Above All Love: Simply Fellowship

David Holdsworth

https://simplyfellowship.carrd.co/

  1. MAR 22

    Episode 2 - Zacchaeus

    Simply Fellowship — Episode 2: Zacchaeus Above All Love Devotional Blog WELCOME Welcome to Above All Love. This is Simply Fellowship — the Good News, quietly told. This is a gentle space. No pressure, no performance. You don't have to have it together to be here. You don't have to be respectable, or popular, or have a good reputation. You're welcome exactly as you are, wherever you are reading this. If you need to take a break, step away and come back later — that's completely fine. There's no right way to be here. Just be here. HYMN We begin with a hymn. Read it slowly. You might want to sit with each line before moving on. Just as I am, without one plea, But that Thy blood was shed for me, And that Thou bidd'st me come to Thee, O Lamb of God, I come, I come. PRAYER Loving God, Thank you for seeking us out — even when we have climbed our own trees to watch from a distance, not daring to get too close. Help us to hear you calling our name today. Give us the courage to come down and welcome you in. May we know that we are seen, loved, and invited — by you. Amen. SCRIPTURE Our reading today is from Luke chapter nineteen, verses one to ten, from the Easy English Bible. Jesus went into Jericho and he was walking through the town. A man was there called Zacchaeus. He was a chief tax collector and he was rich. He wanted to see who Jesus was. But he could not see him because of the crowd. He was not a tall man. So he ran ahead and he climbed up into a tree to see Jesus. Jesus would pass that way. Jesus came to that place and he looked up. He said to Zacchaeus, 'Come down quickly. I must stay at your house today.' Zacchaeus came down quickly and he was very happy to receive Jesus. The people who saw this were not pleased and they said, 'Jesus has gone to stay with a man who is a sinner.' But Zacchaeus stood up and said to the Lord, 'Lord, I will give half of everything I own to poor people. And if I have cheated anyone, I will pay them back four times as much.' Jesus said to him, 'Today, God has saved this home. This man is also a son of Abraham. The Son of Man came to look for the people who are lost and to save them.' DEVOTION Zacchaeus is not a popular man. He collects taxes for the Roman occupiers — which means he takes money from his own people, and often takes more than he should. The crowd knows it. And Zacchaeus knows the crowd knows it. So he doesn't push to the front. He finds a tree. He watches from a distance. Safe. Hidden. But still — curious. Still drawn to Jesus, even if he doesn't think he belongs anywhere near him. And then Jesus stops. Looks up. And calls him by name. Not to scold him. Not to expose him. To invite himself to dinner. The crowd is outraged. This is not the right kind of person to sit with. But Jesus doesn't seem to notice, or perhaps he simply doesn't care. He has come to find the lost — and Zacchaeus, for all his money, is very lost indeed. Something happens in that moment of being seen and welcomed. Zacchaeus comes down from the tree a different man. Before Jesus has even said a word about sin or repentance, Zacchaeus is already transformed by grace. That's what love does. Not pressure. Not judgement. Love. Many of us have been Zacchaeus. We've watched from a distance, not sure we'd be welcome. Not sure we're the right kind of person. Not sure God would want to come and stay at our house, given what our house is like. But Jesus looks up into the tree and calls us by name....

    7 min
  2. A Call to Peace

    11/11/2025

    A Call to Peace

    ​Before this reflection, let us remember the words of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew: ​"Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God." (Matthew 5:9, NIV) ​ ​Today, we honour the lives lost in conflict. We wear the poppy, some white, some red, but we all pray for peace. Our faith calls us to seek the Kingdom of God, a place where war cannot exist. ​We must listen to those who saw the horrors. Wilfred Owen spoke against the great lie of war, condemning: ​"The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est / Pro patria mori." ​Harry Patch confirmed the grim truth: ​"War is organized murder, and nothing else." ​Even those who commanded felt despair; General William Tecumseh Sherman said: ​"I am tired and sick of war. Its glory is all moonshine... War is hell." ​Our Christian faith demands that we stop excusing war. As C.H. Spurgeon taught: ​"I wish that Christian men would insist more and more on the unrighteousness of war, believing that Christianity means no sword, no cannon, no bloodshed..." ​Our hope is found in God’s promise to guide us away from destruction: ​"They shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning-hooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more." (Isaiah 2:4) ​Building this peace takes courage—a deeper courage than fighting. Albert Einstein challenged us: ​"We must be prepared to make heroic sacrifices for the cause of peace that we make ungrudgingly for the cause of war." ​We must work for it every day. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. taught us that: ​"It is not enough to say 'We must not wage war.' It is necessary to love peace and sacrifice for it." ​Let our act of remembrance be a promise: to follow Christ's love, turn away from hatred, and finally learn war no more. ​Amen. *Image sourced from Gemini*

    3 min
  3. 10/21/2025

    Ares or Christós?

    What if we aren't the "goodies" after all? What if propaganda from all sides of all conflicts reveals a darker truth? There are no heroes only villains and their victims. The broken cisterns of this world are truly overflowing. There are no righteous, no not one! There never have been, for all our supposed righteousness is as filthy rags. It is a sad reality that so many, even those of the faith, seem to effectively kneel before Ares. This idolatry of violence and war is in such contrast to worshiping at the feet of the Prince of Peace. Sometimes it feels as if the entire world is marching toward destruction and chaos. Worst of all is that we know the mistakes made in our histories, but we seem to learn nothing from history (other than that we learn nothing). We do it all again and again. Sin after sin. When posterity comes to judge us will they look upon the arms trade unchecked, the governments unhindered in iniquity and the vast lands of earth bursting into flame? Or will they look and see a people who voiced against the arms trade, the war mongers and the hell fire worshippers? Either way, it is hard to not get depressed. But, take heart peaceful brothers and sisters (or those who are unpeaceful but on the cusp of repentance). Though this dark night of evil brings such bitter sorrow, joy comes in the morning. That morning will come and swords will be of no use, for the learning of war will be no more. Swords will be ploughs and spears will be pruning hooks. Will it happen before or after the King arrives? God knows the answer to that one. For only He knows the day and the hour. But, what if instead of trying to fulfill the rapture racket people get on board with what the God of love whose gospel is peace is doing? All creation is groaning in birth pains. All things become new. Let us heed the encouragement given by Adin Ballou: "The earth, so long a slaughter field, Shall yet an Eden bloom. The tiger to the lamb shall yield, And war descend the tomb." Amen Choose this day who you will serve! Will you kneel to Ares or Christós? O Lord, let it be Christós!

    3 min
  4. 09/30/2025

    Celebrate Peace Day

    It is hard to be optimistic or positive given how much is going on in the world. Nonetheless let us dare to dream of a better, more peaceful world, where quiet and peacable peoples may thrive. Many of us are exhausted and overwhelmed, but the struggle and pilgrimage towards peace continues in various pockets of society across the world. May the lights still shine. As a Christian I look to the Prince of Peace as the author and finisher of my faith. There is great darkness in the world, but a much greater light. Adin Ballou, an American Christian pacifist and abolitionist wrote a book called Christian Non-Resistance, in all its important bearings, illustrated and defended (1846), which was widely read and admired by Leo Tolstoy. There is a short poetic part in the book that says: ​"The earth, so long a slaughter-field, Shall yet an eden bloom; The spear shall be a harvest-tool, The trumpet's voice be dumb." Another version is cited as ending: "The tiger to the lamb shall yield and war descend the tomb," which captures the same powerful anti-war sentiment. It evokes the biblical imagery from Isaiah. ​"The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together; and a little child shall lead them." (Isaiah 11:6 KJV) The same verse, Isaiah 11:6, in the EasyEnglish Bible is: ​"At that time, wolves and lambs will live together. Leopards will lie down with goats. Calves, lions and fat cows will live together. A small child will be their leader." The literal fulfillment of Isaiah 11:6 is tied to the establishment of Christ's eternal kingdom, where there will be no more death, sorrow, or pain (Revelation 21:4). The danger will pass as a child can play near wild animals in peace and security under the perfect reign of the Messiah. I believe His kingdom is both now and not yet. In other words: Christians live in the time between Jesus' first coming and his second coming. The kingdom is already here, but it is not yet fully here. This means we must continue to ​"Depart from evil, and do good; seek peace, and pursue it." (Psalm 34:14) Pax et Bonum Soli Deo Gloria

    3 min

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