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How to preach 'blessed are the poor' to those who are rich?

Luke 6:17-26 Mark Twain famously said that it was not the bits of the Bible that he couldn't understand that caused him problems, but the bits that he did.  Today is one of those passages. It is difficult. Not to understand, but to live. How does one preach on this passage to a congregation when most of us, and I include myself very much in this, are materially rich and well fed? You will notice that the passage begins with the words, ‘Jesus came down with them’. He has been up a mountain where he has been praying, and he calls to him those who he chooses to be his 12 disciples. Now he comes down and stands on a level place, and the people flock to him. They come to listen to his teaching and to receive his healing. Power comes out of him. And then we are told, ‘Jesus looked up at his disciples’ Having come down from the mountain to the people, he now sits down and looks up at the disciples. So here is Jesus ministering with astonishing power, in words and actions, but from a posit...
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Encounter. The icon of the Presentation

Luke 2:22-38 If you go into an Orthodox church, often in front of you, where the sanctuary rail would be, is a large panel on which rows of icons are placed – the iconostasis. One of the rows on the iconostasis is called the festival row and on it are scenes from the life of Mary but mainly of Jesus. And today we are looking at the icon of the presentation or purification. The audio of this talk can be found here. On the left, we have Joseph and Mary. Behind them is the temple. The red drape in iconography shows that we are looking at what is going on inside the building, even though the main characters are shown standing in front of the building. PURIFICATION Mary and Joseph have come into the temple. Joseph is holding in his hands two birds, pigeons. The pigeons are a sacrifice for the purification of Mary, which the law required for a mother after she had given birth. Why was a woman thought to be ritually unclean after giving birth? Indeed, why was Mary unclean after the birth of ...

Jesus, the Lord of the Sabbath

Mark 3:1-16 I wonder what the man with the withered hand expected when he went to the synagogue that Saturday? He would, at least technically, have not been permitted into the temple, into the very presence of God, because of his disability; but he could come to the synagogue and hear God’s laws and learn of God’s ways. And this Saturday, the visiting speaker was the rabbi from Nazareth. He was quite controversial. There had been a heated debate about some of the things that Jesus and his followers were doing on the Sabbath. And maybe Jesus was speaking about the Sabbath. Maybe he read from Exodus 20 , and he spoke of how God gave the Sabbath as a day to celebrate His creation and as a day to rest, a day for restoration. Maybe he read from Deuteronomy 5 : about how the Sabbath was a day to remember how the people of Israel, who had been slaves, were set free; and how it was to be a day when their servants, their slaves were set free from doing any work. Or maybe he spoke from Levitic...

Psalm 96: The glory of God

It is cold, damp, dark and a bit depressing. And so it is good to be reminded that there is glory.  Psalm 96 speaks of the glory of God 'Declare his glory among the nations ..' (v3) 'Ascribe to the Lord .. glory and strength; ascribe to the Lord the glory due to his name'. (vv7-8) If we allow Him, God opens our eyes and we see that glory: We see His glory in what He has done: His salvation and wonderful works (v2,3);  in the creation of the heavens (v5) We see His glory in who He is: full of honour, majesty, strength and beauty (v6).  Plato was right. There is absolute beauty. We see His glory in His name: the sacred name 'I am who I am'. It is a name that declares the absolute freedom of God, that He is beyond all limits or boundaries, beyond space, beyond time, bigger than our language and rationality - and yet in revealing to us His name, H e enables us to call to Him. (v8) We see his glory in what He will do: Psalm 96 speaks of how God will come, make an app...