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John

One of the few, or perhaps the only, Apostle who did not die a
horrible death. He died in exile on the Isle of Patmos. Tradition
says that a priest of Diana gave John poisoned wine to drink, but
he made the sign of the cross over the chalice, and the poison evaporated
in the form of a serpent. That is the reason for the snake in a
chalice on his window.
John holds an honored place in Christian history. Hundreds of churches
have been named for him, and many Christian leaders—including
John Chrysostom, John Wycliffe, John Calvin, John Knox, and John
Wesley—have borne his name. John was the son of Zebedee, and
the brother of the apostle James. He was a fisherman by trade. Peter,
John, and James formed the “inner circle of disciples. Some
scholars believe that the disciple named John in the synoptic Gospels
is the disciple “whom Jesus loved” in the fourth Gospel.
John was one of the few, or perhaps the only, Apostle who did not
die a horrible death. He died in exile on the Isle of Patmos.
John appears to have been a man of great intolerance with a sometimes
violent temper. He was a “hothead” whose solution to
everything was to rebuke, or even worse, annihilate the opposition.
He found a man casting out demons, and since the healer was not
one of the disciples, John told him to stop. James and John even
received a nickname, Boanerges, because of their outbursts. It means
“sons of thunder.” When met by Samaritan opposition
to Jesus’ passing through their village, John and his brother’s
solution to the problem was to call down fire to kill the opposition.
John wasn’t all that different from most people. How many
of us respond to opposition with anger? When people disagree, it
is often a result. Just look at the anger surrounding issues such
as civil rights and abortion. People on both sides of these issues
would gladly call down fire to blot out the opposition. Even within
our own denomination, we’ve had great fights and splits. From
the issue of slavery to the issue of the ordination of women, factions
within our church family have become so angry with each other that
they can no longer worship together.
Anger and intolerance have existed since the beginning of human
existence, and will likely be with us until the kingdom is fulfilled.
The good news is that Jesus took John as he found him—brash,
intolerant, and angry—and guided him to be able to use these
characteristics in a positive way.
Anger and intolerance are morally neutral. Anger against our fellow
brothers and sisters is bad, but it is good to be angry that people
in this world are hungry; it is good to be intolerant of disease,
oppression, social injustice, hate, fear, and ignorance. Jesus showed
John that it is possible to fight against injustice without hating
or wanting to destroy the people with an opposing view.
The good news of John is the same good news shared through the
stories of so many of the disciples. Jesus can take an imperfect
human and despite his or her flaws, teach them how to serve God.
None are beyond redemption. Whether we suffer from doubt, disbelief,
fear, ignorance or anger, the love and grace of God show in Christ
Jesus can teach us and transform us. How could we even hope for
anything more than that?
Brandon Gilliam
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