“All things work together for good” is a bold statement in
light of the laundry list of laments that follows. Hardship, distress,
persecution, famine, nakedness, peril, sword, and being killed all day like
sheep led to slaughter sounds more like all things working together against us. I don’t think
“all things work together for good” means we should attach some deeper meaning
to the suffering that is part and parcel with the human condition. Troublesome
times come to the faithful and unfaithful alike but for those who love God all
things work together for good because of the “no separation clause” of the covenant.
The good for which all things work together is that nothing can separate us
from the love of God in Christ Jesus. That means God cannot be separated from
our suffering and endures hardship, distress, persecution, famine, etc, right
along with us. We don’t desire difficult days or rejoice in our sufferings but
we do find great courage and strength and enduring hope that even death cannot
destroy the relationship we have with the One who sighs deeply for and with us.
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
Lectionary 17 A - Psalm 119:126-139
I think the psalmist weeps because the
nature of God’s statues is not understood. They are not meant to be burdensome
or arbitrary or restrictive of liberty. They are wonderful because they enrich
relationships within the human community which is the way God is blessed. The
law of the Lord is about living with each other in peace and harmony,
celebrating the good gifts of life while together enduring difficulties with
dignity and patience and enduring hope. A community living in the light of the
Lord, who is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast
love, is redeemed from human oppression which is self centered and judgmental, quick
to anger and consumed by hatred. But even secret sins we keep politely hidden diminish
relationship and rob us of the joy of living the freedom the law offers. So the
psalmist praying for mercy and panting for the commands of the Lord weeps
streams of tears for those who do recognize the gift that God offers in the
law.
Monday, July 21, 2014
Lectionary 17 A - 1 Kings 3:5-12
1 Kings 3:5-12
It is a smart prayer for a boy who doesn’t know how to come
or go. One wonders how he thought to pray it. You would expect him to pray for
the death of his enemies since the boy king had so many. A long life generally follows
praying a shorter one for one’s enemies. Riches almost always makes it to the
top of the wish list and despite his estimation of God’s people as great a
little extra cash is always appreciated. God is surprised and certainly quite
pleased that this second son of Bathsheba and David’s badly begun union turns
out to be a king worthy of the title. God grants Solomon understanding and a
discerning mind and all the rest as well and for a time there really is no king
like him. Unfortunately for Israel, and I suppose for God as well, Solomon gives
up on the gift of discernment in favor of the counsel of foreign wives and the
golden age of Israel ends with a kingdom divided between warring sons. It is
the stuff of Shakespeare and the great Greek tragedies and more times than we
care to admit our own tales of fortune and folly. It will take a long time but
there will be a king born in Bethlehem who eclipses Solomon and all his splendor. He will never
know riches and his life will be cut short by his enemies but in the end his
poverty is our wealth and his death and resurrection the only hope for friend
and enemy alike.
Thursday, July 17, 2014
Lectionary 16 A - Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43
Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43
The first hearers of this word were no doubt encouraged by it.
Justice will be done and love wins as good will triumph over evil. It is a good
word for all who weary of a world infested by evil and the misery it causes
even if one hopes God’s judgment is tempered by mercy for weeds in the same way
it is for wheat. In the end the final job of judging between wheat and weeds is
none of our business and naming some ultimately good and others ultimately evil or dividing along the us and them line might just mean we have
some weeds in our wheat as well. Maybe that is the point of the parable on a
more personal level. We are weed and wheat, saint and sinner, and only God can
pull out one without uprooting the other.
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
Pentecost 16 A - Romans 8:12-25
Romans 8:12-25
The sufferings of the present may not be worth comparing with the glory
of the future but when “subjected to futility we groan as in labor” waiting
patiently is not as easy as Paul would make it seem. That is why we are in debt
to hope, charging to the future what we cannot afford in the present so that
these bodies decaying day by day might anticipate the forever future banquet
long before the party has started. The nature of faith is to look past the
present difficulties without denying that they cause us to groan by keeping our
eyes on the prize, which is the day when sorrow and sighing will flee and
groaning will cease. In the meantime we wait with eager expectation, albeit
patiently, by going deeper in debt to hope.
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
Lectionary 16 A - Psalm 86:11-17
Psalm 86:11-7
The psalmist looks to the Lord, gracious and full of compassion, in the
face of violent people intent on doing bodily harm. Maybe it’s not such a good
thing that God is slow to anger and full of kindness when the arrogant rise up
against you. One might be better served by a great God of might to smite the
evil doers. But then all that is needed is a sign of God’s favor that those who
hate will be put to shame, which truth to be told, is where redemption begins
for us as well. Not the kind of shame that leads to destructive behavior or
self loathing. No, it is the sign of God’s favor that exposes the self that is
less true than the self on the other side of shame. Arrogance is shamed by humility,
violence by peace, hatred by love so that the wicked forsake their ways and set
their eyes on the Lord. There is only one sign that can accomplish such things,
the sign upon which the child of the Lord’s handmaid was crucified.
Monday, July 14, 2014
Lectionary 16 A - Isaiah 44:1-8
Isaiah 44:1-8
The
God of Israel is throwing it down in the deity ring. The first, the last, "there
is no other like me" is laying claim to big G God status. Even though the short lived, golden age of Solomon was not solid 14 K and compared to the great
civilizations of history hardly compares the Word of the Lord declares
otherwise. The One who says “there is no other” is telling the truth. Maybe the
proof is that today we praise the God of Israel and not the gods of Assyria or
Babylon or Rome. The word the big G God has for the small and of no account is “do not be afraid”
which is the way this God is like no other. Small g gods are magnified by great
civilizations. The big G God chooses to magnify a nation and people of no account.
Thursday, July 10, 2014
Lectionary 15 A - Matthew
Good soil does not happen by itself and even without the effort of
cultivation is the result of flood or glacier or volcanic eruption. Something
happens to make good soil. Hard path and rocky ground and thorn infested field
take heart. It’s not your fault. Of course we all hope we are good soil,
hearing and understanding and producing bumper crops. But if you are like me
you have good soil days and bad, times of rejoicing in the word and times of
spiritual drought, times of inner peace and contentment and times when choked
by cares and concerns you’re doing well to get out of bed. The good news is that seed sown is not
conditional on the state of the soil. That’s because the consistent sower sows
seed as if it was grown on trees and doesn’t seem to understand or care about the
economics of agriculture. You don’t waste seed where it doesn’t have a prayer
to produce. Some would rename this parable the parable of the soils but I think
it’s still all about the sower who recklessly scatters the seeds of hope and
peace and love and life everywhere, no matter what, and hopes that on good days
and bad we’ll do the same.
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
Lectionary 15 A - Romans 8:1-11
“There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus” even when
those who are in Christ Jesus continue to set their minds on the things of the
flesh. That is because the “no condemnation” clause is due to “thanks be to God
through our Lord Jesus Christ” (Romans 7:25) and not a result of anything we
have done or not done as in “I do not understand my own actions. For what I
want to do I do not do, but what I hate I do.” (Romans 7:15) However, the experience
of “life and peace” is a direct result of setting the mind on the things of the
Spirit. This “setting of the mind” is an orientation towards one thing or
another. Either you believe you are loved by God period end of sentence or you
don’t. Behavior follows belief not vice versa. So to live fully into the Spirit
begins with a confidence that the “no condemnation” clause remains in effect
even when our minds are hostile to God. That is the radical nature of grace and
the risk God takes by dying for ungodly, god-hating sinners before getting a
prenuptial. (Romans 5:6,8,10)
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Lectionary 14 A - Psalm
Psalm 65
“When
deeds of iniquity overwhelm us…” we look to the Lord to forgive our
transgressions and “save us from weak resignation to the evils we deplore”. (God
of Grace and God of Glory - LBW 415) The psalmist could not have imagined the
awesome deed by which God would get the job done and so sings of a God girded
with might whose strength established the mountains and silenced the roaring of
the seas. But it was God in Jesus Christ who was overwhelmed by our
transgressions and the One who established the mountains and silenced the seas struggled
to climb a hill where with his last cry the whole world was stilled. But if
that is where the story ends it would hardly be a source of hope. As it is death
could not contain the One who established the earth and breaking free from the
grip of the grave God set us free as well so that overwhelmed by grace we might be cured of our warring madness and bend our will to God’s control.
Monday, July 7, 2014
Lectionary 15 A - Isaiah 55:10-13
Isaiah 55:10-13
Isaiah
55 begins with a word that goes out from the Lord’s mouth as an invitation to
the thirsty to come and buy food and drink that delights without money and without cost. It is a word for a recently released captive people returned to
Zion who suffer under the weight of harsh conditions while attempting to
rebuild a ruined country. As sure as the seasons, Isaiah tells them, God’s word
will water your work and even the mountains and hills will sing while the trees
and fields keep the beat. It is a word
that requires faith which is not the same as proof as the joy and peace will not come without difficulty. But without the word of hope the wicked will return
to their ways and the unrighteous to their thoughts which leads inevitably to
despair. To hope in the Lord, to trust the promise, is to anticipate the
everlasting sign which is not yet and at the same time already present which
means we sing the future song even while the fields are choked by thistles and
the hills covered with briers.
Thursday, July 3, 2014
Lectionary 14 A - Matthew 11:16-19, 25-30
Matthew 11:16-19, 25-30
Even John who “came neither eating nor drinking” wondered about
his cousin Jesus, “Are you the one who is to come or should we expect someone
else?” (Matthew 11:3) but then Messiahs are held to higher standards than mere
mortals. The people who institutionalized the Exodus, ritually recounting God’s
intervention through plagues and parted sea, expected the great I AM to show up
in the same way the second time round. No one expected that God’s anointed would
turn out to be a drinking man and a friend of tax collectors and sinners. Oh
vey! What was God thinking? It is clear that in Jesus God is operating outside
the religious box of his day which should give the wise and intelligent of our
time reason enough to rethink the ways we try to make the one accused of being
a glutton and drunkard more respectable. Not that wisdom is vindicated by
excess in food or drink but rather in extravagant hospitality that befriends even
those who burdened their own people for a profit or whose lifestyle made them
ritually unclean. There is no where God will not go to invite the weary and
heavy burdened to come and find rest and in doing so hopes Pharisees of every
generation will do the same.
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
Lectionary 14 A - Romans 7:13-25
Romans 7:13-25
Ignorance is bliss and if not for the law we would be
blissfully ignorant of sin. As it is the law makes us painfully aware of sin’s
death grip on our lives as we with Paul lament “I do not do what I want,
but I do the very thing I hate.” But this confession is not the conclusion of
the matter as if we were given a spiritual loophole for bad behavior. That is
because Paul is not concerned primarily with the actions of the body but rather
the inclination of the heart. “These people honor me with their lips but their
hearts are far from me” (Isaiah 29:13) is how God describes those who hide evil
intent behind the mask of outward piety. Since the locus of the rebellious
nature of the human being is a refusal to be fully human (and by that I mean to
be satisfied being a creature without lusting after Creator status) then Paul’s
cry, “wretched man that I am” is far more serious than simple behavior
modification can resolve. So where does
that leave us? Some would say it leaves us in the lurch and we’ll live our
whole lives struggling with temptations beyond our ability to resist which in
the end leads one to despise God or ourselves or despair altogether. No. The conclusion of
the matter comes in the verses that follow, “Therefore, there is now no
condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, because through Christ Jesus
the law of the Spirit who gives life has set you free from the law of sin and
death.” (Romans 8:1-2) We do not have to pay our way by penance or accept the
way we are is the way we always will be or reject the system as a set up. The
resolution of “wretched man that I am” is “there is no condemnation”.
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
Lectionary 14 A - Psalm 145:8-14
Psalm 145:8-14
If all of
the Lord’s works praised and the faithful ones blessed and those who fell down looked
to be lifted up the Lord wouldn't need to be nearly as gracious and
compassionate and slow to anger. As it is even the Lord’s own people push the
Lord to the limit as if slow to anger did not have a tipping point. That
doesn't mean the Lord is stuffing until one day even the Almighty can’t help
but vent all over creation. No, it means the Lord’s nature as gracious and
compassionate is infinitely more patient with us than we are with each other or
ourselves for that matter. The gracious and compassionate nature of the Lord overflows
in steadfast love that will not abandon us despite our fickle nature and
willful ways. So does the Lord have a tipping point? Not in the way that we do
but there comes a time when the Lord leaves us to the destructive works of our
hands and minds, a spiritual timeout if you will, until lost and alone, bowed
down by the burden of our pride or malice or greed or envy or apathy or lust we
turn back to the Lord and experience again the steadfast love that upholds and lifts
us up.