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Showing posts from July, 2015

1. Sent to finish God’s work (John 4:34-38) – a mission of sowing and reaping

My food,’ said Jesus, ‘is to do the will of him who sent me and to finish his work. ‘Don’t you have a saying, “It’s still four months until harvest”? I tell you, open your eyes and look at the fields! They are ripe for harvest. Even now the one who reaps draws a wage and harvests a crop for eternal life, so that the sower and the reaper may be glad together. Thus the saying “One sows and another reaps” is true. I sent you to reap what you have not worked for. Others have done the hard work, and you have reaped the benefits of their labour.’ John 4 recounts Jesus’ encounter with a Samaritan woman at a well in her hometown of Sychar.   The woman is amazed at the insight this Jewish traveller has into her life and at the words he speaks about God.   She runs to tell her neighbours about this amazing man, wondering if he might even be the Messiah God had promised.   The disciples, seeing   the approaching Samaritan crowd and disapproving of Jesus’ conversation with a woman of ‘ill repu

“As the Father has sent me, I am sending you” (John 20:21)

Towards the end of John’s Gospel Jesus commissions His disciples to go into the world on mission.   The incident the aged John chooses to recount is different from those recorded by Matthew and Luke.   Matthew, whose record of Jesus’ commissioning words is the most famous, describes Jesus’ words on a mountain top in Galilee.   He sends the disciples out, confident in His universal authority and enduring presence, to make disciples from all nations through teaching and baptising (Matthew 28:18-20).   Luke, meanwhile, tells of an occasion in Jerusalem when Jesus opens the disciples’ minds to see how his life and death fulfilled the Old Testament and then commissions them to be His witnesses.   To fulfil their task of preaching forgiveness of sins in His name, they must wait for the power that will soon be given from heaven, a reference to the coming Holy Spirit (Luke 24:44-49).   There is also a version of the ‘Great Commission’ in the so-called long ending of Mark (Mark 16:9-20), whic

God’s Writing 7: Restoration

This series has followed a journey through salvation history by considering references in the Bible to God’s writing.   We have seen how God wrote intelligence into our nature in creation, both through DNA and in our conscience.   We saw that God remains intimately involved in our world and in our lives in His providence.   We considered how He has revealed Himself in words in Scripture and how He records our deeds as the righteous Judge.   We have also encountered the forgiveness inherent in the not guilty verdict that is ours in Jesus and the transformation that the Spirit brings about as He writes God’s Law on our hearts.   In this episode we reach the end of the story, or perhaps the beginning of the new story, as we reach the book of Revelation.   In last week’s post, I emphasised that the gospel is not just about us being saved to go to heaven – it is also about our transformation so that we can serve God on earth.   It is important to remember, however, that this world is not

God’s Writing 6: Transformation

The gospel has sometimes been truncated in an unhelpful way.   It is sometimes told as if it ends with the forgiveness of our sins, the cancelling of our debts, and declaration of our acceptance by God.   All of this is true, but it isn’t everything!   It leaves the impression that we are saved and ready for Heaven so we might as well just sit back and wait for the next bus.   It rightly emphasises that we were in the wrong, in debt to God, and that this dishonourable past is now blotted out, but it fails to describe the riches that are credited to us on account of Jesus.   The gospel is not only about forgiveness – it is also about transformation.   So far in this series we have seen God writing in creation, in providence, in revelation, in judgement and in forgiveness, but we need to see that God writes in transformation.      In the first post of this series I discussed the conscience and the moral standard that is written on our hearts.   This same language of law written on

God’s Writing 5: Forgiveness

So far in this series we have seen God writing in creation, in providence, in revelation and in judgement.   God’s standard of justice is written in our hearts, it was written on tablets of stone and it is written in the books that record our actions, just as God’s verdict was written on the wall in Belshazzar’s feast.   If this was the whole story of the Bible, there would be no good news and no hope.   Yet to understand the message of the gospel we must understand the justice of God and His righteous wrath because of human sin.   God will not and cannot ignore our sin – it is not only a violation of the laws of morality; it is a personal offence against God.   When we measure ourselves against the standard of perfection described in the Ten Commandments, we inevitably find ourselves, like Belshazzar, seriously lacking.   What hope is there, then, for us? As we come to the next occasion of God’s writing in the Scriptures, a word of caution is in order.   John 7:53-8:11 is not conta