Above: The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, August 28, 1963
Photographer = Warren K. Leffler
Image Source = Library of Congress
Reproduction Number = LC-DIG-ds-04411
Looking Upon the Heart
SEPTEMBER 30, 2021
OCTOBER 1 and 2, 2021
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The Collect:
Sovereign God, you have created us to live
in loving community with one another.
Form us for life that is faithful and steadfast,
and teach us to trust like little children,
that we may reflect the image of your Son,
Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord. Amen.
–Evangelical Lutheran Worship (2006), page 49
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The Assigned Readings:
Genesis 20:1-18 (Thursday)
Genesis 21:22-34 (Friday)
Genesis 23:1-20 (Saturday)
Psalm 8 (All Days)
Galatians 3:23-29 (Thursday)
Romans 8:1-11 (Friday)
Luke 16:14-18 (Saturday)
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When I consider your heavens, the work of your fingers,
the moon and the stars that you have ordained,
What are mortals, that you should be mindful of them;
mere human beings, that you should seek them out?
You have made them little lower than the angels
and crown them with glory and honour.
–Psalm 8:4-6, The Book of Common Prayer (2004)
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The Book of Genesis is honest about the vices and virtues of Abraham and Sarah. Abraham was a man who valued his relationship with God so much that he acted to the detriment of his family sometimes. Sarah knew jealousy and acted accordingly. Abraham, who preferred that people deal honestly with him, dealt dishonestly with others on occasion, telling lies. These were not the
No, that dress does not make you look fat
variety of lies. No, these were lies with negative consequences for people. Yet Abraham and Sarah were instruments of divine grace in their time. Their legacy has never ceased to exist.
Grace is radical and frequently disturbing. It ignores human-created distinctions (as in the pericope from Galatians) and calls us to live according to a higher purpose. We are free from the shackles we have accepted, those which others have imposed upon us, and those we have imposed upon ourselves. We are free to love God and our fellow human beings as fully as possible, via grace. We are free to follow Jesus, our Lord and Savior, who taught us via words and deeds how to live according to the Kingdom of God.
Recently I watched a sermon by Michael Curry, soon to become the Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church. He spoke of an incident in the Gospels in which our Lord and Savior’s relatives, convinced that Jesus was crazy, sought to take him away and control him. Seeking to control Jesus is what much of the Christian Church has sought to do for a long time, Curry stated accurately. Our Lord and Savior was–and remains–beyond control, fortunately. Yet elements of institutionalized Christianity have retained human-created distinctions (such as those St. Paul the Apostle listed in the pericope from Galatians) and have labeled doing so orthodoxy. Fortunately, other elements of institutionalized Christianity have behaved properly in that regard.
Boundaries provide order, hence definition and psychological security. Some of them are necessary and proper. Other boundaries, however, exclude improperly, labeling members of the household of God as outsiders, unclean persons, et cetera. Jesus, as the Gospels present him, defied social conventions and broke down boundaries relative to, among other factors, gender, ritual impurity, and economic status. Erroneous distinctions regarding gender and economic status remain in societies, of course. Many of us lack the concept of ritual impurity, but we have probably learned from our cultures or subcultures that certain types of people are somehow impure, that contact with them will defile us. Often these are racial or ethnic distinctions.
The example of Jesus commands us to, among other things, lay aside erroneous standards of judging and to consider only the proverbial heart. That is a difficult spiritual vocation, but it is a matter of obedience to God. It is also possible via grace.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
JULY 2, 2014 COMMON ERA
THE FEAST OF WALTER RAUSCHENBUSCH, WASHINGTON GLADDEN, AND JACOB RIIS, ADVOCATES OF THE SOCIAL GOSPEL
THE FEAST OF CHARLES ALBERT DICKINSON, U.S. CONGREGATIONALIST MINISTER AND HYMN WRITER
THE FEAST OF GEORGE DUFFIELD, JR., AND HIS SON, SAMUEL DUFFIELD, U.S. PRESBYTERIAN MINISTERS
THE FEAST OF HENRY MONTAGU BUTLER, EDUCATOR, SCHOLAR, AND ANGLICAN PRIEST
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https://blogatheologica.wordpress.com/2015/07/02/looking-upon-the-heart/
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