In September the ordered world of Proverbs and James is read
against the cross of Marks world. Walter Brueggemann
reminds us of Karl Marxs dictum, "The ruling ideas of
each age have ever been the ideas of its ruling class."
Who benefited by our pious simplistic characterizations of the
Hebrew scriptures as law and the New Testament as grace? How did
reading Proverbs and not the Prophets prepare us so easily to
turn the symbol of the authorities answer to those who
defied them into a symbol of the devotional life that posed no
threat to the authorities? Septembers meditations will
bring a chill to "whatever is, is right."
Likewise, Octobers Bible passages may enlarge and
disturb our image of God. We meet a God who asks us questions. We
meet a God who balances the scales in the marital relationship
and puts children at the center of what God is about, and a woman
who models what it means to be faithful in a relationship.
New world a-coming.
Disturbing world a-coming.
September 4
Who Are God's People?
Proverbs 22:1-2, 8-9, 22-23; Psalm 125; James 2:1-10, (11-13),
14-17; Mark 7:24-37
Earlier translations render the first verse of todays
scripture as "The rich and poor meet together," but the
New Revised Standard Version specifies the basis of the meeting:
"The rich and poor have this in common: The Lord is the
maker of them all."
These proverbs assigned to a royal author do not question the
fact that there are rich and poor people in the world. He is only
concerned with how they are to be treated. He who has a
"bountiful eye" will be blessed.
The responsive psalm assures us the Lord protects the people.
The nagging question stays with us: Who are the Lords
people?
The gospel begins to break through with unexpected answers to
that question. In the first place, Jesus is in Gentile
territoryno longer in the land of the chosen people. In the
second place, he has an encounter with a womana feisty
woman at that. He is tired. He wants his whereabouts to be
unknown, but a woman, a Gentile with an urgent missionher
daughter is illfinds out he is there and comes for help.
His reply to her has troubled the commentators on this passage
for hundreds of years.
God-made-man responds in all his humanness. He is tired,
weary, a Jew encountering a Gentile. "Let the children be
fed first, for it is not fair to take the childrens food
and throw it to the dogs." The woman is undaunted. She takes
the worst he can throw at her and tosses it back at him.
"Sir, even the dogs under the table eat the childrens
crumbs."
Too little attention has been given to this, one of the great
encounters in the New Testament. It doesnt fit with our
pious picture of Jesus. Did he laugh? She had turned the tables
on him. Did he say, "Lady, you win"? The record
doesnt say. We can only imagine. The record does say that
"for saying that, you may gothe demon has left your
daughter."
The people of God have been enlarged.
September 11
How Long Will You Love Being Simple?
Proverbs 1:20-33; Psalm 19; James 3:1-12; Mark 8:27-38
The mysterious and attractive figure of Wisdom enters our
meditations. She cries aloud in the streets, asking a poignant
question: "How long, O simple ones, will you love being
simple?"
How long, O Lord, how long?
How long will we refuse to understand?
Psalm 19 tells us of the wonders of God. "The heavens are
telling the glory of God, and the firmament proclaims Gods
handiwork." Image is piled on image: The sun comes out like
the bridegroom and, like a strong man, runs its course with joy.
The law is as much a wondrous creation as the heavens,
"sweeter also than honey."
Wisdoms question remains with us. How long, O simple
ones, will you love being simple? How long will we refuse to
understand?
Within the joy and beauty of Psalm 19, we are reminded that
the law is as much a wondrous creation as the heavens. To the
nature worshipers comes he who fulfilled the law and paid the
price of a cross.
The gospel brings us to that moment on the road to Caesarea
Philippi when Jesus was trying to make the disciples understand.
"Who do people say that I am?" he asked them. He got a
variety of answersall good possibilities but none
reflecting the new thing God was about to do. Finally Peter said
Jesus was the Messiah ("Christ" in Greek), he by whom
the kingdom of God would be made known.
In parable after parable, Jesus had told them what the kingdom
of God was like, but a world turned upside-down was outside the
realm of the possible for them. A suffering and dying Messiah? A
crucified Messiah?
Too complicated for us. We love our sweet little Jesus who
died for our sinsnot because of our sin, the choice against
Gods way.
Is it possible we love being simple? It is safer that way. If
we dont understand, we dont have to be challenged,
confronted, disturbed. If we dont understand, we can keep
our religion personal and private. Wisdom was right. We love
being simple.
September 18
Week of the Law
Proverbs 31:10-31; Psalm 1; James 3:13-4:3, 7-8a; Mark 9:30-37
This week we are back to simplicityand a rude awakening.
The reading from Proverbs presents us with the well-known image
of the good wife. In the year of our Lord, 1994, it is almost
impossible for many women to take this image of the biblical
paragon seriously. We live in an age of comic strip
figuresHi and Lois where Hi is left to placate the children
with a makeshift dinner while Lois dashes off breathlessly,
attache case in hand, to close out a real-estate deal
(surprisingly, not unlike the good wife of Proverbs who
"considers a field and buys it"). Ms. 1994 will surely
note that missing from this is the husband who only appears to
praise.
What can we learn from this passage? Is it wishful thinking?
An apology for all the harsh images of women elsewhere in
Proverbs?
The responsive psalm is Psalm 1, the epitome of the
well-ordered world of Torah life. Into that well-ordered world
crashed the Prophets with a new message"I abhor the
pride of Jacob." And then the last and greatest of the
Prophets, who, as Ched Myers says in his commentary on our
passage from Mark, constructs a new social order.
It may seem strange to us that immediately after hearing Jesus
talk about his impending death, the disciples would argue about
who is the greatest. Not so at all. These young men had risked
everything to embark on a great adventure, following a leader who
would change the world. They didnt understand what he was
about any more than the church 2,000 years later understands.
They saw the adventure coming to a glorious conclusion. There
would be a struggle with the powers in Jerusalem, he would win,
and they would reap the spoils of victory. They had better get
the pecking order assured now. The rude awakening was that there
would be no place for that kind of thinking in the new order
Jesus would bring in. The new order would turn the old order
upside-down.
September 25
Radical Trust
Esther 7:1-6, 9-10, 9:20-22; Psalm 124; James 5:13-20; Mark
9:38-50
The lesson from the Hebrew scripture is the story of Esther,
one of the beloved heroines of the Bible. (It is not a part of
our lectionary, but take a peek at the story of Vashti [1:10-23],
also a remarkable woman and definitely not "a good
wife"!) But Esther claims our attention nowa young
woman, dutiful, loyal, courageous, and very beautiful. She
didnt hesitate to use all of her feminine charms to save
her people. She, too, might say, "For this was I born, and
for this I was brought to this place."
With the success of her stratagem, she might have given thanks
with Psalm 124, a psalm of thanksgiving for a communal
deliverance. Let Esther sing, "If it had not been the Lord
who was on our side, when our enemies attacked us, then they
would have swallowed us up alive."
The ninth chapter of Mark closes with a collection of
quotations from the tradition that are not necessarily connected.
The original context is lost. Together, however, they make some
radical statements about the nature of Christian discipleship.
The community does not have to worry about tests of
membership: "Whoever is not against us is for us." A
good deed done by anybody rebounds to the glory of God and makes
the kingdom of God more visible"Oh, thats what
its like!" Its a sobering discipline to
practice. God is everywhere, and God is always working. Watch for
Gods footsteps.
The next batch of quotations suggests in what high regard we
should hold our relationship with God. If any part of us gets in
the way of that relationship, dont hesitate to get rid of
it.
This may be one of the times when a personal application of
the tradition may be more helpful than a community application.
It is more difficult to discipline oneself than to see the
offending member as one of the community. The church has a sorry
history of judging and excluding. "Go and sin no more"
is an example of the radical trust our Lord gave.
October 2
Pressed Down and Overflowing
Job 1:1; 2:1-10; Psalm 26; Hebrews 1:1-4, 2:5-12; Mark 10:2-16
These scripture passages are too varied in their content even
to be touched on in one devotional period, but too important to
be passed over with just a cursory reading.
The drama of the book of Job is precipitated by one of the
great religious questions: Does Job worship God for nothing? The
beginning is an extravagant picture of Jobs wealth and
piety. He is so scrupulous in his religious observances that he
even makes sacrifices for the sins his children may have
committed in their hearts.
God offers Job as exhibit A to a skeptical Satan, who promptly
throws down a gauntlet. Doesnt Jobs piety benefit him
greatly? God is sure Satans cynicism misreads the situation
and so gives Satan freedom to destroy all Jobs comforts.
The searing question remains with us. Why do we worship God?
For benefits in this lifeor in the life to come?
The responsive psalm is well-chosen. "Vindicate me, O
Lord, for I have walked in my integrity." The Special
Providence of Americas founding religion; the automatic
whine, Why did this happen to me? The smug acceptance of all the
good things that happen.
In the gospel we meet the radical Prophet who turned that
thinking upside-down. In this weeks scripture, he is
disturbing a more specific detail of the status quo and calling
for a new reimaging of relationships.
To the crowds he rooted the marital relationship in the very
purposes of God in creation. Any alteration in that relationship
was a human accommodation to a human hardness of heart. With his
disciples he went on to an even more radical understanding. Men
and women have equal rights and equal responsibilities in the
marital relationship. The implications of the radical new thing
were being spelled out.
The disciples still living in the old order wanted to protect
him from the children, but Jesus welcomed them. "This is
what I am about," he said. How do children manifest the
kingdom? Their lack of status? Their willingness to trust? Their
openness to new possibilities?
October 9
What Is God Like?
Job 23:1-9, 16-17; Psalm 22:1-15; Hebrews 4:12-16; Mark
10:17-31
Job, afflicted by God and harassed by his friends, is still
laboring under the old delusion that God is reasonable: "Oh,
that I knew where I might find him." Job would come to
Gods dwelling and lay his case before God. He is certain an
upright person could reason with God and be acquitted.
God is like an honest judge.
Jobs agony is fittingly reflected in Psalm 22, mirror of
the woes of the rejected and engraved on our hearts as the cry
from the cross.
But in Marks gospel Jesus adds another dimension to the
right way to respond to this all-powerful God. A rich man offered
his credentials for finding favor with God. He had kept all the
commandments from the days of his youth. Jesus told him he lacked
one thing. Sell all he has, give the money to the poor, and come
and follow him. The man was shocked, as indeed Job would have
been, as indeed all of us who strive to impress God on our own
terms would be.
Jesus responded to his shocked disciples with a venture into
humor, which, if the Twelve got it, the church has missed almost
completely because we have been unwilling to see a love of money
excluding a love for God. What kind of God demands that we choose
between them?
Hebrews presents us with a God whose word is fearsome,
"sharper than a two-edged sword, piercing until it divides
soul from spirit, joints from marrow...before him no creature is
hidden...to [this One] we all must render an account."
Perhaps we need to live into that image of God before we can
fully appreciate the vision of the great high priest of Hebrews.
We do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our
weaknesses. The old gospel hymn well expressed the feeling:
"Can we find a friend so faithful/Who will all our
sorrows share?/Jesus knows our every weakness/Take it to
the Lord in prayer."
October 16
The Secret Messiah
Job 38:1-7, (34-41); Psalm 104:1-9, 24, 35c; Hebrews 5:1-10;
Mark 10:35-45
George Croly, a popular 19th-century English divine, wrote
prolifically during his lifetime, but only one hymn outlives him.
It contains a line pertinent to our reflection on this great
poetic passage of the voice from the whirlwind, the Hebrew
scripture for our meditation this week: "Stoop to my
weakness, mighty as thou art/and make me love thee as I ought to
love."
God answers Jobs questions with questions of Gods
own. The modern mind tends to resist this image of the Almighty
God roaring out of the heavens at Gods pitiful creature and
flees for its religious comfort from the God of the Old Testament
to the sweet and gentle Jesus of the New. Hear, O people of God,
the Lord thy God is one.
And the God of the whirlwind hears and heeds and responds in
the most beautiful poetry.
What more do you want God to do? What do you think God wants
you to do?
Job would understand the responsive psalm. God is the creator
and sustainer of all things, but there is a right way to respond
to this all-powerful God, and woe to those who dont.
The gospel is the story of the disciples amazing
response to Jesus announcement of his forthcoming passion
and Jesus even more amazing description of the way of the
new order.
For the third time, Jesus had told them what was going to
happen to him in Jerusalem. In response, the two with Peter, the
inner circle, the ones closest to him, make an audacious request
for place and privileges. They were still very much into old
order thinking.
The messianic secret that runs through MarkJesus
constantly telling his followers not to reveal who he iswas
the effort not to build on the old expectations that would be
aroused by the use of the term "Messiah." The Messiah
was the one who would restore the Davidic kingdom and make the
Jews once more a world power. Jesus is still misunderstood today.
We hear, "My kingdom is not of this world" as a
designation of geography, not of a way of life.
Jesus called the disciples together and patiently explained
what life would be like in the new order, the kingdom he would
bring in. There is little evidence that the churchthe
churchesthat the disciples left behind got it. There is
little evidence that the church today has got it.
October 23
What Do You Want Me to Do for You?
Job 42:1-6, 10-17; Psalm 34:1-8, (19-22); Hebrews 7:23-28; Mark
10:46-52
The God of the whirlwind has made the case. Jobs
surrender is unconditional. He even uses Gods words of
judgment. He admits to speaking about things too wonderful for
him to understand. He repents in dust and ashes. The friends are
rebuked by God because they had not spoken of God as God is.
If only the compilers had left the poem there! The mystery of
God is too great for us. There is no reward deserved for
comprehending that elementary fact. The only right relationship
between creature and creator is faith.
We might have wished for Psalm 139 as the responsive psalm:
"Such knowledge is too wonderful for me/It is so high that I
can not attain it." But our lectionary chose Psalm 34, a
praise for deliverance from trouble. Like the ending of Job, it
makes no place for the non-deliverance in life. "And they
all lived happily ever after" is the stuff of fairy tales.
We need the prophetic faith that affirms that the creating Word
of God will accomplish that which it intends.
The gospel is the dramatic story of the healing of blind
Bartimaeus. Jesus of Nazareth is passing by. With the audacity of
the desperate, Bartimaeus calls out, "Jesus, Son of David,
have mercy on me!" Son of David? Is that a recognition of
royal lineage? Are the powers of Earth and hell being put on
notice? The minions of the status quo order him to be quiet, but
he is already moving in another world.
He calls out even more loudly, "Son of David, have mercy
on me!" Jesus stops, saying, "Call him here." The
blind man with reckless abandon throws off his cloakthe
mark of his way of lifesprings up, and comes to Jesus.
Those first young fishermen he had called had not responded more
readily.
And then Jesus startling question: "What do you
want me to do for you?" The obvious answer is, of course, I
want to see. But is it? What you dont see you dont
have to take responsibility for. A queen, told her subjects had
no bread, replied, probably as much out of ignorance as
callousness, "Let them eat cake." A president of the
United States, sponsoring a trickle-down theory of economics,
propounded, "A rising tide lifts all boats."
Blindness protects us from harsh realities. Blindness also
means someone else will take care of us. Think, Bartimaeus. There
is cost as well as promise to the new life that will open up for
you. "What do you want me to do for you?"
"I want to see."
He regained his sight, and the record is that he follows Jesus
on the way. The way to the cross.
October 30
Toward New Possibilities
Ruth 1:1-18; Psalm 146; Hebrews 9:11-14; Mark 12:28-34
The Hebrew scripture for the week begins the story of another
remarkable woman of the tradition, Ruth the Moabite. A famine in
the land of Judah caused a certain man of Bethlehem to go to Moab
to live with his wife, Naomi, and two sons. The sons took Moabite
wives, Orpah and Ruth. He died, and the two sons died, leaving
Naomi alone in a country strange to her. Hearing that the famine
was over in her homeland she decided to return.
Following the custom of their land, her daughters-in-law went
with her, but she released them from any obligation to her, and
Orpah turned back to her native land.
Not so Ruth. Despite Naomis protest, Ruth clung to her
with the memorable words of Ruth 1:16ff:
Entreat me not to leave thee,/or to return from following
after thee, for whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou
lodgest, I will lodge; thy people shall be my people, and thy
God, my God.
Surely it recalls the Word of the Lord to Abram: "Get
thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy
fathers house, unto a land that I will show thee."
This woman did no less than the father of our faith.
The responsive psalm appeals to Israels memory of the
acts of God on behalf of the powerless. The Lord upholds the
orphan and the widow.
The gospel passage shows Jesus on the other side of the
questioning processand doing very well. In fact so well
that our pericope shows a scribe, impressed by Jesus
answers, trying out on him the favorite issue of the disputers.
"Which commandment is the first of all?" Jesus
answered, "You shall love the Lord your God with all your
heart and soul and mind and strength," and he added,
"The second is you shall love your neighbor as
yourself."
The scribe was so delighted with the response he elaborated
with a little homily of his own and caused Jesus to commend him
with the words, "You are not far from the kingdom of
God."
Hebrews continues with its excitement about the new
possibilities of the new priesthood. Again an old gospel hymn
rings through our meditation:
Not all the blood of beasts/On Jewish altars slain/Could
give the guilty conscience peace/Or take away the stain/But
Christ the heavenly lamb/Takes all our sins away/A sacrifice of
nobler name/And richer blood than they.
So sang the old folks.
The question for us is what difference does it all make? For
what new possibilities for the world are we cleansed and made
new?
Read other articles by:
Dozier, Verna J.
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