Insights: Easter. William Barclay

Insights: Easter - William Barclay


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      First published in 2008 by

       SAINT ANDREW PRESS

       121 George Street

       Edinburgh EH2 4YN

      Copyright © The William Barclay Estate, 1975, 1976, 2001, 2002, 2003

      ISBN 978 0 7152 0860 1

       eISBN 978 0 8615 3661 0

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be produced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent.

      The right of William Barclay to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

      British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

      It is the Publisher’s policy to only use papers that are natural and recyclable and that have been manufactured from timber grown in renewable, properly managed forests. All of the manufacturing processes of the papers are expected to conform to the environmental regulations of the country of origin.

      Typeset by Waverley Typesetters, Fakenham

       Printed and bound by Bell & Bain Ltd, Glasgow

       Contents

       Foreword

       Introduction

       The coming of the King

       The last meal together

       The Lord’s Supper

       Love’s last appeal

       The farewell command

       The traitor’s bargain

       The traitor’s kiss

       The arrest in the garden

       A certain young man

       Jesus before Annas

       The man who sentenced Jesus to death

       Pilate’s losing struggle

       The soldier’s mockery

       The cross

       There they crucified him

       The promise of Paradise

       The triumphant ending

       The blazing revelation

       The last gifts to Jesus

       The great discovery

       The doubter convinced

       The kingdom and its witnesses

       The glory of departure and the glory of return

       Foreword

      At last! I’ve discovered William Barclay, the Christian’s best kept secret (at least to this generation!) and he’s brilliant. I would describe his commentaries as the theological Brodie’s Notes I’ve been searching for and didn’t know exist. Thanks to Barclay I’m now devouring my Bible in the same insatiable way some devour a bestselling novel. The Bible is brimming with texture and dimension and history and politics and romance and heartache and promise and love and more and at last it is coming into full focus for me.

      My new-found Bible-reading experience reminds me of the satisfaction I used to have as a professional actress during rehearsals. The process of transforming the words on the page of my script into a believable, living, breathing character, thrilled me. I revelled in the creative collaboration between actor and director as we strove to get to the heart of the play. Ultimately though, it was the director’s responsibility to have an overview, to capture the meaning of the play – in short, to tell the story.

      It can be argued that, similarly, the Insights series takes on the role of director in breaking with tradition to examine the Easter story. Even though this method, like that of any other serious Bible commentary, involves extensive, critical examination and interpretation of the text, it opts out of following the conventional verse-by-verse structure. Instead, it examines the Easter story by leap-frogging around scripture ‘for the sake of keeping the narrative continuous’.

      At first glance, this approach may seem chaotic, but it soon becomes evident that looking at the story from different ‘camera angles’ (whether it be form one of the gospels, or Acts or Corinthians) enhances the intensity of the story. The insight gained by galvanising the narrative tool transforms our understanding.

      In my opinion, the decision to use this device is a stroke of genius as it allows the commentary to go beyond the boundaries of a typical exegesis. It frees Barclay up to engage with the reader and, like any great director, to stay committed to telling the story.

      Barclay teaches, probes, advices, and disturbs. In fact, as we use these notes to aid our Bible-reading experience, we cannot help but be personally challenged. We are compelled into a dialogue. He doesn’t allow us the luxury of a passive read. The experience is much more dynamic than that.

      Driven by his passion for God, he’s committed to sharing his great wealth of knowledge with the rest of us in a language that is intelligent, straightforward and free from confusing jargon. He has the gift of making the almost inexplicably complex, clear.

      And Barclay isn’t afraid of exposing his heart. His underlying agenda is obvious.

      Barclay is passionate for us to know God and by knowing Him to be significantly changed, transformed. Barclay encourages us to do so through understanding more of Jesus.


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