Tuesday, 29 December 2015

The Epiphany



I am told that Durham is a beautiful city.  Ez and I would not know as when we went to watch England v West Indies cricket match it was so foggy and rainy we could not see further than a yard ahead of us!  We then drove to Edinburgh.  I am told this is another beautiful city.  We would not know though, as it was still so foggy and rainy we could not see a yard in front of us.  We then drove to Skye for a two week holiday.  Apparently the drive is breath-taking!  We would not know though as it was so foggy and rainy we could barely make out the fog lights on the car in front.  But then… The most glorious thing happened.  As we drove past Inverness on our way to the Skye Bridge the wind began to pick up.  Suddenly the fog started to clear, the rain started to stop and the sun started to shine… all of a sudden we could see the irresistible countryside, the beautiful blue lakes, wonderful mountains still snow topped, the miles and miles of breath-taking scenery.  We were surely driving in heaven!  Of course Scotland had always been beautiful but it was then when the sun shone and the fog left that Ez and I knew it for ourselves.  We knew the beauty of Scotland.  We had an epiphany.

The bible is full of people having epiphanies.  Men and woman who in moments of need have found out things about God that have always been true.  Abraham and Isaac on Mount Moriah have an epiphany when they see the lamb in the thicket.  This leads Abraham to say that ‘God always provides’. God has always provided but right there on the mountain Abraham knew it for himself.  Hagar has been humiliated by Sarah and Abraham and has fled the camp.  She finds herself in the middle of nowhere, heavily pregnant, in 110 degrees of heat, desperate for water utterly alone.  She thinks to herself ‘no one could possible know what I’m going through, nobody notices me in my rock bottom’. But then an epiphany. The divine comes to see her and she realises that God is the ‘God that see’s’.  Of course God has always seen Hagar, but there in her rock bottom she knows it to her very soul.  The Psalmist in Psalm 139 contemplates whether he can escape God’s presence.  And as he contemplates he has an epiphany and he realises that even if he was to run into space or darkness, God will be with him.  Whatever we are going through today or tomorrow we can know that we also have a God that provides, sees us and walks with us.  But perhaps the greatest epiphany happened on Christmas day all those years ago.  Titus 2:11 says ‘the grace of God appeared’.  Of course God has always been gracious but it was only when Jesus was born in the feeding trough of animals having given up paradise, equality with God that the world could see it.  It was as he was born that the fog left, the rain stopped and the sun shone revealing a wonderfully loving and gracious God.  It was Christmas day the grace of God appeared. From then on, God would always be seen through the beautiful lens of Jesus.

The verse in Titus 2:11 goes even further still.  Paul writes ‘the grace of God appeared bringing salvation to all people’.  This is more than grace this is saving grace.  The epiphanies continue throughout the gospels as people realise that Jesus was the messiah.  First it was Zechariah who sang:

“By the tender mercy of our God, the dawn from on high will break upon us, to give light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our ways into the way of peace”. 

Zechariah’s picture is one of a dark world where its people have lost all direction.  As a result it is a place without joy and peace, heading towards death.   Zechariah has the epiphany that Jesus is going to be the horn of salvation who can save us from this fate.  Simeon and Anna who have been waiting, praying and fasting their whole lives. Finally they get the opportunity to hold that baby bought by Mary and Joseph for the Jewish customary ceremonies.  As they hold him they have the epiphany that this is the one they have been waiting for.  This is the one who is God’s instrument of salvation.  The boy grew up to be a man and the epiphanies continued.  The Samaritan woman and her townspeople, Peter having been rescued from drowning, the man born blind when he recovered his sight, the thief on the cross and the soldier at the foot… ‘This is surely the Son of God?’ This is grace, saving grace; this is glorious and wonderful salvation.  Titus 2:11, ‘grace has appeared bring salvation to all people’.

Paul Beasley Murray tells the story of a minister who was counselling a married couple.  There was much anger and hurt and lots of misunderstanding.  Finally during a session the husband loses it and shouts… ‘I’ve given you everything… I have given you a house to live in, a car to drive, clothes to wear, food for the table… I have given, given, given…’  The list went on for a while.  Finally when he stopped the wife said ‘you are right, you have given me everything… but yourself’.  In contrast God gave us his very self at Christmas, his one and only Son.  Now whoever we are, however we come and whatever we have done we can know forgiveness and new life. Paul wrote to Timothy ‘God our saviour desires everyone to be saved’.  Well Christmas is the moment it became possible when God stooped down to Bethlehem and the feeding trough and went on to embrace Calvary.  ‘The grace of God has appeared bringing salvation to all people’.  May we give God the greatest gift in return of simply accepting His gift and learning to follow Him.  I hope you have a happy Christmas and have a great new year!

Tuesday, 22 December 2015

A Prince of Peace



 

Forgive me, but I love the tv programme ‘I’m a Celebrity get me out of here’.  For those who do not know the show it follows a bunch of b/c/d list celebrities go into the Australian jungle for 3 weeks surviving on back to basic rations.  They then do ‘bushtucker’ challenges to earn food for the camp.  These are awful ordeals that test the celebrities fears like dealing with extreme heights, dealing with horrible bugs, dangerous snakes and all other sorts of awful things.  The one trial that looks like fun is the cyclone event.  A steep hill is layered with plastic and the celebrities have to climb the hill with a star and reach a destination point.  Easy enough!  Except there is all sort of things trying to blow them off course like water canons, wind generators, plastic balls and inflatables that are all fired with the intention of knocking the celebrities over and forcing them away from their destination. Instead they end up back at the bottom of the hill where they begin the long climb once again. 

The cyclone trial reminds me a bit about life.  We all have targets to reach, destinations in mind, a way of being that is full of peace, joy and love in our mind, but there always seems to be something that blows us off course.  You may have said with me things like, ‘when the children are sleeping through the night I can reach my destination of joy and peace but in the meantime I will just struggle on’.  Or you may have said ‘when the children are at school… when this big project at work is finished… when I retire… when I am feeling better… I will reach my destination of joy and peace but in the mean time I will just struggle on’.  We all have our goals but constantly we are blown off course from our destination.  Life does not happen in the miraculous point in the future where everything has been done and all is well, life happens right now in the meantime.  And we have a God that wants to bring joy and peace into the meantime.  Joan Osbourne asks, ‘if God had a name what would it be’?  Well he does and according to Isaiah 9 it is the ‘Prince of Peace’.

The Bible records the story of how Jesus having taught on the beach declared to his disciples, ‘let’s go to the other side of the sea of Galilee’.  Easy enough as half of them were fisherman.  Off they go.  Coast surrounds them, mountains in the distant, beauty all around.  But suddenly, out of no where, comes a terrible storm.  Now they can not see the destination, you can not see the beauty, the wonderful scenery, the other boats…  All that can be seen now is water, water, and more water, as waves crash into the boat one by one.  This is the end.  Death is around the corner.  They are nearly overcome.  They are about to sink and die on the sea of Galilee.  Then they remember Jesus is on the boat.  The prince of peace is on the boat.  They go to find him.  He is asleep in the back with his head on a cushion.  The boat is being thrown around, water is pouring in, the end is near… and Jesus is asleep.  They wake him.  They shout at him.  ‘Do you not care that we are about to die?’  Jesus gets up.  He staggers I presume against the force of the weather.  He faces the storm and speaks, ‘peace be still’!  And straight away, all of a sudden, transformation, a deep calm comes over the sea.  The disciples ask ‘who is this man’?  It is the prince of peace.  They reach their destination.

As Christians we are all on a journey.  A journey to eternity.  There in heaven we will be perfect, clothed in righteousness, without sin as we dwell with our God forever.  Our role this side of heaven is to be heading in that direction.  Becoming more holy, displaying more and more in our lives the fruit of the Spirit, becoming better followers of Jesus and becoming better imitators of our God.  There in heaven we will know perfect peace, perfect joy and fullness of life, but the journey there can be a difficult and a very different experience.  We keep getting blown of course, things keep getting in the way.  We are nearly overcome.  This Christmas we remember that we have a prince of peace who if we allow to can enter our mean time and say to the storms of our life ‘peace be still’.  We have a prince of peace who can bring a deep calm and help us back on our journey as disciples of Jesus.  So we can ask, what things are we having to face at the moment?  What is stripping us of our joy?  What things are keeping us away from our journey to Christlikeness?  Because the prince of peace wants to come and say to the storms of our hearts, ‘peace be still’!  And the beginnings of that ultimate joy and peace we all shall share in eternity can be ours today.  So why not ask the prince of peace to come into your heart afresh this Christmas and enjoy the radical purpose filled journey to eternity?  A journey with many storms… but a journey of peace and joy as our prince of peace walks with us and constantly reminds us of what wonders lie ahead. Because that is the gift of Christmas.  The gift of Jesus.

If God had a name what would it be?  Well he does!  Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father and Prince of Peace.  He came over 2000 years ago.  But the God that came still comes and transforms hearts and lives today.  May it be your heart this Christmas he floods with a joy and peace in believing.   Blessings… and happy Christmas!