Lectionary Ruminations 2.0
is a revised continuation of Lectionary
Ruminations. Focusing on The
Revised Common Lectionary
Readings for the upcoming Sunday from New Revised Standard Version (NRSV)
of the Bible, Lectionary Ruminations 2.0
draws on nearly thirty years of pastoral experience. Believing that the questions we ask are often
more important than any answers we find, without overreliance on commentaries I
intend with comments and questions to encourage reflection and rumination for
readers preparing to teach, preach, or hear the Word. Reader comments are
invited and encouraged. All lectionary
links are to the via the PC(USA) Devotions and Readings
website.
49:1 Who is speaking? Why are the coastlands but not the mountains
addressed? Is this a statement about
call, about when life begins, or both? What is significant about being named?
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49:2 How shall we deal with the
militaristic imagery?
49:3 Is Israel a person, a people, or a
nation?
49:4 How has the author labored in vain?
49:5 Why am I hearing echoes of
49:1? What is the relation between Jacob
and Israel?
49:6 How could an entire nation/people be
a light to the nations? It only works in
English (NRSV?), but the two occurrences of “light” in this verse might lend
itself to a play on words.
49:7 How many ways is God identified
here? Is this a reference to pre-Christian anti-Semitism?
40:1 Is this Job’s psalm? Is the speaker an individual, a community, or both?
40:2 How shal we interpret “rock” when we
encounter it in pre-Christian Hebrew Scriptures?
40:3 What does the new song
symbolize? Why do so many worshipers seem
to complain about learning and singing new and unfamiliar hymns?
40:4 What does it mean to make the LORD
one’s trust? What is the difference
between trust and faith?
40:5 What are some of the LORD’s wondrous
deeds?
40:6 Does this verse condemn or outlaw
sacrifice and offering outright? In
light of this verse, why do we still collect or take up an offering during
worship? What is an open ear?
40:7 Where have I heard “Here I am”
before? What is the scroll/book?
40:8 What biblical imagery does this
verse remind you of? Jeremiah 31:33 perhaps?
40:9-10 What is “the great congregation”?
1:1 Who was Sosthenes and what do we know about him?
1:2 Paul might be “called to be an
apostle” but the church in Corinth is “called to be saints”. What are you and your church called to be? What do we know about Corinth and the church
there?
1:3 A nice liturgical greeting that
combines elements of both Greek and Hebrew letter writing, but how do we deal
with the fact that it is not Trinitarian?
1:4 Why “my God” rather than “our God”?
1:5 What “speech and knowledge of every
kind” does Paul have in mind?
1:6 What is the testimony of Christ and
how is it strengthened?
1:7 What spiritual gifts might Paul be
thinking of? What does Paul mean, or what is he referring to, when he writes
about “the revealing of our Lord Jesus Christ”?
1:8 What is “the day of our Lord”?
1:9 Here is another call (see Isaiah
49:1), this time “into the fellowship of his Son”.
1:29 What happened the day before the “next day”? Who saw Jesus coming? What is the theological significance of John’s proclamation “Here is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!”? Try unpacking that!
1:30 When did John say this?
1:31 John the Evangelist seems to put
John the Baptizer’s ministry into a broader theological context than the
Synoptics.
1:32 What is significant about John’s
testimony? See verse 33. In at least one
other Gospel it seems that only Jesus saw the Spirit decending.
1:33 Why does John the Baptizer go out of
his way to deny that he knew Jesus(see 1:31)?
1:34 Is it enough to see but not
testify? Can one testify if one does not
see? How many titles/identities does
John bestow upon Jesus?
1:35 Sometimes this Gospel can be
redundant (see 1:29). So what day now is
it? What do you make of the fact that
John the Baptizer had his own disciples?
1:36 Speaking of redundancy, see 1:29.
1:37 What is the meaning (or what are the
meanings) of “follow”? Does this mean
that some of Jesus’ s first disciples had earlier been disciples of John the
Baptizer?
1:38 Jesus asks a direct question. Why
don’t the two give him a direct answer?
What is the meaning (or what are the meanings) of “looking”? Why does this Gospel translate “Rabbi”? What are you looking for? What are people in the pews looking for?
1:39 “Come and see”! Is not the invitation all Christians and
churches ought to be extending? On the
other hand, how can we invite people to “Come and see” if we ourselves have not
“seen”? Is there any significance to the
time?
1:40 Is this not the first mention in
John of the name of one of the disciples of Jesus? Who was the other person?
1:41 Following up from the previous
verse, who are the “we”, Andrew and who?
I think we can assume from the context that the other person with Andrew
was not his brother Simon Peter. Why is
Messiah translated? See 1:38.
1:42 Does this make Andrew the first
successful evangelist, the first person to “bring” someone to Jesus? Is it not a little rude to meet someone for
the first time and immediately insist on calling them by another name? As in verses 38 and 41, why is “Cephas”
translated? What language does the name
“Peter” come from? What language does the
name “Cephas” come from? Does it matter?
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