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Lectionary Notes
- 19th Sunday after Pentecost
(view sermon
or sermon
for this text)
Readings for 19th Sunday after Pentecost,
10/7/07:
Lamentations 1:1-6, Psalm 137, 2 Timothy 1:1-14, Luke
17:5-10
Lamentations 1:1-6:
- Lamentations are written in a time of exile, chaos,
unrest, confusion, etc., for the people of Judah and Jerusalem and communities
in that region, as Babylon takes over and takes people away from their homes.
These laments are written in this context.
- The imagery is sad and bittersweet, very beautiful in
its sadness, you might say. "How lonely sits the city that once was full
of people!" A ghost-town. Have you ever lived an a community that has
been through some horrible devastation? Think some towns in Mississippi and
Louisiana post-Katrina, or even towns that have had major industries shut
down.
- The city is feminine, of course, a princess that is now
a pauper - alone and abandoned.
- Note, the Psalm for today also deals with exile. Exile
- being away from home, themes for the day.
Psalm 137:
- This psalm, written in past tense, recalls the time
of exile in Babylon. Remembering a hard time that has been endured.
- I love this particular psalm - the text provides lyrics
for one of my favorite songs from the musical Godspell, "On the
Willows."
- "How could we sing the Lord's song in a foreign
land?"
- "Happy shall they be who take your little ones and
dash them against the rock!" Ah, words we try to pretend are not in the
Bible. Have you ever read The Last of the Mohicans? In the book - not
the movie - is a scene where one group of attackers actually does this to
a woman's baby. Even in fiction, it is not a pretty picture.
2 Timothy 1:1-14:
- I love the relationship between
pseudo-Paul and Timothy that pervades this epistle and this passage. I really
sense the feeling of mentor-mentee relationship, and the genuine love and
caring felt by the elder toward the younger.
- Even these works that are generally
agreed to be pseudonymous capture Paul's tendency to be overly (ingenuinely)
modest?: "and for this reason I suffer as I do"...
- Yay for Lois and Eunice, women
of faith, faith that is passed to Timothy, faith of women that is valued as
strong and important!
- "rekindle the gift of God
that is within you" - I like this imagery. Does pseudo-Paul reference
a crisis time in Timothy's faith? A time when his faith was burnt out?
Luke 17:5-10:
- "Increase our faith!"
Jesus' response: It doesn't take much faith to do amazing things. You've got
faith. What you don't have is the desire, apparently to use it. Use what you
have before you worry about getting more!!!
- I find it difficult, even contextually,
to deal with slavery in the Bible, in parables, from Jesus' lips. I know he
is working within a system, a society. But I don't want us to gloss over the
reality of what's here. We're talking about humans owned by other humans.
Don't forget that just because we're using slavery for a religious lesson.
- Slaves aren't praised for doing
what is expected of them, and neither should we be praised for doing what
God expects of us. Hard words for those of us (that is, most of us) who don't
like to do things without recognition. Jesus tells us - just do what we're
supposed to do. It's our responsibility. That's it.
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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