Daily Inspiration

This summer, we’ll immerse ourselves in the person and work of the Holy Spirit: from the first verses of Genesis, to the last verses of Revelation.  Often the ‘forgotten’ part of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit is there at Creation, and also at the climax of the New Creation, throughout history revealing the reality of God’s presence and power to the world.  So, let’s celebrate the Wildfire of the Holy Spirit, and continue to welcome His presence in our lives today!

Monday 20th July – Romans 8:19-27  ‘Yearning beyond words’

I confess to being someone who builds their life around words.  I love to read, to write, to communicate in words.  And we live in a content-rich culture.  Wherever we go, whatever we see, on billboards in the streets or screens in our homes, there are words, words, words.

But sometimes there are no words.  Sometimes the enormity of life or particular circumstances render words irrelevant.  When Job lost everything – his family, his livelihood, his health, his place in the community – his friends simply sat with him on the ground for seven days (Job 2:13).  In fact, the problems started when they chose to open their mouths and try and ‘explain’ what had happened.

Perhaps we, too, feel that we live in a time when words fail us.  The great changes around us, the fears we carry for the future, mean that we are lost for words.  Life is not as it should be. 

And that causes us to yearn for something better.  For we know that something better is coming. We hold onto the promises of God, we trust that one day all shall be well, and all manner of things shall be well.  But not yet.  And that sense of waiting, of longing, represents a deep spiritual desire inside us.  As St. Paul puts it in our passage: we ‘groan inwardly as we wait eagerly’ (v23).  We long to see the kingdom come, to see ourselves made fully whole, to see the world made right.

Part of what it means to have the Spirit of God dwelling in us is to feel this.  This is not a spiritual failing, but the opposite – proof that the Spirit truly is inside us and helping us to see as Jesus sees, to feel as Jesus feels.  It is God-given and God-directed.  To love is to long.  To grow is to groan.  The Spirit unites with our spirit to help us give voice to these longings.  Not in words, but in a deep yearning for God’s kingdom to come.

And the Spirit is not just here alongside us in this process.  The Spirit also articulates these groans in the very throne room of God.  Our longing reaches the ears of God through the groans of the Spirit too deep for words (v26).  And it doesn’t matter if we don’t have the words, we don’t know exactly what to pray: the Spirit communicates what is needed.

So let us take heart.  Life is confusing currently.  We may well not know how or what to pray.  But God knows, and our yearning will find its way to Him, through the Spirit who dwells in us and intercedes on our behalf.  Amen, come Lord Jesus.

Saturday 18th July – Romans 8:12-18  ‘True heirs’

A few years ago, there was a period drama on TV called ‘Belgravia’.  The central character of the story was a young man called Charles Pope.  Originally given up by his grandparents to be adopted, ashamed that he was (so it was thought) born out of wedlock, it turns out that Charles was in fact the legitimate heir to a noble title.  Overnight, his fortunes changed.  He woke up one day as an obscure middle class merchant; he went to bed that night as a peer of the realm.

On one level, it’s an enjoyable fairy tale.  But in Romans 8 our journey to faith is described in the same terms.  Through Christ, we become heirs to something even more wonderful: we are adopted as God’s children.  We might have the same body, the same genes – but our destiny has changed.  We come to know our divine parent: ‘By the Spirit we cry “Father”.’ (v15)  And this is not just something external – somehow at a deep level our spirits join together with God’s Spirit, assuring us that we are indeed God’s children (v16).

And although this is a lovely picture of intimacy with God, St Paul is at pains to stress that it is more than that too – then as now, children inherit the riches of their parents (or lack of, as may be the case for many of us!).  And God’s divine resources, God’s inheritance for each of us, is boundless.  It may involve challenges in this life (v17) – but these will pale in comparison with the glory God has planned for us (v18).

This destiny brings with it both rights and responsibilities.  The beautiful right to be free from fear (v15) – fear of death, fear of punishment, fear of exclusion: in Christ, we have life, forgiveness and are welcomed into his divine, global family…

…but also the responsibility to lead the new life we are called to (v13).  As we saw in earlier reflections, we are born again, new creations.  To lead this kind of life we need to be led by the Spirit (v14) carrying the rights and responsibilities of God’s children, his true heirs.

Charles Pope was a fictional character. But your destiny is real.  You are a child of God. And because you are his child, God has made you an heir – and a new life awaits.  We may battle with fear, but it no longer needs to define us.  May God grant us grace to be led by the Spirit and live as his courageous, confident children today. 

Friday 17th July – Romans 8:1-6  ‘The Spirit of life’

I don’t know if you’ve ever seen the crown jewels at the Tower of London.  It’s a long time since I went, but I still recall the sense of wonder at seeing the breathtaking, dazzling display for the first time as a child.  One of the highlights is the Queen Mother’s Crown.  Worn at her coronation as Queen Consort in 1937, the crown is decorated with no less than 2,800 diamonds!  And at its pinnacle (although it is now shown separately), is the greatest diamond of them all – the famous Koh-i-Noor, weighing in at over 100 carats and still the subject of controversy between Britain and India today.

If the bible is the story of the greatest ruler of them all – Jesus – then many consider the book of Romans to be its crown, describing the beauty of the gospel with great depth and clarity.  And in this crown, chapter 8 is arguably the Koh-i-Noor – the greatest treasure of them all.  If there is one chapter which summarises the heart of all the great truths we hold onto, it is Romans 8. 

And what it tells us, put simply, is that God’s plan for us is life.  True life, abundant life, life with God forever.  It is a life conferred by the Spirit (v2) – since God is the author and sustainer of life, when His Spirit dwells in us then it cannot help but confer this life on us.  We may still have to die a physical death, but our spiritual life is assured.

What does this life look like?  In this first of three reflections on this diamond of all diamonds, St Paul gives us three glorious glimpses of what ‘the Spirit who gives life’ offers us.  First, no condemnation (v1).  Jesus took that on our behalf, that we might be free (v2).  In a world where there are always restrictions of different sorts, the reality that we live in the light of a greater and deeper, eternal freedom is a wonderful encouragement.

Second, a new government (v6).  We’re not talking here about civil or national government.  Rather our minds can now be governed by something other than our own inclinations and desires.  This slow adoption of divine government in our lives takes time – a lifetime, for most of us! – but slowly the growing realisation that we live by a new ‘rulebook’ (the ‘law of the Spirit of life’), with a new power source, energises our faith and empowers us to lead lives that were more like the lives we were designed to lead.

And, thirdly, the outcome of this is peace (v6).  We all face conflicts – with ourselves, mostly, but also with others, with temptations, occasionally within communities.  The Spirit of Christ brings peace.  Not with all people, all the time – at least, not this side of heaven.  But slowly, steadily, our minds, governed by the Spirit, produce lives characterised by peace.

Deep down, we all think that real life ought to be about freedom and peace.  The great news is that this is exactly what Jesus came to bring.  The temptation for most of us is to look for this kind of life in things that can’t give it to us.  But here, detailed in Romans 8, is the real deal.  And may God’s Spirit increasingly govern our minds, that we might live today, and this week, in freedom and peace.

Thursday 16th July – Acts 12:25-13:4  ‘Set apart by the Spirit’

It’s always fascinating watching how people eat a plate of food.  You can learn a lot about someone’s personality from how they eat: in particular, when they choose to eat their favourite mouthfuls.  Some can’t wait, and have to munch their favourite things first.  Others like to space them throughout their meal.  When I was younger, I always wanted to finish well – I would make sure that at least one of my favourite mouthfuls was set apart till the very end.

To be set apart is to be special.  And this idea of being set apart is also an important one for a follower of Jesus.  The word ‘holy’ literally means set apart, and God’s people in the New Testament are frequently referred to as hagioi or ‘holy ones’ – the ‘set apart ones’.  It’s the same word used for ‘saint’ and the great news is that all God’s people are saints, because we are all holy, all set apart.

How?  That’s the work of the Spirit.  When the Spirit dwells in us, we are literally cleaned from the inside – the old word would be ‘sanctified’.  The Holy Spirit – the clue is in the name – makes whatever the Spirit dwells in holy (i.e. set apart) too.

But there are several different ways we can understand this set-apartness.  We are set apart from sin and wrongdoing.  We are set apart in love – for God and each other. We are also set apart for stuff.  For good works, for worship, and also for specific callings.  God has plans for each one of us, and part of the Spirit’s role in our lives is to reveal them.

In today’s passage we see the Spirit set apart Saul and Barnabas for a specific special task (v2).  Notice that it was birthed in worship and prayer (v2), and sealed by the laying on of hands (v3) – a sort of commissioning.  The church nowadays still practises this for ordained ministry, but sadly restricts such ‘ordinations’ to one particular type of calling.  But biblically, there is a strong case that we could be set apart for all kinds of ‘ordinations’, as the Spirit of God directs. 

We’ll say more about the gifts of the Spirit in later instalments, but let’s reflect here that calling is a universal thing for followers of Jesus. We are all called to follow Jesus, and God has prepared in advance good works for each one of us (Ephesians 2:10).  The Spirit indwells each Christian, so we are all set apart in one way or another.

You may not feel worthy of any kind of call.  But it has often been observed that God does not call the equipped, but equips the called.  Even here, the Spirit directs Saul and Barnabas where to go (v4).  So, a question to ponder today – if the idea of calling might be far wider than you imagined, where is God calling you?  What is God setting you apart for?  There’s an exciting thought….

Wednesday 15th July – Acts 10:9-20,44-48  ‘Spirit-led rulebreaking’

All human institutions rely on rules to function.  It’s just the way of things.  Even those things that start as dynamic movements end up needing protocols and procedures, strategies and systems.

It’s no less true in the Church.  As soon as any community grows to any size, it needs some sort of organisation to keep going.  We saw two days ago how even the ‘model church’ quickly had to improve its structure, in order to care for people on a long-term basis.

Beyond these human rules, however, lies something deeper too. God’s people had clear laws which determined the pattern of their life.  Although we often characterise God’s law as a series of do’s and don’ts, in reality it was a whole vision of life – for individuals, for communities, for lifestyle, for worship. 

And two of those rules which any orthodox Jew would observe strictly were: eating certain ‘clean’ foods, and never visiting the home of a non-Jew.  Yet, here, in today’s passage, Peter is asked by God to do both of those things.  What’s going on?  Does God break his own rules?

Well, yes and no. Since Jesus’ resurrection we now live in ‘the age of grace’.  Jesus himself taught that his new way fulfilled all the food laws (Mark 7:19), and now people of all cultures and races are welcomed into God’s kingdom.  But Peter hadn’t yet grasped the full reality of what this meant.  It took this extraordinary series of encounters in Acts 10 to change his mind, and open his eyes to the full reality of the glorious new kingdom of Jesus.

And, significantly, it was the pouring out of the Holy Spirit on the non-Jewish Cornelius and his friends (v44) which confirmed to Peter that God was doing a new thing.  Even in the new age of grace, God disrupted the ‘order of blessing’ which Peter himself had preached just a few chapters earlier in Acts 2:38-39.  The Spirit was supposed to come after profession of faith in Jesus – here it came early!

So, to answer the question: no, God’s laws weren’t being broken, instead fulfilled; but yes, God was also disrupting the ‘natural order of things’ to do something new.

And this is still the way God works.  This story is not a free ticket for a kind of ‘if it feels good, do it’ sort of spirituality.  But it does remind us that God’s Spirit is wild like the wind, or like fire.  It frequently disrupts our cosy human structures to do something new – for God’s greater glory.

The last few years have seen all kinds of unusual things; like Peter, we may feel uncomfortable, even confused.  But let’s also pray that, like Peter, we too can see where the Wind is blowing, that God’s creative, disruptive Spirit might birth extraordinary new things in our lives and in our churches today.

Tuesday 14th July – Acts 8:26-35  ‘Divine appointments’

A few years ago I read a superb little book called ‘The 10-Second Rule’ by Clare de Graaf.  The rule, as the writer describes it, is very simple: ‘Within ten seconds, do the next thing you’re reasonably sure Jesus wants you to do, and you could change a life forever.’

The point is that (like Simeon in day 20) we all get ‘nudges’ to do certain things.  A person to call, a note to write, maybe we see someone while we’re out and feel that we should say hello or offer help.  Clare de Graaf encourages us to consider that these might be divine prompts, Spirit-led nudges to live out our faith in lots of small acts of kindness.

We don’t need to be sure – as humans, we’ll get it wrong sometimes.  But the point is: if the thought that crosses your mind is a good one, if it seeks the other person’s good and wellbeing, then it’s pretty likely that God would smile if we did it, indeed we might even conclude that He put the thought there in the first place.

Ultimately, the underlying theology – and I think it’s a very good way to live – is that Christian character is shaped less by our big, dramatic decisions than by the cumulative impact of thousands of small acts of simple obedience.  But de Graaf is right to observe that we shouldn’t ‘overthink’ these nudges – which I have to admit is what I do all the time.  That’s why he calls it the 10-Second Rule: you’ve got to act on the impulse quickly, because if you wait more than ten seconds thinking it over, debating with yourself, the moment will have gone. The person you saw in the street will have walked past, the phone call that flitted through your mind will be replaced by thoughts of what’s for lunch, or whatever.

In today’s reading, Philip got one of these nudges.  A random chariot trundled past on the road and the Spirit said to Philip: ‘Go and approach it’ (v29).  Philip had to respond quickly: wait a while thinking it over, and the chariot would be gone.  Philip – who had learned to trust these nudges – acted immediately (v30), and the result was amazing.  Just by ‘coincidence’ the chap in the chariot was reading the best chapter in the whole Old Testament pointing to the sacrificial death of the Messiah, and wanted someone to explain it!  The result: a new follower of Jesus, and moreover an influential leader travelling back to another country, taking the message there with him.

Not all of our ‘divine appointments’ will be so spectacular.  But let’s not ignore those nudges we get to contact or to bless someone else.  They might just be God’s idea…  and if we act on them, just like Philip or Clare de Graaf, who knows, we might get to change a life forever.

Why not pray for a ‘nudge’ today… and for grace to act upon it, too!

Monday 13th July – Acts 6:1-7  ‘Practically spiritual’

The spiritual life is often thought to exist ‘in another dimension’.  And sometimes, it does.  Miracles, prophetic words of knowledge, angelic languages – these are not ‘worldly’ things.  But sometimes, we can fall into the trap of believing that unless it’s a bit weird or quite obviously ‘supernatural’, that the Spirit of God isn’t in it.  We need to beware this line of thinking.

This lovely passage in Acts reminds us that the life of the Spirit celebrates practical gifts, and is well able to affirm them as God-given and extremely valuable for the kingdom.  The ‘ideal church’ of Acts quickly gets its problems just like any other church.  In this case, their social care programme – dedicated to feeding those in need – is not going well: some are being fed, others aren’t.  And it’s causing arguments and allegations of discrimination.

The solution is wonderfully sensible.  The apostles appoint seven new leaders to look after the church’s social care, which proves to be a spectacular ‘win-win’: both freeing up the apostles to focus on their core gifting, and blessing the practical care ministry, such that everyone is fed.  The result, in fact, is not just practical benefit, but spiritual too – the church grows more quickly and reaches into new areas (v7).

What is notable in the appointment of the new leaders is that the first qualification is that they should be ‘full of the Spirit’.  It assumes that they will have practical organisational gifts, but also looks for signs of spiritual maturity as well.  The spiritual and the practical blend together for God’s glory.

Too often the church has neglected practical gifts.  Yet the early church affirmed them.  If you’re a gifted organiser, or good with your hands, or creative and artistic, these are God-given talents, which the Lord has given you for a reason.  Rather than separating them from your ‘spiritual life’, it is far better to surrender them to God, that He might use them for His glory.  That might be in the workplace, but it might also be in the Christian community.  I couldn’t have produced the online services which we’ve done for the last six years without some wonderful people offering their technical gifts to create them.  What a blessing they have been to us!

But there is a further encouragement here. As we grow spiritually, we might also find our practical gifting grow too.  As we become more Christlike, so those Christlike qualities will enhance the things we’re good at.  We’ll see things with God’s eyes, care for people better, including those we work with or serve as clients, understand our own fears and motivations.  These all help us to be more fruitful.

We humans are a marvellous, divinely-inspired concoction of body, soul and spirit.  May God continue to grow our whole lives, that our practical gifts, surrendered to God, may be used for His glory – both this week, and beyond.

Saturday 11th July – Acts 4:23-31  ‘Spiritual grace for testing times’

True goodness unsettles people.  It might seem a strange thing to say, but time and again it has been demonstrated in the history of the church.  Jesus himself was of course the perfect example of this: but it didn’t take long for his followers to discover the same reality.  Opposition to the early Christians began remarkably quickly – in today’s passage, Peter and John return from their first grilling by the authorities.  What had prompted it was, of all things, an outstanding miracle.  A man had been spontaneously healed, and Peter had spoken to the crowd which gathered about the powerful name of Jesus.

It is a sobering reminder that commitment to living a life of peace, kindness and welcoming the supernatural intervention of God is no guarantee that we will not face trouble.  Shining the light of Jesus inevitably reveals darkness elsewhere, and there is in some humans a hatred of the idea that they might not be masters of their own destiny: that they might ultimately have to answer one day to a Higher Power, a Greater Being.  We might obey the State, and be model citizens, in most things.  But our truest and highest allegiance is to God, and powerful people in particular are prone to resent the idea that they can never ultimately control us, because our minds and spirits are free – with the uncomfortable implication that their power is limited, even puny, compared to the Lord of the Universe.

So perhaps it is not so surprising after all that Christians have often been seen as subversives, a threat to the natural (corrupt, human) order.  Every time the power of God is revealed, the flaws of human power are laid bare, and it is this sense of losing control which led the authorities to try and force Peter, John and the early Christians to stop.

But where there is opposition, God’s grace is greater.  That is also a common theme of the history of the church.  And here in Acts 4 we see the believers not only unite in prayer but also experience the power of God again: ‘the place where they were meeting was shaken.  And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke the word of God boldly’ (v31).  God’s presence through his Holy Spirit was made all the more available to those under pressure because of their faith.

Let’s notice, though, what the believers prayed for: an end to opposition?  An easy time from the authorities?  Not a bit of it.  They prayed for more miracles, more opportunities to share their faith.

The great encouragement to any of us facing opposition to our faith is that God will give us more grace, more love, more spiritual power: in short, more of Himself. The challenge is that He may not remove the opposition: rather, give us grace to push through it and out the other side.

Today let us pray this grace for all those around the world facing these challenges.  Let’s use Acts 4 as our prayer for them.  And, if this type of challenge happens to be your situation too, take heart: God is with you in it.  ‘When we come to the end of ourselves, we come to the beginning of God.’  Amen.

Friday 10th July – Acts 2:1-21  ‘Weak made strong’

You knew we’d get there eventually.  Day 29 on our journey through the Spirit in the Bible and, yes, we’ve finally got to the passage that you might have thought we’d cover on Day 1: Pentecost, the pouring out of the Spirit in a new and glorious way: on all people, for all time.

There’s so much we could say about this wonderful passage.  How the manifest presence of God came to Jesus’ friends in wind and fire.  How it ignited mission, and fulfilled what we looked at yesterday, as the gospel could now reach ‘to the ends of the earth’.  How it came at just the right moment, when multitudes of nations were gathered and could take this good news back to their homes and neighbourhoods.  How it was mistaken for drunken behaviour and ridiculed, as sadly it sometimes still is today. How it represented a ‘new law’ for God’s people, which is what Pentecost had traditionally celebrated.  How it brought Joel’s famous prophecy (day 17) to life….

And we can celebrate all of those things.  But today, I feel drawn to sharing what it meant for the disciples, and how that might speak to us.  I’ve been reminded recently of something profound written about St. Peter by the great Christian writer, G.K. Chesterton (and please forgive the non-inclusive language, Chesterton was of his time):

“When Christ at a symbolic moment was establishing His great society, He chose for its cornerstone neither the brilliant Paul nor the mystic John, but a shuffler, a snob, a coward – in a word, a man. And upon this rock He has built His Church, and the gates of Hell have not prevailed against it. All the empires and the kingdoms have failed, because of this inherent and continual weakness, that they were founded by strong men and upon strong men. But this one thing, the historic Christian Church, was founded on a weak man, and for that reason it is indestructible. For no chain is stronger than its weakest link.”

At the heart of our story today is Peter, who stands up before the crowds as a person transformed.  Chesterton is right to note that Peter is essentially someone like us, and that this is why he proved such a great choice to lead in the upside-down kingdom of Jesus. 

But this Peter has a new power inside him.  He is no longer operating solely out of his human weakness, but in the power of Christ, which fills and equips Peter by His Spirit.  Which means we can now look at Chesterton’s insight two ways: not just celebrating that God uses weak people (like us) to achieve His purposes. But also, since Christ indwells every Christian, then in fact every ‘weakest link’ is now far stronger than we could ever dare to imagine.  Not our strength, but Jesus’.

Pentecost may have been a unique occasion, an unparalleled experience.  But it speaks to a deeper truth for each of us: that the Spirit enables us to do things we could never have imagined possible.  The Spirit is still enabling us today.  What does – or might – that beautiful truth look like for you?

Thursday 9th July – Acts 1:1-8  ‘To the ends of the earth’

In 1995, a man left his well-paid job in New York, moved to Seattle, and began a business operating out of the garage in his new rented home.  He started by selling books in the newly emerging online market.  The first book he sold was ‘Fluid Concepts and Creative Analogies: Computer Models of the Fundamental Mechanisms of Thought’ by Douglas Hofstadter. Catchy title, eh?  Nevertheless, business boomed.  Within two months, he’d sold books to all 50 states in America and to 45 countries overseas.  And from there it just kept on growing….  For this was how Amazon started, and it made the man – Jeff Bezos – currently one of the world’s richest, on paper at least.

What starts small can sometimes grow in an extraordinary way.  When Jesus left this world to return to his Father in heaven (today’s passage from the start of Acts), he left behind 11 leaders, a total group of 120, no money, and no buildings.  In other words, not a lot to the naked eye.  But his final words to them were clear: what he started would spread ‘to the ends of the earth’ (v8).

How?  Well, if Jeff Bezos harnessed the power of the internet, Jesus’ followers were about to receive a totally different kind of power.  They couldn’t earn it or create it, they simply had to trust, wait and receive (v4-5, repeated v8).  Only when they had received it would they be empowered to take Jesus’ good news to those around them: first to the capital city, then to the rest of the country, and finally across the world.

It reminds us that the gift of the Spirit is not just for our benefit, but for those around us.  Lovely as it is to experience the presence of God, His power equips us to serve, and especially to share what we believe.  As we’ll see tomorrow, the disciples’ first experience of this demonstrated that truth probably more than they could possibly have dreamed.

Infectious faith is a work of the Spirit.  It’s good to have a testimony, and to know what we believe.  It’s good to be ready to share whenever the opportunity arises.  But most of all, we need the presence and power of God: giving us divine appointments, the right words at the right time, and multiplying their effect in those we are sharing with.

It doesn’t mean being passive.  But the great weight off our shoulders is that, ultimately, it’s not about us.  It’s God’s work: we trust, we receive, we go – and we leave the rest to him.

Who do you know that God is at work in?  Why not pray for them today?  And pray for power to be God’s witness wherever you may get the opportunity.  Amen, come Holy Spirit.

Wednesday 8th July – John 20:19-23 ‘Re-creation’

During the covid pandemic a few years ago, it sometimes became quite hard to remember what ‘mass gatherings’ used to look like, but one of the more unusual mass gatherings of people in the last couple of generations has been the popularity of re-enacting major battles.  I remember watching one about 30 years ago in Suffolk – truthfully I can’t remember which battle was being re-enacted, but I do remember noticing that ‘dying’ in the battle seemed remarkably popular.  Later, I wandered past the beer tent and realised why…

What we see here in today’s passage is a far more important re-enactment, one with eternal and global consequences.  The Gospel of John is all about new creation, a re-telling of the story of Genesis.  It begins in the same way: ‘In the beginning….’  In ch3, Jesus meets Nicodemus and tells him that he must be ‘born again’ i.e. re-created.  And here, in John 20, the risen Jesus does something which appears quite odd: he breathes on his disciples.  Again, since the pandemic, we’re not too keen on anyone breathing on us, but bear with me, there is a vitally important reason here.

What Jesus does seems odd, until you compare it with Genesis 2 – we looked at it way back on day 2 of these reflections.  There we saw God breathe his divine Spirit into human beings.  Now, here in John – the ‘re-telling of Genesis’ – our risen Saviour initiates a new act of creation.  When Jesus breathes on his disciples, he is effectively saying: ‘you are each God’s new creations now.’  What a thought that is!

When we become Christians, we don’t just ‘join a religion’ or ‘try to be good people’.  It’s far deeper than that.  We start a new life: we become new people, filled with the Spirit of God.  Through the work of Christ, God is creating a new humanity, able to worship and serve him, to be the pinnacle of His creation that we were always intended to be.  Or as St Paul summarises elsewhere: ‘If anyone is in Christ: new creation!  The old has gone, the new is here.’ (2 Corinthians 5:17)

It might not often feel like that, as we wake up wearily on a wet Wednesday in winter, or struggle to say a few prayers before we go to sleep – but that is who we are.  Jesus has put His Spirit in us, and we are made new.  And we can observe that two consequences of this new life in our passage are peace (v19) and forgiveness (v23). Because we are at peace with God, we can be at peace with ourselves, with others, with our world.

Why not let that peace rest in your heart for a few moments now?  You are Jesus’ new creation.  Receive the Holy Spirit.  Let Him fill you with peace today.

Tuesday 7th July – John 16:5-15  The Divine Awakener

I wonder if you’ve heard the phrase applied to someone that they were a ‘person of deep convictions’?  Often it’s used in the context of someone who effected great change, based on their principles: a Nelson Mandela or an Abraham Lincoln.  But you might use it to describe a very principled friend or colleague.  The word ‘conviction’ in this case refers to deeply and strongly held beliefs that determine the way they live, the things that sit deep in their heart.

We come across the word ‘conviction’ in the Bible too, and it means something similar.  Jesus uses it here in this passage when he talks of the Spirit ‘convicting the world of sin, righteousness and judgement’ (v8).  Modern translations might render it ‘prove the world to be in the wrong’, but the idea is that, prompted by God’s Spirit, people come to a deep awareness of truths which cause them to live a different way

In particular, Jesus says, these truths involve understanding that we fall short of being the people that God made us to be (sin), that this has eternal consequences (judgement), but that there is One who did not fall short and is able to sort things out on our behalf (righteousness – found in Jesus).

Although these are not easy truths to admit (especially in our modern culture) nevertheless without them the central act of the Christian faith – Jesus’ death and resurrection – makes no sense at all.  Jesus dies for a reason: the ‘fallen-shortedness’ of every member of the entire human race for all of history.  His righteousness wins for us what we could never claim for ourselves, and because of that we are forgiven, we are free, we become ‘new creations’.

It’s worth reflecting that whilst words like judgement might feel awkward for us, the fact that there will be a day when God puts everything right, when all the abuse and corruption and violence perpetrated by those who seem to have got away with it will be punished and dealt with, ought to bring us great comfort.  What happens in this world matters profoundly to God, and He will make things right.

Jesus uses the word Advocate again here to describe the work of his Spirit, and we might like to observe that the Spirit can act as counsel for the prosecution as well as the defence, if I can put it like that.  The Spirit defends our hearts, reassures us of God’s love, and helps us see through the lies of the enemy.  But there are also times when we need to be reminded that God calls us to be holy, and to cast ourselves again on His mercy.  That is ‘conviction’ as Jesus describes it, and either way (prosecution or defence) Jesus is glorified, since in both scenarios it leads us back to Him.

Whilst the word ‘convict’ is usually applied to an ex-prisoner, this passage reminds us that Christians are all convicts in a spiritual sense: those who have had deep truths revealed to them, but – praise God! – are no longer in prison.

Today, invite the Spirit to speak those deep truths to your heart again.  And rejoice in your convictions!

Monday 6th July – John 14:15-27  ‘The Divine Advocate’

I must confess that I love watching legal dramas.  There’s something about the intense atmosphere of a courtroom that draws you in.  Something too about how truth is disclosed (or avoided), how arguments are massaged and presented, and ultimately, whether justice is served.  Although many such dramas nowadays focus large amounts of time away from the courtroom – the preparations, the police interviews with witnesses, the personal lives of the protagonists – the key moment remains that time when the barrister (or advocate, to use another name for the role) gets to her or his feet, rustles their papers and addresses the witness.  This is the moment when those of us watching at home sit forward on our chairs and draw a sharp intake of breath…

People need advocates.  They need them in the justice system; but there are also other times when we might need them: to fight our corner, to defend those who can’t defend themselves.  One of our good friends in London used to attend bankruptcy hearings with those being pursued for debt repayments, and his expert advocacy rescued dozens from destitution.  An advocate is the sort of friend we need: full of energy, wise advice, and above all committed to us and our wellbeing.

There are lots of images for the Holy Spirit in the Bible, of which the most popular we have largely covered over the last few weeks: wind, fire, and water.  The dove is also well-known, as shown at Jesus’ baptism or (by implication) in the famous story of Noah.  But this passage gives us another unique image, and one which is particularly important because it is given by Jesus himself.  How does Jesus describe the Holy Spirit?  Here, as our Divine Advocate – in fact he’s so keen we absorb it that he tells his disciples twice – v16 and then again in v26.

Sometimes this word is translated ‘helper’ but that’s a bit cosy, the word is a little more dynamic than that.  In the original Greek it’s parakletos, which is where traditional churches get the name ‘Paraklete’ to describe the Holy Spirit. (An old minister friend of mine grew up thinking that the priest kept saying ‘parakeet’ and spent his time as a child in church looking for a parrot flying round the building!)  It literally means ‘one who comes alongside’. 

Hence the modern translation of Advocate.  The force of the meaning is of just the sort of good advocate we have described: energetic, wise and committed to us.  And, uniquely, this Advocate does not just walk alongside us, but actually dwells in us (v17, repeated in v20).  The Spirit’s heart speaks directly to ours, if I may put it like that.  It is Jesus himself with us by his Spirit: loving us (v21), empowering us (v23) and teaching us all things (v26).

We often talk in church about whether we’re committed to Jesus.  But this passage reminds us that the more important truth is that Jesus is intensely, eternally, absolutely committed to us.  Just let that sink in for a while… What a thought to kickstart our day!  Amen, hallelujah!

Note: Our back catalogue is still available here.  There are series from all across the bible, and you can either view the PDF files online or download at your leisure.