Reflections
If you have enemies, good that means you stood up for something.
~ Marshall Bruce Mathers iii, American Rapper—Hip-Hop
You have no enemies, you say? Alas, my friend, the boast is poor. He who has mingled in the fray of duty that the brave endure, must have made foes. If you have none, small is the work that you have done. You’ve hit no traitor on the hip. You’ve dashed no cup from perjured lip. You’ve never turned the wrong to right. You’ve been a coward in the fight. ~ Charles Mackay, 1814-1889, Poet / Author
… many ordinary, well-adjusted Christians might imagine that this passage, at the end of John 15, was bordering on the paranoid. The world is going to hate you, says Jesus. The world will persecute you. The world is guilty, and it hates me and my father as well as you! We can imagine someone saying, ‘Look here, how paranoid can you get?’ … But this doesn’t take away from the fact that Jesus’ warnings in this section are not paranoid, even if they may sound like that to a comfortable, armchair version of Christianity. ~ N.T. Wright, scholar, former Bishop of Durham
Hope for the Christian isn’t just confidence in a certain, glorious future. It’s hope in a present providence. It’s hope that God’s plans can’t be thwarted by local authorities or irate mobs, by unfriendly bosses or unbelieving husbands, by Supreme Court rulings or the next election. The Christian hope is that God’s purposes are so unassailable that a great thunderstorm of events can’t drive them off course. Even when we’re wave-tossed and lost at sea, Jesus remains the captain of the ship and the commander of the storm. ~ Elliot Clark, Cross Cultural Church Planter
My barn having burned to the ground, I can now see the moon.
~ Mizuta Masahide (1657-1723), Japanese Poet and Samurai