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JOHN 3: 14-21
The Fourth Sunday in Lent
(We're out in MK's margins today; as far as JN again.)

Both the making of 'Nehushtan' by Moses (NUM 21:4-9) & its destruction by Hezekiah (2K18:4) lend themselves to colourful preaching in conjunction with our given JN passage. The incident of the snake on the pole is burned deep into Jesus' psyche. It is central to the way he sees his life & death. 14/15 & then 16/17 are like a Psalm, with 16/17 re-stating the theme declared in 14/15. It's important to take all this as one. To focus only on JN 3: 16 as Christians often do, detaching it from its context within 14-17, is to lessen its scope & its impact, if not misunderstand it completely!

The whole passage is also a refrain to God's loving action in NUM, &, in our case, to Jesus' Passion. God so loved the people, despite their lack of attitude! - that he gave them a snake .... not in the grass but on a pole so that if they chose to, they could look to it (whatever primitive, mysterious meaning this incident bears!) & be made whole. Making people whole is what God does best, healing our various serpent bites as we choose to look to Jesus lifted on the cross & raised in triumph over his death & all death. What's biting us today? What healing & wholeness do we need? Where are we to look for it?

Some 'brands' of faith give the impression God is, on (im)balance a condemnatory figure looking for excuse to be destructive. But as17+ helps us understand, the God revealed in Jesus is not like that at all. The very opposite. If we are condemned it will be because we choose to condemn ourselves because we don't choose God. If we are destroyed it will be because we choose to destroy ourselves. When all the time, all God wants is our wholeness. Hence Jesus, his lifting up, his making those who will look to him whole. I long ago gave up trying to theologise about how 'the atonement' works. There comes a point beyond which doing that doesn't get one nearly as far as entering into the mystery of God & God's ways. These days I happily settle for Charles Wesley for 'tis mystery (& mercy!) all'!

The light v darkness contrast is another way of reinforcing what it is God offers us, contrasted with what we're prepared to accept. The bigger I make myself, the more shadow I cast on others to black God's love out from them, if that were in itself possible. If we humble ourselves as Jesus does in becoming whole-making Light, no-one needs choose to live in the darkness of evil & the pain it brings. Yet, even in deepest darkness, God is closer than breathing......