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Lectionary Notes
-
10th Sunday after
Pentecost, Proper 13, 18th Sunday in Ordinary Time
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Readings for 10th Sunday After Pentecost,
8/5/07:
Hosea 11:1-11, Psalm 107:1-9, 43, Colossians 3:1-11,
Luke 12:13-21
also: Ecclesiastes 1:2, 12-14; 2:18-23, Psalm 49:1-12
Hosea 11:1-11:
- This is in some ways a very pretty passage, filled with
metaphors of God's love for Israel as a parent for a child. Unfortunately,
it seems only after strong impulses to destroy the naughty children that God's
compassion finally wins out!
- Israel has been a wayward child: "The more I called
them, the more they went from me." Do we react to God's call this way?
Insisting on going the opposite direction as soon as we realize what God wants
from us?
- "How can I hand you over,
O Israel? . . . My heart recoils within me; my compassion grows warm and tender."
This inner dialogue of God's, while in some ways frustrating in its too-far
humanization of God in my mind, makes the effect of our actions on God come
alive. Imagine how frustrated a parent is with a child who refuses to listen,
refuses protection, refuses to behave. How much the parent just wants to get
through to the child, but how much, too, the parent can never let go of the
love for the child that comes first.
Ecclesiastes 1:2, 12-14, 2:18-23
- Ecclesiastes is a thought-provoking
little book, and this passage is a good illustration of why. In the end, I
can't read this selection and come up in agreement with the Teacher - I always
convince myself that through God's grace we overcome the hopelessness expressed
here. But there is such profound thought in the Teacher's words - a challenge
to us.
- Vanity, vanities. "I saw
all the deeds that are done under the sun; and see, all is vanity and a chasing
after wind." What gives our life meaning, really? What makes it more
than "chasing after wind?" I suspect there are probably only very
few things that truly give us meaning in life. God is our meaning-maker.
- The words of the Teacher seem
filled with depression. In the end, that's why I have to turn back to the
gospel - indeed, the man building the barns in Luke seemed to miss the vanity
of his actions. But the gospel lesson suggests that a life lived in a different
way, with different priorities, will yield a less fruitless result.
Psalm 107:1-9, 43:
- Theme of the psalm: God's love
is steadfast.
- Steadfast, according to dictionary.com
is "Firmly fixed or established; fast fixed; firm. 2. Not fickle or wavering;
constant; firm; resolute; unswerving; steady. God's love for us is constant
and unwavering. Take comfort!
- God satisfies us, satisfies our
needs, hunger and thirst in the physical sense, but spiritual needs as well.
Psalm 49:1-12:
- Keeping theme with the gospel
lesson, this Psalm focuses on riches/wealth, etc.
- Warning: don't turst in your wealth,
in the abundance of your riches. "No ranson avails for one's life."
So well put! Nothing can be exchanged that equals the value of a life in God's
eyes. In the end, the wealthy perish too, "and leave their wealth to
others."
Colossians 3:1-11:
- Paul talks about "the things that are above"
- earthly things, as opposed to heavenly thing. Earthly things are the vices
like evil, greed, etc., heavenly things are those in us now that we are in
Christ.
- How does Paul's differentiation of heavenly and earthly
things fit in with Christ's teachings about the kingdom of God being at hand,
present, here among us on earth? Did God, who created all that is, pronounce
even this earthly creation as good? I understand what Paul is getting
at - the things that occupy our lives ought to change as a result of our knowing
Christ. But I don't see Christ-like things and earthly-things as in direct
opposition of one another....
- "but Chris is all and in all." With that I
can agree. But it is not just as simple a statement as it seems to skip over.
Read: Christ is all. That's a pretty big claim with big consequences
for how we understand ourselves!
Luke 12:13-21:
- This is the text of the first
sermon I ever preached, so it holds a special place in my heart!
- "One's life does not consist
in the abundance of possessions." Such a simple statement. Such a powerful
statement. Look around your home. Do you believe that your life is more than
what you see piled up around you? I remember as I was shopping last summer
to fill my huge parsonage with things so it wouldn't look quite so empty that
these words from Luke were echoing loudly in my ears. "These things that
you have, whose will they be?" DVDs, CDs, computers, phones, trinkets
with no purpose. What does my life, your life, consist of?
- I recommend highly, How
Much is Enough? by Arthur Simon, founder of Bread
for the World. Very readable, very on-topic, and very likely to call you
quickly to accountability even in its simplicity.
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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