The Coracle Trust

Coracle Trust E-Reflections

Holy Week: Does the will of God mean life for me?

Monday 18 April 2011

It is impossible to accept the death of the soul unless one possesses another life, outside of the soul's illusory life... in the hands of our Father who is in secret . Simone Weil

Heilige Dreifaltigkeit

Heilige Dreifaltigkeit

Read John 12:27–50 and return Jesus said, "And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself." He said this to show the kind of death he was going to die. "I know that his command leads to eternal life."

I and the Father are one, through and through

We come to our next threshold. How are we to interpret 'commands' that see harsh, how do we reconcile our images of God with God? Is our translation that gives us 'command' in question? What I am left with, at the very least, is this. As we shall see Jesus is very keen, almost insistent for his disciples to appreciate that he and the Father are one, that when we see Jesus we see the Father, that there is no gap. Here is the crisis of trust that the Trinity has embarked upon resolving once and for all – we can’t give up to or willingly fall back into something, into someone that isn’t wide, strong and benevolent and true. And Jesus wants to show us that this is God.

Question: Does the will of God really mean life for me?

Embedded within many of our questions, or maybe the backcloth to them, is our view of, or deepest impression of, what God seems to us and that is often ridden with suspicion and some dis-ease. This is Jesus’s greatest passion, to show us that obeying God is life, that we are not merely agents but sons and daughters, not pawns but friends - when we imagine God we are to look at Jesus, for when we do we see the Father too! Our idea of God tells us more about ourselves than about him. Thomas Merton Andrew Hook

Two hands, Bridget Macaulay

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