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Lectionary Notes - Third Sunday in Lent
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Readings for Third Sunday in Lent, 3/19/06:
Exodus 20:1-17, Psalm 19, 1 Corinthians 1:18-25, John
2:13-22
Exodus 20:1-17:
- The Ten Commandments - all the rage in the last couple
years with courtroom battles. People have spent a lot of energy defending
these commandments. Are they worth defending? Do we follow as well as defend?
While I don't feel they need to be posted in our courtrooms, I think they are
still pretty important for us.
- The ones I am most drawn to are the first commandments.
God is God and our only God. We might not worship other deities, but sometimes
we're in danger of worshipping our possessions, our work, our culture, or our
country. We may not make golden calf idols, but we idolize plenty of things,
don't we?
- "Remember the sabbath." This is so hard for me. We're
recently started a twice-weekly prayer chapel at our church - 30 minutes to be
still and be with God. I find even that hard. My mind is always racing over my
to-do list. How do you keep sabbath?
- Coveting - that's another commandment that I think is
so important. We always want what we don't have, no matter how much we do
have. How do we live a life of gratitude?
Psalm 19:
- "The heavens are telling the
glory of God." These famous words from the Psalm are often set to music.
- This imagery of the sun "like a
bridegroom from his wedding canopy", this personification of the sun draws to
my mind Greek/Roman mythology, and no doubt made contemporaries of the
psalmist think of similar images of sun-gods in other religions. The
difference? Here the sun is put into place by God, not a god in itself.
- God is more than gold, sweeter
than honey. A simple message - but reminds us of things we put too often
before God in our lives.
- "Let the words of my mouth and
the meditations..." This verse is often used by pastors before they begin
preaching. I like it, but if there's a way to use a Bible verse too much to
the point of over doing, this one makes it on my personal list!
1 Corinthians 1:18-25:
- "For the message of the cross is
foolishness to those who are perishing..." I don't know what to make of this
verse, because I too often see it used as a "Jesus is the only way, see?"
tool. But let's revamp it. An instrument of weakness is made into an
instrument of power. That is what God does to things. Gives them a whole new
life, and a whole new meaning.
- That theme carries into the
whole passage - God doesn't just change meanings of things around, but
meanings of people. We're flipped inside out by this 'foolishness' of Jesus
Christ.
- Compare this passage with the
value of Wisdom we see in Proverbs. I think Paul is discounting being
worldly-wise instead of God-wise. Better a fool for God than wise for the
world?
John 2:13-22:
- "my Father's house a marketplace." Maybe we don't have
malls in our churches (maybe!), but how do we take the holy out of our holy
places? Churches often play dangerous games with marketing and commercialism.
Where do we draw lines?
- "he drove all of them out" - this is one of few times
we see Jesus so confrontational. When in your faith are you moved to be
confrontational? What is worth making a scene?
- In verse 21, John gives his take on Jesus' words in
verse 19. What would you think Jesus meant?
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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.)
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