Friday, March 2, 2012

Sabbath

This week's topic was Sabbath. Donna Schaper writes: "Sabbath comes from the word "to separate," as in one of its roots, "sabbatical," where scholars still separate "teaching time" from "study time." Sabbath is the separation of time into different parts. Sabbath is neither rest nor labor but the separation of the two. Sabbath is the pause between them." Additionally, Schaper suggests that sabbath is not a day of the week but a state of mind.

"Remember the sabbath day and keep it holy" is included in both offerings of the Ten Commandments (Exodus 20:8 and Deuteronomy 5:12).
Exodus continues: "Six days you shall labor and do all your work. But the seventh day is a sabbath to the Lord your God; you shall not do any work--you, your son or daughter, your male or female slave, your livestock, or the alien resident in your town. For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that is in them, but rested on the seventh day.; therefore, the Lord blessed the sabbath day and consecrated it."
Deuteronomy 5:12-15 begins similarly, "Observe the sabbath day and keep it holy," with the reminder, "as the Lord your God commanded you." The details are offered in much the same way, but the reason given for the practice varies from Exodus: "Remember that you were a slave in Egypt, and the Lord your God brought you out from there with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm; therefore the Lord your God commanded you to keep the sabbath day."

In Leviticus 25:3-7, a sabbath for the land is prescribed; the seventh year will be a sabbatical year, a year of complete rest for land which has been farmed the other six years.

When we shared our own concepts of sabbath, our descriptions included:
--Sabbath is a gift from God
--"creation's day of rest"
--Taking time, making space to be with God
--Reminder of our beginning and our completion; remembrance that God is saving us
--Rest day
--great equalizer
--a time of liberation
--break in the tyranny of production and usefulness; locus in different identity
--different than "any other day"
--the seventh day; the first day; even "the eighth day" ( a "little Easter")
--connection between God's wholeness and the promise of wholeness realized for us
(shades of Matthew 5:48)
--God honors God's image in us---no exceptions!

Jesus says: "People weren't made for the sabbath; the sabbath was made for people." Essential to our well-being.
--

The Bible

"The Bible is a record of God's search for humanity." --Robert McAfee Brown

"We have so much to say about the Bible that we are not prepared to hear what the Bible has to say about us." --Abraham Heschel

"The Bible is not just man's word about God but also God's word about man." --Karl Barth

"Instead of reading the Bible as orthodoxy, or morality, or history, we take the Bible as a range of imagination that provides the community around the text with narrative and stories and songs and poetry and images that have the potential to move beyond themselves . . . the Bible is not user-friendly to those who like the way the world is organized. It is inherently subversive."
--Walter Brueggemann

"The Bible is a redescribing of reality."

"Our Bible study offers new understanding and experience of God, the world, and ourselves through the lens of Jesus' life, death, and resurrection."

"We need to read the Bible in principle and practice beginning with the gospel narrative of Jesus and the radically new thing he brings to the human situation. Jesus does not fit any of the current schemes of biblical interpretation, biblical literalist, literary critical, dispensationalist, which make the text more important than Jesus himself and thus neutralize the revolution of his teaching. Rather we should see that Jesus has brought a transforming possibility of nonviolence and forgiveness to our way of being human, and all biblical interpretation, including the pathways of revelation from the Old Testament, flow from that." --Anthony Bartlett


We engaged in a lively discussion of Matthew 15:21-28, a fascinating, revealing, and even confounding text. We not only read the story, but in our discussion, the story and its power began to "read" us!


Resurrection

"is the world ultimately a cold, hard, dead place?
does death have the last word?
is it truly, honestly, actually dark
so that whatever light we do see
whatever good we do stumble upon
are those just blips on the radar?
momentary interruptions in an otherwise meaningless existence?
because if that's the case then despair
is the only reasonable response.

it's easy to be cynical.

but Jesus says destroy this temple and I'll rebuild it
he insists that his execution would not be the end.
he's talking about something new and unexpected
happening after his death.
he's talking about resurrection.

resurrection announces that God is not giving up on the world
because the world matters
this world we call home
dirt and blood and sweat and skin and light and water
this world that God is redeeming and restoring and renewing.

greed and violence and abuse they are not right
and they cannot last.
they belong to death and death does not belong.

resurrection says that what we do in our lives matters
in this body
the one that we inhabit right now
every act of compassion matters
every work of art that celebrates the good and the true matters
every fair and honest act of business and trade
every kind word
they all belong and they will all go on in God's good world
nothing will be forgotten
nothing will be wasted
it all has its place."

---Rob Bell, Resurrection




Friday, February 24, 2012

A Prayer of Invocation

O God,
we dare to speak your name at the threat of having our mouths stopped,
for your name is holy,
and wherever we are we ought to take of our shoes,
for all ground everywhere is sacred.

Still, we pray for your presence here,
that our spirits be joyous, our words inspired and true, our works hereafter be just.

Renew our minds and bodies to be fresh and vital as the morning light,
and grant us peace within as deep as the starry night.

Open our eyes to your glory in the subtle dazzle of everything,
in the lives of every living thing,
that everywhere and at all times we assuredly be mindful of you.

Deliver us from captivity to comfort and property
that we may be free to risk for you at every turn and circumstance.

Make us brave and bold and scrupled enough
to know that to love our enemies does not mean to be afraid to make them
in a daily thrust toward justice and in the bold venture of saying what we mean
and meaning what we say, in a trustworthy strive toward intimacy.

Awaken us to the task of becoming beautiful in spirit, mind, and heart,
and so in face, that our gifts might be worthy of your grace.

Arouse us to pay the price of being merciful
that our lives reflect your mercy in us.

Empower us to dare to be compassionate that your dreams for our humanity come true,
to be imaginative that your kingdom come in and through us,
to be disciplined yet flexible that we may prepare the way for you in our hearts
and in your world, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


"We Dare to Speak Your Name," by Ted Loder in My Heart in My Mouth
Innisfree Press, 2000.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Salvation

What is "salvation?" Members of our Saturday morning group said:
--Forgiveness
--Freedom
--Eternal Life
--Peace
--Saving
--Accepting
--Hope
--New Life
--Completeness
--Closeness
--Understanding
--Jesus
--"Taking a bath"
The New Testament Greek verb, sozo, translated "to save," can mean:
--to deliver
--to rescue
--to keep from perishing
--to make well, to heal, to restore
"Eternal life" is given commentary in all of the other responses. When we understand "eternal" as a reference to unbreakable communion with God, it enhances our perceptions. It is a sharing of life with Christ which has no boundaries.
More later!

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Unbounded Love

The power of God is the power of unbounded love. In biblical language, agape love. The most common expression for this in the New Testament is the verb agapao. This is the the self-giving, other-focused, ever-welcoming love of God that we see and experience in Jesus. It is God's creative power--that from which we come, the fullness of which we live toward, the grace of which we are immersed in every moment. Unbounded love is the only power that can save us.

As we considered it, we described such love this way:

1) No limits; unboundaried

2)Releases

3) unconditional

4) infinite

5) it transforms desire (coveting reshaped into giving)

6) creative, imaginative

7) means anyone can love anyone

We discussed real-life examples of people who have embodied this kind of love in our life, and we witnessed to their impact.

We listened to and reflected on several texts. Specifically, we considered at some length Jesus' teaching of the love of enemies (Matthew 5;43-45). He begins with, "You have heard that it was said, "You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy." One participant described this as "our default mode." But Jesus eliminates the boundary to loving: "Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be children of your Father in heaven . . ." When we love our enemies, we love as God loves. There is an embodied experience of salvation for all parties in such love. A bit later, when Jesus says, "Be whole/complete, therefore, as your Heavenly Father is whole/complete (5:48)," he is speaking of completion in God's love. Quite a bit of "lab work" for the community of Jesus to faithfully explore!

We also considered Mark 10:21, in the story of Jesus and the rich man: "Jesus, looking at him, loved him and said, "You lack one thing; go, sell what you own and give the money to the poor, and you will have a treasure in heaven; then come, and follow me." It is compelling to consider Jesus' difficult invitation as an expression of deep love, and a beckoning to live a life joined with our Lord's. The man's possessions are barriers, and Jesus is one who removes barriers!

We also noted John 13:1: "having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end." Jesus lived fully the life of agape love in deeply personal expression, without ever compromising that love or colluding with the powers that would limit it.

Friday, February 3, 2012

A Jesus-Centered Faith

"John's Gospel tells us: No one has ever seen God. It is the Only Son, who is close to the Father's heart, who has made him known (John 1:18). Which suggests that we really have no categories for God except what is derived from Jesus, and that leaves the question much more mysterious and mystical. We are called to encounter God as the endless gentleness of love, so profound and so radical we can hardly imagine it. In order to come anywhere near we must hang around Jesus continually. The incommunicable God is communicated only by the absolutely powerless one." --Anthony Bartlett, "Millenial God"

"The person who sees me sees the Father."--Jesus, in John 14:9

Each participant was asked to offer terms that described Jesus. What do we know about him?
--Patient
--Healer
--Son of Man (True Human)
--Loving
--Caring
--Teacher
--Leader
--Example
--Path
--The Way
--Determined
--Simple
--Assured
--Assured powerlessness
--Generous
--More than himself
--Living Word
--"All of it"
--King without paraphanalia
--Love that pisses people off
It is a rich list that can be added to.
Here is our discipline: to receive all of our concepts of God through Jesus --"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life. No one comes to the Father but by me (John 14:6)." A key manifestation of that discipline will be to read all the scriptures through the lens of Jesus' life, death, and resurrection.
A simple example: Jesus says, "You have heard that it was said, "An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth," But I say to you . . . " and goes on to describe an assertive nonviolence. No one who is taking our interpretive principle seriously can continue to say, "The Bible says an eye-for-an-eye" and consider that authoritative. Rather, after receiving the teaching and example of Jesus, we then are freed to go back and re-read the Old Testament text with new eyes and a different appreciation of what it is showing us.
Discipleship is the exploration, individually and communally, of the radical love of God and the life we are called to live within it.
We will hear Jesus' invitation to us, "Follow me," and we will indeed seek to, commitedly and joyfully!