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Lectionary
Notes - 3rd Sunday of Easter
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Readings for 3rd Sunday of Easter, 4/30/06:
Acts 3:12-19, Psalm 4, 1 John 3:1-7, Luke 24:36b-48
Acts 3:12-19:
- Anger - sometimes Peter sounds
so accusatory to me, especially in his early preaching, as if still so fresh
from losing Jesus as a daily physical presence in their midst, he's looking
for someone to blame. He does make concession in verses 17-19.
- Peter's words are also
interesting considering his own role in Jesus' trial and death. Do you think
he's speaking to himself as much as to the crowd?
- This scene takes place just
after Peter heals a crippled beggar. Healing was central to Jesus' ministry.
How do Peter and Jesus differ in their style of healing?
Psalm 4:
- "how long" - the human cry against injustice, the human
plea for God to intervene.
- A theme of this psalm: God hears us. Sometimes we doubt
this - wonder if God is listening. The psalmist, with his own doubts, is still
sure in his heart that God hears and listens. Are you?
1 John 3:1-7:
- We are God's children. The
author sticks with this theme throughout. More than creator and created, more
than master and servant. We are parent and child, a relationship that
communicates God's overflowing, unconditional love toward us.
- Verses 2 and 3 are traditionally
used as part of funeral liturgies. What we will be has not yet been revealed.
So much potential that is inside of us. What is the best you can imagine
yourself being? What is God revealing you to be?
- "no one who abides in him sins;
no one who sins has either seen him or known him." What do you think the
author means by this? Obviously, Christians continue to sin. Do we not abide
in God? Sin can but distance between us and God, I think, but does it keep us
from seeing or knowing God? I think God can bridge even such gaps between us,
and seeks to do so.
Luke 24:36b-48:
- Luke presents instead of just a doubting Thomas, a
whole group of disciples who are frightened and terrified, which seems a
likely scenario to me. What would it take to convince you that someone had
risen from the dead?
- Jesus eating fish is a symbolic proof that he is alive
and real - not just a spiritual appearance - eating symbolizes his human body
appearance for Luke - that's why it is emphasized that Jesus was hungry and
ate in their presence.
- "Then he opened their minds to understand the
scriptures." - I love this verse, and have a jealousy about it - what did
Jesus say to them? I've always been a questioning, looking for answers sort of
believer. Not a doubter, but a seeker. I'd like a Q and A session with Jesus
like this.
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 Rev. Beth Quick.
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