Reflection from Rev Bruce

I have a great deal of sympathy for Thomas. Almost certainly he, and the other disciples, are beginning to get a sense that something is happening. Something significant that will change things. Something that is unsettling them. Why else would Jesus begin this part of the conversation with “Do not let your hearts be troubled”? Already Jesus has spoken of someone betraying him, and of Peter denying him. Things are not turning out as they had expected. As Thomas is trying to get his head around this, Jesus begins to talk of preparing places for them in his Father’s house, of going and coming. Seemingly this is news for Thomas and he appears to no longer grasp where everything is headed, where Jesus is going. So he says to Jesus, “Lord, we don’t know where you are going. How can we know the way?” 

 
This question probably reflects how many of us in the Church, across the nation, and around the world, are feeling at this moment. This year is not turning out how most of us expected! We sense that we are in the midst of something significant, something that will change things, but are not sure what or how. There is much that remains unknown about Covid-19. We long to know more about what the next stages will look like, what the new normal will be, and what will be necessary to enable this to happen. We too want to know where we are headed, how we will get there, and when. But like Thomas, we find that we don’t know where we are going and we don’t know the way. 
 
In his reflection last week, Chris wrote “don’t assume we will go back to how things were, because I don’t think we will”. It’s important to recognise that this is implied by Thomas’ question. If he doesn’t know where Jesus is going, then he’s not expecting to return to something that is familiar. Whilst the destination may be unknown, and this fills him with uncertainty, he has at least grasped that whatever is happening is leading in a new direction. 
 
I suspect Jesus’ answer exasperated Thomas. Jesus gives none of the specific details that Thomas was looking for. There is no route map, no list of directions, no timescale. In some ways the whole exchange reminds me of times when we’ve set out to take the kids on a surprise trip somewhere, and they’re nagging us for details, unable to cope with the suspense. Philip’s question in verse 8 certainly suggests he didn’t think it was satisfactory answer!  
Maybe it’s the walker in me, but I find something hugely appealing in Jesus’ response to Thomas, that he is “the way”. It’s a phrase that for me is suggestive of movement. It conjures up images of paths (e.g. The Pennine Way), stretching from one place to another, enabling us to find a way through various terrain, even though we may not be able to see the final destination.  
It also reminds me that one of the earliest references we have to Jesus’ followers after Pentecost is as those who “belonged to the Way” (Acts 9:2). This, and the stories of the early Church in Acts, seems to me to encapsulate what Jesus is telling Thomas and the others in the passage from John. Jesus is inviting them to a way of living, a way of being, that is distinctive. It is a way that reveals God (truth), a way that is animated by the Spirit (life), a way that leads to the Father. It’s about living life as God desires, therefore it is the way.  
If we identify with Thomas’ sense that things are changing, and we’re not quite sure where we are headed, perhaps we too need to hear Jesus’ answer; to follow him, the way. To be encouraged that the life we are invited to in Jesus is not about remaining static, but one of movement, of journeying on, of heading to a different destination.  
As we contemplate what this might mean, both as individuals and as churches, I wonder if God has already been preparing us for this (even if, like Thomas and the rest of the disciples, we weren’t quite aware of this!)? In recent years there has been work on A Methodist Way of Life (attached) that has sought to remind us that what we are about is living our lives in a distinct way in response to God’s love, made known to us in Jesus. It is both old and new, drawing on the scriptures and the inspiration of the Spirit, and on the example of the early Church and the traditions inherited from Wesley (and others). Let me encourage you to reflect on A Methodist Way of Life that together we might discern the way in which God is leading us.  
Peace and all good, 
Bruce 

Reflection From Rev Chris Humble

John 10.1-10 and verse 4 “he goes ahead of them” This comment is about the shepherd who goes ahead of the sheep, like a traditional Middle Eastern shepherd and the sheep follow. (he has no need of a dog to round up the stragglers!). But the fact that these words are chosen for use during the Easter Season remind us that there are other dimensions to this text. Jesus Christ has gone ahead through the experience of death and resurrection and he beckons us forward to share in this new life he now enjoys with God. So later in John’s gospel (in chapter 14 vs 1-3) we have those words read at many a funeral. “In my Father’s house are many rooms….I go to prepare a place for you” I re-read a quite old book on prayer recently by Olive Wyon called” The School of Prayer”. She is an author who I was first introduced to by The Revd Dr Eric Wright when I was a probationer and he was Probationer’s Secretary in Leeds nearly thirty years ago! In her book Wyon reminds her readers that in the middle east region where travel was (and still is often) by nomadic people undertaken by camel or with herds and flocks, facing a long journey the travellers journey by stages, stopping every so often at a resting place (the same concept John 14.3 uses). There would be a series of resting places along the journey. And at every resting place a servant would be sent on ahead to prepare for the arrival of the main party, so when the weary travellers arrived, food would be ready, the table laid, fire lit, beds made. They would be welcomed. The dragoman as he is known often undertook this role, but he would then move ahead again to the next staging post. We, in the modern western world stop off at the motorway service station on a long journey and perhaps sometimes we may even stay overnight in a motel or B & B. Originally the word hostel meant a place of hospitality and it is this same root that we find used for what we now call a hospice. Of the 18 places I have called “home” so far in my life, I only ever once lived in a hostel, when I was at Lincoln Theological College, its original name was The Bishop’s Hostel. And unlike a short stay in a hostel, I lived there for three years whilst I trained for ministry. We are as Christians invited to a journey of discipleship. On that journey we are supposed to grow, develop and change as we grow in maturity in faith. It is a journey with stages, and we must keep moving ahead. We are not supposed to remain static. Just like some of the seeds I have sown this Spring, they have not all germinated and spouted forth shoots out of the soil. I sent some tomato seeds to my 94 year old uncle who could not get out to buy stock, but he gently complained that only two of the ten seeds I sent him have germinated, whereas all of mine have. I jokingly asked him if he had remembered to water them! If each of us might be likened to a seed in God’s garden (and remember Mary mistook the Risen Christ for a gardener), the idea is that we grow and develop. My hunch is that many of us still think the same as we were taught in Sunday School, which might be fine for a child but not able to withstand the complexities of the weathers of adult life. I quite recently met the girl I once lived next to fifty years ago as a small child in Lune Street, Saltburn. We reminisced of course. She told her husband that I used to go to their house often when my mother was in hospital and if asked what I might like to eat for tea would invariably say “egg and chips”. That was the summit of my culinary horizon at the age of four. I still like egg and chips but probably would ask for something different and more varied now than the repeated answer I gave then. I have changed a bit in fifty years of course! Christ goes ahead of us and he wants us to follow, to move in the direction as he is leading us. The words of an old hymn by Godfrey Thring come to mind “ Saviour blessed Saviour” ( Hymn & Psalms 274) , verse 4 has “ onward ever onward, journeying o’er the road, worn by saints before us, journeying on to God, leaving all behind us, may we hasten on, backwards never looking till the prize is won”. Many speakers on Thought for the Day have expressed hopes that we do not just return once this coronavirus pandemic is over to what was normal, but that this experience of restrictions has changed us and we cannot and should not just long to go back to what we knew before all this. A businessman called Dick Elsie, who is an engineer,spoke of how he is co-ordinating engineering businesses to switch to make ventilators and he said his business meetings were now much shorter and more focused than before. Perhaps we need some of that! Both Sam Wells of St Martin in the Fields and John Bell of the Iona Community have spoken recently of not wanting to go back to “normal” because a new normal has been forged where we have more time for each other, for longer conversations rather than just soundbites, time to hear the sounds of birds that are usually drowned out by traffic and we are probably more sensitive to the environment and the planet on which we live as our common home with all the people around the world and all that lives, we must take the lessons we are learning into the new future. We might be more aware than ever that we are in the business of living in God’s world together in a common humanity. And we must begin to shape that new future now, even as Church as well as in other areas of life. So, I want you to think what shape and pattern our churches might have when we come out of these social distancing restrictions (whenever that might be). Don’t assume we will go back to how things were, because I don’t think we will. Some of the things we have been doing are probably past their sell-by date and need to cease. New green shoots need nurturing, fresh expressions need encouragement and we have not always been careful to do that. We need to start doing that more passionately. Christ goes ahead of us to prepare a place and we must make sure we follow. With every good wish, Christopher Humble