Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Pentecost 16

Today's lessons are not about the authority of the prophets to teach but the ability of their listeners to learn.

I must quote  Nancy Koester:
Are we teachable? Can we change? Can we grow into the image of God in which we are created?

Each text for the 16th Sunday after Pentecost asks these questions. Psalm 25 puts them in the form of a prayer: “Lead me in your truth and teach me.”

The gist of the lesson in Ezekial is that the exilic Israelites should quit blaming their situation on the sins of the past and take responsibility for their present actions.

In the alternate lesson the Israelites quarrel with God and Moses over their thirst.

The lectionary passage Philippians 2:1–13 continues Paul’s preceding recommendations on how followers of Jesus Christ should live.  Again to quote Working Preacher. 

When Christ came to the Temple in today's Gospel he marked the beginning of the end since he here confronted Jewish authority directly and set the seeds for his eventual crucifixion.

It is interesting to note that in the parable neither son comes off as a particularly shining example of Christian obedience. God works through imperfect followers. We should not use our inadequacies as an excuse for not acting.







Saturday, August 9, 2014

Pentecost 15

Chapter 19 of Matthew deals with questions of salvation and what one must do to earn it. The simple answer, of course, is that one cannot earn what is freely given. Today's lessons deal with an issue dear to the hearts of the church's faithful members. I have been faithful in attendance at the services of God's House all my life, I have tithed or better and have been a pillar of the congregation; I even have a plaque to confirm it. What then of these johnny come latelys? What did they do to earn salvation, they don't even contribute to the upkeep of the building.

Our adventure begins with the reluctant prophet Jonah whom God sends to Nineveh. Not only does Jonah not want to go to Ninevah, he fears the wrath of its citizens given the message he has been sent to deliver and furthermore he fully believes the people should suffer God's righteous wrath for the iniquity of their lives. When his message achieves the results God desired and God repents his wrath Jonah is annoyed with God and tells him so, then sits and sulks by the city's walls. Why should these people get off scot free when Jonah has lived his entire life in God's service.

The alternate OT Lesson is a passage from Exodus chronicling the Israelite's wanderings in the desert. Why did Moses and Aaron lead them into the wilderness to die of hunger when they could be feasting in the fleshpots of Egypt. When God sends them Manna from Heaven it isn't long before they complain again about the boring nature of this life-giving food.

Psa 145:8  The LORD is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love.

This verse is echoed in all our lessons today.

Php 1:29  For you have been given the privilege of serving Christ, not only by believing in him, but also by suffering for him.
Php 1:30  Now you can take part with me in the battle. It is the same battle you saw me fighting in the past, and as you hear, the one I am fighting still.

The message of the parable in Matthew:
The doling out of God's mercy is not done by Union Scale, it is no closed Union Shop. There is no fairness about it because none of us have 'earned' it. It is a benificence freely given to all to whom it is granted by the Holy Spirit that they believe. Depending on how you look at it God shows no favouritism or he shows all favouritism. There is no special place reserved for those who have laboured all their lives on behalf of God's saving grace save for the joy they have experienced in God's service. In fact the expectation of reward for faithful service could be accounted a sin.

1Co 9:16  I have no right to boast just because I preach the gospel. After all, I am under orders to do so. And how terrible it would be for me if I did not preach the gospel!
1Co 9:17  If I did my work as a matter of free choice, then I could expect to be paid; but I do it as a matter of duty, because God has entrusted me with this task.
1Co 9:18  What pay do I get, then? It is the privilege of preaching the Good News without charging for it, without claiming my rights in my work for the gospel.
1Co 9:19  I am a free man, nobody's slave; but I make myself everybody's slave in order to win as many people as possible.

God's mercy is not fair. Perhaps we should be thankful it is not fair. If it were fair none of us would merit it.



Thursday, August 7, 2014

Pentecost 14

Rather obvious today's theme is Forgiveness.

Let's begin with another passage from Matthew we recite every Sunday:

Mat 6:12  Forgive us the wrongs we have done, as we forgive the wrongs that others have done to us.

You may use the more obsolete term "trespasses".

The idea is that we cannot free ourselves from the guilt within us and be truly forgiven our sins unless we forgive those sins we observe in others. Unfortunately we can most readily recognize our own peccadilloes in others because they are so familiar to us despite the fact that we manage to be blind to them in our own actions.

Take another example:

2Sa 12:5  David became very angry at the rich man and said, "I swear by the living LORD that the man who did this ought to die!
2Sa 12:6  For having done such a cruel thing, he must pay back four times as much as he took."
2Sa 12:7  "You are that man," Nathan said to David. "And this is what the LORD God of Israel says: 'I made you king of Israel and rescued you from Saul.

Read the rest of this story and note that Nathan traps King David by telling him a parable.

The framers of our pericope chose the story of Joseph and his brothers to associate with today's theme. When their father Israel, (Jacob), dies Joseph's brothers fear reprisals from their brother Joseph for the wrongs they have done him. They have guilty consciences. Despite the fact that Joseph had forgiven them they had not forgiven themselves for their own wrongdoing. Because they still think in terms of revenge they expected their brother would as well.

Two verses stand out in Psalm 103:

Psa 103:8  The LORD is merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love.

Psa 103:13  As a father shows compassion to his children, so the LORD shows compassion to those who fear him.

Romans raises yet another aspect of the Forgiveness equation:

Mat 7:1  "Judge not, that you be not judged.

Or to put it in more contemporary lexicon, don't sweat the small stuff. At the time the issue was the eating of non-kosher foods. How often do we get caught up in splitting hairs and forget our mission to spread God's love. Is that principle so important that it merits alienating a fellow christian brother.

To come back to Peter's question:

"Lord, how often will my brother sin against me, and I forgive him?"

And the answer as far as I'm concerned is that if you 're keeping score you haven't truly forgiven. To be truly forgiven the record has been destroyed. That is what God's forgiveness grants us if we truly repent. If we cannot forgive the faults of others is it because we cannot truly accept the idea that God can forgive them in us? Do we judge others too harshly because we judge ourselves too harshly as well? Or is it that we have not truly repented because we have that secret vice we really don't want to give up?

If, like Joseph's Brothers, we cannot abandon those vengeful sentiments and jealousies then we probably can't accept that God will forgive them in us.














Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Pentecost 13

Mat 18:15  If one of my followers sins against you, go and point out what was wrong. But do it in private, just between the two of you. If that person listens, you have won back a follower.
Mat 18:16  But if that one refuses to listen, take along one or two others. The Scriptures teach that every complaint must be proven true by two or more witnesses.
Mat 18:17  If the follower refuses to listen to them, report the matter to the church. Anyone who refuses to listen to the church must be treated like an unbeliever or a tax collector.

Whether or not these are statements made by Jesus or placed in his mouth by the writers of Matthew to enhance their authority they are a fundamental means of dealing with disagreements and dissension within any group, the church included. The most reviled possible individual the writer could conceive of was a tax collector. Today the final step in dealing with an obstreperous  individual within the church would be excommunication, a step rarely used within the Lutheran context but an extension of the more primitive practice of shunning in which an individual so sentenced would literally disappear from the view of his neighbours in ancient interdependent societies tantamount to a death sentence. I would discount the translations that refer to Gentiles, but this was written for a Jewish audience.

The advice is very apt pointing out that before approaching others about a complaint the complainant should approach the person who has aggrieved him first one on one, then with witnesses, and finally to a higher authority.

The alternate OT Lesson deals with the institution of Jewish Rite of Passover. A seminal event in Jewish faith.

The lesson from Ezekiel deals with his commission from God to call his people Israel to account. Verse 11 makes it clear that Ezekiel's task is to ensure through his prophesy that Israel turn from their wicked ways for it is not God's purpose to punish but to turn sinners to repentance.

The passage from Psalm 119 reads like one from the book of wisdom. Internalizing the Laws of the Lord sets us free and makes us happy. If we learn to live by them we will delight in them and find comfort in them. Compare with Psalm 23:

Psa 23:4  Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; for thou art with me: thy rod and thy staff, they comfort me.

Romans summarizes the Law of Moses and Jesus more succinct formula.

Today's Gospel ends with this famous addition:

Mat 18:19  Again I say to you that if two of you shall agree on earth as regarding anything that they shall ask, it shall be done for them by My Father in Heaven.
Mat 18:20  For where two or three are gathered together in My name, there I am in their midst.

Each of us is the sum total of everything that has ever happened to us in life, everything we have experienced, learned, and read. Each of us looks at any experience, teaching or doctrine through the prism of our life's experience. It should come as no shock that everyone of us has their own unique point of view. We are products of our upbringing, our cultural heritage, the language we speak, our work experience, our economic position, our status in the community.

What is important is that we love ourselves, that we feel comfortable within our own skins and right with our God as we conceive him/her. Secondly that all we think and do and say is aimed at doing no harm, indeed doing good to our fellow creatures and the world around us.

Given the scope of possibility for disagreement if two or three agree on anything in God's name who can stop it from happening.

The issue then seems to be obedience to the Law, Authority, and Concord. And the answer seems to be that if we live in unity with our neighbour and do right by them we cannot go very wrong.

However in the very next verse comes the BUT from Peter we will confront next week. How many times must I forgive my brother if he wrongs me.





Sunday, August 3, 2014

Garth's Catechism

  • Does not give the answers, provides a process for asking the right questions.
  • Is not a talisman against evil, but a means of support when bad things happen.
  • The opposite of faith is not doubt but certainty.
  • One cannot prove the existence of God, that’s why one needs faith.
  • Belief is not intellectual knowledge, it is a spiritual gift.
  • There is only one God, but there are many approaches to conceiving him.
  • One cannot know God, but one can believe he exists.
  • God is in all things and of all creation.
  • Heaven is not a place but a state of grace.
  • The Kingdom of God is not a place in time or space.
  • Prayer is not a shopping list, it is conversation with God.
  • God does not need our thanks and praise, it is we who need to give it.
  • Sin is anything that separates us from the Love of God.
  • Hell is not a place but being separated from God. We create our own hells.
  • Faith is granted to individuals but it is lived out in the communion of all believers.
  • We meet God in the person of his saints, our fellow believers.
  • We cannot earn God’s grace, it is freely given.
  • We cannot buy God’s grace through good works or deeds, but our response to redemption will prompt us to express God’s love through acts of love of our own.
  • Confession implies regret and a will to turn away from past sins.
  • Repentance means turning away from sin, forgiveness means wiping the slate clean, it is not a license to return to former behaviours and do it again.
  • Lutherans believe, they are not saved in a one-time act but experience a growing conviction of the Love of God.
  • God does not punish us for sinful behaviour, but neither does he proof us from the consequences of our acts and those of our fellow human beings and the forces of nature that surround us.
  • Bad things happen to good people, being Christian does not guarantee good health, wealth, or happiness.
  • God does not punish our sins, we do that ourselves; nor does he reward good, goodness is its own reward.
  • Holding a grudge hurts only the person who poisons his spirit with that hate.
  • The Ten Commandments and the Law are a guide for communal living. Breaking them does not constitute sin, sin is what breaking them does to the individual who transgresses them. It is not the act itself that is sinful, it is the intent. Even good things can be done with sinful intent.
  • Evil is not incarnate, it is an absence of God’s Love.
  • Nothing in creation is inherently evil, evil occurs when good things are put to bad uses.
  • Jesus Christ is God Incarnate, an expression of God’s Saving Grace. He is one with God and has existed throughout eternity.
  • We express our experience of God’s Love in terms of the Holy Spirit. We are imbued with it in Baptism, Faith is a gift of the Holy Spirit. Some experience God’s Spirit in dreams and others through the appearance of Angels.
  • We term that part of us that experiences God as our Soul. It inhabits ever pore of our being and animates our person. We experience it in our fellow beings through their aura, that which animates every living creature. Some extend that to include even inanimate objects
  • We can experience God’s Love, but only another human being can express it through healing touch.