Easter March of Hope

Today the local churches joined together for an Easter March of Hope, starting off from the coffee morning:

A very obedient dog:

IMG_1632Setting off:

IMG_1635Singing on the main road:

IMG_1637 IMG_1638Outside Asda:

IMG_1641 IMG_1647Continuing on:

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Easter visuals

We worship an invisible God, but there are many visual things we do to try to help us to capture all He has done for us. Some of these things include displays commemorating Easter in our local churches:

Photo0294 Photo0295 Photo0297 Photo0298At the local parish church:

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Finished!

‘It is finished!’ (John19:30)

It is finished

God is the Creator of all; He is the First and the Last, the Alpha and the Omega. When God finished His work of creation in the beginning, He saw that it was good. (Gen 2:1-2) John has already reflected this work in the beginning of his gospel, describing Jesus as the Word who speaks salvation into existence. Now ‘knowing that everything had now been finished, and so that Scripture would be fulfilled’ (John 19:28), Jesus receives the drink and cries out, ‘It is finished!’ A good salvation work has been completed: there is nothing left to do. Jesus has finished the work the Father gave Him to do. He can now bow His head and give up His spirit. The once-for-all sacrifice for sin has been completed (see Hebrews 9:26, 10:12).

It is extremely difficult for us to accept that there is, in the words of the hymn, ‘nothing left for us to do, for Jesus did it all.’ We are people who like to be in control, who feel that salvation must be earned. Even when we theoretically accept that only Jesus was spotless and sinless and therefore salvation can be found in no other name, we tend to want to add to our salvation through our own good works. The New Testament was written, in part, to remind us that all the ‘Jesus-and’ philosophies just don’t work. We don’t need anything else. As Eugene Peterson says, ‘”It is finished” deletes the hyphens.’ (‘The Word Made Flesh’, P 260)

Good Friday, the day when we remember the most unjust, cruel death imaginable, is forever to be cherished and loved by Christians, for it is the day when our salvation was finished. To be sure, we are still being saved and perfected: but, as the writer to the Hebrews reminds us, ‘by one sacrifice he has made perfect forever those who are being made holy.’ (Hebrews 10:14) There really is nothing left for us to do except accept the salvation offered to us and offer our lives back to God in faithful obedience. Though the disciples at the cross could not possibly have understood all that Jesus meant by this last victorious cry before death (and the paradox inherent in that situation so often goes over our heads as it probably did theirs), we wait in anticipation for Easter Sunday, knowing that God accepted that final sacrifice and our salvation is secure.

Good Friday

 

 

 

Easter meetings

Easter is a very special time in the Christian calendar, for we celebrate at this time the death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. Here, we’re at the very heart of the gospel, looking into how our salvation was actually purchased for us and it’s vital that we remain centred and rooted in this redemptive act.

To focus our attention on Easter, we are holding some special services this weekend. Three of these involve the film based on Matthew’s Gospel by the Visual Bible Society. With words taken directly from the NIV (hence the length of the film and the reason we have decided to show this over three sessions), this film rendition of the life and death of Jesus stars Richard Kiley as Matthew and Bruce Marhiano as Jesus and will help us to enter into the story in a new way. The first session will be on Good Friday at 7 p.m., with the remaining two sessions shown on Saturday 4th April at 1 p.m. and 7 p.m.

Jesus filmOn Saturday, we will be holding our coffee morning as usual from 10 a.m. until 12 noon, but in the morning, Christians from all local churches will also be joining together for the ‘March of Hope’ around Goldthorpe. Come and sing God’s praises and give out Easter leaflets and Easter eggs to local residents! We will be leaving GPCC at 10.15 a.m. and the march starts from the parish church on Lockwood Road at 10.30 a.m. After the march and coffee morning, there will be a church lunch at 12 noon, so if you want to eat before the film, come along and join with us!

On Easter Sunday, we will be holding a communion service starting at 10.30 a.m. and the evening service will be a family service starting at 6 p.m. Come along to take part in a range of fun activities (and win Easter eggs!), but most of all, to celebrate that Jesus is alive!

 

The Physical and the Spiritual

‘I thirst.’ (John 19:28)

In Greek, this one-word cry of Jesus expresses something of the physical agony He suffered on the cross. Jesus was, we must remember, fully human; He is the Word made flesh (John 1:14) and as a human being, He suffered the physical pain and horror of crucifixion, one of the most cruel forms of execution ever known. This cry is a reminder that our ordinary physical needs must be included in prayer. Jesus taught us to pray for our daily bread (Matt 6:11) and we have to acknowledge that we have these ordinary, everyday needs which must not be removed from our spiritual life. To attempt to do so is to live a life that is not fully whole,a life that is not integrated but compartmentalised falsely into ‘physical’ and ‘spiritual’, divided into ‘secular’ and ‘sacred.’

Throughout history, people have wanted to separate the physical from the spiritual. Heretics have separated the two natures of Christ, either believing He was fully God but could not possibly have embraced the physical indignities of being human or believing He was fully man but not fully God. So often, we struggle to understand even how we can be both ‘spirit’ and ‘body’, let alone how Jesus could be both God and Man. As such, we cannot escape from our bodies (however hard we try) and we cannot ignore our spirits (however hard we try.) In the book of Hebrews, we are repeatedly reminded that we have a great High Priest who understands our suffering because He Himself has suffered (Hebrews 2:10, 2:18, 4:16, 13:12). This cry of Jesus from the cross helps us to glimpse that suffering and to understand that He is able to help us when we are tempted, when we suffer, when we reach the end of ourselves. We do not suffer alone, for He has suffered on our behalf.

Loving People

‘Woman, here is your son…’ ‘Here is your mother.’ (John 19:26-27)

Death is never merely an abstraction, something to be studied philosophically or with academic interest only. Death touches each one of us at some point in our lives. Those we love and care for are taken from us. We grieve, weep and mourn their loss. We do not study Jesus’s death simply from an academic or theological perspective only either. His death matters to us because it is the means of our salvation; we cannot simply gaze and be unmoved.

Jesus thinks of his mother and his beloved friend at the cross. He knows that His death will have an impact on them. No man is an island and everyone’s death impacts someone else. In thinking of His mother, Jesus not only demonstrates selflessness even in the midst of personal agony; He shows us how interconnected our lives are. We neither live to ourselves nor die to ourselves. We belong not only to God but to each other. We have a duty of care to other people. As Eugene Peterson says, ‘With these words, Jesus made His mother and His disciple mutual participants in all that is involved in His death: abandonment, forsakenness, the hope of heaven, atonement, sacrifice, pain, salvation. And, it goes without saying, resurrection… All of Jesus’ words and actions, from this moment, enter the arena of everyday domesticity to be worked out and practiced precisely there.’ (‘The Word Made Flesh’, P 255)

In the midst of all the eternal, world-changing action of Calvary, Jesus cares for the ordinary lives of the people He loves. We can never, John reminds us later, love God without loving people as well (see 1 John 3:11-18). This is a lesson he learned first-hand from Jesus.