Sunday 26 April 2026
|
|
Meditatio:
‘I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.’ (John 10:1-10)
This blog
focusses, rather, on the ‘so what’ statement that follows the story about
sheep, shepherd and sheepfold. It is the statement that Jesus came that we
might have ‘life’ and have it ‘abundantly’. But what does this ‘life’
mean? Surely, everyone who is alive is alive. Does ‘life’ mean something
different or additional in this context? Clearly, it does. We
may be alive but not alive. We may breathe and move but yet not be fully alive.
We might have all our faculties and be world-class sports players and, yet, be
dead or only half-alive in another sense.
Being alive
in Christ – which is what this story is about – is more than behaving in some
predetermined ‘religious’ way – saying prayers, going to Church, hanging out
with similar minded persons, avoiding the seven deadly sins and being a good
son, daughter, brother, sister, mother, father, spouse, partner, friend,
colleague, citizen, etc. Being alive in Christ means entering a new
relationship with someone who goes before us (like that nice cuddly
European-looking shepherd). It means finding new life and a different life
within us in a new relationship. Now, this is not the same thing as rolling up
in a bubble of sanctimonious self-satisfaction. It means having our hearts
broken open to others in whom Christ is really present and alive and moving.
Perhaps one of the biggest tragedies of life is that some of us have never
really ‘lived’. We may not have ‘lived’ ‘abundantly’. The psalmist asks:
"Who
is the one who will have life, and desires to see good days?” (Psalm 33:13)
The
ancient Rule of St Benedict which has profoundly shaped
monastic, religious and lay spirituality in Western Europe and beyond opens up
with a concise and bold challenge:
Listen carefully,
my child, to your master's precepts…
Ausculta
fili – Give
ear O Son (Proverbs 31.2) – the very opening words of the Rule (or the familiar
phrase ‘Éist a Mhic’ in Irish) makes the point that we need to listen to the
Voice of the One who can give life and give it to the full.
Too often
we settle for less than the full life that is on offer because we don’t take
time and space to listen - really listen to ourselves, to others and
ultimately to that continuing voice of Love which whispers to us every day in
events, persons, emotions, thoughts, failures, joys and sorrows.
As someone –
whom I cannot now source but has been in my notes for over 20 years - put it:
‘All that
is asked of me is rapt attention, here, now, to others. And I’ll find the good
life.’
But How do
we know that Voice? How? It has three marks: Gentleness, Kindness, Inviting
(more than compelling).
We have a
sure foundation in Jesus who cares for each of us deeply and continuously as a
mother does for a new-born baby and as a dying person does for those whom we
have loved. But, if we recognise the light and the life of God in the
gentle, kind and inviting voice and face of Jesus who is the Face of God
(another take on ‘Son of God’) then we, too, can be a gentle, kind and inviting
voice and face for others who seek life and light. We can choose to
radiate kindness if we want and if we are serious about doing so. This is the
life that God, in Jesus, has promised us and is available here and now.
The
Christian singer Beckah Shae puts it so well in the song
Life (lyrics here and music here):
More,
more, more, more, more
There's
got to be so much more to this life….
I'm
gonna live the rich life
The full
and blessed life..
Exceeding
and abundantly
More than we could even ask or think
Collect
of the Word for this Sunday (Church of Ireland)
God of all power, you called from death our Lord Jesus, the
great shepherd of the sheep; send us as shepherds to rescue the lost, to heal the injured, and to feed one another with understanding; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.