The self-emptying of Jesus reveals both his divinity and the pathway to our full humanity.
The self-emptying of Jesus reveals both his divinity and the pathway to our full humanity.
A sense of shame can be God’s invitation to accept healing and new life.
God speaks prophetically through the Church and through some individuals, and the prophetic task is inseparable from humility, constructiveness, graciousness, love, patience and generosity.
God comes to us, in seemingly insignificant places and borne by easily overlooked people.
True greatness comes in devoting ourselves to recognising and liberating the greatness in others, and that will often come at the cost of misunderstanding, sniping and rejection.
Christ uses his power to lift up others, but we are prone to misuse power to exalt ourselves.
When Jesus invites us to join the feast, and to invite others as well, some people need reassuring to get them in the room, while others need challenging to make space, but the invitation is there for all of us and it’s genuine.
Any political wisdom which has lost touch with the values revealed to us in the character of God is on the road to disaster. It is not wisdom at all; it is just the mouthings of wealth and power.
Authority in the Christian community derives not from worldly status or popularity contests, but from a humble willingness to imitate Christ in his devotion to God and his service of others.
The gospel calls us on a road to healing and wholeness, but its steps are so deceptively simple (which doesn’t mean easy) that we often don’t take them seriously and so don’t do them.
When we call Jesus King, we may not know what we’re saying.
Encounters with the risen Christ open our minds rather than narrow our theology.
God uses the experiences of our lives to confront us with our own imperfections and, once so confronted, we are responsible for our growth and change in that area.