Monday, 16 May 2016

About the archaeology of the Bible

Excellent theologians throughout the centuries have trawled through the crevices and recesses of scripture and recorded their treasures.
Yet each one of us may look again and find some hidden gem or question, which has lain unearthed since first recorded and first laid down.
For example, these (and many others) have exercised my brain over the years -

  • Why was Lazarus in the grave for 4 days? Is there some significance to 4 and not 3, as in the case of Jesus?
  • Why did Jesus cause all those pigs to drown when they were the source of income for so many?
  • Why did Jesus not just cast out the bad spirits? How can a bad spirit 'drown'?
  • Why did Jesus curse the fig tree for having no fruit when it wasn't the season for fruit?

Saturday, 14 May 2016

About the gates of heaven (see also 13.3.16)

The mystery for me is who closed them?
What is the meaning of the saying that, by dying, Jesus 'opened' them?
Could it mean this?
God did not, would not, close the doors on us.
We walked through them and shut them behind us with our disobedient and seemingly independent ways - in fact with our pride.
The doors are not in some far-off heaven but are within us, in our hearts and minds.

Jesus has come knocking on those doors, asking us to open them to him.
He has shown us that, even though having suffered the full range of physical, mental and emotional agony, to the point of, and beyond, death,
he really is alive.

Death is not the end of life but the beginning of a new and ever-lasting adventure of life and love.


About sin

Sin is a spiritual 'leprosy'.
We must keep away from it. It is infectious.

This is an unusual thing for me to write but it came into my head in this form
and I feel it has something to say, even if I'm not entirely happy with it.

(I don't even like the word 'sin' and have my own definition for it
which is, 'An offence against love' 
but that seems a bit 'wordy' to use in this context.)


About humanity and inhumanity

Sometimes, the wickedness of which humanity is capable
has to be seen to be believed.

I don't know what I had in mind when I wrote this thought,
and it is gloomy,
but how many of us don't feel like this at times.



Sunday, 8 May 2016

Quotations from Julian of Norwich - 1

Revelations of Divine Love

The Fifth Chapter
Paragraphs 1 and 2

"In this same time our Lord shewed me a .. sight of his homely loving.
I saw that he is to us everything that is good and comfortable for us. He is our clothing that for love wrappeth us, claspeth us, and all becloseth us for tender love, that he may never leave us; being to us all-thing that is good, as to mine understanding."

The whole of this chapter is incredibly beautiful (the chapters are very short).

The Thirty-Ninth Chapter
Paragraph 4

".. our courteous Lord willeth not that his servants despair, for often nor for grievous falling: for our falling letteth not him from loving us. Peace and love are ever in us, being and working; but we be not always in peace and in love. But he willeth that we take heed thus that he is Ground of all our whole life in love; and furthermore that he is our everlasting keeper ......"

These are the two quotes which have meant the most to me but the whole book is full of similar beauty.
I hope these may have given a small taste of the love and consolation which is to be found within its pages.




About Julian of Norwich

On May 8th, in the year 1373, Julian of Norwich had a series of visions which coloured her whole life thereafter and on which, she spent the rest of that life reflecting. She wrote about it in a little book called "Revelations of Divine Love".

I may have first heard of her around 1973, the six hundredth anniversary of her experience. Her book had come back into public awareness at least at the beginning of the 20th century because my copy was published in 1926. It was given to me by the housekeeper to our parish priest when he died. He had lent it to me when I asked him about her and I fell in love with it immediately.

The foreword explains that, while the spelling is modern, "the actual wording of the text has been kept considerably closer to the text than....." other editions". It is this text that I find so enchanting.

By chance, her name came up in a conversation the other evening and caused me to pick up the book which has lain in my desk for many a year. Being reminded that the date of her vision was today, this gave me the idea to share these thoughts and, perhaps, from time to time, to share my favourite passages.
I'll copy my two favourites in a new post.


Saturday, 7 May 2016

About God and science

Belief in and love for both,
cause me to look at the world through -

the lens of God's love,
the microscope of God's mercy
and the telescope of God's truth.