Thursday, 30 April 2026

Ministry as integration: mind, heart, life, and will


‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength’ Mark 12.30

I've been on sabbatical. And one of the gifts of sabbatical, if you let it be one, is the chance to come back to first principles. To ask not just "what am I doing?" but "who am I being, and why?"  

Over recent weeks I've found myself returning to a short personal mission statement I've been carrying for a while:

Thinking carefully. 

Feeling deeply. 

Living joyfully. 

Acting intentionally.

Four short phrases. But the more I sit with them, the more I think they contain something worth unpacking, not just for me, but for all of us who engage in ministry in any form. So here's my attempt to do that unpacking, both as a personal reflection and as an invitation.

Why Mission Statements Matter (and Why They Usually Don't)

Let's be honest: most personal mission statements are well-intentioned and quickly forgotten. They get written on a retreat, framed on a wall, and promptly overridden by the relentless pressure of whatever is urgent this week. If that's your experience, you're not alone.

But I want to suggest that a mission statement fails not because the idea is bad, but because it stays at the level of aspiration rather than becoming a framework for actual discernment. The question isn't just "does this sound like me?" but "does this help me make decisions, set boundaries, and notice when I'm drifting?"

These four phrases have started to do that work for me. Let me show you what I mean.

Thinking Carefully

Ministry is, among other things, an intellectual vocation. We handle texts that have been argued over for millennia. We engage with people in the full complexity of their lives and questions. We preach into cultural moments that require discernment, not just sincerity.

And yet ministerial culture often militates against careful thinking. The diary fills up. The pastoral need is immediate. The sermon needs to be ready by Sunday. Thinking carefully starts to feel like a luxury, something you might get to when the real work is done.

I want to push back on that. Careful thinking is part of the real work. When we stop doing it, we start recycling old answers to new questions, or reaching for emotional intensity as a substitute for theological depth. Neither serves our congregations well.

Thinking carefully means building a reading and reflection practice that isn't merely functional, not just "what do I need for the next sermon?" but a genuine ranging of the mind across theology, poetry, current affairs, science, and the arts. It means, before major decisions or initiatives, building in a deliberate pause for discernment: a day, a structured conversation, a period of sitting with the question rather than rushing to resolution. It means, in preaching, modelling careful thought explicitly: saying the hard question out loud before offering a response, rather than papering over complexity with confidence.

It also means cultivating at least one relationship with someone who will challenge your thinking, a theological sparring partner, a mentor, a colleague from a different tradition. Iron sharpens iron, and the minister who only ever talks to people who agree with them will eventually stop growing.

The question to carry: Am I bringing genuine intellectual rigour to this work, or am I coasting on what I already know?

Feeling Deeply

This is the one many of us in ministry find hardest, not because we lack feeling, but because the volume of emotional need around us makes it tempting to manage our feelings rather than experience them. We develop professional warmth as a kind of armour. We learn to be present to others' pain without letting it land. It feels like resilience. It is often, quietly, a form of shutdown.

Feeling deeply is not the same as being overwhelmed. It is the capacity to let what matters to others actually matter to you, to be genuinely moved, genuinely troubled, genuinely delighted, while maintaining enough inner groundedness that you don't drown in it. That balance requires tending. It requires supervision, spiritual direction, and a regular reflective practice that attends to your own inner life rather than just your productivity.

It also has liturgical implications. When we plan worship primarily around what is theologically correct or organisationally smooth, we risk creating services that are competent but emotionally thin. The minister who feels deeply asks regularly: what emotion does this service need to make space for? Grief, lament, wonder, anger, and delight are all as liturgically valid as quiet reverence. A congregation that is never given permission to feel will eventually find ways to feel elsewhere.

There is also something here about the emotional culture of our communities. A minister who feels deeply, and who is visibly, appropriately human about it, gives others permission to do the same. We model what is possible. If we are shut down, we subtly communicate that shutdown is the appropriate response to the demands of faith.

The question to carry: Am I genuinely present to what is happening around me and within me, or am I managing from a safe distance?

Living Joyfully

I want to be careful here, because "living joyfully" can sound like a demand for relentless positivity, the minister as perpetual wellspring of cheerfulness, unmoved by difficulty, always modelling the abundant life. That version of joyfulness is exhausting to perform and dishonest to boot.

The joy I mean is something more like grounded delight, the capacity to find genuine pleasure in existence, in people, in the created world, in the strange privilege of doing this work. It is not the absence of struggle but a quality of orientation that persists through it.

And here's the thing: joyful living is itself a form of proclamation. When a minister can rest without guilt, laugh without performance, and take genuine delight in things outside their role, they embody something the gospel actually promises. A minister who is visibly ground down, who has sacrificed everything on the altar of vocational duty, is not a good advertisement for the life of faith, whatever their theological orthodoxy.

Practically, this means protecting rest and recreation, not as indulgence but as theological statement. It means letting people see your joy in things beyond ministry: your friendships, your reading, your walks, your food, your recreation, your family. The humanity of the minister is part of the ministry. It means noticing the moments of genuine delight in the work itself, the conversation that came alive, the liturgical moment that cracked something open, the unexpected encounter that reminded you why you're here, and naming them, even if only in a journal.

Sabbatical is a particularly natural moment to renegotiate the terms on which we live. Joy that is perpetually deferred is not really joy, it is a promissory note that never gets cashed.

The question to carry: Is my life a credible witness to the goodness I proclaim, or have I let duty crowd out delight?

Acting Intentionally

Ministry can be one of the least intentional of vocations, despite the best efforts of those within it. The needs are endless. The interruptions are constant. The invisible work of pastoral presence doesn't appear on any strategic plan. And so we find ourselves, week after week, responsive rather than purposeful, carried by the current rather than steering within it.

Acting intentionally doesn't mean becoming rigid or managerial. It means developing a clear enough sense of what matters most that you can make real decisions about where to invest your finite time, energy, and voice. It means being able to distinguish between the urgent and the important,  and to choose the important even when the urgent is screaming.

Practically, this might mean a quarterly review of your commitments against your own deepest values: is what I'm spending time on actually aligned with who I want to be and what I'm called to do? It might mean making your strategic priorities for any given season concrete and few, two or three things you genuinely want to see shift, and letting everything else serve those. It means developing a decision-making practice for new requests: not just "can I do this?" but "should I, and does it fit who I am called to be?"

It also means being transparent with your leadership team and congregation about what you are not going to do, and why. Intentionality requires visible limits as well as visible commitments. The minister who says yes to everything out of a misplaced sense of duty isn't being sacrificial, they're being imprecise. And imprecision, at scale, is a form of unfaithfulness to your actual calling.

The question to carry: Am I making genuine choices about my ministry, or simply reacting to whatever arrives next?

The Risk of Fragmentation

Here is the deeper reason these four things belong together: each of them, taken alone, can become a distortion.

The minister who thinks carefully but never acts becomes paralysed by nuance. The one who feels deeply but never thinks becomes enslaved to the emotional weather of those around them. The one who lives joyfully but never acts intentionally drifts into a comfortable but inconsequential ministry. The one who acts intentionally but never stops to feel becomes a machine, efficient, perhaps, but not fully human, and not really pastoral.

The mission statement works as a framework precisely because it holds all four together. The underlying claim is one of integration, that the fully formed minister brings mind, heart, life, and will into alignment, and that when any one of these is neglected, the others eventually suffer too.

One way to keep the whole framework alive in day-to-day ministry is to carry a single integrating question into each week:

Am I bringing my whole self; mind, heart, life, and will, to this work?

That question is, in the end, both a personal discipline and a theological one. The God in whose image we are made is not a partial God. Ministry conducted from a whole self -- carefully thinking, deeply feeling, joyfully living, intentionally acting -- is ministry that testifies, in its very texture, to the wholeness that the gospel promises.

 

I'm not there yet. I suspect none of us are. But that's what the next season is for.

What does your own ministry framework look like? I'd be glad to hear.

Sunday, 5 April 2026

Called by Name in the Garden

A Sermon for Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
Easter Sunday 5 April 2026


Genesis 2.4–9, 15
John 20.1-18

Early on the first day of the week, John tells us,
            Mary Magdalene came to the tomb while it was still dark.

That detail is important because John is not simply giving us the time of day.
            He is telling us something about the state of the world.
The resurrection story begins in darkness.

The darkness of grief.
            The darkness of confusion.
            The darkness that comes when hope has been shattered.

Only two days earlier Mary had watched Jesus die.
            The one who had healed, taught, challenged the powerful,
            and gathered people into a community of radical love
            had been executed by the machinery of empire.
Crucified outside the city walls. Silenced.

From Mary’s perspective, the story is over.
            So she comes to the tomb not expecting resurrection,
            not expecting miracle, but simply to mourn.

And that, perhaps, is the first thing we need to notice about the Easter story.
            It does not begin with certainty or triumph.
            It begins with grief.

Mary comes looking for a body.
            She expects death to have the final word.

In many ways, that is how most of us approach the world as well.
            We know what death looks like.
            We recognise it everywhere.
In the violence that scars our societies.
            In the quiet despair that people carry inside themselves.
            In the systems of power that grind people down
            and tell them this is simply how the world works.

Death feels predictable.
            Resurrection does not.

And so when Mary arrives at the tomb
            and sees that the stone has been removed,
she does not leap to the conclusion
            that something extraordinary has happened.

Instead she runs to the disciples and says,
            “They have taken the Lord out of the tomb,
            and we do not know where they have laid him.”

Even the empty tomb does not immediately produce faith.
            Peter and the beloved disciple run to see for themselves.
                        They peer inside.
            They notice the linen wrappings lying there.
            The burial cloth folded neatly in its place.

And yet, John tells us quite bluntly,
            “They did not yet understand the scripture, that he must rise from the dead.”

So they leave, they go home,
            and the mystery remains unresolved.

But Mary stays.
            And that detail is easy to miss, but it is profoundly important.
The disciples go back to the safety and familiarity of home.
            But Mary remains at the tomb.
            She remains in the place of grief.

She stands there weeping.
            And the resurrection story pauses with her tears.

There is something deeply honest about that moment.
            The gospel does not rush past the pain.
            It does not leap immediately from crucifixion to joy.
Instead it lingers in the space where grief is still raw and unanswered.

Mary bends down to look into the tomb again.
            And this time she sees two angels
                        sitting where the body of Jesus had been lying.
            One at the head, the other at the feet.

They ask her a simple question.
            “Woman, why are you weeping?”

And Mary replies with heartbreaking simplicity:
            “They have taken away my Lord,
            and I do not know where they have laid him.”

She still assumes that death has won.
            The best she can imagine is that someone has moved the body.

And yet, even as she speaks those words,
            the resurrection is already standing behind her.

John tells us that when she turned around
            she saw Jesus standing there,
            but she did not know that it was Jesus.

She thinks he is the gardener.
            Which, in a way, is a beautiful misunderstanding.
Because this entire story is taking place in a garden.
            And that is not accidental.

The gospel writer has carefully placed the resurrection here
            so that readers will hear echoes of another garden story
                        we have just heard this morning.
            The story from Genesis of the garden where human life begins.

In Genesis we hear about the earth bringing forth life.
            A garden planted by God.
            Trees growing from the soil.
            Rivers watering the land.
And human beings placed within that garden to tend it and care for it.
            It is a story about the beginning of creation.

Now, in John’s gospel, we find ourselves in another garden.
            But this time it is a garden overshadowed by death.
                        A garden beside a tomb.
            A garden where a crucified body had been laid.
And yet something new is beginning there.

The resurrection, John suggests,
            is not simply the resuscitation of one individual life.
            It is the beginning of a new creation.

Just as life once emerged from the soil of the first garden,
            now life is emerging from the darkness of the tomb.

The old world had seemed so solid and permanent.
            A world where empire ruled through violence.
            A world where crosses lined the roads outside Roman cities.
            A world where those who challenged injustice could be crushed and discarded.

But Easter quietly announces that this world is not as permanent as it looks.
            Something new is breaking through.

Mary, however, cannot see it yet.
            She turns away from the tomb and sees a man standing nearby,
            and he asks her the same question the angels asked.
“Woman, why are you weeping?
            Whom are you looking for?”

Still assuming he must be the gardener, she pleads with him:
            “Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have laid him,
            and I will take him away.”

Her words reveal both devotion and despair.
            She is still searching for the body of a dead teacher.
            She is still living inside the story of Good Friday.

And then everything changes with a single word.
            Jesus says to her, “Mary.”

That is the moment of recognition.
            Not when she sees him.
            Not when she analyses the evidence.
But when she hears her name spoken.

Earlier in John’s gospel Jesus described himself as the good shepherd,
            the one who calls his sheep by name and leads them into life.
Now that promise becomes real in this garden.

Mary hears her name.
            And suddenly she recognises him.
            “Rabbouni!” she cries. Teacher.

In that moment the darkness begins to lift.
            The grief that had brought her to the tomb is transformed by encounter.
            The one she thought lost to death is standing before her, alive.

But the story does not end there.
            Because resurrection is not simply about reunion.
            It is about commissioning.

The risen Christ does not simply comfort Mary. He sends her.
            Jesus says to her, “Do not hold on to me,
                        because I have not yet ascended to the Father.
            But go to my brothers and say to them,
                        ‘I am ascending to my Father and your Father,
                        to my God and your God.’”

It is a curious moment.
            Mary has just discovered that the one she thought lost to death is alive.
Her instinct is entirely understandable.
            She reaches out. She wants to hold on to him.
            To cling to this moment of joy.
            To keep the resurrection exactly as she has found it.

But Jesus gently redirects her.
            “Do not hold on to me.”

The point is not rejection. It is transformation.
            Mary cannot freeze this moment in time.
            The resurrection is not something to possess or contain.
            It is something that moves outward into the world.

And so Jesus gives her a task.
            “Go to my brothers and say to them…”
And in that moment Mary
            becomes the first preacher of the resurrection.

If Eve was blamed for spreading Satan's lie in the Garden of Eden,
            Mary is here charged with telling the truth of Christ
            that reverses the curse of sin and death.

The first Easter proclamation does not come from a pulpit
            or a temple or a place of recognised authority.
It comes from a grieving woman standing in a garden beside an empty tomb.

And that is important because in the world of the first century,
            women’s testimony was often dismissed.
Their voices carried little weight in formal settings.
            If someone were inventing a story to persuade people,
            they would almost certainly have chosen a more socially credible witness.

But the gospel writers do not reshape the story to make it more convenient.
            They tell it as it happened.

The first witness to the resurrection is Mary Magdalene.
            The first person commissioned to announce the good news is Mary Magdalene.
            The first voice of Easter is Mary Magdalene.

Which tells us something important
            about the way God’s new creation begins to unfold.

Again and again in the gospel story,
            the people who become bearers of the good news
            are not the ones the world expects.

Not the powerful.
            Not the secure.
            Not those with the most recognised authority.

Instead, it is those who have known loss,
            those who have remained present in the place of grief,
            those who have stayed when others left.

Mary becomes the apostle to the apostles.
            She goes and tells the disciples, “I have seen the Lord.”

It is a wonderfully simple proclamation.
            Four words that carry the entire weight of Easter.
            “I have seen the Lord.”

But notice what she does not say.
            She does not present an argument.
            She does not construct a theological explanation.
            She does not attempt to prove the mechanics of resurrection.
She simply bears witness.
            “I have seen the Lord.”

The resurrection enters the world through testimony.
            Through people who have encountered life where they expected death,
            and who cannot help but speak about what they have seen.

And perhaps that is where this story begins to reach into our own lives.
            Because Easter is not simply about something that happened once,
            long ago, in a garden outside Jerusalem.
It is about the pattern of God’s life
            breaking into the world again and again.

The resurrection story tells us that death does not have the final word.
            Not the death of bodies.
            Not the death of hope.
            Not the death that systems of power attempt to impose on human dignity.

When Rome crucified Jesus, it was meant to be the final statement.
            Crucifixion was not only an execution.
                        It was a public message.
            It said to the world: this is what happens
                        to those who challenge the order of things.
The cross was meant to end the story.

But Easter quietly overturns that logic.
            The one the empire executed has been raised.
            The one silenced by violence now speaks again.
            The one buried in a borrowed tomb
                        now stands in a garden calling people by name.

And that changes everything.
Because if resurrection is real,
            then the powers that present themselves as permanent
            are suddenly revealed to be fragile.

If resurrection is real,
            then injustice is not the inevitable shape of history.

If resurrection is real,
            then the story of the world is still open.

Something new can emerge.
            The garden is not closed.

And perhaps that is why the setting of this story matters so much.
            In Genesis, humanity is placed in a garden and given a simple calling:
            to tend the earth, to nurture life,
            to care for the creation entrusted to them.

That vocation is fractured by violence, fear,
            and the long history of human domination over one another.

But now, in John’s gospel, we find ourselves back in a garden again.
            Only this time it is not the beginning of creation.
            It is the beginning of new creation.

Mary mistakes Jesus for the gardener.
            And in a strange way she is not entirely wrong.

The risen Christ stands in the garden
            as the one who tends the fragile beginnings of a new world.

A world where life pushes up through the soil of despair.
            A world where grief is met with the calling of our names.
A world where those who have been overlooked
            become the first witnesses to hope.

And Mary is invited to participate in that work.
            She is sent to speak.
            To tell the others what she has seen.
To announce that the story they thought had ended on Friday
            is not finished after all.

That is how the resurrection spreads.
            Not through spectacle.
            Not through overwhelming displays of power.
But through people who have encountered life
            and who carry that news into the world.

People who say, in their own words and in their own lives,
            “I have seen the Lord.”

Which brings us, perhaps, to the quiet challenge of Easter.
            Because if this story is true, it asks something of us as well.

Mary does not stay in the garden forever.
            She does not remain standing beside the empty tomb.
She goes, she carries the news,
            and the resurrection continues to unfold
            through the lives of those who are willing to bear witness to it.

Every time hope is spoken in a place of despair.
            Every time dignity is defended where systems try to erase it.
Every time communities choose compassion over cruelty,
            generosity over fear, justice over indifference.

Each of those moments becomes a small echo of Easter morning.
            A sign that the new creation is already taking root among us.
            That the garden is beginning to bloom again.

And so perhaps the question the resurrection leaves with us
            is not simply whether we believe the story.

The deeper question is whether we are willing to live inside it.
            Whether we are willing to recognise the voice that calls us by name.
Whether we are willing to step into the work
            of tending this new creation that God has begun.

Mary arrives at the tomb expecting to find death.
            She leaves carrying life.
She arrives weeping in the darkness.
            She leaves speaking words that have echoed through the centuries.
            “I have seen the Lord.”

And the extraordinary thing about the resurrection story
            is that it does not end there.
Because the risen Christ is still calling people by name.
            Still meeting us in the gardens of our grief.
            Still sending witnesses into the world.

And wherever that call is heard,
            wherever people take up the quiet work of hope and justice and love,
            the garden of Easter continues to grow.

Christ is risen.
            And the world, slowly and stubbornly,
            is being made new.

Saturday, 4 April 2026

Holy Saturday and the Millennium



Revelation, the Millennium, and the Time Between

A careful reading of the Book of Revelation suggests that Christians are not primarily invited to locate themselves at the triumphant end of the story, nor simply at its darkest point, but in the tense, ambiguous space in between. Revelation encourages its readers to see themselves as living on Holy Saturday, caught between crucifixion and resurrection, between apparent defeat and promised new life.

This is not a comfortable place to be. Holy Saturday is a day of waiting, grief, uncertainty, and quiet hope. The worst has already happened, but the best has not yet been revealed. Revelation, read attentively, insists that this in-between time is not an accident of history but the normal location of faithful Christian life.

Revelation and the Shape of the Easter Story

Revelation repeatedly invites its readers to interpret their own lives through the story of Jesus. This is not merely imitation in a moral sense, but participation in the pattern of Jesus’ life, death, and vindication. The book is saturated with crucifixion imagery. The Lamb who was slain stands at the centre of the heavenly vision, and victory is consistently defined not through domination or violence, but through suffering love and faithful witness.

For John’s original readers, living under the shadow of the Roman Empire, this invitation would have been sharply concrete. Some may have known betrayal that echoed Maundy Thursday. Others may have lived with the fear and anxiety of Good Friday morning. Some faced the very real possibility that their own lives would end as martyrs, their deaths mirroring the suffering of Jesus on the cross.

Revelation does not spiritualise these experiences or rush past them. Instead, it affirms that the story of Jesus becomes real in the lives of those who follow him. The cross is not only something to be believed in, but something to be lived through.

The Millennium as Holy Saturday

Nowhere is this more apparent than in Revelation 20, with its puzzling imagery of the millennium and the binding and release of Satan. This passage has often been treated as a timetable of future events or as a coded prediction of political history. But read alongside the Easter story, it can be understood quite differently.

The binding of Satan in Revelation 20 reflects the victory already won through the cross. The powers of domination, accusation, and death have been decisively undermined. The resurrection of Jesus, anticipated but not yet narrated in the flow of Revelation, guarantees that this victory is real and enduring.

And yet, Satan is released “for a little while”. Evil has not vanished from the world. Violence, deception, and oppression persist. The saints continue to suffer. The dwelling places of the faithful remain under threat.

This is precisely the tension of Holy Saturday. Good Friday has happened. The decisive blow has been struck. But Easter morning has not yet dawned. The stone has not yet been rolled away, at least not from the perspective of those still living within history.

Revelation locates faithful Christians squarely in this space. The martyrs, those who have borne faithful witness even to death, are depicted as already vindicated. They reign with Christ. Their suffering has not been meaningless. But for those still living, the struggle continues. Satan’s power is broken, but not yet silenced. The old world is judged, but not yet replaced.

Waiting Without Illusion

Holy Saturday faith is not naïve optimism. It does not deny the reality of suffering or pretend that the world is already as it should be. Revelation is unsparing in its portrayal of violence, injustice, and imperial power. It knows that the beasts still rage and that Babylon still intoxicates the nations.

At the same time, Holy Saturday faith refuses despair. The future is not open-ended or uncertain in the deepest sense. The Lamb who was slain already reigns. The final judgement and the new creation are not wishful thinking but promised realities grounded in the character and action of God.

This combination of realism and hope is one of Revelation’s greatest gifts to the church. It offers a way of living faithfully without either retreating into apocalyptic fantasy or settling for cynical accommodation with the world as it is.

A Paradigm for Christian Life

Seen in this light, the fusion of the Easter weekend and the millennium provides a powerful paradigm for Christian existence. We live after the cross and before the full unveiling of resurrection life. We know that death does not have the final word, but we still feel its weight. We trust that the powers of evil are ultimately defeated, but we still encounter their effects daily.

Revelation does not ask us to escape this tension. Instead, it calls us to inhabit it faithfully. To bear witness. To resist the seductions of empire. To remain patient in suffering. To sing songs of hope even while the world groans.

This is Holy Saturday living. It is quiet, unresolved, and deeply costly. But it is also the place where hope is learned, where faith is refined, and where the church becomes most recognisably shaped by the Lamb.

Crucifixion, Millennium, Resurrection

The parallels between the Easter narrative and Revelation 20 can be sketched simply:

  • The death of Jesus corresponds to the martyrdom of believers.

  • The victory over Satan on the cross is echoed in Satan’s binding in the pit.

  • Holy Saturday finds its parallel in Satan’s temporary release and the continued struggle of the saints.

  • Resurrection anticipates final judgement and new creation.

This is not a sequence designed to satisfy curiosity about the future. It is a theological map for faithful living in the present. Revelation is not primarily about what will happen one day, but about how we live now, in the long, difficult Saturday between death and life.

And perhaps that is its most pastoral insight. Revelation tells the truth about where we are, without despair, and about where we are going, without illusion. It teaches us how to wait.

Monday, 30 March 2026

Love to the End

Good Friday Reflection for Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
3rd April 2026

John 19.31–42

Good Friday brings us to a strange kind of silence in the Gospel story.

Once the climactic moment of crucifixion is completed,
            the shouting crowds fade.
The soldiers have done their work.
            The long agony of the cross comes to its end.

And then we are left with what happens after death.

Bodies must be taken down.
            Burial must be arranged.
There are practical matters that cannot be ignored.
            These days we call it the ‘Sadmin’ – the administration that follows a death.

The Jewish authorities want the bodies of the crucified criminals removed quickly,
            because the Sabbath is approaching.
So soldiers check the condemned men.
            The legs of the two others are broken to hasten their deaths.
But when they come to Jesus, they see that he is already dead.
            Instead, one soldier pierces his side with a spear,
            and John tells us that immediately blood and water flow out.

Then two unexpected figures appear in the story.
            Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus.

Joseph is described as a disciple of Jesus,
            though secretly, because he feared the authorities.
Nicodemus we met earlier in the Gospel,
            coming to Jesus under the cover of night, searching for understanding.
These are not the bold public followers.
            These are cautious men, people who have kept their distance.

And yet here they are now.

Joseph asks Pilate for the body of Jesus.
            Nicodemus brings a large quantity of spices.
Together they take Jesus’ body,
            wrap it carefully in linen cloths with the spices,
                        according to the Jewish burial customs,
            and place him in a nearby tomb in a garden.

It is a scene filled with quiet tenderness.

After the violence of the crucifixion,
            there is now an act of care.
The body that has been humiliated and wounded is treated with dignity.
            People step forward to do what love requires.

Good Friday asks us to sit with this moment.
            Because death is never abstract.
                        It is physical.
                        It is embodied.
            It is the reality of bodies that must be carried, wrapped, buried, mourned.

And the Gospel does not rush past this.
            John wants us to notice every detail.

But John also wants us to see something more.
            He tells us carefully when all of this is happening.
It is the day of Preparation,
            the day before the Passover festival begins.

In Jerusalem, the Temple will be full of activity.
            Lambs are being slaughtered for the Passover meal.
Families are preparing to remember the ancient story of liberation,
            the night when the blood of the lamb marked the homes of Israel
            and death passed over them.

And John wants us to see
            that at precisely this moment, Jesus dies.
And this is not accidental.

From the very beginning of John’s Gospel,
            Jesus has been described in Passover language.
When John the Baptist first sees him, he declares,
            “Here is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.”

And now, at the end of the story, that image comes fully into view.
            Just as the Passover lamb once marked the beginning
                        of Israel’s liberation from slavery,
            so now Jesus’ death becomes the sign of God’s liberation for the world.

Even the small details in the story echo that connection.
The soldiers do not break Jesus’ bones,
            recalling the instruction that the bones of the Passover lamb must not be broken.

Earlier in the crucifixion scene a hyssop branch appears,
            the very plant used in the Passover ritual to mark the doorposts with blood.

John is weaving the story together very deliberately.
            The cross is not simply a tragic execution.
It is a moment of profound theological meaning.
            It is the place where God confronts the forces that enslave human life.
Violence, domination, fear, and the machinery of empire that crushes human dignity.
            All of these powers gather around the cross.

And yet John tells us that something else is happening there too.
            One of the most mysterious details in the story
                        comes when the soldier pierces Jesus’ side.
            John says that immediately blood and water flow out.

At first glance it is an odd detail to include.
            But John rarely includes details without purpose.
Throughout this Gospel, water and blood have carried deep symbolic meaning.

Water is the sign of life.
            Jesus speaks to the Samaritan woman about living water
                        that becomes a spring within a person.
            He tells Nicodemus that people must be born of water and Spirit.

Blood, too, becomes a sign of life.
            Earlier in the Gospel, Jesus speaks in shocking language
            about giving his flesh and blood for the life of the world.

And now here, at the cross, these two images appear together.
            From the pierced body of Jesus, blood and water flow.
From the place of death, life emerges.

Early Christians would later see echoes here of baptism and communion,
            the water of new birth and the cup of the covenant.
But even before we move in that direction,
            the point John is making is clear.

The cross, the place of violence and death,
            becomes strangely the place where life begins to flow.

And this brings us to something that Good Friday confronts us with very directly.
            The incarnation goes all the way down.

Christians say that the Word became flesh.
            That God entered human life fully,
                        not as an appearance or an illusion,
                        but in real, vulnerable human flesh.

And Good Friday shows us what that means.
            Flesh that can be beaten.
                        Flesh that can be pierced.
            Flesh that must be wrapped in linen cloths and placed in a tomb.

There is no distance here between God and the realities of human suffering.
            God does not remain safely above the worst that the world can do.
God enters it: completely and fully,
            without holding back.

And this is why Good Friday
            is such a strange and powerful day in the Christian story.
Because what we see here is not simply the cruelty of human violence.
            We also see the depth of divine love.

Earlier in John’s Gospel we are told
            that Jesus loved his own who were in the world,
            and that he loved them “to the end.”

That phrase carries several meanings.
            It can mean to the very last moment.
            It can mean completely, fully, without limit.

Love to the end.
            And that is what we see on the cross.

Not love that withdraws when things become dangerous.
            Not love that protects itself from suffering.
            Not love that calculates the cost.

But love that continues even when it leads into the darkness.
            Love that remains present even in death.
            Love to the end.

And perhaps that is where Good Friday speaks most directly to us.
            Because if this is what the love of God looks like,
            then it also reveals the shape of the life we are called to live.

A love that refuses to abandon the wounded.
            A love that stands alongside those who suffer.
            A love that does not give up when the world becomes hard or frightening.

Good Friday does not offer easy comfort.
            The tomb is still closed at the end of this story.
            The silence of death remains.

But the Gospel leaves us with this quiet, stubborn truth.
            That in the strange mystery of the cross,
                        in the pierced body of Jesus,
            in the love that goes all the way to the end,
                        something life-giving has already begun to flow.

And that love, once released into the world,
            will not be stopped.