Ash Wednesday services at all Resurrection locations will be held on schedule today.
Scheduled programming has resumed for Thursday, February 13 at all Resurrection locations.
9 The one who claims to be in the light while hating a brother or sister is in the darkness even now. 10 The person loving a brother and sister stays in the light, and there is nothing in the light that causes a person to stumble. 11 But the person who hates a brother or sister is in the darkness and lives in the darkness, and doesn’t know where to go because the darkness blinds the eyes.
Light has an opposite: darkness. Scholar William Barclay said, “As John sees it, there is no such thing as neutrality in personal relationships. As Westcott put it: ‘Indifference is impossible; there is no twilight in the spiritual world.’” * In relationships with others, we’re either moving toward love or away from it—there’s no static middle ground. “The word darkness refers here mainly to the ethical aspects of the term. This has been made explicit in some versions, for example, ‘in darkness doing evil,’ ‘doing dark deeds.’” **
Lord Jesus, keep me moving more and more fully into your light, particularly in the way I relate to all of your human children in my circle of influence. Amen.
Janelle Gregory, who serves as Resurrection's Human Resources Lead Director, wrote today's Insights. Janelle finds that her heart is constantly wrestling with the truth that she needs a Savior, and the times when she's at her very best are when she's just too tired to put up a fight.
* William Barclay, The Letters of John and Jude (Revised Edition). Westminster John Knox Press, 1976, p. 47.
** C. Haas, M. De Jonge, J. L. Swellengrebel, A Handbook on the First Letter of John. United Bible Societies, 1972, p. 26.
*** William Barclay, The Letters of John and Jude (Revised Edition). Westminster John Knox Press, 1976, pp. 47-48.
**** Wright, N. T., Early Christian Letters for Everyone (The New Testament for Everyone) (pp. 153-154). Westminster John Knox Press. Kindle Edition.