Lectionary Ruminations 2.5 is a further revision and refinement
of my Lectionary Ruminations and Lectionary
Ruminations 2.0. Focusing on The Revised Common Lectionary Readings
for the upcoming Sunday from New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) of the Bible, Lectionary Ruminations 2.5 draws on over thirty years of pastoral
experience. Believing that the questions we ask are often more important
than any answers we find, without over reliance on commentaries, I intend with
sometimes pointed and sometimes snarky comments and Socratic like questions, to
encourage reflection and rumination for readers preparing to lead a Bible
study, draft liturgy, preach, or hear the Word. Reader comments are invited and
encouraged.
ISAIAH 43:1-7
43:1 Who is initially
speaking? To whom is the LORD speaking? What is the relationship, if any,
between redemption and calling by name?
43:2 What waters are being
referred to? When Christians read this passage considering the Sacrament
of baptism, are we misreading the Hebrew Scriptures, or simply exercising
Hebrew Midrash from a Christian perspective? I wonder how post Shoah Jews
read and interpret this passage.
43:3 PC(USA) Presbyterians:
Do not forget the opening lines of A Brief Statement of Faith! How was
Egypt given as a ransom? Why the mention of Ethiopia and Seba?
43:4 I like the first part
of this verse, but the second part rubs me the wrong way. If the LORD is giving
away people and nations, to whom or what is the LORD giving them to?
43:5-6 Note that all four
cardinal directions are named. These verses remind me of an invitation to the
Lord’s Table: “They will come from east and west, and from north and south, and
sit at table in the kingdom of God.” It also reminds me of some Native American
traditions relating to the four winds and/or four directions.
43:6 Note that sons and
daughters are both mentioned, a rare inclusive verse!
43:7 Could this verse not be
used to argue for universalism? This verse could provide an interesting
juxtaposition in relation to the exclusiveness of Christian Baptism.
PSALM 29
29:1 What does it mean to
ascribe? How do we ascribe? What, or which, heavenly
beings are addressed here?
29:2 Do you worship in holy
splendor? What does holy splendor look, smell, sound, feel, and taste
like?
29:3 What does the voice of
the LORD sound like? Would you recognize it if you heard it? Being
a sailor and kayaker, I really like and relate to this verse. How do
people who are land locked and had never experienced the ocean or other large
body of water understand this verse?
29:4 With a voice like this
the LORD deserves a contract as an announcer and/or commercial spokesperson.
29:5-9 Think of the
scene/passage in The Hobbit where Bilbo and the dwarves find
themselves amidst giants “hurling rocks at one another for a game, and catching
them and tossing them down into darkness where they are smashed among the trees
far below, or splintered into little bits with a bang.” This passage is not
talking about a “April showers” God but rather a “summer thunderstorm” God.
29:6 Where is Sirion and why
is it mentioned?
29:7 Is this a reference to
lightening or a volcanic eruption?
29:8 Where is the wilderness
of Kadesh?
29:9 Who say “Glory?”
29:10 How are people in flood
ravaged areas hearing this?
29:10-11 How do we reconcile
images of a storm god with peace?
29:1-11 There is no still small
voice here, no safe, domesticated God. This Psalm is about the God of fierce
landscapes, the God of raw power represented by severe and intense natural
phenomena. I doubt many would be comfortable welcoming this God into their
clean, climate controlled, predictable sanctuaries.
ACTS 8:14-17
8:14 Is the Jerusalem
setting important? What if the apostles had been someplace else other
than Jerusalem when they heard this news? Was it surprising or problematic that
Samaria (not Samaritans?) had accepted the word of God? Why was James not
sent?
8:15 Does this sound a
little judgmental to you? How it is possible that someone accepts the word of
God without receiving the Holy Spirit?
8:16 Who is this verse
talking about? Why, in the NRSV, is this verse in parenthesis? How does
this verse challenge some who insist on baptizing “in the name of the Father,
and the Son, and the Holy Spirit?” or else it is not a Christian, Trinitarian, Baptism?
8:17 What is so special
about the laying on of hands? Is it possible for a person or a people to
receive the Holy Spirit without being baptized? Is either prayer or the laying
on of hands not enough? Must prayer and the laying on of hands be combined?
What is the difference between “baptism in the name of Jesus” and “baptism in
the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit?”
LUKE 3:15-17, 21-22
3:15 What people? When
was the last time people in the pews of churches you know were filled with
expectation? Why would people think John could be the Messiah?
3:16 What is so special
about the thong of a sandal? Is the doublet “Holy Spirit and fire” merely
poetic, or something more?
3:17 What is a winnowing
fork and what is it used for? What is a threshing floor and what is it
used for? What is chaff? How do we preach the Gospel in an urban
environment where all people know about wheat is that it comes in five pound
bags of ground flour and they probably have no idea what the imagery of this
passage is communicating? Why was chaff burned? Does this passage
require the existence of a fire filled hell? Is this unquenchable fire related
to the Holy Spirit and fire of the previous verse?
3:21 Really? All the
people? Do you think this is an exaggeration, a hyperbole? What
does it mean for heaven (singular, not plural) to be opened?
3:22 So the Holy Spirit was
someplace over the Jordan River, on the other side of earth from people along a
declination of plus or minus 180 degrees? What is the meaning of “bodily
form?” If in some ways it was like a dove but not really a dove, how was
it different? What might a dove symbolize? Whose voice came from heaven and
what did it sound like? Where and when might we hear these words again?
ADDENDUM
I am
a Minister Member of Upper Ohio Valley Presbytery of the Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.) and am serving as the Interim Pastor of the Richmond United
Presbyterian Church, Richmond, Ohio. Sunday Worship at Richmond begins at 11:00
AM. Some of my other blog posts have appeared on PRESBYTERIAN BLOGGERS and The Trek.