Sunday, August 30, 2020

From Rock to Block: A Sermon for 30 August, 2020, the Thirteenth Sunday After Pentecost,

 

Preached (via Zoom) at All Saints Anglican Church, King City, ON, Diocese of Toronto, Sunday, 3o August, 2020.  Readings for the Thirteenth Sunday After Pentecost:  Exodus 3.1-15, Psalm 26.1-8, Romans 12.9-21,Matthew 16.21-28

 

 

22 And Peter took him aside and began to rebuke him, saying, "God forbid it, Lord! This must never happen to you." 23 But he turned and said to Peter, "Get behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling block to me; for you are setting your mind not on divine things but on human things."

 

From rock to block!

 

I recall one particular soldier who kept me busy during my ministry with the Army.   He was brave and very good at his trade, but he had a singular talent for getting into trouble with money, alcohol, and women.   As his sergeant told me, “Padre, that guy can go from hero to zero so fast it will make your head spin.”

 

That phrase “hero to zero” came to mind this week as I thought of Peter in today’s gospel.    Poor old Peter!  Last week, when Jesus asked the disciples “who do you say I am?”, Peter totally aced the exam.  “You are the Messiah,” he exclaims,”the Son of the living God” (Matthew 16:16), to which Jesus basically says “Well done Peter, go to the head of the class!”   Jesus declares that Peter will be the “rock” on which he will build the church, which in the language of the creeds is the founding moment of the “holy, catholic, and apostolic church” that we are a part of, all because Jesus recognized that Peter was the hero needed to found and build the church.

 

How quickly it all changes!  Here we are just a few verses later in Matthew 16, and Peter goes from hero to zero in a heartbeat!   In Matthew’s gospel, this is the first time that Jesus predicts that he will go to Jerusalem and die there.  He describes his death (note the word “must” in 16.21) as an obligation, something he has to do.   For Peter, who has just identified Jesus as the Messiah, the anointed saviour of Israel, and who was doubtless raised on stories of Israel’s great military heroes from stories such as those in the books of Joshua and Judges, well, this is all a bit much to take.  Peter surely wants a Messiah who wins, not one who loses.

 

Peter doesn’t just challenge Jesus, he “rebukes” him, which in military terms is like telling the general, “sir, that’s crazy talk”.  So it is that Peter goes from hero to zero.    What he can’t recognize is that in telling Jesus not to go to Jerusalem and die, he is essentially repeating the temptation that Satan offered to Jesus in the wilderness to save himself from death, to which Jesus replied “Away with you Satan” (Mt 4.10).  Peter becomes an obstacle on Jesus’ road to Jerusalem, literally a stumbling block (scandalon), which literally means something you can trip over but it also means a trap.   Thus we can say that Peter goes not just from hero to zero, but he goes from rock (the foundation of the church) to stumbling block.  Hero to zero.  Rock to block.  Ouch.  Poor Peter.

 

All this background is necessary to help explain two ensuing phrases which give Christians a lot of trouble.  One is Jesus telling Peter that he is “setting his mind not on divine things but on human things”.  There is a temptation here, especially after hearing Peter called “Satan”, to think of an absolute division between heaven and b earth, so there’s  the divine, God stuff, and the earthly, human stuff, which is bad and maybe even demonic.     Call this way of thinking sacred versus secular.   At it’s worst, it’s sectarian thinking, making believers want to have as little to do with the human world as possible.   At it’s mildest, it makes us compartmentalize God, so that we only occasionally think of ourselves as Christians and disciples while going about our business in the real or physical world.

 

This confusion is made worse when we don’t properly understand what it means to deny ourselves, take up our cross, and follow Jesus.   These words as they are often understood can reinforce the sacred/secular divide and make is think that a life focused on divine things must be a joyless life of abstinence and suffering, like the lives of the early Christian hermits in their hair shirts.    Which is all very strange when we remember that Jesus in the gospels went to weddings, visited the homes of people he loved, ate and drank with friends and was accused of being a glutton and a drunkard.    It all seems very hard to reconcile.

 

What if we didn’t have to think in terms of a faith that called us away from our earthly lives, but which instead enriched them?   What Peter doesn’t understand is that Jesus must go to Jerusalem not only to die, but also to live  (“and on the third day be raised” 16.21).   The cross that Jesus calls us to is thus not life-destroying but life-giving.  The cross gives us eternal life, but it also gives us life in the day to day of our lives.  Our reading from Romans 12 gives us a good sense of what that life looks like:  rejoicing, blessing, befriending, companionship, all in the company of others.   The self that has to be denied in that life is the self that gets in the way of these things – cursing, hating, grudge-holding, pettiness, hatefulness, hoarding, and selfishness, fear and bigotry and racism.   No one wants to be that guy!   These are all the dark things that we need to take to the cross and give to God so that we are free to live the way God wants us to live.

 

This calling sounds like a life worth living, like our best possible life, and it is!  It’s what I called in an earlier sermon our vocation, our calling as disciples of Christ.   But what if we slip up?  We are, on occasion, selfish, we are constantly tempted to put our needs before those of others.   What if we, like Peter, go from rock to block, from hero to zero?  Because we probably will, on any given day.   In which case, God will say to us, as he says to Peter, “get behind me”.   Jesus never says “Get away from me”.   He only says that to Satan.  He won’t say that to us. Getting behind Jesus means retaking our rightful place as a disciple, as a follower.  Following Jesus means that we won’t get lost, and we don’t want to be lost, because Jesus is taking us to our best life.

 

  

 

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Daily Devotional fo Wednesday, 26 August, 2020

Prayers for Wednesday, 26 August, 2020 (Proper 21, Trinity 11)

 

Today we begin a more compressed format, as my time available for his project is limited.  Only the reading that is the subject of the commentary is featured in full; the rest are available by link, as are the daily prayers and intercessions.  MP+

 

Invitatory

 

O God, make speed to save us.

 

Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit:

as it was in the beginning, is now, and will be for ever.

Amen.

 

The Lord is our refuge and our strength:  O come, let us worship.

 

Hebrew Scriptures 

Job 6.1; 7.1–21

 

Then Job answered:

‘Do not human beings have a hard service on earth,

   and are not their days like the days of a labourer? 

Like a slave who longs for the shadow,

   and like labourers who look for their wages, 

so I am allotted months of emptiness,

   and nights of misery are apportioned to me. 

When I lie down I say, “When shall I rise?”

   But the night is long,

   and I am full of tossing until dawn. 

My flesh is clothed with worms and dirt;

   my skin hardens, then breaks out again. 

My days are swifter than a weaver’s shuttle,

   and come to their end without hope. 

 

‘Remember that my life is a breath;

   my eye will never again see good. 

The eye that beholds me will see me no more;

   while your eyes are upon me, I shall be gone. 

As the cloud fades and vanishes,

   so those who go down to Sheol do not come up; 

they return no more to their houses,

   nor do their places know them any more. 

 

‘Therefore I will not restrain my mouth;

   I will speak in the anguish of my spirit;

   I will complain in the bitterness of my soul. 

Am I the Sea, or the Dragon,

   that you set a guard over me? 

When I say, “My bed will comfort me,

   my couch will ease my complaint”, 

then you scare me with dreams

   and terrify me with visions, 

so that I would choose strangling

   and death rather than this body. 

I loathe my life; I would not live for ever.

   Let me alone, for my days are a breath. 

What are human beings, that you make so much of them,

   that you set your mind on them, 

visit them every morning,

   test them every moment? 

Will you not look away from me for a while,

   let me alone until I swallow my spittle? 

If I sin, what do I do to you, you watcher of humanity?

   Why have you made me your target?

   Why have I become a burden to you? 

Why do you not pardon my transgression

   and take away my iniquity?

For now I shall lie in the earth;

   you will seek me, but I shall not be.’

 

Psalm

Psalm 119.1–24 : the Glories of God’s Law 

 

Epistle

Acts 10.1–16 Peter and Cornelius  

 

Gospel

Jn 7.1–13 Unbelief of Jesus’ brothers, Festival of Booths 

 

Commentary (Father Michael)

 

Continuing with the story of Job.  Whereas the first of Job’s friends offered hope and the prospect of a long life if he turned back to God (the assumption being that Job must have sinned to have received such disaster), Job here rejects hope altogether.  While he accepts that he must have committed some “transgression” or “iniquity” that has made him a “target” to God, he laments that he will die without pardon.

 

My study bible notes that Job’s words “What are human beings, that you make so much of them, that you set your mind on them” are a parody of Psalm 8:4-5, where the same question is asked, but then the psalmist praises God for giving humans “glory and honour” and putting them in charge of all creation.   Here Job simply asks why God made humans if all they experience in their short lives is torment?

 

Anyone who has tried to comfort a person in anguish and despair has likely heard similar questions.  Where is God in my suffering?  Why has God allowed horrible things to happen to me?  If there is a God, he must be a bastard.    To reply with a pat theological answer would only make things worse.  I would certainly not attempt a quick answer to Job. The value of the Book of Job, I think, is that the character of Job expresses emotions and questions that come to us in our darkest moments. We can take our time in answering them.

 

Questions

How would you speak to a friend giving voice to despair like Job’s?  What other questions come to mind in today’s passages?

 

Intercession

Daily prayers and hymns from Oremus:  

 

Anglican Communion Cycle of Prayer:

Olympia (The Episcopal Church) The Rt Revd Gregory Rickel Busoga (Uganda) The Rt Revd Paul Moses Samson Naimanhye 

Diocese of Toronto Cycle of Prayer:  Grace Church, Markham

 

The Lord’s Prayer

 

Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name, thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom, the power, and the glory, for ever and ever. Amen.

 

 

Collect

 

Almighty God, we are taught by your word that all our doings without love are worth nothing.  Send your Holy Spirit and pour into our hearts that most excellent gift of love, the true bond of peace and of all virtue; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

 

Let us bless the Lord.

Thanks be to God.

Monday, August 24, 2020

Daily Devotional for Monday, August 24, Feast of St. Bartholomew

 

Prayers for Monday, 24 August, 2020 (Proper 21, Trinity 11)

 

Today is the feast of Saint Bartholomew, the Apostle. 

Prayers for Monday, 24 August, 2020 (Proper 21, Trinity 11)

 

Today is the feast of Saint Bartholomew, the Apostle.  https://oremus.blog/2020/08/23/oremus-for-monday-august-24-2020/

 

 

 

Invitatory

 

O God, make speed to save us.

 

Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit:

as it was in the beginning, is now, and will be for ever.

Amen.

 

The Lord is our refuge and our strength:  O come, let us worship.

 

Hebrew Scriptures 

Job 4.1,5.1-11,17-21,26-27

 

Then Eliphaz the Temanite answered:

 

‘Call now; is there anyone who will answer you?

To which of the holy ones will you turn? 

Surely vexation kills the fool,

   and jealousy slays the simple. 

I have seen fools taking root,

   but suddenly I cursed their dwelling. 

Their children are far from safety,

   they are crushed in the gate,

   and there is no one to deliver them. 

The hungry eat their harvest,

   and they take it even out of the thorns;

   and the thirsty pant after their wealth. 

For misery does not come from the earth,

   nor does trouble sprout from the ground; 

but human beings are born to trouble

   just as sparks fly upward. 

 

‘As for me, I would seek God,

   and to God I would commit my cause. 

He does great things and unsearchable,

   marvellous things without number. 

He gives rain on the earth

   and sends waters on the fields; 

he sets on high those who are lowly,

   and those who mourn are lifted to safety. 

‘How happy is the one whom God reproves;

   therefore do not despise the discipline of the Almighty. 

For he wounds, but he binds up;

   he strikes, but his hands heal. 

He will deliver you from six troubles;

   in seven no harm shall touch you. 

In famine he will redeem you from death,

   and in war from the power of the sword. 

You shall be hidden from the scourge of the tongue,

   and shall not fear destruction when it comes. 

You shall come to your grave in ripe old age,

   as a shock of grain comes up to the threshing-floor in its season. 

See, we have searched this out; it is true.

   Hear, and know it for yourself.’ 

 

Psalm

Psalm 1   

 

 

Happy are those

   who do not follow the advice of the wicked,

or take the path that sinners tread,

   or sit in the seat of scoffers; 

but their delight is in the law of the Lord,

   and on his law they meditate day and night. 

They are like trees

   planted by streams of water,

which yield their fruit in its season,

   and their leaves do not wither.

In all that they do, they prosper. 

 

The wicked are not so,

   but are like chaff that the wind drives away. 

Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgement,

   nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous; 

for the Lord watches over the way of the righteous,

   but the way of the wicked will perish.

 

 

 

Epistle

Acts 9.19b-31 (Saul in Damascus and Jerusalem)

http://bible.oremus.org/?ql=465275208

 

 

Gospel

John 6.52-59

 

The Jews then disputed among themselves, saying, ‘How can this man give us his flesh to eat?’ So Jesus said to them, ‘Very truly, I tell you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood have eternal life, and I will raise them up on the last day; for my flesh is true food and my blood is true drink. Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood abide in me, and I in them. Just as the living Father sent me, and I live because of the Father, so whoever eats me will live because of me. This is the bread that came down from heaven, not like that which your ancestors ate, and they died. But the one who eats this bread will live for ever.’ He said these things while he was teaching in the synagogue at Capernaum.

 

Commentary (Father Michael)

 

Continuing with the story of Job.  Because of the weekend’s interruption, we missed Job 3, where Job begins to give vent to his sorrows.  He does not, as his wife urged him to (2.9), curse God, but he does curse all of creation, in a kind of negative parallel of the order of creation at the start of Genesis (3.3-10).    Job’s outburst to his friends begins the heart of the book of Job, a dialogue in three rounds of exchanges between Job and his friends.   At the heart of these exchanges is the question of theodicy, a theological term meaning the problem of evil.

 

Job in chapter three asks the immediate question, “why me?”, but sets it within the larger question of “why do I exist in a created order that permits the sort of suffering that I have experienced?”  Anyone who has experienced suffering, from the loss of a child, a spouse, or of one’s own health, has felt the immediacy of such questions, and the terror that there may be no answer to them.   

 

The first of Job’s friends to speak, Epliphaz, offers a rebuttal that one often hears from the religious, that since suffering is not random (5.6), it must come from God as punishment for sin (4.7-8).   This argument is often reached for in moments of disaster; I have heard it offered as an explanation for the Covid-19 pandemic, just as it was advanced for AIDs in the 1980s and for the 9-11 attacks of 2001.   Jesus in the gospels is often asked if sufferings and disease are caused by sin, and he never answers in the affirmative.  Even Eliphaz’ point about children being “crushed in the gate” would put the blame upon Job’s dead children for their house collapsing on them!  His argument is essentially, turn back to God, regain favour with him, and all will be well.   As we work through Job, we will be frequently challenged to sort out the bad arguments from the lofty prose of Job’s friends.

 

 

 

 

 

Questions

If a friend told you what God was punishing you for your misfortune, how would you react?   What would you say in response to Eliphaz? 

What other questions come to mind in today’s passages?

 

Intercession

 

Let us pray to God,

whose word was entrusted to the Apostles

and has spread to all the world.

 

For the Church of the living God throughout the world, let us ask the riches of his grace.  Today we pray in the Anglican Communion Cycle of Prayer for the clergy and people of these Dioceses and for their bishops:  Kibondo (Tanzania) The Rt Revd Sospeter Ndenza; Kigali (Rwanda) The Rt Revd Nathan Amooti Rusengo; Kigeme (Rwanda) The Rt Revd Assiel Musabyimana 

 In our Diocesan cycle, we pray for the clergy and people of Christ Church, Woodbridge.

 

Empower your Church to proclaim the saving message of Jesus Christ.

Lord of mercy, spread your word.

 

Give us courage and strength to spread the Gospel in places

where it has not been preached.

Lord of mercy, spread your word.

 

Bless us in our personal lives that we may live fully according to Jesus’ example.

Lord of mercy, spread your word.

 

Open our eyes to your Word in the Holy Scriptures

that we find new paths of understanding.

Lord of mercy, spread your word.

 

Remember, in your mercy, those who have gone before

marked with the sign of faith and led by the Gospel.

Lord of mercy, spread your word.

 

 

The Lord’s Prayer

 

Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name, thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom, the power, and the glory, for ever and ever. Amen.

 

 

Collect

 

 

Almighty and everlasting God, who gave to your apostle Bartholomew grace to believe and preach your word, may your Church truly love what he believed and faithfully preach what he taught; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.   Amen.

 

Almighty God, we are taught by your word that all our doings without love are worth nothing.  Send your Holy Spirit and pour into our hearts that most excellent gift of love, the true bond of peace and of all virtue; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

 

Let us bless the Lord.

Thanks be to God.

Who Is He? A Sermon for the Twelfth Sunday After Pentecost

 

Preached (via Zoom) Sunday, August 23, 2020, the Twelfth Sunday After Pentecost, at All Saints Anglican Church, King City, ON, Diocese of Toronto.

Readings for this Sunday:   Exodus 1.8 - 2.10; Psalm 138.1-8; Romans 12.1-8; Mathew 16.13-20

 

 

He said to them, "But who do you say that I am?" (Mt 16.15)

 

“What do people think about Jesus today?  Who is he?”

“Some say a major historical figure of the first century who started one of the great world religions.”

“Some say a good, wise  man, like Gandhi and Martin Luther King, who gave us some great words to live by.”

“Some say a subversive.   A political revolutionary.”

“OK, so what about you.  Who do you say that I am?  Who do you say that I, Jesus, am?”

This is the question that our identities as Christians revolve around.  Whenever it was in our lives that we consciously decided to call ourselves as Christians, or disciples, or even Anglicans, then we must have formulated some answer to that question.   We must have decided who Jesus was for us.

For some of us, your answer as to who Jesus is may be a bedrock certainty, but for others, it may have been, it may still be, a harder question to answer than we might care to admit to our church friends, and that’s okay.  Perhaps we had different answers depending on when and where we were in our faith lives depending on whether we were busy, or in crisis, or feeling in control of things, or strong or weak, young or old.    

Peter’s confident answer ("You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God”)  may come easily for some of us, while others might say, “well, Peter, that was easy for you, you knew Jesus, you saw him feed all those people with just a few scraps of bread, and hey, he actually grabbed your hand and pulled you out of the water when  you were drowning!”  Well, perhaps, though Peter in the remainder of the gospel is not a superman of faith, and even after the resurrection, Matthew says of the rest of the disciples as a whole, “When they saw him, they worshipped him; but some doubted” (Mt 28.17).

Possibly some of these disciples had a foot in both camps, worshipping and simultaneously doubting.   If so, that doesn’t sound like a hedging of bets to me as much as it sounds like our human condition.   I have known good, solid Anglicans, pillars of their parishes, reliable, hard working, dependable, who have quietly admit to me that they don’t’ always feel that they can check all the boxes of their faith, or say every item of the creeds with equal conviction.   Barabara Brown Taylor, an American preacher, noted somewhere that the reason we say the creeds together in church is so that others can speak for us when we have trouble saying them, because on another day, under other circumstances, we might be called to say the creeds for others, when they might struggle.    Sometimes we depend on the faith of others.

 That’s why we are the people of God.  We are church, the body of Christ.   It’s not up to us to believe as atomized individuals.   As Paul notes in our reading from Romans, we all have different gifts,   Our belief may depend one day on the teaching we receive from someone, on another day it may depend on the encouragement we receive from someone else, and on yet another day our belief may be buttressed by the cheerfulness of someone who has also suffered their share of adversity.   Belief is not something that we have to manufacture within us.    As Jesus tells Peter, and as the sheep in today’s cartoon wisely remind us, belief is grace, given to us by God, and often the avenue of that belief, the way in which that grace is incarnated, is in the life and faith and witness of another believer.   Not being church is in part why the separation of pandemic has been so hard on so many of us, because we have deprived of the company of those whose belief inspires us.

Because we are church, our faith entails on us the ministry of witness, the responsibility that we are called to explain what it means to be the body of Christ.   We are church because we all have some answer to Jesus’ question, “Who do you say that I am?”.   As church, we have a duty, a responsibility, to tell the world who Jesus is.   In fact, and this is the big idea of my ministry that I will keep returning to in the time that I have with you, if we are a church that can say something true and compelling about who Jesus, then we will be a church that will grow.   Conversely, a church that doesn’t have anything to say about Jesus is a church that is doomed to irrelevance and decline.

So what is something true that we can say about Jesus?     Can we join with Peter in calling him “the Messiah, the Son of the Living God”?  It would be desirable if we could, but perhaps that language, theological and abstract, might not convince someone who doesn’t really know Jesus, or who is suspicious of church language.  It might seem too abstract, too pat.   So what if we were to find ways of speaking about Jesus that connect things he does to things that we have known in our lives?  What if we could say something about Jesus that was true for us and compelling to others?

Was there a time when you were hungry, starving for meaning and hope, perhaps out of a job, and someone fed you, either spiritually or physically?   If so, then you can talk about Jesus as the bread of life.   Was there a time where you hurt someone, either inadvertently or in some petty moment, and they forgave you?  Then you’ve lived the parable of the prodigal son and you get Jesus’ message of fogiveness.   Have you had someone stand with you when others abandoned you?  They you’ve lived the parable of the Good Samaritan and you understand Jesus’ message of love.  Have you come through a profound loss or bereavement, and found hope on the other side?   Then you know something about Jesus, the resurrection and the life.  If you have experienced any of these things, than you have something good to say about Jesus and your life will reflect your faith in a real and attractive way.

This is what I meant about “true for us and compelling to others”.   My hunch is that we all have times in our life stories when have experienced something of Christ’s love and life.  Those moments are what make our faith real and compelling.  A church that knows who Jesus is can show a living faith that makes a difference in real lives, that shows in joyfulness, compassion, and hope.   A church that knows Jesus is a church that can worship with meaning and passion – even when wearing a mask!  If a church can show Jesus to others in the lived lives of its members, then the theology will follow.  The theology doesn’t have to come first.

Here’s a final thought about why this is all important.    For a long time we the church assumed that the Christian story would be carried on and perpetuated in the institutions and living memory of our society.  We grew up in a Christian culture, it was the sea that we swam in.   But stories are forgotten.  Think about our first lesson, at the start of the book of Exodus: “Now a new king arose over Egypt, who did not know Joseph” (Ex 8.1).  Joseph and all that he did for Egypt was forgotten by the new rulers, but faith in God and in his promises remained strong in the hearts of the women who entrusted Moses to the river, and their faith was rewarded.   

Our Christian story is only as real as those who remember it and live it.  Without them, it will be forgotten.  It matters.  It’s the best story that there is, it’s the best answer to what people need to hear.  That story lives in our hearts and in our lives. Who do we say that Jesus is?   We say that he is light, and love, and hope, and life.   We say with Peter that he is Son of God.   We say that for one another when we need to hear it.  We say it to a world that needs to hear it.

Friday, August 21, 2020

Friday Theology: Tom Holland on the Appeal of Paul's Gospel

 

I’m currently reading Tom Holland’s book, Dominion:  How the Christian Revolution Remade the World (New York:  Basic Books / Hachette, 2019).  Holland is book is religious history, written by an outsider with some knowledge of Christianity, but it is not theology.   Nevertheless, I found this description of Paul’s gospel message to be both brief and a compelling summary of Paul’s own theology.  MP+

 

To an age which - in the shadow first of Alexander’s empire, and then of Rome’s - had become habituated to the yearnings of a universal order, Paul was preaching a deity who recognized no borders, no divisions.  Paul had no ceased to reckon himself a Jew; but he had come to view he marks of his distinctiveness as a Jew, circumcision, avoidance of pork, and all, as so much ‘rubbish’.  It was trust in God, no a line of descent, that was to distinguish the children of Abraham.  The Galatians had no less right to the title than the Jews.  The malign powers that previously had kept them enslaved had been routed by Christ’s victory on the cross.   The fabric of things was rent, a new order of time had come into existence, and all that previously had saved to separate people was now, as a consequence, dissolved.  “There is neither Jew not Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus”.

Only the world turned upside down could ever have sanctioned such an unprecendented, such a revolutionary, announcement.  If Paul did not stint, in a province adorned with monuments to Caesar, in hammering home the full horror and humiliation of Jesus’ death, then it was because, without the crucifixion, he would have had no gospel to proclaim.  Christ, by making himself nothing, by taking on the very nature of a slave, had plumbed the depths to which only the lowest, the poorest, the most persecuted and abused of mortals were confined.  If Paul could not leave the sheer wonder of this alone, if he had risked everything to proclaim it to strangers likely to find i disgusting, or lunatic, or both, then that was because he had been brought by his vision of the risen Jesus to gaze directly into what it meant for him and for all the world.   That Christ - whose participation in the divine sovereignty over space and time he seems never to have doubted - had become human, and suffered death on the ultimate instrument of torture, was precisely the measure of Paul’s understanding of God: that He was love.   Paul, in proclaiming it, offered himself as the surest measure of its truth.  He was nothing, worse than nothing, a man who had persecuted Christ’s followers, foolish and despised; and yet he had been forgiven and saved.   “I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me."

And, if Paul, then why not everybody else?

Daily Devotional for Friday, 21 August, 2020

Prayers for Friday, 21 August, 2020 (Proper 20, Trinity10)

 

Today in the Christian calendar we remember Blaise Pascal (d 1662), scientist and religious thinker.  

 

 

Invitatory

 

O God, make speed to save us.

 

Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit:

as it was in the beginning, is now, and will be for ever.

Amen.

 

The Lord is our refuge and our strength:  O come, let us worship.

 

Hebrew Scriptures 

Job 2.1-13

One day the heavenly beings came to present themselves before the Lord, and Satan also came among them to present himself before the Lord. The Lord said to Satan, ‘Where have you come from?’ Satan answered the Lord, ‘From going to and fro on the earth, and from walking up and down on it.’ The Lord said to Satan, ‘Have you considered my servant Job? There is no one like him on the earth, a blameless and upright man who fears God and turns away from evil. He still persists in his integrity, although you incited me against him, to destroy him for no reason.’ Then Satan answered the Lord, ‘Skin for skin! All that people have they will give to save their lives. But stretch out your hand now and touch his bone and his flesh, and he will curse you to your face.’ The Lord said to Satan, ‘Very well, he is in your power; only spare his life.’

So Satan went out from the presence of the Lord, and inflicted loathsome sores on Job from the sole of his foot to the crown of his head. Job took a potsherd with which to scrape himself, and sat among the ashes.

Then his wife said to him, ‘Do you still persist in your integrity? Curse God, and die.’ But he said to her, ‘You speak as any foolish woman would speak. Shall we receive the good at the hand of God, and not receive the bad?’ In all this Job did not sin with his lips.

Now when Job’s three friends heard of all these troubles that had come upon him, each of them set out from his home—Eliphaz the Temanite, Bildad the Shuhite, and Zophar the Naamathite. They met together to go and console and comfort him. When they saw him from a distance, they did not recognize him, and they raised their voices and wept aloud; they tore their robes and threw dust in the air upon their heads. They sat with him on the ground for seven days and seven nights, and no one spoke a word to him, for they saw that his suffering was very great. 

 

 

Psalm

Psalm 140   

 

Deliver me, O Lord, from evildoers;

   protect me from those who are violent, 

who plan evil things in their minds

   and stir up wars continually. 

They make their tongue sharp as a snake’s,

   and under their lips is the venom of vipers.

          Selah 

 

Guard me, O Lord, from the hands of the wicked;

   protect me from the violent

   who have planned my downfall. 

The arrogant have hidden a trap for me,

   and with cords they have spread a net;

   along the road they have set snares for me.

          Selah 

 

I say to the Lord, ‘You are my God;

   give ear, O Lord, to the voice of my supplications.’ 

O Lord, my Lord, my strong deliverer,

   you have covered my head in the day of battle. 

Do not grant, O Lord, the desires of the wicked;

   do not further their evil plot.

          Selah 

 

Those who surround me lift up their heads;

   let the mischief of their lips overwhelm them! 

Let burning coals fall on them!

   Let them be flung into pits, no more to rise! 

Do not let the slanderer be established in the land;

   let evil speedily hunt down the violent! 

 

I know that the Lord maintains the cause of the needy,

   and executes justice for the poor. 

Surely the righteous shall give thanks to your name;

   the upright shall live in your presence.

 

 

 

 

Epistle

Acts 9.1-9 (The Conversion of Saul)

http://bible.oremus.org/?ql=465006824

 

Gospel

John 6.27-40

Do not work for the food that perishes, but for the food that endures for eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you. For it is on him that God the Father has set his seal.’ Then they said to him, ‘What must we do to perform the works of God?’ Jesus answered them, ‘This is the work of God, that you believe in him whom he has sent.’ So they said to him, ‘What sign are you going to give us then, so that we may see it and believe you? What work are you performing? Our ancestors ate the manna in the wilderness; as it is written, “He gave them bread from heaven to eat.” ’ Then Jesus said to them, ‘Very truly, I tell you, it was not Moses who gave you the bread from heaven, but it is my Father who gives you the true bread from heaven. For the bread of God is that which comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.’ They said to him, ‘Sir, give us this bread always.’

Jesus said to them, ‘I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty. But I said to you that you have seen me and yet do not believe. Everything that the Father gives me will come to me, and anyone who comes to me I will never drive away; for I have come down from heaven, not to do my own will, but the will of him who sent me. And this is the will of him who sent me, that I should lose nothing of all that he has given me, but raise it up on the last day. This is indeed the will of my Father, that all who see the Son and believe in him may have eternal life; and I will raise them up on the last day.’

 

 

Commentary (Father Michael)

 

Pressing on today with the story of Job. and what a difficult thing to read, with its suggestion that God would willingly allow us to experience suffering!  God’s giving Job into the power of Satan, like the story of the sacrifice of Isaac in Genesis, can be difficult to reconcile with our idea of God as a loving father.  All I can suggest for now is that we be willing to sit with that tension and unease as we work our way through Job.

 

The second exchange between God and Satan (2.1-3a) is word for word identical with the first exchange (1.6-8), and this repetition reminds us of how folktales often work.  Job probably originated as a folktale, which took on theological weight as the canon of the Hebrew scriptures was developed.  Likewise the words of Job’s wife, which elicit a statement of faithful patience from Job (2.9-10), mirror Job’s reaction to the terrible news he receives from the surviving servant (1.13-22).  In both cases, the theme of the story, of faithful acceptance of the good and bad that life brings, is developed.

 

The appearance of Job’s friends at the end of chapter 2 completes the prologue and sets the stage for the long debates that follow.  Their strategy, to sit silently with their friend in solidarity with his suffering, is admirable.  As anyone trained in pastoral care and visiting knows, the most effective thing one can do when visiting is to be a compassionate presence, so the one suffering knows that they are not alone.  Usually the worst thing that a visitor can do is to show up and start talking!   We shall see how well Job’s friends do as we go on.

 

 

Questions

Is God giving Job into Satan’s power problematic for you?   How do you respond to Job’s continuing faithfulness amid all that he has suffered?  

What other questions come to mind in today’s passages?

 

Intercession

 

Let us pray in faith to God our Father, to his Son Jesus Christ, and to the Holy Spirit, saying, “Lord, hear and have mercy.”

 

For the Church of the living God throughout the world, let us ask the riches of his grace.  Today we pray in the Anglican Communion Cycle of Prayer for the clergy and people of these Dioceses and for their bishops:  Oleh (Nigeria) The Rt Revd John Usiwoma Aruakpor, and Bunyoro-Kitara (Uganda) The Rt Revd Samuel Kahuma 

 In our Diocesan cycle, we pray for the clergy and people of St. Paul, Runnymede.

 

 Lord, hear and have mercy.

 

For all who proclaim he word of truth, especially all who struggle to communicate the gospel within the isolation and restrictions of the pandemic, 

Lord, hear and have mercy.

 

For all who have consecrated their lives to the kingdom of God, and for all struggling to follow the way of Christ, let us all the gifts of the Spirit.

Lord, hear and have mercy.

 

For Elizabeth our Queen, for Justin our Prime Minister, and for all who govern the nations, that they may strive for justice and peace, let us ask the strength of God.

Lord, hear and have mercy.

 

For the people of Belarus, as they struggle to claim their stolen election, and for the people of Lebanon, dealing with failed government and the aftermath of the Beirut explosion.

Lord, hear and have mercy.

 

For scholars and research workers, particularly for those working on treatments and a vaccine for Covid 19, and for all whose work seeks to benefit humanity, let us ask the light of the Lord.

Lord, hear and have mercy.

 

We pray to be forgiven our sins and set free from all hardship, distress, want, war, and injustice.

Lord, hear and have mercy.

 

For all who have passed from this life in faith and obedience,  and for all who have perished from Covid 19 and from diseases that went untreated because hospitals were overwhelmed, let us ask the peace of Christ.

Lord, hear and have mercy.

 

 

The Lord’s Prayer

 

Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name, thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom, the power, and the glory, for ever and ever. Amen.

 

 

Collect

 

 

Almighty God, who gave your servant Blaise Pascal a great Intellect, that he might explore the mysteries of your creation, and who kindled in his heart a love for you and a devotion to your service: Mercifully give us your servants, according to our various callings, gifts of excellence in body, mind, and will, and the grace to use them diligently and to your glory, through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.

 

Almighty God, you have broken the tyranny of sin and sent into our hearts the Spirit of your Son.  Give us grace to dedicate our freedom to your service, that all people may know the glorious liberty of the children of God; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

 

Let us bless the Lord.

Thanks be to God.

Mad Padre

Mad Padre
Opinions expressed within are in no way the responsibility of anyone's employers or facilitating agencies and should by rights be taken as nothing more than one person's notional musings, attempted witticisms, and prayerful posturings.

Followers

Blog Archive

Labels