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  • THE JOURNEY IS OVER (JOURNAL 90)

    3 June, 2016

    If you were to read our journal entry for this day last year, you would read the following Today's instalment… [more]

  • JOURNAL 89

    22 May, 2016

    Hi sweetheart, Sometimes I experience periods of “What if…?”. These are times when my mind seems… [more]

  • JOURNAL 88

    17 May, 2016

    Hi Darling, Coming home from the hospital with a mechanical device fitted to my chest – a P.E.G. I think it… [more]

  • JOURNAL 87

    13 May, 2016

    JOURNAL 87 The doctor said I can go home this morning. The surgery has had the desired effect and this new means of… [more]

  • JOURNAL 86

    10 May, 2016

    JOURNAL 86 MOTHER’S DAY Hello sweetheart, I haven’t spoken to our children as to… [more]

  • Today's "Moment with Mark" (90)

    19 February, 2013

    Stay here and watch with me."  (Mark 14:34 NLT)

    As we move into this season of Lent (a season that in my denomination is largely overlooked as an occasion to reflect upon and prepare oneself for the Easter event....to our considerable loss, I fear), I am inviting myself to walk with the disciples through all that transpired in their lives so long ago. I find myself sitting nearby in the Garden of Gethsemane watching Peter, James and John as Jesus says to them, "I don't want to be alone. I need you now like I've never needed you before. Stay here with me".

    Did I just hear someone say, "That's not what the text says".  I suppose that technically you are correct. But I think you ought to read the text again but this time read beneath the lines. Do you see what I mean? My image of Jesus for much of my Christian life was one of Jesus the "complete" man; the man who needed no one , such was His self-sufficiency. Everyone needed Him but He needed no one.

    Well, He just burst that bubble of my ignorance. Notice that He didn't say "watch me" as though He was about to give them an example of what to do in tough situations. No, what He said was "watch with me". He was requesting that they stand with Him and support Him, to be there for Him at this hour of His greatest need.

    Does this perspective disturb or irritate you? Does this image of Jesus portrayed as needing anything from us challenge how you have understood Him all these years? It certainly impacted me that way. But I will watch the other three disciples to see how they respond.

     

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