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Showing posts from April, 2026

Why the Messiah had to suffer. Luke 24:13-35

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Luke 24:13-35 Jesus says to the two disciples on the road to Emmaus: ‘Was it not necessary that the Messiah should suffer these things and then enter into his glory?’ They had been there with the others on the first Easter Sunday, but they had decided to call it a day. It was all too confusing and depressing. An audio of this talk can be found here They had thought that Jesus was the Messiah; that he would set Israel free from Roman occupation and bring in God’s reign of abundance and security and justice. They didn’t know how – perhaps he was going to provoke an uprising and raise an army. Or perhaps God would step in, as he had done in the past, and wipe out the Romans overnight. But they trusted this man, and they had put their hope in him. But it had all gone so wrong. Jesus had been arrested and crucified. Even the crowd had chanted for his death. And now, three days later, the women were saying that an angel had told them that Jesus was alive. Some of the disciples had been to t...

The Word that makes us glorious. Easter day 2026

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Matthew 28:1-10 This was a sermon preached at a family service when we created a living model of this image. An icon of the myrrh bearing women. Prosopon school. Painted/written by Alison Rogers The icon above shows the women who came to the tomb to anoint Jesus’ body Or maybe you have been given an artist’s impression of a potential crime scene! And here on the ground we have a coffin marked out by our forensic experts. I would like us to visualise this scene and see how it helps us understand what we read in Matthew 28 Our witnesses are three women Mary Magdalene, another Mary (Mark and Luke tell us that she is Mary the mother of James – in other words, they are saying, you may not know her, but you know James and she is his mum). And there is a third woman mentioned by the other writers. They come to the tomb of Jesus. They know it is his tomb. They had seen where his body was laid. They had seen the stone rolled across the entrance. But when they get there, they find that the bod...

Dangerous Holy Ground—and an Open Door. Good Friday 2026

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Hebrews 10.19-25 This passage seems to be addressing a problem we don’t have. It is talking to people who are afraid of praying, of coming into the presence of God. Most people – if they believe that God exists – don’t have that problem. They may have a problem about coming into a church for a service – in the same way that I might feel awkward going into a night club. It is just not my world. But we have been taught that we can come to God as we are; that we can pray to him wherever we are; that we don’t need to use special words. And yet this passage assumes something very different: that people tremble to come into the presence of God. They knew something that we have largely forgotten. They had a concept of God as totally other, as holy, as set apart, as awesome. He is eternal – we are mortal He is the creator – we are the creation. It is the difference between a fruit fly and a human being. All the wisdom of Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Kant, Hume, Weil, Einstein, Wittgenstein put ...