‘Inattentional Blindness.’

‘Blessed are your eyes for they see.’ Matthew 13:16

In the Bible we are sometimes urged to use our eyes to see. But there are stories of seeing people just not seeing. This happened to Mary Magdalene in the Garden of Gethsemane. She didn’t recognise her Master. Maybe His features were not clear in the morning light. Perhaps her eyes filled with tears were unable to focus. To see Jesus alive was not something she was expecting. This is a medical condition known as ‘inattentional blindness’. Not seeing because you were not expecting to see something.

The two disciples on the road to Emmaus were also unable to recognise Jesus. Although they were followers of him, maybe they had never seen Him close up. Perhaps the evening light was too dim. Their blindness did mean that they had plenty of time to listen to the preaching of Jesus without being distracted. It seems when they saw His nail-pierced hands, what they thought couldn’t happen, had happened. Jesus was alive.

On one occasion Brother Andrew had his forbidden Bibles in an open suitcase on the back seat of the car. When the guards searched his car, they completely failed to see them. How did that happen? Maybe it was part of God’s plan.

Unexpected Father

Joseph was not expecting to become a father. He was only engaged to be married and although engagements were very binding in Nazareth, he hadn’t got round to thinking about children yet. As far as we know Joseph would become a good earthly father.

He had to cope with the fact that he was to be the foster father of the ‘Son of God,’ and then decide that by marrying Mary she would be shielded from shame. Under God’s guidance he did all he could to keep his family safe by taking them to Egypt and then a few years later back to Nazareth.

He taught his Son, and probably his other sons, to have a skill but then we hear no more of him. We note that he wasn’t at the crucifixion, as he was probably an older husband and had by then died. His role in God’s plan was not for him to play a leading but we assume him to be a quiet obedient man.

We don’t need to know about Joseph, but can use him as a role-model. Many of us are bit players in God’s plans. Like Joseph we just need to be obedient. I recall the words of Milton’s sonnet ‘On his blindness,’ ‘They also serve who only stand and wait.’

I

Today is Precious

‘You do not even know what will happen tomorrow.’ James 4:14

21.4.2026 Whenever I write the date I realise that it is unique. There has never been a day before which has had this date and this date will never be used again in the whole of history. Today is unique and precious.

James urges us not to make plans without consulting God, all of time is in His hands. The seconds, minutes, years all belong to Him, they are not ours to be squandered or wasted. God has a plan for each of our lives, they are the best plans for us that can possibly be. Our own plans fall miserably short, our knowledge is so limited, our perceptions so narrow.

Only the God of all eternity knows the past, the present and the future. So let’s leave it in God’s hands. Tuesday 21st April 2026 belongs to God, to be lived by us. It might prove to be a very ordinary day, on the other hand it might be monentous and life-changing. Let us accept the gift of today, it won’t come again.

Rejoice with Me.

‘Rejoice with me, I have found …….. Luke 15:9

Luke tells us of three losses in one chapter. We’ve all lost things at times, small items which are insignificant and tiny, a telephone number or pencil; others are almost life-changing, our credit card or phone. The loss of the items in the story told by Jesus were on the important end of the scale.

Sheep were a shepherd’s livelihood. Every one was important to hi; they were his livelihood and his source of income and he also loved them as individuals. Many a shepherd would have risked his life just to rescue the one who was in danger.

The string of coins round a woman’s neck were worth much wealth to her. They would have been of value if her husband had died and she could change them into money. In her anguish she had shared the news with her neighbours, who shared her sorrow and then shared her joy.

The third lost item was the most important. The prodigal son was lost, but then returned home and was found. We recognise that this story is referring to a lost soul from the kingdom of God. How much God loves each one of us and doesn’t want any to be lost. When a wandering soul returns we are told that there is rejoicing in heaven.

Small yet Mighty

In the hands of God small, insignificant things can become great and far-reaching. The Bible is full of many examples of this. Abraham had been an ordinary nomadic herdsman. In the hands of God he became the father of a great nation. ‘ Matthew 22:32 tells us The God of Abraham, of Isaac and of Jacob will be with you Gideon is another character who was made great by God. When told by God that he was going to be the leader of Israel, he protested ‘I am of the smallest in the nation of Israel and no mighty warrior.’ In his own strength he was nothing, in the hand of God, he was indeed a a mighty warrior.

In the New Testament we find that through the power of Jesus five small loaves and two fishes were enough to feed a multitude. Luke 9:16-18 They had been prepared to feed one lad, not 5,000. In all these cases we see what God can do with very little. Our little becomes His much.

I’ve just read the annual review of a children’s where I had some small involvement. Within the booklet was the obituary of a number of folk who I had known. They all had a difficult start in life. This Christian orphanhad given them a good start in life. I was amazed what they had achieved through God. God is the ingredient who make tiny and insignificant things, great and mighty. We are fairly small and unimportant but God can achieve great things when we surrender our lives to Him.

Available but not free

I had been attending a meeting and was now tired, hungry and wanting to be home as soon as possible. To travel by bus was too slow, travelling by the underground too noisy and crowded, it was going to have to be taxi. The company were paying anyway. I found a taxi rank and asked the nearest driver, ‘Are you free?’ The reply was curt, Madam, I’m not free but I’m available.’

Oops, that put me in my place. Salvation is available, to every one of us, but it is not free. It’s not us who have to pay. Christ paid the price when He gave His life at Golgotha for all who will believe. The cost is high, so high that we just can’t imagine it. We know the facts, but it is too unbelievable. The Son of God giving His life and suffering for you and me! An unbelievable price.

It is a price we can never pay, it is a sacrifice we can only accept . Salvation is available to all, but not all will accept the offer. The price is out of this world high. We cannot earn, we can only accept.

Reading the Bible

It can sometimes be difficult to read the Bible. It seems there is lot to hinder us. I find I need my glasses because some Bibles have small print. There is sometimes too much noise, so I can’t concentrate. Often the meaning is not easy to understand, Bible reading takes some digging. The devil makes it difficult because he knows how much we need to read its contents.

I’ve now found another way of engaging with the Bible. The book of Psalms is probably the most accessible; all 150 of them. I now read one each day but very importantly, I read them out loud. This helps to imprint the words on my mind. As Psalm 119 is very long, I’ve broken it down into sections. This all means that for about 160 days I am vocalising a psalm and making them personal to me.

I’ve just got as far as the 23rd psalm. What a delight it is to read it out loud! It contains so many messages for me and for you. ‘The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not be in want.’ verse 1. Verse 2 says ‘ He makes me to lie down in green pastures.’ Life is hectic, I need this message of comfort. Right through to the end, I speaks to me. ‘I shall dwell in the house of the Lord, for ever.’ What comfort! I shall continue to read the Psalms out loud, it does my soul good..

Forgotten Bulbs

‘My God shall supply all your needs according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus.’ Philippians 4:19

Everything was going well in her busy life as she attended to the needs of her family and the community. There was no cloud on her horizon and in the autumn she found time to indulge in one of her passions. She didn’t usually plant bulbs in the autumn but this autumn she planted a large number of them. She didn’t know why she had this urge.

At Christmas everything changed, her husband died. Her family, friends, community and garden were neglected. She sunk into a deep depression and as January turned into February there was no lifting of her spirits, her family were becoming worried for her.

Then she stood in her neglected garden in early April and noticed bright green shoots appearing where she had planted the bulbs in the autumn. The cold dark soil was revealing it’s treasures. In her bereavement she had forgotten the bulbs, which as they flowered were to great her in her sorrow.

When she had planted them God had known what she hadn’t known. Her winter would bring a time of great sorrow and pain. God had kept the bulbs safe until she was ready for their message. From the time of seeing the first bulbs growing, her heart slowly mended. She now had a glimpse of the future. Life would never be the same again, but now she had hope. God had indeed gone before.

Mary and her Lamb

Behold the Lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world.‘ John !:36

It seems the nursery rhyme. ‘Mary had a little lamb,’ originated in New Hampshire, America in the 19th century. It is thought to be based on a true incident where a child named Mary took her pet lamb to school which naturally caused an uproar. There are other claims to this story, one being in Massachusetts where a memorial has been erected. The moral was made that because Mary loved her lamb, the lamb loved her in return and the rhyme was written by her teacher.

Still thinking on the theme of lambs and love, the choral work, ‘All in the April evening‘ was composed by Sir Hugh S. Robinson (1874-1923) to words by the Irish poet Katherine Tynan Hickson (1861-1931). The final verse reads – ‘All in an April evening, April airs were abroad, I saw the sheep with their lambs and thought on the Lamb of God.’

A number of Biblical references are included in the Bible to Jesus being the Lamb, of God, one being the comment from John the Baptist, who when he saw Jesus passing by said in John 1:36 ‘Behold the Lamb of God.’ The slain lamb is referred to in Revelation 5:6 ‘Then I saw the lamb, looking as if it had been slain, standing in the centre of the throne.’

Missing Thomas

‘Now Thomas (called Didymus), one of the twelve was not with the disciples when Jesus appeared to them‘ John 20:24

There was probably a very good reason why Thomas was not with the disciples when Jesus appeared to them in the upper room after His resurrection. It had been a hectic and upsetting time; he probably had business which had to be done. The result was that he missed this wonderful appearance of Jesus.

His absence caused him to disbelieve what he was being told, it just wasn’t possible. Although he probably wasn’t at the foot of the cross when Jesus died he still knew that Jesus was completely dead and had been buried for three days!

Because he was not with the others, he had to suffer further hours of anguish and despair by not having the joy which the other disciples had experienced. He could not, he would not believe, ‘Unless I see… ‘Unless I put my finger… ‘Unless I put my hand… . He was relying on his senses and not on his faith.

How many blessings do we miss because we are not in Christian fellowship? What experiences do we miss because we are going it alone? We are programmed for fellowship, Christian fellowship and we need the help and love of those who are walking along the same path.