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Lectionary Notes - Pentecost Sunday
Readings for
Pentecost Sunday, 6/4/06:
Acts 2:2-21, Psalm 104:24-34, 35b, Romans 8:22-27, John
15:26-27, 16:4b-15
Acts 2:1-21
- I have to admit - speaking in
tongues is something that I don't connect to, don't understand, and frankly,
usually don't take seriously. My only witnessing of speaking in tongues has
left me more than a little skeptical. But I can't deny its frequent presence
in the scriptures - so where does that leave me? Last year, a girl of
approximately 9 year of age read this passage in church on Pentecost, and she
whipped through Phrygia and Pamphylia like they were her hometowns. It was
amazing. If I think about her reading this passage so flawlessly, I think I
can get my head a little bit around the idea of speaking in tongues. When an
unlikely vessel communicates an even more unlikely message, with unlikely
abilities?
- Pentecost. In some ways, these
scene is one of the most exciting in the Bible. This is the moment of truth -
Jesus is dead, risen, and ascended. The disciples have been taught, prodded,
encouraged, but most of all, entrusted with the good news. Will they carry it
on? Will they stand up in the face of opposition and accusations? Yes! The
start of the church.
- Everyone who calls on God's name
will be saved!
- Notice that Peter quotes how
God's spirit is poured out on all flesh: songs, daughter, young, old,
slave free. Seriously, where do we get the idea that God only speaks through
some people, who we deem acceptable?
Psalm 104:24-34, 35b
- manifold: many and varied
- Leviathan: same name as Jonah's
whale is given - a big sea 'monster'/creature, or just generally a big thing
of its kind: the 'Leviathan' of the redwoods would be the biggest of the
trees. (check out
Dictionary.com)
- The dependence of creation on
the Creator. While I don't like to think of God hiding God's face from me, the
psalmist makes the point that we are dependent on God.
- "I will sing to the Lord as long
as I live; I will sing praise to my God while I have being." Amen!
Romans 8:22-27:
- "whole creation has been groaning in labor pains" - I
like this image - the whole creation is expecting - in expectation of what God
is working in us.
- "wait for adoption" -
I'm always torn by Paul's language
of adoption. On the one hand, I'm hesitant to think that we're not born into
God's family, God's children. I shudder to think that God only adopts some as
children, and not others, which is an unfortunate and often drawn conclusion
of such theology. But on the other hand, there is a special-ness about God
going the 'extra mile', as it were, to make us God's own. Out of God's deep
desire to have us as children. I guess I just want to make sure God has no
limits or special qualifications for who is adopted! But I can also picture
the hope of a child waiting to be adopted.
- Hope - "we wait for it with
patience." Ah, some are better at this then others, no?
- "for we do not know how to pray
as we ought, but that very Spirit intercedes with sighs too deep for words."
Yes, exactly. Thank God for the spirit interceding. God hears us, even if we
can't speak it.
John 15:26-27, 16:4b-15:
- "from the beginning" - those he speaks to know the whole story, or
apparently all of it Jesus them to know to fulfill their roles.
- :7 "It is to your advantage" - I doubt the disciples saw it this way. Who
wants a weird-sounding Advocate instead of Jesus who they know and love?
- "I still have
many things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now." Bear, from
the Greek bastazo^, meaning, to lift up, to bear in mind, to consider.
Perhaps this statement from Jesus still applies to us today - Jesus is always
wanting to fill us in, share more, but we are never able to bear it, it seems.
- "When the Spirit
of truth comes, [it] will guide you into all the truth." What a unique way of
phrasing this - "all the truth" (emphasis added). What is all
the truth?
- The Spirit is
not speaking things the Spirit comes up with, the Spirit is not originating
direction on its own - the Spirit is like a messenger, conveying what is
heard, and what is to come. The Spirit is the Vessel for God's communication
with us, at least in this interpretation from John. Interesting words for
Trinity Sunday . . .
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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