John 20 and Cain and Abel
When you read John 20:19-23 there are a couple of Old Testament stories that come to mind. The next two posts will look at these parallels.
Notice that the disciples function like Cain in that they participate in the death of the other character - Jesus and Abel.
The first is the Cain and Abel story - Genesis 4:1-16.
Notice that the disciples function like Cain in that they participate in the death of the other character - Jesus and Abel.
Then you might notice that both the disciples and Cain are gripped by fear.
You will notice that both stories have the murdered speaking beyond the grave. In the case of Abel his blood cries out to God. While in the case of Jesus he appears in the room the disciples locked themselves into.
Cain and the disciples both receive a 'mark' from God.
The stories are similar in a number of ways, until the way the one who is murdered responds. Abel's blood "cries out" to God - the same way the Israelite cry out to God under Egyptian oppression. When this blood cries out it is "shrieking" and "clamoring" to God. But the blood of Christ does something different - he proclaims peace and forgiveness.
Could it be that John 20 is making reference to the first murder (Cain and Abel) in order to make a distinction that the response of the second murder (the murder of Jesus) is a new commandment?
Are we being invited to consider how we will respond to when someone kills us, stabs us in the back, slanders, destroys, criticizes, diminish, hurts and abandons us? Will we respond like Abel and "cry out" or will we declare peace and forgiveness like Christ?
It seems if we are Christians - rather than "Abelists" - then it is clear what we are to do.
Functional Fixedness and the Church
Quick!
In 30 seconds, how many ways can a brick be used?
GO!
If you are like me when I first took this little test, you came up with a good number of things, but they are all basically two or three categories 1) some sort of weight 2) some sort of structural use 3) some sort of weapon.
When you examine this question however you can begin to see that we self limit our responses. For instance this question says nothing about the size of the brick or what it is made of? What if the brick was ground up or 1,000 feet tall? What if it was a brick of gold, Legos, or soap?
Functional Fixedness is the reason people are not good at coming up with new uses for an old thing and it is the reason that you and I come up with the same - predictable? - list of uses for a brick.
So you may be able to see where this post is going.
Quick!
In 30 seconds, how many ways can the Church be used?

Be the change by Jason Valendy is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.