Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Worship GOD - 4

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
In the previous chapter, Worship God - 3, we learnt that the key new truth in worship is that worship happens through Jesus. He is the temple where we meet God. And since He Himself is God, our true worship will be a worship of Jesus too. Moving forward, let us now understand the saying "Worship in Spirit"

WORSHIP IN SPIRIT
"The hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit" (John 4:23). Some interpreters take this to refer to God's Holy Spirit. We can also take it to refer to our spirit. But probably Jesus thought of both these interpretations when He said so. In John 3:6 Jesus connects God's Spirit and our spirit in a remarkable way. He says, "That which is born of the Spirit is spirit". In other words, until the Holy Spirit quickens our spirit with the birth of new life, our spirit is so dead and unresponsive, it does not even qualify as spirit. Only that which is born of the Spirit is (a living) spirit. SO when Jesus says that true worshipers worship the Father "in spirit," He means that true worship comes only from spirits made alive and sensitive by the quickening of the Spirit of God.
This "spirit" is essential in worship. Otherwise worship is dead.Or to Jesus' phrase, it is "in vain". "This people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me; in vain do they worship me" (Matt. 15:8-9). A heart (and spirit) alive and engaged with God is essential. Jesus is contrasting authentic worship in spirit and truth with external worship that focuses on Samaria and Jerusalem. What makes it authentic is not only that worshiping mind grasps the truth of Jesus, but also that the worshiping spirit experiences awakening and is moved by the truth that the mind knows. A person who has no affections for God awakened by the truth of Jesus is not worshiping "in spirit and truth". And a person with great affections built on false views of God is not worshiping "in spirit and truth". Jesus demands both: worship in spirit and in truth.

ALL OF LIFE IS WORSHIP
One implication of this vision of worship is that it applies to all of life as well as to services of corporate worship. The essence of worship lies in our mind's true vision of God and our spirit's authentic affections for God. This means that whenever we display the worth of God by words or actions that flow from a spirit that treasures Him as He really is, we are worshiping in spirit and in truth. We may be at work or at home or at church. It doesn't matter. What matters is that we see the glory of God in Jesus (truth), and we treasure Him above all else (spirit), and then we overflow by treating others with self-sacrificing love for their good. Few things display the beauty of God more. For followers of Jesus, therefore, all of life should be this kind of worship.
This is powerfully illustrated by the connection Jesus makes between worshiping God and serving God. When Satan tempted Jesus to worship him, Jesus responded, "Be gone, Satan! For it is written, 'You shall worship the Lord your God and Him only shall you serve'" (Matt. 4:10). Serving was often attached to worshiping as an outward expression of religious ministry in the temple. But now the temple is Jesus. How is the 'service" of worship transformed?

YOU CANNOT SERVE GOD AND MONEY
We get a surprising glimpse of what service to God means for Jesus in Matthew 6:24. He said, "No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money." The surprising thing here is that serving God is compared to serving money. But how do you serve money?  Not by helping money or meeting money's needs. You serve money by treasuring it so much that you shape your whole life to benefit from what money can do for you.

So it is with God in the way Jesus sees the service of worship. We do not help God or meet God's needs ("The Son of Man came not to be served," Mark 10:45). Rather we serve God by treasuring Him so much that we shape our whole life so as to benefit from what He can do for us. And, unlike money, what God can do for us above all other treasures is be for us everything we have ever longed for.



THE INFINITE WORTH OF GOD IN JESUS
Therefore, all of life is service to God. That is, all of life is shaped by our passion to maximize our experience of the supreme worth of God in Jesus. So we end where we began. All the world worships something. From the most religious to the most secular, all people value something high enough to build their lives around it-even if unconsciously. Jesus demands that every person in the world build his life around the infinite worth of God in Jesus. Consider what you are worshiping. Then ask Jesus to open your eyes to the truth of God's supreme worth and to awaken your spirit to treasure Him above all.
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With this I come to the close of the one of Jesus' demands. Hope you all enjoyed reading it. The next demand of Jesus that I intend to bring before you all is the demand to Pray. I would most probably be writing that for the MGOCSM Diaspora newsletter "Alethia". Please uphold this intention in your prayers. Also pray for me a sinful servant of Jesus

Your Brother and Follower of Jesus
Jobin George

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Ask, Seek and Knock

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ
As we enter the last day of the 3 Day Lent, I would like to look into the Gospel reading for the day. The reading is from the Gospel of St. Luke 11:5-13. This particular portion comes right up after Jesus teaches His disciples the Lord's Prayer. This shows the importance of prayer and the amount of importance Jesus placed on it too. Throughout the four gospels we can see Jesus teaching us on why, how, for whom, and what we are to pray. And though we might think that the Son of God would be above the need to pray, He sets the example for us, as a perfect human being, by rising early in the morning to pray (Mark 1:35) and seeking times alone to pray (Matt. 14:23) and sometimes spending the whole night in prayer (Luke 6:12) and, in the end, preparing for His suffering by prayer (Luke 22:41-42).

While, I will not be dealing with the whole aspect on why, for whom and what to pray, which I am keeping aside for the next edition of the newsletter, Alethia - by MGOCSM Diaspora, India, I will try to give a short description on how Jesus taught us to pray.

In today's fast paced world, where every thing that we need gets to us in an instant and we can also restrict the time and place of the occurrence, we also expect our prayers to be answered by our Lord. We expect Him to come down to our timeline and bless us with the blessings that we ask for within the time frame we set up. How ridiculous it sounds that the creation is demanding for the blessings from the Creator who created both the time and space. And once the requirement is fulfilled, we place our God into a closet to be taken out again in another time of need. That's one picture. Another picture - What happens when we do not get the blessings? For a time, we complain to God to keep away the blessings, even though we prayed so much. And then we forget about it.

Jesus gives the picture of an earthly father. A father is always loving towards his children, even if the father is the hardest of criminals, he will always try to give better gifts to his child who has asked for something. He will try to give him the best fish, if the son has asked for a normal fish to satiate his hunger. So how much more does our Heavenly Father loves us? The One who created each and every cell in our body with utmost care. he has taken care to provide for us with all that we need, even before we ask of it.

But, He wants us to come closer to Him. And we can come closer to Him only by prayer. And how should we pray? Jesus says "Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives; he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks, the door will be opened." (St. Luke 11:9-10). He tells us to be persistent in our prayers to Him. He wants us to seek Him through our prayers and to keep on knocking at the door of God, because our God is a loving and compassionate God and He will hear our cries.

I would like to end on a warning too, given by Jesus on the same note in St. Matt. 6:5-14. Here Jesus warns us that being persistent in our prayers is not being repetitive in our prayers but to be thoughtful. He tells us not to heap up empty phrases, because that is the way the non-believers pray. He also tells us not to be loud about our prayers where everyone will see you, but to be silent in the closed quarters of our room and to pray that our Father might hear in Heaven and not the people surrounding us. 

I now close my thoughts here and more thoughts are being added as I end this small session here. I am praying that the Lord bless me to write more on the topic for the newsletter. Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus, may this 3 Day Lent bless you with all the blessings that you seek. Our Father is a merciful and loving one, keep on praying and asking, and He will provide it to you in His time.

Please keep me in your prayers.
Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin George

Sunday, January 20, 2013

True Fasting

Dear Brothers & Sisters in Christ Jesus
Hope you all are in good health and enjoying the fellowship of our Savior in this New Year.

As we enter the Nineveh Lent, or the Three Day Lent as it is commonly known, I would be deviating from the series that I am currently writing to write about the Orthodox teachings on True Fasting .

True Fasting 

Gluttony makes a man gloomy and fearful, but fasting makes him joyful and courageous.

And, as gluttony calls forth greater and greater gluttony, so fasting stimulates greater and greater endurance.
When a man realizes the grace that comes through fasting, he desires to fast more and more.
And the graces that come through fasting are countless....
~St. Nikolai of Zicha


What is fasting? If you Google it out, you would find this answer, "Fasting is primarily the act of willingly abstaining from all fooddrink, or both, for a period of time." But is that only it? In the words of St. John Chryostom, "Fasting is a medicine", but in the hands of an inexperienced person, the same medicine which can be used to cure the ailments of the soul can become a poison and destroy the person who is taking the fast. When we pray, or make an invocation, or make any supplication, or when we go to the Embassy of our Lord with many tears, this Fast is an ally, and as an assistant is a Good Intercessor. 

Just like while taking a medicine, while taking a fast, the person has to know the appropriate time that it has to be taken, the appropriate amount, the condition of the body which is to observe the fast and many other things. If any one these is overlooked, it causes more harm than good. Just as we are concerned for the healing of the physical body and such accuracy is required for the same, then it is also necessary to examine and observe everything with every possible detail for the healing of the soul too.

So how do we examine and observe these details? St. John Chrysostom again gives a solid example as such:
When the winter is over and the summer is appearing, the sailor readies his ship for voyage by taking his ship to deeper waters; the soldier polishes his arms and rubs his horse to ready him for battle; and the farmer sharpens his sickle; and the wrestler strips his clothing and bares himself for the fight.
So too, when fast, like a kind of spiritual summer, makes its appearance, let us like soldiers ready our weapons, like the farmer sharpen our sickle, and like the sailor order our thoughts against the waves of extravagant desires; and as travelers let us set our journey towards heaven, and as wrestlers let us strip ourselves for the contest. For the believer is at once a farmer, and a sailor, and a soldier, a wrestler, and a traveler. 
St. Paul also says "We wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against power. Put on therefore the whole Armour of God" (Ephesians 6:12)

Fasting is the change of every past of our life, because the sacrifice of the fast is not the abstinence but the distancing from sins. Therefore, if anyone limits the fast to the abstinence of food, he is, in the words of St. John Chrysostom, "is the one who in reality abhors and ridicules the fast". So are you fasting?
Give me proof of it by your works. Which works?
If you see someone who is poor, show him mercy.
If you see an enemy, reconcile with him.
If you see a friend who is becoming successful, do not b jealous of him!
If you see a beautiful woman on the street, pass her by.
 
In other words, not only should the mouth fast, but the eyes and the legs and the arms and all the other parts of the body should fast as well. Let the hands fast, remaining clean from stealing and greediness. Let the legs fast, avoiding roads which lead to sinful sights. Let the eyes fast by not fixing themselves on beautiful faces and by not observing the beauty of others. You should not eat debauchery with your eyes as well. Let your hearing also fast. The fast of hearing is not to accept bad talk against others and sly defamation of others.


Let the mouth fast from disgraceful and abusive words, because, what gain is there when, on the one hand we avoid eating chicken and fish and, on the other, we chew-up and consume our brothers? He who condemns and blasphemes is as if he has eaten brotherly meat, as if he has bitten into the flesh of his fellow man. It is because of this that Paul frightened us, saying: "If you chew up and consume one another be careful that you do not annihilate yourselves."

So what about those who cannot go without eating all day because of some medical issues?
Dear Brothers and Sisters remember that we have a Lord who is loving and who does not ask for anything beyond our power. He does not require us to abstain ourself from food, nor taht we keep our stomachs empty, but that we offer our entire selves to the dedication of spiritual things, having distanced ourselves from the worldly desires. We should regulate our lives with a sober mind and direct all our interest toward spiritual things. Therefore, you who eats and cannot fast, display richer almsgiving, pray more, have more intense desire to hear divine words. Become reconciled to your enemies, distance your soul from every resentment. If you are able to do this, then you have observed the true fast, which is what our Lord asks of us more than anything else. It is for this very reason He asks us to abstain from food, in order to place the flesh in subjection to the fulfillment of His commandments.

You should remember the bold and daring saying that "he who eats for the glory of the Lord eats and he who does not eat for the glory of the Lord does not eat and pleases God." For he who fasts pleases God because he has the strength to endure the fatigue of the fast and he that eats also pleases God because nothing of this sort can harm the salvation of his soul, as long as he does not want it to. Because our philanthropic God showed us so many ways by which we can, if we desire, take part in God's power that it is impossible to mention them all.

In the end, you should not be ashamed because you were not able to maintain the fast, because food does not bring on shame, but the act of wrongdoing. Sin is a great shame. If we commit it, not only should we feel ashamed but we should cover ourselves exactly the same way those who are wounded do. Even then we should not forsake ourselves but rush to confession and thanksgiving. We have such a Lord who asks nothing of us but to confess our sins, after the commitment of a sin which was due to our indifference, and to stop at that point and not to fall into the same one again. If we eat with moderation we should never be ashamed, because the Creator gave us such a body which cannot be supported in any other way except by receiving food. Let us only stop excessive food because that attributes a great deal to the health and well-being of the body.

Let us therefore in every way cast off every destructive madness so that we may gain the goods which have been promised to us in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ and the Father and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Abridged from St. John Chrysostom homilies "On Fasting"

Friday, January 18, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Worship GOD - 3

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
In the previous chapter, Worshiping GOD - 2, we learnt that Jesus introduced a new form of worship which does not place importance of the geographical and historical importance of the place or temples, but whether we worship God in accordance with the truth and whether our spirit is authentically awakened and moved by that truth.

What is worship in truth? What is the truth?

Now, lets learn on how to worship God in accordance with the truth...

ALL WORSHIP SHOULD BE THROUGH JESUS
AND OF JESUS

The key new truth is that worship now happens through Jesus. He is the temple where we meet God. This is true first because He poured out His blood "for the forgiveness of sins" (Matt. 26:28) and "gave His life as a ransom for many" (Mark 10:45) and opened the way through His own crucified and risen body for us to be reconciled with God (John 3:16,36). There is no way that sinners could offer acceptable worship to God without having Jesus' blood as a  go-between with God.

It's true that worship now happens through Jesus because He Himself is God. He is not simply the mediator of worship between us and the Father; He is also the one to be worshiped. He made this claim directly and indirectly. He forgave sins, which only God can do (Mark 2:5-11). He accepted worship from His disciples (Matt. 14:33; 28:9). He claimed eternal preexistence with God: "Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was, I am" (John 8:58). He said He was one with the Father: "Whoever has seen me has seen the Father" (John 14:9). "I and the Father are one" (John 10:30). So all should "honor the Son, just as they honor the Father" (John 5:23). Therefore, all worship "in truth" will be worship of Jesus and through Jesus. For "whoever does not honor the Son does not honor the Father who sent him" (John 5:23).

Dear Brothers & Sisters
I now stop here to let you ponder on the above words. We now learnt what is the truth that we should worship. In the next session, lets learn what is this worship in spirit.

"The Lord bless you and keep you; 
The Lord make His face shine upon you, And be gracious to you; 
The Lord lift His countenance upon you, And give you peace." - Numbers 6:24-26


Saturday, January 12, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Worship GOD - 2

Dear Brothers & Sisters in Christ Jesus

Last week, we started learning about the teachings of Jesus from the incident with the Samaritan woman by the well. We learned that the time of the Messiah had come upon the world and there was to be a change, a radical change at that, in the people of the Lord worship.
So lets continue to learn what is this radical change....

"DESTROY THIS TEMPLE, AND IN THREE DAYS I WILL RAISE IT UP"
We all know this famous saying of Jesus from the Gospel of John 2:19. Jesus says these words to the priests and Pharisees when they asked Him for a sign from heaven to know that He was sent by God. The reason Jesus says it is because He intended to take the place of the temple Himself. In other words, the "place" where worship would happen - the "place" where people would meet God from now on  - would be Jesus, not the temple in Jerusalem.

He communicated the same in several ways. When Jesus said the above words, the people were astonished and said, "It has taken forty-six years to build this temple, and you will you raise it up in three days?" But the Gospel writer explained, "He was speaking about the temple of his body" (John 2:21). In other words, Jesus meant that when He was raised from the dead, He would be the new "temple"-the new meeting place with God.

Jesus said something almost as startling when He was criticized for letting His disciples pick grain and eat it on the Sabbath. Jesus' response to this criticism was to point out that David, the king of Israel, had fed his band of men with the bread of God's house that was only designed for the priests to eat. He made the connection with Himself and His band of men by saying, "I tell you, something greater than the temple is here" (Matt. 12:6). In other words, "The Messiah, the son of David, is here, and he himself is going to take the place of the temple."
"NOT IN THIS MOUNTAIN OR IN JERUSALEM,
BUT IN SPIRIT AND IN TRUTH"
So when Jesus said to the Samaritan woman, "The hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth," He meant that a whole new approach to God in worship had come with the coming of the Messiah himself. No longer would geography be relevant: "Neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem will you worship the Father." Instead, what takes the place of external geographic concerns are internal spiritual concerns: "Those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth." The external places of Samaria and Jerusalem are replaced with the spiritual realities of "spirit and truth." What matters now is not where you worship but whether you worship God in accordance with the truth and whether your spirit is authentically awakened and moved by that truth.

Dear Brothers & Sisters
I now stop here to let you ponder on the above words. We learnt that true worship does not happen in any 'spiritual' place, but it happens in spirit and truth. In the next session, lets learn what is this worship in spirit.

"The Lord bless you and keep you; 
The Lord make His face shine upon you, And be gracious to you; 
The Lord lift His countenance upon you, And give you peace." - Numbers 6:24-26


Tuesday, January 8, 2013

St. Stephen, The First Martyr

Dear Brothers and Sisters of Christ Jesus
Today we remember the martyrdom of St. Stephen. He was the first of the believers of Jesus Christ to be martyred for His name. His life and death are a constant reminder to the followers of Jesus on how to live a true Christian life.

Life of St. Stephen
Stephen's name is derived from the Greek language Stephanos, meaning "crown". In the words of Asterias, St. Stephen was "the starting point of the martyrs, the instructore of suffering for Christ, the foundation of righteous confession, since Stephen was the first to shed his blood for the Gospel." 

Stephen was a Jew and is believed to have been the student of the renowned rabbinical tutor Gamaliel, who had been the mentor of the great St. Paul. We hear of Stephen in Acts of the Apostles 6:5 to 8:1. Stephen was among the seven chosen deacons of the original church of Jerusalem to help the apostles in the distribution of food and water among the widows from both the Hebrew speaking and the Greek speaking population. Stephen was the foremost among the seven because "he was a man full of faith and Holy Spirit" (Acts 6:5). Being so filled with the grace of the Holy Spirit, he worked many miracles and spoke as a messenger from God. Apart from the service he did, he was well versed in the Scriptures and was a great orator and debater.

Since his acceptance of Jesus as his Savior, he was seen as a defector of the Jewish teachings. His staunch faith must have occasionally led him to take a stance which was opposing to that of the teachers of the law. His knowledge of the Jewish teachings were so true that the leaders of the Jewish faith would often find no words to contradict him. The inspired words that sprang forth from his mouth through the grace of God, so filled his heart and so heavenly that his face was illuminated with divine light. All who sat gazing at him, saw him thus clothed in shining glory like an Angel (Acts 6:15) 

"Which one of the Prophets did your fathers not persecute, and they killed the ones who prophesied the coming of the Just One, of whom now, too, you have become betrayers and murderers." (Acts 7:52)

While on trial, he experience a theophany in which he saw both God the Father and God the Son:

"Behold I see the heavens opened, and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God." (Acts 7:56)

In the end, he was taken to court on false charges and he was accused for blasphemy against God and Moses. He was stoned by an infuriated mob at the gates of Jerusalem, where the then Saul, and later known as Paul stood watch. This incident is then to be one of the life changing incidents of Saul's life.

Even at the point of death we see how close St. Stephen was close to Jesus that he knelt and prayed for those who stoned him to be forgiven.

"Lord. don't charge them with this sin!" (Acts 7:60)

Relics
His body was then left at the foothill of the city to be eaten by the dogs for two days. But on the second night,  Gamaliel— teacher of the Apostle Paul and the Apostle Barnabas— along with his son, secretly came and took the body to his own estate, in Capharganda, to be buried.

Nicodemus, who died while weeping at this grave, was also buried there along with Gamaliel's godson Abibus and Gamaliel himself upon his repose.

After many years the memory of St. Stephen's burial place had left the minds of men, until 415 when Gamaliel appeared three times to Father Lucian, priest at Capharganda. He revealed to Fr. Lucian the place of his burial and everything about it. Fr. Lucian received the blessing of the Patriarch to exhume the saints from their grave where a strong, sweet fragrance filled the cave.

St. Stephen's relics were translated to Zion and honorably buried, and many of the sick were healed by his relics. The other three relics were placed inside a church atop the cave on a hill. Eventually, his relics were translated to Constantinople.

Today, you wil find his whole right arm at The Holy Trinity of St. Sergius Lavra, established by St. Sergius of Radonezh in 1345, at Sergiyev Posad, Russia

Prayers
Troparion (Tone 4) [Holy Tradition]

O First Martyr and Apostle Of Christ,Thou hadst fought the good fight.And didst expose the perversion of the persecutors,For when thou wast killed by stoning at the hands of wicked men,Thou didst receive a crown from the right hand on high,And didst cry out to God saying,"O Lord do not charge this sin against them!"Yesterday the Master came to us as a man,And today his servant departs from life.Yesterday the King was born as a man,And today His servant is stoned to death.For the sake of Christ Holy Stephen became the first martyr.
Kontakion (Tone 3) [Holy Tradition]
Yesterday the Master came to us as a man,
And today his servant departs from life.
Yesterday the King was born as a man,
And today His servant is stoned to death.
For the sake of Christ Holy Stephen became the first martyr.


Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin George


Saturday, January 5, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Worship GOD

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus

Wishing you all a Very Happy and Prosperous New Year. It's been 5 days into the New Year and as I go through the social networking sites all I find is many people expecting how their New Year to go compared to the blessings they received during the last year. For me, I would like to take you through the Demands of Jesus which He made during the 3 and half years of His ministry. From my perusal of The Bible and the book "What Jesus Demands from the World" by John Piper, I have found about 50 Demands of Jesus. But in the next few series, I will only be going through very few of the demands. Today, I will be going through the demand of "Worshiping God in Spirit & Truth"

No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money. -MATT. 6:24

Everyone in the world worships something. From the most religious to the most secular, all people value something high enough to build their lives around it. It may be God, or it may be money. But what makes it worship is the driving power of some cherished treasure that shapes our emotions and will and thought and behavior. Into this universal experience of worship Jesus demanded, "Worship (God) in spirit and truth" (John 4:24). In other words, bring your experience of worship into conformity with what is true about God, and let your spirit be authentically awakened and moved by that truth.

The Hour Is Coming and Is Now Here
Today, there are many Christian sects, claiming that their form of worship is the true worship. So we are often confused where do we go to worship. Is it this particular church famous for its miracles, or is it this other church where some famous saint has been buried, or is it this other church famous for its grandeur? When I think about these, I am reminded of the incident of Jesus with the Samaritan woman by the well near her hometown. During their conversation, she had challenged Him about the difference between places where Samaritans and Jews worship. She said, "Our fathers worshiped on this mountain, but you say that in Jerusalem is the place where people ought to worship" (John 4:20). Jesus responded by turning her attention away from geography to something astonishing that was happening in her very presence  He said, "Woman, believe me, the hour is coming when neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem will you worship the Father... The hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth" (John 4:21, 23). This is a radical statement - to say that the hour is now here when worship in Jerusalem would cease!

The hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people to worship Him. God is spirit, and those who worship Hm must worship in spirit and truth. - JOHN 4:23-24

Jesus made the breath taking claim to be the long-awaited Jewish Messiah. The woman said to him, "I know that Messiah is coming (he who is called Christ). When he comes, he will tell us all things." Jesus responded, "I who speak to you am he" (John 4:25). So when Jesus says that the time "is now here" when we will no longer worship in Jerusalem, He meant that the kingdom of the Messiah has dawned and there was going to be a radical break in the way people worship.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus,
In the next session, I would be writing on the meaning of Worship in Spirit and Truth. I hope to do justice to the topic. Please do keep me, a sinner in your prayers so that the Lord Almighty would guide me to write more about Him to you.

May the peace of our Father, the love of Jesus and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.

Your brother in Jesus
Jobin