
Above: Ancient Sardis
Image Source = Google Earth
Alive in Christ
AUGUST 7, 2022
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Blessed Lord, who caused all holy Scriptures to be written for our learning:
Grant us so to hear them, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest them,
that we may embrace and ever hold fast the blessed hope of life,
which you have given us in our Savior Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns
with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
—The Book of Common Prayer (1979), page 236
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Genesis 7:1-10 or Acts 23:1-11
Psalm 128
Revelation 3:1-6
John 7:1-2, 14-24
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I do not apologize to Biblical literalists for pointing out that Genesis 6:19-21 and Genesis 7:2-3 contradict each other. The explanation for the two sets of instructions is simple: an editor “cut and pasted” different sources together.
Psalm 128 is overly simplistic. Sometimes people suffer for keeping the faith. Consider, O reader, the death threats against Jesus in John 7 and the suffering of St. Paul the Apostle in Acts 23.
The message of the church at Sardis (Revelation 3:1-6) remains relevant in many places, unfortunately. A congregation may seem to be alive and thriving. It may be full for worship services. It may have many active programs. It may even have a large and impressive physical structure. Yet such a place is spiritually dead if it has forgotten to make Christ and divine grace central.
I have certain liturgical sensibilities. Good, proper liturgy sets the spiritual table for me in corporate worship. Some people from churches with less formal liturgies regard my liturgical preferences as dead formalism and as going through the motions. They mistake simplicity of worship for sincerity of worship.
I have visited congregations with liturgical styles I regard as insufficient and uninspiring. I have attended worship services at these churches. Functionally, I have merely attended social events. I have, of course, been sociable and well-behaved when doing so. Through it all, though, I have wanted to be somewhere else.
Despite this, I affirm that congregations alive in Christ come in a variety of liturgical styles. Liturgy reflects various factors, including personality, which has a bearing on one’s preferred liturgical style.
Being alive in Christ is another matter, though. It takes congregations and their members through good times and difficult times. It endures.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
JANUARY 19, 2021 COMMON ERA
THE FEAST OF SARGENT SHRIVER AND EUNICE KENNEDY SHRIVER, U.S. HUMANITARIANS
THE FEAST OF SAINTS DEICOLA AND GALL, ROMAN CATHOLIC MONKS; AND SAINT OTHMAR, ROMAN CATHOLIC ABBOT AT SAINT GALLEN
THE FEAST OF ELMER G. HOMRIGHAUSEN, U.S. PRESBYTERIAN MINISTER, BIBLICAL SCHOLAR, AND PROFESSOR OF CHRISTIAN EDUCATION
THE FEAST OF HAROLD A. BOSLEY, UNITED METHODIST MINISTER AND BIBLICAL SCHOLAR
THE FEAST OF HENRY TWELLS, ANGLICAN PRIEST AND HYMN WRITER
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https://blogatheologica.wordpress.com/2021/01/19/alive-in-christ/
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Above: God Speaking to Job; from a Byzantine Manuscript
Image in the Public Domain
Arguing Faithfully With God
AUGUST 14-16, 2023
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The Collect:
O God our defender, storms rage around and within us and cause us to be afraid.
Rescue your people from despair, deliver your sons daughters from fear,
and preserve us in the faith of your Son,
Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord. Amen.
–Evangelical Lutheran Worship (2006), page 44
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The Assigned Readings:
Genesis 7:11-8:5 (Monday)
Genesis 19:1-29 (Tuesday)
Job 36:24-33; 37:14-24 (Wednesday)
Psalm 18:1-19 (All Days)
2 Peter 2:4-10 (Monday)
Romans 9:14-29 (Tuesday)
Matthew 8:23-27 (Wednesday)
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Faithful and pure, blameless and perfect–
yet to the crooked you show yourself shrewd.
Your holy light shines on my darkness;
my steps are guided, my vigor renewed.
Your law will shape my heart and my mind,
letting me find richest blessing.
–Martin Leckebusch, Verse 3, “Refuge and Rock,” a paraphrase of Psalm 18 in Psalms for All Seasons: A Complete Psalter for Worship (2012)
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Elihu, in the Book of Job, was a pious idiot. He condemned Job for challenging God and was sure that the titular character of the text must have done something wrong, for surely a just deity would not permit the innocent to suffer.
The Almighty–we cannot find him;
he is great in power and justice,
and abundant righteousness he will not violate.
Therefore mortals fear him;
he does not regard any who are wise in their conceit.
–Job 37:23-24, The New Revised Standard Version (1989)
The Book of Job 1 and 2, had established, however, that God had permitted this suffering as a test of loyalty. And, starting in Chapter 38, when God spoke to Job, one of the most impatient people in the Bible (despite the inaccurate cliché about the “patience of Job”), the divine reply contained no apology.
(Yes, I know of the layers of composition in the Book of Job, that Elihu’s section was not part of the original text and that the prose wraparounds came later, but I am, in this post, treating the book as a whole, as we have received the final version.)
The readings from Genesis contain parts of accounts of divine destruction of the wicked and sparing of some people in the process. The men of Sodom were as anxious to rape women as they were to violate angels, so their issue was not homosexual orientation or practice but violence against almost anyone on two legs. Their sin involved the opposite of hospitality in a place and at a time when the lack of hospitality could prove fatal for guests or world-be guests. Lot was morally troublesome, for he offered his virgin daughters to the rape gang. Those same daughters got him drunk and committed incest with him later in the chapter. Abraham had at least negotiated with God in an attempt to save lives in Genesis 18:20-33, but Noah did nothing of the sort in his time, according to the stories we have received.
Sometimes the faithful response to God is to argue, or at least to ask, “Did I hear you right?” The Bible contains references to God changing the divine mind and to God holding off judgment for a time. I am keenly aware of the unavoidable anthropomorphism of the deity in the Bible, so I attempt to see through it, all the way to the reality behind it. That divine reality is mysterious and ultimately unfathomable. The titular character of the Book of Job was correct to assert his innocence, which the text had established already, but, in the process of doing so he committed the same error as did Elihu and the three main alleged friends; he presumed to think to know how God does or should work.
This occupies my mind as I read elsewhere (than in the mouth of Elihu or one of the three main alleged friends of Job) about the justice, judgment, and mercy of God. I recall that the prophet Jeremiah argued with God bitterly and faithfully–often for vengeance on enemies. I think also of the repeated cries for revenge and questions of “how long?” in the Book of Psalms and the placement of the same lament in the mouths of martyrs in Heaven in the Book of Revelation. And I recall how often God has extended mercy to me in my ignorance, faithlessness, and panic-driven errors. I conclude that I must continue to seek to embrace the mystery of God, rejecting temptations to accept false and deceptively easy answers as I choose the perhaps difficult alternative of a lack of an answer or a satisfactory reply instead. God is God; I am not. That much I know. Nevertheless, some more answers from God might be good to have. May the faithful argument continue.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
JULY 14, 2014 COMMON ERA
THE FEAST OF MATTHEW BRIDGES, HYMN WRITER
THE FEAST OF SAINT CAMILLUS DE LELLIS, ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIEST
THE FEAST OF SAMSON OCCUM, PRESBYTERIAN PASTOR
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http://blogatheologica.wordpress.com/2014/07/20/arguing-faithfully-with-god/
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