Author Archive: Craig

Prayer of the People, 30 April 2021

Heavenly Father,

You are the Lord of all Creation; You spoke, “Let there be light” and there was light. Your Son Jesus is the Light of the World. And now, by His Spirit, His Word illuminates our lives. Thank you for this grace in which we sit, walk, and stand. 

Speak again Lord, to our dark hearts. “Let there be light.” Awaken us to you. Teach us to walk in Your light and to fellowship with each other in this world according to your grace and truth. We are longing for you and our spirit calls out, “Abba Father!”

We confess that having our lives exposed in your light can generate fear. First we tremble at the thought of your holiness. Save us according to your Word and not our word. Forgive our sins and may willful sin not rule over us. Second we tremble at the thought of being out of step with our world. Your light invites us into what is unfamiliar and makes us look peculiar. Please replace our fear of people with your perfect love. 

We long for leaders who walk in the light, who lead with wisdom and who pursue justice. We ask that You will bring Your comfort and help to those traumatized by violence, greed, and cold apathy. Both the one who raises the hand in anger and the one who receives it have suffered. It is your revealing light that can usher us all into healing and reconciliation. With your Spirit we groan with longing that we might be revealed fully as your children in your New Creation.

We cry out to you on behalf of the people of India who the many who have suffered under poverty and sectarian violence. But now Covid 19 has cut across many segments of this nation. Comfort those who grieve. Please bring healing to many suffering under the pandemic. Empower your Church to serve their neighbours and to share the promise of life in the Gospel of Jesus. Fill them with your Spirit and bring joy again to the lives of many. Come Lord Jesus Come.

We pray now as you have taught us — (Please join me in the Lord’s Prayer)

Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come,
your will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
And forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.
And lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from the evil one;
for yours is the kingdom,
and the power, and the glory, 
forever. 
Amen.

This prayer was part of the Origin Church Weekend Broadcast on 30 April 2021.

Generational Vision

“One generation commends your works to another; they tell of your mighty acts. They speak of the glorious splendour of your majesty — and I will mediate on your wonderful works.” Psalm 145:6-7

Followers of Jesus are connected in His Church to a great host of witnesses. The writer of Hebrews insists we “are surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses,” and therefore must throw off the sin that would entangle us and keep us from running the race marked out for us by Jesus (Hebrews 12:1-2) The evangelical impulse is to join in the pioneering or in-breaking life of Jesus’ Kingdom but we do not actually live the Christian life as innovators of a new spirituality. We draw from for in living well of Christ and the testimony of God in the Scriptures.

But It’s easy to be short-sighted and selfish.

I serve Jesus and His church in a university campus community. I have met people within the academy who know they are seeking to grasp the knowledge drawn out from Creation by those who have gone before them. But for the students of these professors the pursuit of new futures frustrates them. The looming need for a good paying job, for taking care of parents and siblings, and for paying for the “education” they have signed up for drives them to make the grades at the expense of deeper understanding and retention of knowledge. I believe the need to succeed limits the growth of character possible through our engagement with knowledge and each other. Their teachers are particularly aware of the corpus of knowledge that the students don’t know so they seek to stimulate learning. However time is limited. All learning must happen fast. The end of the term is coming. Fast learning is the plan. Fast money is the need. Some students confess — the ones who are doing best are the ones who have stellar short-term memory and can take up the strategies necessary for getting facts and formulas into place quickly. And though I haven’t read it yet, I have come across at least two professors know we need to slow down. I can’t wait to read The Slow Professor: Challenging the Culture of Speed in the Academy.

Our North American culture seems short-sighted. I’m not sure if it is a global phenomenon but perhaps it is. We have a difficult time planning ahead with the generations to come in mind. It’s as if we don’t care. Like generations before us we adopt the stance of “Eat, drink, be merry for tomorrow we will die” (Ecclesiastes 8:15 and Isaiah 22:13) Like Hezekiah we know enough to know that the future for our children’s children children is dim on the planet. But we shrug and say, “At least I have peace in my generation” (Isaiah 39:8) and become careless.

That was never to be the way. In the Torah God directed His people to commemorate the Passover and His deliverance of them from Egypt’s enslaving powers when they had “settled down” by making it their habit to talk with their children about the Word of God and to derive the meaning of this peculiar way of life by recalling what God had done. “We were slaves of Pharaoh in Egypt, but the LORD brought us out of Egypt with a mighty hand… to bring us into… the land he promised on oath to our ancestors. The LORD commanded us to obey all these decrees and to fear the LORD our God, so that we might always prosper and be kept alive, as is the case today. And if we are carful to obey all this law before the LORD our God, as he has commanded us, that will be our righteousness” (Deuteronomy 6:21-22). God wants us to live with the coming generations in mind by keeping Him in mind.

God has the generations in mind. Jesus treated the generations as a living reality. He grew weary of his generation that sought a sign as if faith had no personal living point of reference (Matthew 16:1-4). He was the living sign right in front of them. While previous generations had put down stone markers in the land as reminders of God’s activity, Jesus rolled the stone away at His resurrection, fulfilling the Law and the prophets. He lives and is able to call us into a living relationship with the God of Abraham, Issac, and Jacob (Mark 12:27). The Holy Spirit makes generative community life a reality (2 Timothy 1:6). The promise of the Resurrection draws us forward into days and The Day in which all things are made new. (Revelation 21:1-8)

Some may hear this promise and retreat into pessimism taking up a license to consume the earth with abandon. But others, anticipating their participation in the new Creation and the ethic of the Kingdom — loving your neighbour, and loving as the overflow of life in Jesus’ Church — try not to disconnect their life today from the life of others in the future. (Matthew 22:36-40) We are thinking of the children. Maybe. During the pandemic I realized that I have cynicism about the forward thinking and supposed generational vision of the church when pandemic remakes of The Blessing swept the globe. Here’s Canada, The US, Ireland, and the chorus, “and the children rang out in my head” and across our living room on more than once occasion! But I want it to be true and I want to offer God’s blessings to those to come!

Thinking Ahead

It’s hard to take what we learn and experience (what we know) and then think ahead and act accordingly for the benefit of others. Bina Venkataraman in her book, The Optimist’s Telescope (published by Riverhead 2019), has scanned the planet for stories of “thinking ahead” for the benefit of the coming generations. I was challenged by the stories of two villages, Aneyoshi and Murohama in Japan that successfully guided future generations on how to survive a tsunami in their areas.

In Aneyoshi, Japan, an aging stone tablet stands sentinel, warning future inhabitants, “Do not build your homes below this point!” No homes stood below its elevation in 2011. The waves of the recent tsunami lapped just three hundred feet below the marker.

These two communities are exceptions, not the rule. Hundreds of other stone markers commemorating tsunamis are scattered across Japan, many erected after devastating tsunamis in 1896 and 1933. According to a study by the Nuclear Energy Agency of the international Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, virtually none of the other communities with such markers heeded them as Aneyoshi and Murohama did.

What made these villages, but not the others, heed history?

The communities in Japan where the historic markers made for effective warnings were small villages, with cultural continuity across generations. Schoolchildren learned the history of the past tsunamis and the need for vigilance. And the stone markers in Aneyoshi and Murohama stood out relative to the hundreds of others in Japan for offering specific actions rather than just vague commemorations of history: Do not build homes below this point. Do not flee to this hill.

The spiritual legacy of the church of Jesus is not marked on a stone. The most significant “stone,” the one covering the tomb of Jesus was rolled away and discarded. However, what remains is the capacity of Jesus to raise up living stones for Himself. Our future is not in our buildings nor in our digital markers. Our future is in Him. We receive from Him a living trust that includes the Gospel, this Creation, and His children. Every wise steward thinks ahead. Generational stewardship is one in which we think ahead and act with the best intention to generate conditions in which they may thrive too. Now we write not on stones but one human hearts. This has been the way of the church from its conception. Paul says of the Corinthians, “You yourselves are our letter, written on our hearts, known and read by everyone. You show that you are a letter from Christ, the result of our ministry, written not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tables of human hearts” (2 Corinthians 3:2-3)

I have the Rich Mullin’s song The Other Side of The World in the front of my Bible. It’s a song that sees the present church but also the church to come. Whether Rich was considering the other side of the world or the New Jerusalem, he was seeking to live in what some may call hard places with love and with the promise of Jesus’ sure destruction of the powers of Hell through His Word.

But I see a people who’ve learned to walk in faith
With mercy in their hearts
And glory on their faces
And I can see the poeple
And I pray it won’t be long
Until Your kingdom comes

As a follower of Jesus I am having to ask, “How does having an eye on the future and a vision of people in the future influence the decisions we make today?” Are we treating what we know as things to commemorate or as reasons to give clear directives and invitations? This is wisdom — but it must be done gently, not passively, but with a presence that is non-anxious. The conveyance of generational benediction cannot be done with a heavy hand. Instead by having an eye on the future we seek to create the conditions in which the possibility of thriving in the communion of God and the knowledge of His Word and the creative power of His Spirit is present. We manage the tension by valuing both old and new wineskins (Mark 2:22) but perhaps giving preference to the new as often as possible.

The purpose of the post is not to line out all the aspects of this kind of stewardship. This post is a shout out commending generational vision. That’s a starting place. Whether we are caring for the environment or caring for the political futures of a people, or caring for Jesus’ church, followers of Jesus are not to just live for today thanking God for our good fortunes while caring little about the future of our neighbour’s children’s children’s children. Generational vision in the Kingdom of God has to think about a place, but also accepts that Jesus may call some to leave. In that case we are thinking of what and who they carry in their hearts. Thus at Origin Church in a University campus community we are seeking to joyful invest in people to spark a life journey with Jesus!

In the maskil of Asaph that we call Psalm 78, the Psalmist encouraged a generational vision and recommended leadership under the call of God.

Generational Vision: “…things we have heard and known, things our ancestors have told us. We will not hide them from their descendants; we will tell the next generation the praiseworthy deeds of the LORD, his power and the wonders he has done. He decreed statues for Jacob and established law in Israel, which he commanded our ancestors to teach their children, so the next generation would know them, even the children yet to be born, and they in turn would tell their children. Then they would put their trust in God and would not forget his deeds but would keep his commands.” Psalm 78:3-7

Leadership Under the Call of God: “He chose David his servant and took him from the sheep pens; from tending sheep he brought him to be the shepherd of his people Jacob, of Israel his inheritance. And David shepherded them with integrity of heart; with skillful hands he led them.” Psalm 78:70-72

Such a high view of David’s messy leadership right!? But what can be said of David is that at some points he was not thinking just of himself, but was considering what the future generations could be in relation to God. He wanted to build a temple, but God only let him do the work of getting things ready for Solomon to do it (1 Chronicles 22). When that limit was clear David didn’t quit, he actually gave himself in his later years to gathering what Solomon would need.

I have a friend, Peter, who serves with me at Origin Church and who often points to Psalm 78 as part of God’s call in his life and for the church to care not only for our generational cohort, but also for the generations arriving on the scene. Oh that our leadership may be done with skill and integrity of heart!

In campus ministry and in the church these generations are actually in front of us, so we are doing what we can to plant the seeds of the Gospel and God’s Word in their lives while also creating space for them to serve, to lead, and to have their own stories of God’s wonderful grace with us. This requires making space for emerging leaders to have their own adventures in trusting and obeying God in all their relationships. Sometimes a leader who is ahead in years and experience just needs to listen, other times the leaders need to provide clarity and some boundaries, and other times we let the emerging leaders be freely with Jesus in the wild goose chase of His Kingdom.

In the book, A Church Called TOV, Scot Mcknight and Laura Barringer are calling on the church to think and act with generational vision. They are hoping that churches will learn from the scandals and pain before us in the North American church to value the formation of “a goodness culture that resists abuses of power and promotes healing.” Ultimately churches nurture christliness. McKnight and Barringer commend pastors as men and women who have been called by God to “nurture people in Christoformity.”

Generational vision is about people but must applied to more than the people. When it is applied to the land and a place we ask, “Does what we are doing today negatively impact the generations to come?” and “What practices are we doing today that continually re-give into the land — soil, air, and water? Likewise generational vision when applied to a community and congregation compels us to ask, “What are we doing to create an environment where followers of Jesus can thrive? What are we attending to the makes Jesus known and cooperates with the Holy Spirit so people are free to respond to Him and to let His new creation power flow through them? In both of these arenas — the land and the church — people who are shepherding have to be realistic about the human condition and our propensity to be greedy and short-sighted steals from the generations to come. After seven generations, even after three generations, you and I may be forgotten, but what we do to today in Christ and with love (John 15:1-8) has promise to bear fruit in generations for years to come!

Read Luke 9, Verse 23. Tenderly.

What if we’ve got the tone wrong?

When you read the following words of Jesus, what tone or motivation do you attribute to Jesus? “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves…” Luke 9:23

Does the voice in your head sound harsh, strict, commanding? Do you hear this as a rebuke? As a “come on and get it together?” Or perhaps as a word from a coach threatening that she’s going to cut you from the team if you don’t shape up?

As a pastor I wonder if our internal voice and tone is wrong when we read some of the words of Jesus. What if Jesus is not rebuking His disciples when He says. “You can’t be my disciples unless you deny yourselves?” What if this is not first and foremost a demanding word that is commanding them to make a decision right then or he’s going to cut them off.

Matthew does bring us Jesus the Messiah who is King, but what if Jesus is saying these words tenderly and with empathy? What if He is offering His disciples radical acceptance and a gift of agency that can be fuelled into something wonderful by the Spirit of God? What if he is inviting them into a process and not just a decision.

Intrigued?

First let’s start with the words of Jesus. But let’s include them in the context provided by Luke.

Luke sets the scene as a private prayer session in which Jesus asks the disciples “Who do the crowds say I am?” They have various answers but then he asks them, “What about you? Who do you say I am?” Peter answers, “God’s Messiah.”

The answer should have set off fireworks and all the choirs of heaven. But Jesus “strictly warns them” to not tell this to anyone. Jesus goes on to tell them about what is coming or rather what He is going to. “The Son of Man must suffer many things and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests and the teachers of the law, and he must be killed and on the third day be raised to life.”

Now if you were a follower of Jesus and had already experienced so many amazing and wonderful things with Him, these prophetic words would be terribly disturbing. This is dark stuff. This is evil stuff. This is the establishment of Jerusalem rejecting your rabbi and contributing to his death. At least Jesus ended with the words “raised to life” but those may have sounded like a faint-hope-clause for the general resurrection. The words that would have troubled you the most would be “suffering many things,” “be rejected” and “be killed.” Perhaps you would wonder, “All of this because Jesus is God’s Messiah?”

I think Jesus read the faces and hearts of the people, his close followers, gathered with Him in this outdoor prayer room.

He knew what they wanted:
— They wanted to be his disciples.
— They wanted to save their lives (and His) from such a terrible fate.

— They wanted to gain the world. (Isn’t that what some of them, especially the zealots, were
     following Him? A kingdom and glory right?
— They want to not lose their lives.

— They wanted to avoid being shamed.
— They wanted to see the Kingdom of God.

These they wanted, so he addressed their wants and the internal conflict that rapidly raced through their hearts shaped by desires brought up by Jesus’ calm pronouncement of what awaited Him in the future and in Jerusalem.

Luke 9:23 is commonly referenced among evangelicals as a classic call of discipleship. And it is. It’s just that the context requires us to look for the pastoral concern Jesus has for these who have already devoted their days if not their lives to Him. The disciples of Jesus where hearing this call not because they had done something wrong or had been negligent in their spiritual disciplines. They were hearing this call because Jesus whom they were following announced that He was walking into a storm of suffering. This is His future. They are hearing this because they are distressed and confused by Jesus’ prophetic word about Himself. If they are going to accompany Him into that future they will have to enter into a work of the heart in which the “costs” and the possibilities of suffering with Him are engaged.

Let’s see what Jesus says to them:

23Then he said to them all: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me. 24For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it. 25What good is it for someone to gain the whole world, and yet lose or forfeit their very self? 26Whoever is ashamed of me and my words, the Son of Man will be ashamed of them when he comes in his glory and in the glory of the Father and of the holy angels.

27 “Truly I tell you, some who are standing here will not taste death before they see the kingdom of God.”

So make sure you get the picture. Jesus is looking at his disciples full in the face. He is speaking to them with affection. He recognizes how disturbing the prospect of His rejection, suffering, and death is to them. He is reorienting them to the life of the Messiah. He is reorienting them to life with Him. Jesus is operating toward them with radical acceptance. Jesus accepts what is in their hearts. Jesus accepts what is in the hearts of the Jerusalem establishment. Jesus accepts the pathway for their communion with the Father and the Spirit. And if they are going to be with Him on this path, Jesus enters into the necessary dialogue of the heart that they are going to have daily in order to remain with Him.

Reading this text, we are drawn into a conversation with competing desires. I want to be with Jesus but I’m going to have to deny myself. What part of myself must be denied? The part that is reluctant for or refuses a cross.

With the word “cross” Jesus casts their life with Him into real, earthy, public, and conflictual terms. Perhaps they had all been traumatized by the bloody scenes of Roman enforcement against those deemed as troublemakers and criminals to the State. There was no romance associated with the cross. It was an execution stake, capital punishment at its worst. 

There is an internal calculus going on. One factor operating within the disciples of Jesus is God’s gracious gift of faith in Jesus. Being loved and known by God generates love and loyalty. Another factor operating within the disciples of Jesus is the reflexive retraction from horrible humiliation and suffering. No one really wants to be lumped in with a felon under a death sentence. But Jesus calmly asserts reality and invites them into a full body discipleship that must reckon with loss and with self-protectionism. He wants them to face the self-protectionism that would alienate them from Him. It must be denied a ruling and controlling place in their lives. But how?

Jesus’ radical acceptance of His futures and their futures looks beyond the bleakness cast by the shadow of a Roman cross. Because Jesus knows the beauty of His glory and His Kingdom as an end and a reality that is breaking in and will break in to life as they know it, He seeks to persuade the disciples to join Him in a reasonable spiritual conversation that they must have in order to not shrink back from Him. This conversation battles the daily “deaths” that may come because they are full heartedly following Him in a world ruled by powers that kill, steal, and destroy. Jesus provides them and us as His followers today a script for confession and a process for denying ourselves, taking up our crosses daily, and following Him.

The Reasonable Script

The disciples with Luke preserved Jesus’ teaching as a script for the church, a people who now by the Spirit are in Christ and who still face the disequilibrium of following Jesus into discomfort and alienation with the world.

Verse 24. Save your life. Yes I want to save my life. I want to save my life from rejection, pain, and death. I want to save my life for acceptance, comfort, and life to the fullest. But Jesus says that my strategies for doing this will be futile. My strategies have no ultimate power over death, but, Jesus does. Jesus can transform the weapons of the world (and of Satan). I can save my life by losing my life to Jesus. The desire that would deny, that would turn away from close friendship with Him and from the adoption of Jesus’ ways in the world, must be brought to Jesus — where I let them go. I reject their hold on me. I renounce them. These strategies so often shaped by the denial of the truth and by efforts to avoid awkwardness, inadequacy, weakness, and vulnerability seem to give life but are actually causing me to lose my life.

Verse 25. Gain the world. Yes I want to gain the world. I want the stuff, I want the power, the prestige, and the privilege. I want to be loveable and loved. I want the affection and applause of others. What the world requires for my comfort I will become.  But Jesus says that my strategies for gaining the world are too costly. I forfeit my soul. To forfeit is to abandon something that is supposed to be “mine.” To forget it is to relinquish what could be mine. To forfeit soul is to become a hollowed out person; to be dehumanized, to abandon genuine agency for life and to be taken under the powers of death. To live without soul is to abandon the character of the Creator revealed by Christ Jesus who creates anew through generosity, service, and love. To forfeit one’s soul for the world is to mistake the worth of what the world seems to offer over the incredible worth of the soul filled with the Spirit of God. To forfeit soul is to reject being known and loved by God who created me, and gave Himself to eternally love me.

Vese 26. Avoid shame. Yes I want to avoid shame. It’s so painful. Avoiding embarrassment has been programmed into me from the beginning. Some in the world have become masters of wielding shame as a tool to control and bluntly nudge people into doing what they want. Being associated with a crucified person is dangerous. Being associated with a person who has become an enemy of the state is dangerous. Being associated with Jesus who is in conflict with the traditions and expectations of our mothers and fathers, our employers, or even the academy, is dangerous. Being associated with One who promotes our kinship with the poor, the foreigner, and the socially unacceptable, is dangerous. How embarrassing! Jesus shows me however, that making decisions ruled by the desire to avoid embarrassment and the possible exclusion from the circles of humanity is faulty calculus. A greater factor remains and that is the coming of the Son of Man, Jesus, in all His glory, and in the glory of the Father and His angels. A greater factor is the evidence of God’s rule and reign over all yet to be seen not only in the transfiguration of Jesus but in His glorification through the Cross and His resurrection, and His return to make all things new. I need not be embarrassed of the One who has defeated death. I need to embrace Him. 

Daniel Bourguet on Jesus Speaking Tenderly

In my formation as a follower of Jesus memorizing Scripture has been important. After John 3:16 came Luke 9:23. But I wonder if I have abused the text and in doing so may have created a distorted vision of Jesus and therefore “abused” those entrusted to the care and discipleship of the Church. Through Daniel Bourguet’s meditations on John 13-16, The Last Words of Jesus Before the Cross, I have a new appreciation for the tender consideration Jesus had toward his disciples. Jesus has open hands toward them. Not a hand open and moving toward them in anger, but a hand that is open both letting go and receiving them all at once. Jesus respected people and thus offered His radical acceptance of them.

Bourquet notes that the only direct address of His disciples in John 13-16 is when Jesus calls them “little children.” Jesus is speaking to “little children” that could be translated “my little baby ones.” This is astonishing Jesus has spoken to grown men and women all along. But in the upper room just before the Cross Jesus is giving birth to the Church. They had no past, only a future as His children. The use of the diminutive form of child, little children is rare. And in the other occasions of it in the New Testament it is accompanied with the possessive “my.” But in John, Jesus does not use it. Bourget writes,

It is therefore as if Jesus is saying, “my little children”. All the same, it is worth noting that in abstaining from adding the possessive Jesus was the first to do so since the inter-testamental texts, whatever their date, each use the possessive. Why this innovation? It is a gentle way of not putting his hand on those he loves, of avoiding appropriating them; more, it allows a certain ambiguity, leaving the disciples to understand they were both his little children and children of God the Father.

That they were children of God the Father is not open to doubt; the very idea of “Father” implies that they are children. That they were also Jesus’ little children is evident when later he refers to them as his orphans: “I will not leave you orphans” (14:18). The word “orphan” is very lovely, full of delicacy and respect for the disciples, indicating that Jesus would die and so leave them orphaned, but without using the brutal word “death.” The implication is both clear and yet tactfully unstated.

“Little children”: this puts Jesus in the position of father, not biologically of course, but spiritually. He shows us the way of genuine spiritual paternity, not arrogating to himself the title of father, which he systematically reserves for God, the one true Father, before whom he always locates Himself as Son. Using the term “little children” rather than “my little children” indicates his wish not to have any hold over his disciples, but without abdicating his responsibility as a spiritual father. The whole of the discourse in fact demonstrates his concern for his children, to comfort, strengthen, teach and build them up in love. He reveals himself as the perfect model of a spiritual father, to the point of giving his life for them…

A spiritual father can say, “my little children” with such love that the voice of the Father can be heard; this is someone whose whole being speaks of the Father, their whole life, their love, their compassion, mercy and humility, their willingness to listen, their patience and perseverance, their expectations and their forbearance, everything about them speaks of the Father; this is a person sufficiently transparent for the Father to be seen through them, to the point it can be said, “When I see this person, I see the Father.”

In giving his disciples to understand that they are the Father’s little children, Jesus reveals God’s fatherly love, the affectionate love of the Father so full of tenderness for his little children. This is surely a real revelation; never in fact had God used the words “little children” to speak to anyone! Our familiar diminutive teknion is entirely absent from the Septuagint, while the normal teknon is found more than three hundred times. The Septuagint had no place for the affectionate diminutive, and never suggested that God might be so tender and affectionate with his children. The three inter-testamental texts that do use the word never connect it with God, so Jesus was absolutely introducing an innovation, the first to reveal the paternal tenderness of God, very wonderfully.

Jesus therefore becomes the revealer of the Father’s tenderness, as indeed he had earlier that same day by washing the disciples’ feet, just like a mother who washes the feet of her little children who are too young to wash themselves. What a joy it is for us to know ourselves loved by Jesus and by a Father who is so affectionate that we might even think of him as maternal. 

Reader friend, if we wish to really make this text our own, we need to take on board the fact that we are considered by Jesus to be little children, his own little children, as well as the little children of God our Father; this is not necessarily obvious!

Daniel Bourguet, The Last Words of Jesus Before the Cross: Meditations on John 13-16, p 6-8. The People’s Seminary Press 2020; translated from original French edition first published in 2019, Le dernier entretien avant la croix.

A Pastor Speaking Tenderly 

Now, when I read the words of Jesus in Luke 9:23, “Whoever wants to be my disciples must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me” I hear the tender persistent voice of Jesus.

Now when I read the “classic words of discipleship” from Jesus here and in Luke 14:26, 27, and 33 I cannot hear these words from the mouth of a demanding king. Rather these are the tender life giving words of radical acceptance coming from my true spiritual father seeking to gently persuade us to relinquish false recipes for life and the idols that have captivated us in order to fully and freely follow Jesus and therefore LIVE!

Now I must wield these words of discipleship with caution. These are not to be spoken over another because they would not follow my plan. Rather they must be offered in the tenderness and generosity of Jesus when the struggles of the heart have been heard. Since I cannot know what is in the heart of another person I must first offer myself, probe, and listen. Perhaps I should only offer these words of Jesus when I hear one of these three struggles:

I want to be Jesus’ disciple but I also want to save myself from some “deathly” fate.
I want to be with Jesus but I also want to gain the world.
I want to see Jesus’ Kingdom but I also want to avoid being embarrassed before the people whose opinion and applause matters to me today.

And when I offer these words of Jesus, I must do so without resentment but with tenderness, without bravado but with surrender, without seeking to control but with love’s freedom. This is how Jesus spoke these words to His disciples who may have been stunned to contemplate where Jesus was taking them. This is how Jesus has spoken to me.

Prayer of the People, 23 April 2021

Heavenly Father,

Thank you for the grace that has brought us into your Communion — the communion of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Jesus Christ our Lord laid down His life that He might be lifted up for all to see on the Cross for your salvation. His death confounded the powers and authorities and you triumphed over death in His resurrection. You have delivered us from the evil one and have settled the debt of our rebellion.

Now by this gift of faith we are buried with Jesus in baptism and you have raised us into glorious life with Him!

Praise the Lord!
You have forgiven us our sins and free us from the tyranny of shame.
Praise the Lord!

For a time we do not yet see all things under your feet. Yet, we desire that your Spirit would continue to transform our hearts. May our feet and our hands move in accordance with your love. May our voices speak winsomely and boldly of Jesus who fills our hearts.

Oh Lord, teach us your ways. How our hearts are drawn to envy those with more of whatever the lusts of our eyes desire. How easily we are deceived to neglect the weightier matters and  to let our hearts grow cold and hard.

Revive us Lord! Revive us — we open our hearts to you and say Come Lord Jesus.

(Please join me in the Lord’s Prayer.)

Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come,
your will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
And forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.
And lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from the evil one;
for yours is the kingdom,
and the power, and the glory, 
forever. 
Amen.

This prayer was part of the Origin Church Weekend Broadcast on 23 April 2021

From An Alley

Some mornings walking
While the city awakens
Cool air in gentle embrace
With a sparrow’s notes of grace
Carries me to Thomassin,
to Athens, or to Belfast when
the peace before the hustle
is the same.