Tuesday, June 21, 2005

Starting with Genesis: Bound to God. (Proper A8)

Keywords: Present, Bound

In Jewish tradition the story of Abraham and Isaac is called simply the binding. It is the story of God's provision even in the face of death, defeat and a silent God that is echoed by the psalm.

Remembering the image of Isaac bound in ropes, presented before God as an offering, let us hear Paul.

Do you not know that if you present yourselves to anyone as obedient slaves, you are slaves of the one whom you obey, either of sin, which leads to death, or of obedience, which leads to righteousness?

I hear the idea of presenting your self in Abraham's language. Three times he presents himself with the word Hinneh which translates "here am I." The richness of this word captured my imagination ever since my college roommate told me about it. He was taking Hebrew. It caries with it connotations of, behold I am here! You have my attention! Perhaps even, "I'm Yours." Hinneh!

Starting with Jeremiah: Proclamation (Proper A8)

Jeremiah faces the prophesy of Hananiah, a prophesy that runs counter to what God has told him. Who is the true prophet? Jeremiah points out that it is unusual to prophesy peace. The true prophet is the one whose words come true.

The psalm sings praises to Yahweh for giving the people strength and protection through the king. The blessed people are those who declare the righteousness of the Lord, and glory in His strength. Their praise is tied to their true king who belongs to God.

Isn't Hananiah one of those people? He is proclaiming that God will prevail and the Davidic king, Jehoiachin will be returned to the throne along with the sacred objects. Jehoiachin didn't belong to God; his three-month reign was uneventful. "He did evil in the eyes of the LORD, just as his father had done." God dealt with the land. The proclamation of Jeremiah is the true one.

The psalmist proclaims peace and strength for the land. Could his proclamation be true? Have we ever seen shalom in a geopolitical setting?

The big question: Is Jesus a true prophet? Is he the king the psalmist extols?

He proclaimed the kingdom of God, peace in the cup of cold water and the warm welcome. We are to proclaim it and make it a reality in our world through our deeds. Do we? Do we make him out to be a liar? Or has peace come?

late posts

I apologize for the lateness of this post. The thread of concepts and themes in this week's readings was harder to recognize and follow than others. Some of the readings are short. I prefer to think of the editors of the RCL as master craftsmen expertly redacting pericopes to bring to light a theme or concept, even in ordinary time when it seems they don't.