John Shearman's
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Year C - Fifteenth Sunday after Pentecost - September 9, 2007 Proper 18, Ordinary 23 |
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Rev. John Shearman's lectionary analysis reflects the wisdom and insight of a long time scholar and liberal preacher. Drawing on his years of experience as well as the best modern scholarship, John offers a persuasive understanding of ancient sacred texts framed for postmodern spirituality |
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INTRODUCTION TO THE SCRIPTURE [A more complete analysis follows this brief summary for church bulletins.] JEREMIAH 18:1-11 The metaphor of God as the potter and humanity as clay became the theme of a popular gospel hymn in the evangelical tradition. As a prophetic oracle, however, it referred to God's judgment against Israel for forsaking their moral covenant with God that assured their safety. This was the prophetic interpretation of events at a time when the Babylonians threatened to destroy them. PSALM 139:1-6, 13-18 This is not only one of the great treasures of the Psalter but of all devotional literature in every religious tradition. Though it resonates with such theological concepts as the omniscience and omnipresence of God, it is essentially a prayer of intense personal devotion "in a stillness in which the soul and God are alone." DEUTERONOMY 30:15-20 (Alternate) We have here the Deuteronomic formula which became the motif for so much of the final rendition of the Old Testament documents in the centuries following the return of the exiles from Babylon. God's covenant with Israel required absolute obedience to the Torah as supposedly defined by the commandments given to Moses at Mount Sinai. Life, prosperity and the inheritance of the Promised Land depended on this obedience. PSALM 1 (Alternate) Probably composed as an introduction to the Psalter, this psalm clearly presents the implications of the Deuteronomic formula. PHILEMON 1-21 This brief letter has an intensely personal and practical touch. It tells of a slave who came in contact with Paul and how the apostle wrote to Onesimus' slave-master asking for his safe return. There was a bishop with the same name in Ephesus at the end of the 1st century. Could this be his story? LUKE 14:25-33 Think twice before you decide to follow Jesus. Be prepared to sacrifice everything. Followers of Jesus are required to let go of all they own possessions and attachments to focus their attention on their call from God. Are they really ready for what will certainly be involved? Are we? In contrast, two brief parables appear to recommend a very practical approach to one's commitment. Both stories reinforce the message with which Jesus confronted his disciples as they moved inexorably toward Jerusalem and the cross.
JEREMIAH 18:1-11 This is one of the best known passages of the Book of Jeremiah because the vivid metaphor of the potter and the clay offers an exceptional homiletical opportunity. Yet it is not without its difficulties. The problem created by the composite nature of the whole book is reflected in this passage. For the greater part of the 20th century, scholars have recognized that several sources lie behind the Book of Jeremiah. One of those sources in the school of editors known as the Deuteronomists who may have lived in Egypt after the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple in 586 BCE. They produced an edition of the prophecies of Jeremiah circa 550 BCE. This parable (vss.1-4) and its interpretation (vss.5-12) form one passage with distinctive marks of Deuteronomic influence. The extension of the threat of destruction from Israel (vs.6) to all nations (vss.7-10) has the same characteristics. Scholars debate how much of the present passage originated with Jeremiah. The fundamental Deuteronomic concept of Yahweh as Lord of history certainly lies at the heart of this passage. As the potter shapes and reshapes the clay so Yahweh remakes Israel and all nations. Whether the original oracle was more optimistic than the pending doom it appears to express can only be the subject of speculation. Vs.11 appears to suggest that Jeremiah uttered it as a threat in hope of a positive response. Vs.12 records what actually happened. The familiar figure of a potter working with clay is not original to Jeremiah. Isaiah had used it before him (Isaiah 29:16). Others followed, viz. Isaiah 45:9; 64:8; Ecclesiasticus (Sirach) 33:13; Romans 9:20-21. Such frequent references would not have been unusual. Every village and town would have had potters to supply necessary household vessels. In archeological research, one would be lost without the recovered shards of pottery with which the careful observer can date the various levels of the site. In Jeremiah 19:1-15 we find another passage with marked Deuternomic influence which identifies the location of a potters' community near the "Potsherd Gate" to the Valley of Ben-hinnom. It was there because of its proximity to an abundant source of water in the Pool of Shiloam nearby and a stream which ran through the valley in winter. But as the passage describes so vividly, this place had a very dubious notoriety in Israel's faith traditions. There were located the numerous sacrificial altars to foreign idols, including the fearful fiery furnaces of Molech used for child sacrifices. It may have been this last reference which elicited the condemnation of 19:4-6 regarding blood sacrifices of the innocent and burnt offerings of Judean sons. Time and the tragic events wrought by history have transformed this hated site. Today, as one walks or drives through this beautifully landscaped valley in southwest Jerusalem one would never imagine that this was the site of such atrocities. And yet, in the fear that grips Jerusalem every hour of every day, is there not a strange link with these prophetic words. What idol motivates the murders that bloodied the streets of the Holy City in our time? Are not the sons and daughters of Israel and Palestine being sacrificed to strange gods once again? Does Israel's Yahweh not ask today's prophets to cry out, "Turn back, every one of you, from his evil course; mend your ways and your doings" (18:11). PSALM 139:1-6, 13-18 This is not only one of the great treasures of the Psalter but of all devotional literature in every religious tradition. Though it resonates with such theological concepts as the omniscience and omnipresence of God, it is essentially a prayer of intense personal devotion "in a stillness in which the soul and God are alone." (From Schmidt, "Die Psalmen" quoted in The Interpreter's Bible vol. 4, 712.) This excerpt has a very special reference to the experience of a deeply spiritual person entering into the presence of God. All facade of human sophistication melts away as wax before a flame. The whole person lies open before God. The slightest thought or utterance is already known (vs.4). There is no escape (vs.5). The very thought of being in such close proximity to the Most High God is awesome, even terrifying. The Hebrew word generally translated as "wonderful" (pâlîy) in vs. 6 conveys the sense of remarkable, secret or miraculous. In the second occurrence of the word in vs.14, (pâlâh) referring to humanity as part of God's work of creation, there is a sense of uniqueness and distinction. As such, the searching eye of God knows the devotee thoroughly (vss.13-16). There is no other way to respond than to praise God for the marvels of God's creation and of our humanity. And yet, as geneticists have so recently discovered, there is relatively difference between ourselves and the ordinary fruit fly buzzing around the over-ripe tomatoes in the kitchen. For those who have experienced it, intimate contact with God is almost beyond words. In fact, those who attempt to express their experience are often regarded as slightly, if not significantly, abnormal. The mystical tradition in Protestantism has never been strong; but Roman Catholicism has a rich heritage of this form of prayer. Only recently with the opening of wider ecumenical doors has this form of spirituality begun to penetrate mainline Protestant churches. One witness to this movement is the design of labyrinths for meditative walking in church halls or gardens. Another is the increasing number of participants in contemplative prayer through such agencies as the World Community for Christian Meditation DEUTERONOMY 30:15-20 (Alternate) We have here the Deuteronomic formula which became the motif for so much of the final rendition of the Old Testament documents in the centuries following the return of the exiles from Babylon. God's covenant with Israel required absolute obedience to the Torah as supposedly defined by the commandments given to Moses at Mount Sinai. Life, prosperity and the inheritance of the Promised Land depended on this obedience. The challenge of this passage remains with us today whether we are faithful Jews or Christians. Being human, we shall always face the temptation to water down our commitment to "doing our best." All religious traditions have their absolutes. For Jews to live according to these high standards means to live Torah - not so much the Law as the Way. In his collection of essays, The Dead Sea Scrolls and the First Christians, Robert Eisenman cites examples in the Qumran Community Rule of Torah being "the Way" for both Jews and early Christians. If this usage was common in Judaism att he time, Jesus would also have been familiar with the term. This passage states for everyone the path in which God desires all believers to walk. The alternative, as vs. 19 makes clear, is the way of death. When we fail, as we all do, we can only throw ourselves on the mercy of God, accept forgiveness and renew our relationship with God and God's Way. That is how we may live with a clear conscience in this life. Attaining perfection is an act of grace ultimately to be fulfilled in the life beyond death. Worth noting in particular, the words of vs. 20 assure us that obedience does not supercede love in our spiritual relationship with God. PSALM 1 (Alternate) Probably composed as an introduction to the Psalter, this psalm clearly presents the implications of the Deuteronomic formula. Internal evidence suggests a late date belonging to the era of Ezra or later when Israel was regarded as a religious community and the study of Torah was the mark of a religious person. It also recalls the age when Wisdom equated Torah, especially in the circle of those teachers of Wisdom of the late OT and inter-testamental period. A reference from Sirach (Eccleasiaticus) 24:23-27 dating from ca. 190 BCE expressed similar views. One can visualize the scene depicted in the psalm. The teacher of wisdom gathered his students in a small circle under the shade of a tree. The students spend hours concentrating on Torah, as many extreme orthodox Israeli men, exempt from military service, still do in their yeshivas today. Less devoted young men scoff at such a time wasting pursuit. The attitudes of both groups clash, often noisily. The image in vs. 4 of trees growing fruitfully when well irrigated also recalls productive plantations of fig palms I saw growing in the rich soil within a few hundred metres of the Dead Sea. They were irrigated from streams plunging down deep wadis from the wilderness of Judea. Archeologists conclude that the Qumran community, the epitome of the righteous life spent studying Torah even during the time of Jesus, obtained its water supply in a like manner. The reference in Sirach 24:23-27 also draws on the same image of plentiful water as the benefit yielded by the pursuit of wisdom, i.e. Torah. True to the character of Deuteronomic and Wisdom literature, the psalm ends with the moral that God reckons our human ways and grants the rewards or punishments we deserve. PHILEMON 1-21 The lectionary switches from the intensely devotional to the intensely practical. There was a bishop in Ephesus at the end of the 1st Christian century whose name was Onesimus. William Barclay makes the winsome argument that this letter was written by Paul to Philemon to persuade the master of the escaped slave, Onesimus, to return this "useless" fellow to him because, having been converted, he now was of great value to the apostle. Barclay also asks whether "this little slip of a letter, this single sheet of papyrus ... half-personal, half-official ... with no great doctrine" survived because the good bishop "insisted that this letter must be included in the collection (of Pauline epistles) in order that all might know what the grace of God had done for him." (Barclay, William. Daily Bible Readings: Philippians, Colossians and Philemon. Edinburgh: The Church of Scotland, 1957.) Others have suggested that it was sent to Colossae and the neighboring communities with other letters of more doctrinal significance conveyed by Tychicus (Ephesians, Colossians and ‘the lost letter' to Laodicea as described in Col. 4:7, 16). If this analysis is acceptable, it not only tells a touching story, but illustrates how a great theological concept Paul had expounded so well had an obviously personal and practical application. Here is the doctrine reconciliation making a remarkable difference to a very ordinary situation in NT times. It makes the doctrine live; it puts flesh and blood on what Paul had written in Galatians 3:27-29 about the inclusivity of the apostolic church. In those days as now, slaves had only one goal: freedom. They often escaped their bondage by stealing whatever would assist them in their flight. By some happenstance, Onesimus had come into contact with Paul imprisoned in Rome or possibly Ephesus. Paul and his ministry for Christ had made all the difference in this slave's life. If the play on the man's name, Onesimus, is to be believed, (onesimus = useful) the slave who had been useless in Philemon's household had now proved of great service to Paul. Not only the Roman law, but Paul's own convictions about the relationship between masters and slaves (see Ephesians 6:5-9 and Colossians 3:33-4:1) required that Onesimus be sent back to his master. Onesimus was going, however, not as a slave in chains and at great personal risk, but as a free man in Christ and Paul's personal messenger. This letter he carried to Philemon contained the plea that the slave be freed in law and returned to Paul as the apostle's personal aid and companion. Whatever the true story behind the letter may have been, the letter does give us a glimpse into the life of the apostolic church. It also identified some of Paul's fellow workers who were in Rome at this same time (vs. 23), probably in the early 60s CE. Tradition did not record very much about most of these other than what is in the NT. Mark and Luke are well-known, but not the others. Epaprhas was a fellow prisoner with Paul who had evangelized the cities of Colossae, Loadicea and Hierapolis in the Lycus River valley in Phrygia (Col. 4:12-13), probably when Paul worked in Ephesus for about two years. Ephesus lay near the Aegean seacoast about 100 miles to the northwest. Aristarchus, a Gentile Macedonian, also shared Paul's imprisonment. Demas has sometimes been identified with Demetrius of 3 John 12 where he enjoys a better reputation than given him in 2 Timothy 4:9. The presence of these fellow workers in the Gentile mission has caused scholarly questioning as to the exact location from which the Letter to Philemon was written. It is entirely possible that Paul wrote it during an imprisonment in Ephesus to which 2 Cor. 1:8-9 alludes. Nor can we be sure exactly who the slave-master was. The letter was addressed to Philemon, Apphia and Archippus as well as "the church in your house." It would appear that Paul was laying the issue he addressed before the whole community. Such uncertainties do not in any way detract from the essential message of the letter: Paul pleads that Onesimus be set free to engage in ministry with him. LUKE 14:25-33 Asked by a newly designated candidate for ministry what she might expect as she pursued this goal, a long-experienced pastor replied, "Don't go into it, if you can stay out." Puzzled by that apparently negative warning, the candidate requested a further explanation. "Think twice before you decide to follow Jesus," she was told. "Be prepared to sacrifice everything you may wish to gain or achieve in answering your call." This passage agrees with those sentiments. It states unequivocally that followers of Jesus will be required to let go of all they own and focus their attention on their call. Are they really ready for what will certainly be involved? That forthright challenge still stands. Faithful ministry in this day and age is no sinecure. It may have been so in the heyday of Christendom; but no longer. Nor was it so in the Apostolic Age as this reading makes clear. Two brief parables reinforce the message. The apocryphal Gospel of Thomas includes two separate sayings very similar to vs. 26-27. A parallel reading also appears in Matthew 10:37-39. This most likely indicates that these are actually words spoken by Jesus and retained in the collective memory of the Apostolic Church. The parables too have an authentic ring to them as the kind of homey examples Jesus would have given to help his audience remember what he had said. Was Jesus just being cautious and giving fair warning to those wishing to follow him as he approached the crucial event of his ministry? Vs. 25 notes that "large crowds were traveling with him." The moment was at hand for everyone to decide whether to go with him to Jerusalem or remain relatively secure in Galilee. John 7:66-71 records another element of this same tradition. Even without omniscience that John attributes to him, Jesus certainly would have known of the dangers that lay ahead. The parables reveal that he was making mental and spiritual preparations for any eventuality. He wanted his disciples - not necessarily the twelve alone - to be similarly prepared. In telling this part of the story, Luke had the perspective of both the crucifixion and resurrection as well as half a century of reflection by the Christian community. But would Jesus have included crucifixion in his calculations? He would have known that this was the preferred form of capital punishment to the Romans. It was designed to maintain public order by creating a paralyzing fear in the general populace. Apparently Pilate used it liberally. We may thus conclude that Jesus would have been fully aware of the possibility should he fall into the hands of the Roman authorities. It was the measure of his concern for those who had rallied to his cause that they too be made fully aware of the dangers they would face if their enthusiasm and loyalty carried them further in his company. Hence the ominous note of unfinished business in both the parables. |
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This material is copyright Rev. John Shearman, Oakville, ON Canada. It may be used for personal study and local congregational purposes.
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