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Lectionary Notes
-
1st Sunday after
Christmas Day
(view sermon
for this text)
Readings for First
Christmas, 12/26/04:
Isaiah 63:7-9, Psalm 148, Hebrews 2:10-18, Matthew 2:13-23
Isaiah 63:7-9:
- Isaiah can pack a lot into a few
short verses. "I will recount the gracious deeds of the Lord." Will
you? What are the gracious deeds of God in your own life?
- "It was no messenger or angel
but [God's] presence that saved them." Excellently said. God came as
God's own self to save us. We see that in Christ's coming to earth, but even
more generally speaking, we can say that God throughout the scriptures is
always directly involved with the people. A hands-on God. No intermediaries
will do what God can do and does do.
Psalm 148:
- I like Psalms that are simple
and clear in their focus: Praise God, everything and everyone. It is a reminder
to me, to us, in our worship preparations, to remember what is our focus:
Praise God, everything and everyone. Sometimes we try so hard for something
fantastic that we lose focus on why we put together such wonderful music,
beautiful liturgies, and carefully crafted sermons. Praise God!
- Psalms like this that include
things like: sun, moon, starts, mountains, fire, hair, hills, trees, cattle,
birds, young, old, men, women, rules, snow, and wind, all in one litany remind
us of our relationship with ALL creation. A little stewardship of the earth,
please? If the psalm says all creation praises God, we do a good job of putting
a stop to the praise when we destroy the creation...
- This image sort of reminds me of The Lion King
when all the animals come to see the new baby Simba be ‘baptized’ – all creation
is joining in. What a picture!
- Creation is commanded by the psalmist to give praise
because of its existence. Do we require more of God to give God praise? Do
we only feel like praising when things are going our way or when we’ve received
some desired request? Or do we praise because we are, because we have being?
- V. 11-12 say that Kings and the regular people, rulers,
young men and women, old men and women, all should praise together. Is that
a good picture of worship today? How do we worship together from different
walks of life? Who is missing from this full picture in our own congregations?
Hebrews 2:10-18:
- Overall, the theology of this passage is not how I would
articulate my theology. But nonetheless, some good points: "perfect through
suffering" Have you experienced anything like this in your own life?
Suffering making you stronger? More perfect? I don't think that God creates
suffering for us to make us stronger, but I certainly believe God can work
through our suffering to make us stronger.
- "Jesus is not ashamed to call them brothers and
sisters" I do like this part of the passage - the imagery throughout
that we are siblings with Jesus Christ - his brothers, his sisters. He is
like us, human like us. Yes, we view him as also divine, but without his being
human, Jesus wouldn't mean much to us, or be able to reach us, and we wouldn't
be able to seek to be like him, our brother.
- "he did not come to help angels, but the descendants
of Abraham." Similar to the sentiments in the Isaiah text for today -
God didn't send someone else to save us, Isaiah says, and likewise, we read
in Hebrews, God didn't come to save someone other than us. It's God and God's
people. That's it.
Matthew 2:13-23:
- I find Matthew's obsession with
showing Christ as fulfilling Old Testament prophecy distracting. Count the
times in this passage: at least three times in this one passage. I find Jesus'
life and ministry compelling enough without his proof texting. But obviously,
to Matthew, it was very important to show this dotting of 'i's and crossing
of 't's.
- Complain, complain. Another thing
I don't like about this passage is how one-sided the account is - Matthew
talks all about Joseph here, and Joseph's taking "the child and his mother"
- Mary is not even named! What are Mary's thoughts on all this?
- Oh - Herod's killing of the babies.
How terrible. It makes me think of the plague on the first born in Exodus,
which was even more terrible since the scriptures attribute it as being carried
out by God's hand.
- What is the message for us here?
This is about establishing Jesus' identity, for Matthew at least. It also
tells us about God protecting the Christ-child. And Joseph's obedience ot
the angel's directives.
Pastor’s Note: (I use the Greek-English
Lexicon from Liddell and Scott, the “little Liddell”
and the Metzger et. al Greek New Testament in my translation work.)
Lectionary Notes are from
the Lectionary Chat Group Bible Study of St.
Paul's UMC, Oneida, NY, Rev. Beth Quick.
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