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Lectionary Notes
- Baptism of the Lord
(view
sermon for this text)
Readings for
Baptism of the Lord, 1/13/08:
Isaiah 42:1-9, Psalm 29, Acts 10:34-43, Matthew 3:13-17
Isaiah 42:1-9:
- "I have put my spirit upon
him, he will bring forth justice to the nations" - Reminds me of another
Isaiah (61) passage, "The spirit of the Lord is upon me..." both
are marking the identity of Jesus, the task to which Jesus is called - at
least that is how we interpret them, and to an extent, how Jesus interprets
them himself - this is the roll he seeks to play, to fill, to be.
- "a bruised reed he will not
break" - Remember Jesus asking about John the Baptist (Mt. 11) - "what
did you come out to see - a reed shaken by the wind?"
- "I have taken you by the
hand and kept you" - This is no God who sits back and watches from a
distance. This is up-close-and-personal God. We are God's, and God wants us
to make no mistake of that fact. We disobey, turn away, etc. But we are God's.
- "to open the eyes that are
blind, to bring out the prisoners" - again, compare to Luke 4/Isaiah
61
- "new things I now declare"
- a good verse for a beginning of a new year
Psalm 29:
- "The Voice of the Lord" - I guess I've never
noticed this psalm before, which speaks primarily of God's voice.
- It is also visualizing God creating or in relation to
a strong and powerful thunderstorm, which may be based on a psalm to the Caananite
god, Baal (see Chris Haslam's comments
on this) God over the waters, God's glory thundering, breaking the cedars,
flashes forth flames of fire, "the voice of the Lord shakes the wilderness."
What can we do with these images? I led a Bible-study, Companions
in Christ, in my previous church. One lesson is on using our imagination
to read the scriptures. Certainly this psalmist used imagination to create
this imagery, to make God's voice come alive.
- What imagery would you use to
describe/envision God's voice in your life? I like the process theology metaphor
of God's lure, God slowly luring me with God's voice until slowly,
step by step, I followed.
Acts 10:34-43:
- Peter is speaking
to Cornelius and his friends and relatives in Caesarea. Cornelius had been
visited by a messenger from God telling him to invite Peter to his home and
here him speak.
- "God shows
no partiality". Do we get that? Believe it? Preach it? Live and practice
it?
- "preaching
peace by Jesus Christ" Ah, the gospel message is a message of peace.
Too much of our Christian history works to counter that claim. We struggle
on!
- A mini-sermon,
all the facts needed to share the good news packed into one little blurb -
this is Peter's quick pitch, at the opportunity he's been given.
Matthew 3:13-17:
- "John would have prevented
him" - when do we play John's role - for whom do we play John's role?
Facilitating someone else in their journey to ministry is extremely important
- 'proper' as Jesus says, and necessary. If we decline our role, we're preventing
another from fulfilling theirs as well.
- This is the event that marks the
beginning of Jesus' 'official' ministry, and is significantly recorded in
all four gospels. We might all wish for the heavens to part and for a dove
to descend and for God to declare in front of all that we are pleasing and
beloved in God's sight, but it doesn't usually work quite that way for us.
How does it work for us? How can we know God loves us? What are the markers
and milestones in our lives and ministries? How can we play John to someone,
preparing them, providing a space for them to begin their calling?
- Matthew's baptism account is fairly
short - don't forget to compare notes with the other gospels
Lectionary Notes are from
the Lectionary Chat Group Bible Study of St.
Paul's UMC, Oneida, NY, Rev. Beth Quick.
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