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Love one another

  John 13:31-35 Jesus says, “I give you a new commandment that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another”. (John 13:34)  It is a strange saying because the command to love is not a new command. It is there in the Old Testament In Leviticus 19:18, the people of God are commanded to love their neighbour, the member of their community: “You shall not take vengeance or bear a grudge against any of your people, but you shall love your neighbour as yourself: I am the LORD”. And now Jesus commands his followers to love 'one another', the community that is now centred on him.  So how can Jesus say that this is a new command? Some say that up to now, in John’s gospel, the great command has been to believe, to put our trust in Jesus as the Son of God. And now Jesus says that he is giving them a new command. Not just the command to believe but the command to love – to love one another. But most people would say that the command ...
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Victory day!

Micah 4:1-4 It is wonderful to be here celebrating VE day 80. Quite a few of you will remember the actual celebrations. My mother travelled from Newcastle to London, to be in Trafalgar Square, along with thousands of other people. Evil had been defeated People were coming home. Children would see fathers for the first time, and there would be family reunions. There was peace: no more fear of sirens calling people to the air raid shelters There was the possibility to rebuild There was the promise of abundance Sadly, of course, we know that VE day was just a glimpse of what could be. There is still so much evil. Men and women go off to war. Today there is the fear of renewed war between India and Pakistan; and we add that to the litany of Sudan, Congo, Ukraine and Gaza Families and communities are torn apart People live in fear. Possibly tonight they will hear the sirens and have to run to the shelters The arms industry is huge, and it is growing And because of war, millions are homeless...

The Calling of a Pastor

John 21:15-19 In our reading Jesus commissions Peter to care for his people, for his sheep. Jesus commissions Peter. Icon from the  church of St. Peter Gallicantu in Jerusalem   I wonder what the qualification is for a new Archbishop? Or a new pope? This is rather an appropriate passage for the beginning of the conclave. 1. It is about a very personal encounter between Jesus and Peter Three times Jesus asks Peter, ‘Do you love me?’ Twice Peter answers, ‘You know that I love you’. But the third time he says, and I wonder whether it is a bit of revelation to him, ‘Lord you know all things. You know that I love you’. John tells us that Peter denies Jesus three times, just as Jesus predicted. But, unlike Luke, he does not tell us that Jesus turns and looks at Peter after the third denial in the courtyard. So, when Jesus asks him the third time, ‘Do you love me?’, he must have realised and is now acknowledging that Jesus knew that he had denied him three times. In some homes ...

Faith beyond sight: trusting in the risen Jesus

John 20:19-31 Thomas does not believe the other disciples. Thomas and the Disciples. Ravenna.  Basilica di Sant'Apollinare Nuovo He has been with them for 3 years. At times life will have been intense, and they will have had to completely rely on each other. But when the other disciples tell Thomas that they have seen Jesus, that he is risen from the dead; when they tell him that they have seen his hands and side, Thomas refuses to believe them. We are told a little about Thomas in John’s gospel. When Jesus says that he is going to Jerusalem, Thomas says to the other disciples, “Let’s go with him so that we may die with him”. And later, when Jesus says that his disciples know the way to the place where he is going – Thomas asks, ‘How can we know the way?’. And Jesus answers him by saying, “I am the way and the truth and the life.” I think it tells us quite a bit about Thomas It tells us that he imagined in his mind the worst possible outcome: death for Jesus and death for Jesus’ ...