As happens when people travel and spend a great deal of time together, they give each other nicknames. Jesus himself gave John and James the name “Sons of Thunder.” Mark 3:17 lists them among the main disciples, “James, son of Zebedee and his brother John (to them he gave the name Boanerges, which means, ‘sons of thunder’).” While the name might have referenced their passionate personalities, Luke 9:54 gives an interesting account. A certain Samaritan village refused to welcome Jesus, rejecting the Messiah. James and John asked Christ, “Lord, do you want us to call fire down from heaven to destroy them?” On the one hand, they had passion and loyalty for the mission, maybe calling back to how Elijah called down fire on the prophets of Baal. But it was a worldly passion. Jesus rebuked them. His Kingdom wouldn’t happen by force and reactionary anger but compassion and love, mercy and truth. Later, in Acts 8, Peter and James bring the Holy Spirit to the Samaritan region, a godly act of thunder and baptism of the Spirit, fire, redemption, and salvation instead of condemnation. As with John, we often need God to reimagine our expectations of what ministry and purpose look like. We won’t spread a heavenly, loving Kingdom through judgment and condemnation. The Gospel offers a greater heavenly fire to all who believe through the Holy Spirit, one that gives life and saves. Photo Credit: Chat GPT AI