Above: Sky with Rainbow
Redemption and Related Responsibilities
SEPTEMBER 8-10, 2022
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The Collect:
O God, overflowing with mercy and compassion,
you lead back to yourself all those who go astray.
Preserve your people in your loving care,
that we may reject whatever is contrary to you
and may follow all things that sustain our life in
your Son, Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord. Amen.
—Evangelical Lutheran Worship (2006), page 47
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The Assigned Readings:
Genesis 6:1-6 (Thursday)
Genesis 7:6-10; 8:1-5 (Friday)
Genesis 8:20-9:7 (Saturday)
Psalm 51:1-10 (All Days)
1 Timothy 1:1-11 (Thursday)
2 Peter 2:1-10a (Friday)
John 10:11-21 (Saturday)
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Indeed, I have been wicked from my birth,
a sinner from my mother’s womb.
–Psalm 51:6, The Book of Common Prayer (1979)
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The comedian Lewis Black told a joke explaining why God seems more violent in the Hebrew Bible than in the New Testament. Having a son calmed him down. That is, of course, bad theology, for it falls under the heading of the Arian heresy. Furthermore, the God of the Book of Revelation is not the deity of “Kum ba Yah,” a song I despise for several reasons. The Smiter-in-Chief is in full form in the composite story of Noah, based on older stories.
Rewritten folklore and mythology in the Bible presents us with the opportunity to ponder profound theology. We might think that we know a particular tale better than we actually do, so we ought to avoid switching on the automatic pilot. Human immorality saddens God’s heart in Genesis 6:6, but Noah has found favor with God. “Noah,” in Hebrew, is “favor” spelled backward. A note in The Jewish Study Bible–Second Edition (2014) tells me that this
indicates that human perversion and divine grief will not be the last word.
–page 19
Furthermore, the Hebrew word for the ark occurs in just one other story in the Hebrew Bible. It applies also to the basket containing young Moses in Exodus 2. Again The Jewish Study Bible–Second Edition (2014) helps me dig deeper into the scriptures:
Noah foreshadows Moses even as Moses, removed from the water, foreshadows the people Israel, whom he leads to safety through the death-dealing sea that drowns their oppressors (Exod. chs 14-15). The great biblical tale of redemption occurs first in a shorter, universal form, then in a longer, particularistic one.
–page 20
The author of Psalm 51 (traditionally King David, but knows for sure?) understood human sinfulness well. So did the author of 1 Timothy, writing under the name of St. Paul the Apostle. Laws, he noted,
are not framed for people who are good.
–1:9, The Jerusalem Bible (1966)
That statement applies to divine law, certainly. Indeed, in context, it pertains to the Law of Moses. That code, containing timeless principles and culturally specific examples thereof, sometimes becomes a confusing array of laws. Many people mistake culturally specific examples for timeless principles, thereby falling into legalism. The pillars of that code are:
- We mere mortals are totally dependent on God,
- We humans depend upon each other also,
- We humans are responsible for each other, and
- We humans are responsible to each other.
Turning to John 10, we read of Jesus, the Good Shepherd. The sheep need the shepherd, who protects them and lays down his life for them. The sheep also know the shepherd’s voice. I, as a Christian, am one of the sheep. I know my need for God and the ease with which I yield to many temptations. The laws of God exist for people such as me. Divine guidance and redemption play out in my life.
The individual part of religion is important, of course, but it is hardly everything. The collective aspect is crucial also. This truth is especially evident in Judaism, Eastern Orthodoxy, and Roman Catholicism. Much of Protestantism, however, has gone overboard with regard to individualism. Redemption is not just my story or your story. No, it is our story as we relate to God and God relates to us. Society exerts a powerful influence upon our notions of morality and reverence; it shapes us, just as we influence it. May we be salt and light, shaping society according to the four pillars of the Law of Moses and according to the unconditional and free (yet not cheap) love of God.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
MAY 18, 2016 COMMON ERA
THE FEAST OF MALTBIE DAVENPORT BABCOCK, U.S. PRESBYTERIAN MINISTER AND HYMN WRITER
THE FEAST OF SAINT JOHN I, BISHOP OF ROME
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https://blogatheologica.wordpress.com/2016/05/18/redemption-and-related-responsibilities/
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