross, His death, and His resurrection, it is crucial we remember who Jesus is.

However, Jesus is a man.
I am struck by the physicality of Gabriel's message. Mary knows she is a virgin, and she's bright enough to know that sex is a prerequisite for babies. But Gabriel is clear - she will conceive, she will have a baby.

What more dependant image is there than a baby. It's easy sometimes to think of Jesus the GREAT, the WISE, the POWERFUL...but here we are reminded that he is just a MAN.

To this end Jesus is a more perfect mediator - he shares my nature, which makes his sacrifice all the more profound!