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  • Wednesday of Holy Week

    Last Sunday as we shared in stories of Holy Week from Palm Sunday to Gethsemane, we used this paraphrase of the story of Jesus being anointed at Bethany by a woman who may or may not have been called Mary, and who may or may not have had a colourful past and a chaotic present:

     

    Jesus and his friends went to a house in Bethany where they had been invited for a meal.  Whilst they were waiting for the food to be brought to them a woman tiptoed into the room carrying a huge jar of precious perfume.  She came to where Jesus was, opened up her jar of perfume and poured some onto his head and his feet.

    As the lovely smell filled the room, people turned to see what was happening, and one of Jesus’ friends, called Judas Iscariot said in a loud voice, “What a waste!  That could have been sold for a lot of money… the money could have been given to help poor people.”

    The woman looked sad, but Jesus smiled at her kindly. “Leave her alone,” he said, “she has done something very lovely for me.  There will always be poor people for you to help, but I won’t always be here.  People will forget lots of things but from now on, when people share my stories, they will be told about this woman and what she has done for me.”

    Judas was so cross and disappointed, that he slipped off to the religious rulers and agreed to help them trap Jesus.

     

    I wonder who are the people we perceive as 'sinful' - would we allow oursleves to accept their love lavished upon us, graciously and gratefully receiving what they offer?

    I wonder who we could do something lovely for today - and who we could allow to bless us with unexpected generosity?

    I wonder when and how, like Jesus, we become so cross and disappointed that we, too, walk away from Jesus?

    I wonder whose stories we remember and tell, and why or why not?

  • Hot off the (electronic) Press!

    BUGB have a new e-book Bible study out - called 'The Lydia Question' which explores aspects of women and (ordained) ministry.

    Five and a bit years ago I was asked to share my 'story' (I suspect because it was suitably grotty to make a point rather well).  I'm more a 'facts' than 'feelings' person so it was initially ghost written, very skilfully, from an outline I supplied.  Five years and several iterations later it is finally published!

    You can find it here - and if really bored find my story on page 44

    Thank you BUGB for this massive project, and for the privilege of sharing something of my story

    I hope it's a helpful resource for Baptists who remain troubled about this topic.

  • Tuesday of Holy Week (with references to Monday of Holy Week!)

    Yesterday evening we held a short (30 minute!) reflective act of worship for the Monday of Holy Week as part of our involvement as 'observers' in the local Church of Scotland Parish Grouping Council (don't ask, it's way too complicated!).

    We used three stories from the synoptic Holy Week narratives (Matthew and a bit of Luke) and explored some ideas around money.

    Someone was overheard to comment, positively, before they left "that was worth coming out for."  I think that's the best compliment a preacher or worship leader can get... especially when the source is someone for whom they have deep respect.

    Anyway, I thought maybe it might be worth sharing it here (which makes this a ludicrously long post).  The wording won't be identical to what I said, since I ad libbed quite a lot (which led to at least one historically incomplete observation) and this is the original from which I worked.

     

    Joint Holy Week Service

    Monday

    Welcome

    Opening Sentences

    Among the poor,

    among the proud,

    among the persecuted,

    among the privileged,

    Christ is coming to make all things new.

     

    In the private house,

    in the public place,

    in the wedding feast,

    in the judgement hall,

    Christ is coming to make all things new.

     

    With a gentle touch,

    with an angry word,

    with a clear conscience,

    with burning love,

    Christ is coming to make all things new.                                                                                                       

                                       

    That the kingdom might come,

    that the world might believe,

    that the powerful might stumble,

    that the hidden might be seen,

    Christ is coming to make all things new.

     

    Within us, without us,

    behind us, before us,

    in this place, in every place,

    for this time, for all time,

    Christ is coming to make all things new.

    From Gathering for Worship

     

    Hymn

    Ride on, ride on, the time is right: the roadside crowds scream with delight;
    Palm branches mark the pilgrim way
    Where beggars squat and children play.

    Ride on, ride on, your critics wait, intrigue and rumour circulate;
    New lies abound in word and jest,
    And trust becomes a suspect guest.

    Ride on, ride on, while well aware that those who shout and wave and stare,
    Are mortals who, with common breath,
    Can crave for life and lust for death

    Ride on, ride on, though blind with tears, though dumb to speak and deaf to jeers.
    Your path is clear, though few can tell
    Their garments pave the road to hell.

    Ride on, ride on, the room is let, the wine matured, the saw is whet;
    And dice your death-throes shall attend
    Though faith, not fate, dictates your end.


    Ride on, ride on, God’s love demands. Justice and peace lie in your hands.
    Evil and angels’ voices rhyme:
    This is the man and this the time.                                                     

    John L Bell and Graham Maule © 1988, 1996 WGRG

    Prayer

    A prayer from India:

     

    Servant Christ,

    Help us to follow you on the road to Jerusalem,

    To set our faces firmly against friendly suggestions

    For a safe, expedient life;

    To embrace boldy the way of self-offering,

    The way of life given for others’ gain

     

    Servant Christ, help us to follow you

    Amen

     

     

    Entering the Story

    Come with me on a journey through time and space… back to the first century and to Jerusalem

    Come as a visitor to this great city at the far reach of the Empire and drink in the sights and sounds, the smells and tastes of a place you have only heard about

    Make your way along the bustling street towards the mound on which stands the goal of your pi9lrimage – the Temple, high and exalted

    As you ascend the steps towards the huge gates, drink in the atmosphere…

    How many different languages can you detect being spoken?

    What is the weather like?

    How are you feeling now that you have finally arrived at this place, the very centre of Jewish culture and worship..?

     

    As you near the entrance you reach into your purse or pocket and withdraw a coin, currency from home, knowing that this must be exchanged for the sacred coinage of the Temple.  Hear the words of those sat behind the tables:

     

    Come now, you who would enter the Temple of Yahweh, women and men, pilgrims from the entire known world, purchase lambs, goats or birds for sacrifice to make atonement for your sins, to redeem your first born, to worship….  But first you must exchange the sullied coins inscribed with the heads of earthly rulers for the clean ritually pure currency we employ here…  

     

    ['Plants' begin the process of handing over their coins and are given a 'temple' coin (1p piece) instead; encourage others to do likewise.  Jesus comes last, holding his coin, shakes his head, overturns the table and drives out the moneychanger]

     

    Hymn

    Jesus Christ is waiting,

    waiting in the streets;

    no one is his neighbour,

    all alone he eats.

    Listen, Lord Jesus,

    I am lonely too.

    Make me, friend or stranger,

    fit to wait on you.

     

    Jesus Christ is raging,

    raging in the streets, 

    where injustice spirals

    and real hope retreats.

    Listen, Lord Jesus

    I am angry too.

    In the Kingdom's causes 

    let me rage with you.

     

    Jesus Christ is healing,

    healing in the streets;

    curing those who suffer,

    touching those he greets.

    Listen, Lord Jesus,

    I have pity too.

    Let my care be active,

    healing, just like you.

     

    Jesus Christ is dancing,

    dancing in the streets,

    where each sign of hatred

    he, with love, defeats.

    Listen, Lord Jesus  

    I should triumph too.

    On suspicion's graveyard

    let me dance with you.

                                                                                       

    Jesus Christ is calling,

    calling in the streets,

    'Who will join my journey?

    I will guide their feet.'

    Listen, Lord Jesus,

    let my fears be few.

    Walk one step before me;

    I will follow you.

     

    Reading          Matthew 22: 15 – 22

    The Pharisees went and plotted to entrap Jesus in what he said. So they sent their disciples to him, along with the Herodians, saying, ‘Teacher, we know that you are sincere, and teach the way of God in accordance with truth, and show deference to no one; for you do not regard people with partiality. Tell us, then, what you think. Is it lawful to pay taxes to the emperor, or not?’ But Jesus, aware of their malice, said, ‘Why are you putting me to the test, you hypocrites? Show me the coin used for the tax.’ And they brought him a denarius. Then he said to them, ‘Whose head is this, and whose title?’ They answered, ‘The emperor’s.’ Then he said to them, ‘Give therefore to the emperor the things that are the emperor’s, and to God the things that are God’s.’ When they heard this, they were amazed; and they left him and went away.

     

    Reflection

    Is it lawful to pay taxes to the Emperor or not?

     

    If, as we claim, our primary identity is neither racial nor national but mysteriously, ontologically, as children of God, as citizens of the Kingdom or Commonwealth or Republic of Heaven, are we duty bound to pay the taxes demanded of us by the UK Government, the Scottish Parliament, Glasgow City Council?

     

    Take the coin you were given and look at is closely – whose image and inscription does it bear?

     

    Elizabeth II DG REG FD

     

    Elizabeth II Deo Gratia Regina Fide Defensor

     

    Elizabeth II by the grace of God, queen; defender of the faith

     

    By the grace of God queen…

    The Hebrew Scriptures tell us that God was the reluctant instigator of a monarchy for Israel

    The Apostle Paul tells us that all authorities are divinely instituted and to be obeyed

     

    By the grace of God, defender of the faith

    The Christian faith, albeit a specific, time bound, geographically mediated version of it

    The national legal framework that, unrecognised, unacknowledged accords us huge financial benefits, through gift aid, exemption from rates

     

    Is it lawful, is it consistent with our discipleship of Christ, to pay taxes to a ruling body whose values may not accord with our own and yet who grant us enormous concessions?

     

    Render to Caesar that which is Caesar’s… but what does that mean?  With church and state more intricately entwined than our radical reformation forebears would find comfortable, you do we decide?

     

    Give to the state what the state requires of you.

    Give to God what God requires of you.

    Not ‘either-or’ but ‘both-and’

     

    Take the coin you were given and look at is closely – whose image and inscription does it bear?  How do you respond to what Jesus has to say?

     

    Reading          Luke 21: 1 – 4

    He looked up and saw rich people putting their gifts into the treasury; he also saw a poor widow put in two small copper coins. He said, ‘Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put in more than all of them; for all of them have contributed out of their abundance, but she out of her poverty has put in all she had to live on.’

     

    Response

     

    The story is told that a five pound note and a five pence piece met in a pocket or a purse.  As they hadn’t seen each other for a while, the coin asked the note how life had been.

    ‘Busy,’ the note answered, ‘to the supermarket, then the coffee shop, next was the cinema and a restaurant, train tickets, new outfit, party… you know how it is.  Anyway, how about you?’

    ‘Ah, you know,’ the coin replied, ‘same old same old – it’s just church, church, church…’

     

    The story of the widow’s mite is so well known we no longer hear how shocking it is.

    This woman will go hungry in order to pay her dues at the Temple

    This woman has no food bank, so social security, no Big Issue to sell, she faces destitution

    The key is not the absolute value of her giving but its personal, sacrificial cost and the corruption of a faith that was meant, by means of its very constitution, to protect the most vulnerable in society

     

    Everyone here is now financially better off than when we came in – if only in token amount.  The coin you have is yours – you can take it away with you and spend it as you wish.  Or you can quietly slip it onto the Christian Aid collection as you leave.

     

    In a few moments we will leave here, following Jesus out in to the night and on into the journey of Holy Week – what will we carry with us as we go on?

     

    Hymn

    Heaven shall not wait for the poor to lose their patience,
    the scorned to smile, the despised to find a friend:
    Jesus is Lord; he has championed the unwanted;
    in him injustice confronts its timely end.

    Heaven shall not wait for the rich to share their fortunes,
    the proud to fall, the elite to tend the least;
    Jesus is Lord; he has shown the master's privilege -
    to kneel and wash servants' feet before they feast.

    Heaven shall not wait for the dawn of great ideas
    thoughts of compassion divorced from cries of pain:
    Jesus is Lord; he has married word and action;
    his cross and company make his purpose plain.

     

    Heaven shall not wait for triumphant Hallelujahs,
    when earth has passed and we reach another shore
    Jesus is Lord; in our present imperfection;
    his power and love are for now and then for evermore

    John L Bell and Graham Maule © 1987 WGRG

     

    Sending

     

    From where we are

    to where you need us,

    Jesus, now lead on.

     

    From the security of what we know

    to the adventure of what you will reveal,

    Jesus, now lead on.

     

    To refashion the fabric of this world

    until it resembles the shape of your kingdom,

    Jesus, now lead on.

     

    Because good things have been prepared

    for those who love God,

    Jesus, now lead on.

    From The Wee Worship Book © WGRG

  • Good News for Baptist life in Scotland!

    News out today that the new tutor has been appointed for the Scottish Baptist College.

    It is Dr Lina Andronoviene, currently Pro-rector and Academic Dean at IBTS Prague.

     

    This is good news for the Scottish Baptist College

    It is very good news for Scottish Baptist life

    And it is excellent news for me and the other women ministers up here

     

    You can read more about Lina here

  • Palm Sunday

    Let's be honest - my Lent bloggage this year has been a disaster!  Whilst I don't seem to be alone in having given up on the Archbishop's Lent book, I haven't managed to keep up to date with the modest challenges I set myself.

    But today is Palm Sunday - Holy Week begins and in a few minutes I'll head off to church to make ready for this morning's slightly mad service!

    Starting with colour and vibrance, we will end in stillness and solemnity... too easily Christians have a 'Hosanna Party' on Palm Sunday and a 'Hallelujah Party' on Easter Sunday with nothing in between.  Though, that said, I think that may be preferrable to the patterns in so many (Baptist and other) churches round here that just continue as if nothing was going on, erm hello!

    I'm really looking forward to this week and entering as deeply as I can into the story.

    Not singing this (or its more traditional counterpart) today but it's too beautiful not to share...

    1    Ride on, ride on, the time is right:
        the roadside crowds scream with delight;
        palm branches mark the pilgrim way
        where beggars squat and children play.

    2    Ride on, ride on your critics wait,
        intrigue and rumour circulate;
        new lies abound in word and jest
        and truth becomes a suspect guest.

    3    Ride on, ride on while well aware
        that those who shout and wave and stare
        are mortals, who with common breath,
        can crave for life and lust for death.

    4    Ride on, ride on, though blind with tears,
        though dumb to speak and deaf to jeers.
        Your path is clear, though few can tell
        their garments pave the road to Hell.

    5    Ride on, ride on, the room is let,
        the wine matured, the saw is whet;
        and dice your death-throes shall attend
        though faith, not fate, dictates your end.

    6    Ride on, ride on, God's love demands.
        Justice and peace lie in your hands.
        Evil and angel voices rhyme;
        this is the man and this, the time.

    John L Bell (born 1949) and Graham Maule (born 1958)
    © 1988, 1996 WGRG, Iona Community, 4th floor, Savoy House, 140 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow G2 3DH, Scotland