Ninth Sunday after Pentecost: The Host and the Guest

Readings

Amos 8:1-12

Psalm 52

Colossians 1:15-28

Luke 10:38-42

Devotion

Peace be with you!

In the wake of the George Zimmerman trial, there have been protests and blogs posts defending both sides of the argument. Social media sites have been hosts to the debates too. Although, I don’t plan to settle the debate in this space, what I would like to do is to ask two questions: 1) How are we being sincere neighbors to each other? and 2) How are we being good hosts and guests in this debate? These questions are unnerving for me to answer, especially when it is a debate that opens old wounds of the Civil War and the Civil Rights Movement as well as personal experiences of race tensions. For me, the Zimmerman verdict debate underlines how far we have to go to come to healthy relationships between races in the United States.

Last week Jesus expanded our neighborhoods to include anyone we meet in our lifetimes. The Samaritan was the caring neighbor to the dying man; the priest and the Levite were afraid of being made unclean by coming into contact with a dead man (fearing being separated from the Lord). We all have fears stopping us from being good neighbors to the person next to us. We do not know what fears Mr. Zimmerman had that night he ran into Trayvon Martin. Unfortunately, killing of an unarmed teenager happened in the Deep South where Jim Crow laws and slavery beliefs are still hung onto. Why did Zimmerman feel threatened by Martin? What happened in Zimmerman’s past that led him to assume Martin was up to no good?  Was he attacked by an African American in the past? Have we given Zimmerman a chance to tell whole side of his story? For those of you who agree with the not guilty verdict, are you a parent? Do you feel Martin’s parents’ pain for having to bury their teenage son? How safe do you feel tonight sending your child outside? Are we truly listening to each other? Are we being neighborly to one another?

Today’s gospel reading shows us what happens when we get distracted. Jesus visits Mary and Martha in their home on his way to Jerusalem. Martha is stressing out in the kitchen preparing the meal, while Mary is sits with Jesus, listening to what he has to say (Luke 10:39-40). Martha becomes frustrated with being left to prepare the whole meal by herself when Mary could and should be helping her. She asks Jesus to send Mary into the kitchen to help her (Luke 10:40).

Jesus says, “Martha, Martha, you are worried and distracted by many things; there is need of only one thing. Mary has chosen the better part, which will not be taken away from her.” (Luke 10:41-42 NRSV). I wish we knew Jesus’ tone – relaxed and comforting as if to say, “I will finish making dinner. Come relax with us, Martha,” or stern and short as if to say, “I am here to visit both of you; chill out and come relax.” No matter what the tone, Jesus’ point comes through: come visit with me and join the conversation.

We have all been in Martha’s place at one part in our lives. It could have been a family gathering, a fundraiser, a school event, a wedding, or [whatever “it” is] where you are responsible to show people a good time or teach them something. With all the distractions,responsibilities, and pressures of the event, we miss what is happening. Martha is missing the most important part of the visit: being able to have a conversation with Jesus.

No one can discredit Martha from being hospitable. Martha enjoyed being in the kitchen and cooking meals and baking goodies. Just last week during the weekly Tuesday nights Church and Social Media Tweetchat (#chsocm), we were discussing what social media platforms different Biblical characters would have used. I image Martha would have used Pinterest to pin recipes daily to share with her followers. Cooking is what Martha enjoyed doing, but with Jesus she was probably going overboard and needed an extra set of hands.

Jesus tries to get the point across that there is more to hospitality than preparing meals and having a clean home. Part of hospitality is spending time with your guests and being in conversation with one another. There is always something we can learn from the other person.

Whether or not Zimmerman racially profiled Martin, the Florida law let him be found “not guilty” based on the “stand your ground” laws. These laws do not require individuals to wait for the police to arrive and defend them if they feel threatened. For those of us who disagree with the verdict, it is hard to understand and accept the jury’s decision. Many of those belonging to the African American community feel frightened by the implications of the verdict. We should not discount their feelings; however, the true issue is how we go forward to make safe communities for all individuals, especially for minorities and younger generations.

This case opens up conversations about the “stand your ground” laws and racial profiling done by civilians. These conversations are important for us to have so that all Americans feel protected. We should view the Zimmerman verdict of “not guilty” as an invitation to have these conversations. It means both sides need to show hospitality to the other, so all arguments will be heard. Listening to one another is the more important aspect of being in community with each other.

Thanks be to God!

Dear Heavenly Father, Thank you for Mary and Martha showing us how to be hospitable to others. Help us to invite individuals into our communities and to create safe communities. Guide us as we have difficult conversations within our communities. Slow our reaction times as you guide us to listen to one another. Remind us we are all invited through Jesus Christ to enter the Kingdom of God. Thank you for inviting us into your Kingdom. Amen.

Works Cited

Thanks to the Triune God – God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

Reflective Questions

Please answer the following reflective questions in the comments below.  Please agree to disagree and be respectful to each other. (If you have not already done so, please also take a moment, to sign the comment covenant.)  You can answer as many questions as you would like. 

1. How do you show hospitality to others on a daily basis?

2. How will you join the conversation in your community?

Eighth Sunday after Pentecost: Expanding God’s Neighborhood

Readings

Amos 7:7-17

Psalm 82

Colossians 1:1-14

Luke 10:25-37

Devotion

Peace be with you!

As an individual with Cerebral Palsy, I know how it feels to be the dying man in the Gospel reading. No, I have never been close to dying, except at my birth, but some days it feels like society would like me to not be alive or at least be an active individual in the world . One day stands out in my memory as being one of those days where my pure presence disgusted others. I had just started my third and final year of seminary. I had a half a day of classes and needed to stop at Archiver’s. I decided to take the bus to Archiver’s and then home. The night before, I figured out which buses to take. I got on the first bus without a problem; the driver tied down my electric wheelchair and let me off at my next stop. I waited a few minutes for the next bus.

When I got on the second bus, the bus driver made a fuss that I had no one with me and told me I needed someone with me to strap my electric wheelchair down. Then these two ladies started saying I should take the Metro Mobility, which is door-to-door transportation for people who are disabled. Unfortunately, Metro Mobility requires you to apply for their program in advance. Once accepted, you have to schedule your rides three days in advance, which is a significant inconvenience. The older lady was worried that I was getting on the wrong bus, and I honestly thought she was going to call the bus company. She kept telling me that it was a liability for the driver to tie me down and that if I had no one with me, I needed to take the van service. She took no time at all to listen.  The whole time, the bus driver was claiming it was not his job to tie down my wheelchair. Then the driver would not let me off at the bus stop where I needed to go to get to Archiver’s and made me get off at the Rosedale Mall instead. Although I could drive my wheelchair to my destination from there, I was worried about the four lanes of mall traffic and the parking lot with a few dozen blind spots. Plus, the mall is an odd shape and I am directionally challenged.

At this point, I was beyond frustrated and was texting a few dozen friends who I thought might be on the computer and could tell me where a Metro Transit store was, so I could check and see if I or the bus driver was correct. I thought the mall had a store, but there turned out to just be a room to keep dry and/or warm in.

In today’s gospel reading, Jesus is asked by a Jewish lawyer how to inherit eternal life (Luke 10:25). Jesus directs the lawyer back to the Torah and asks what it says to do (Luke 10:26). The lawyer answers Jesus, “Well, it says to love your Lord with your whole heart and to treat your neighbor as yourself” (Luke 10:27). Jesus says, “You are correct. Go do as you were taught” (Luke 10:28).

The lawyer has a follow-up question, “Who is my neighbor?” (Luke 10:29). He is hoping for the simple answer (“those who live near you”) in order to justify himself. We can relate to the lawyer. We like to be around those individuals who are like ourselves. However, Jesus widens the scope of our neighborhood.

Jesus launches into a story. A man is traveling between Jerusalem and Jericho when he is jumped by robbers and is left to die (Luke 10:30). There are three men who pass him. The first two men–a priest and a Levite– avoid the man by going on the other side of the road (Luke 10:31-32). The priest and the Levite have a good reason to avoid the dying man: he is unclean according to the Torah.

A Samaritan passed the dying man, took pity on him, and took care of his wounds and put him up in an inn (Luke 10:33-34). When he left the man, the Samaritan promised to repay the innkeeper for taking care of him (Luke 10:35). Jesus turns to the lawyer and asks, “Who was a neighbor to the dying man?” (Luke 10:36). I imagine the lawyer takes his time answering when he says, “The one who showed him mercy” (Luke 10:37a NRSV). The lawyer is probably afraid of Jesus will say next, “Go and do likewise” (Luke 10:37b NRSV).

The author of the Gospel of Luke does not tells us how the lawyer responds. In my imagination, the lawyer goes away sulking and later realizes Jesus is correct: anyone you meet is your neighbor. The scope of one’s neighborhood is wide. It is no longer just your tribe—your coworkers, friends and family. Your neighborhood is wherever you go anytime of the day, month, and year.

As technology advances, our neighborhoods continue to widen and expand. Before my challenging bus ride, I had just reconnected on Facebook with my childhood friend from camp, Amber. . Amber, who lived two hours away, ended being able to call the Metro bus system for me by using IP-Relay (since her speech is difficult to understand, like mine). The rep told Amber that it is the driver’s job to tie a wheelchair down. In the word of Professor James Boyce, “Taaaada!” (I understand only my Luther Seminary friends understand the “Taaaada!” but it was his way of exclaiming the obvisious.)

I learned just how big my neighborhood was that day. Once I got home, I posted a Facebook note about what happened since I basically texted everyone in my phone. People who I barely knew were outraged by how I was treated as an inconvenience. I am a human being who just happens to be in an electric wheelchair. Just like everyone else, I have places to go and no time to waste.

SEVEN TAAAADA’S (you need seven to be theologically sound):

1. All of the bus drivers during State Fair the week before were awesome and tied my wheelchair down, even when my friends were with me. This is why my friends were not worried when I said I was taking the bus. Taaaada!

2. I remember seeing a sign on a few buses during State Fair encouraging passengers in wheelchairs to ask the bus driver to tie them down. Taaaada!

3. I have on buses in Madison, Milwaukee, Park City, and New York where all the drivers tied me down, even when I had friends with me. Taaaada!

4. If Anita was with me, a fuse would have broke! Just add the fuel to the fire! Taaaada!

5. I want to find a rulebook for the Metro Bus System and carry it with me, so if any other driver pulls this I can show them where it says they have tie any wheelchair down. Taaaada!

6. Let’s talk about the “liability” the older lady was so concerned about. In my humble opinion, the “liability” happens when the driver does not tie a wheelchair down. Taaaada!

7. I will ride the bus again. Taaaada!

The older I get, the more I realize you need a community around you. A community takes care of each other. You need neighbors. We need each other to get through this thing called life. And God has given us to each other.

Thanks be to God!

Dear Heavenly Father, Thank you for the loving Samaritan who sets such a neighborly example. Guide us to care for our neighbors, even those who are different from us. Remind us we are all your children. Thank you for the communities you have given us to nurture and care for us. Amen.

Works Cited

Thanks to the Triune God – God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

Reflective Questions

Please answer the following reflective questions in the comments below.  Please agree to disagree and be respectful to each other. (If you have not already done so, please also take a moment, to sign the comment covenant.)  You can answer as many questions as you would like. 

1. How big is your neighborhood?

2. How do you care for your neighbors?

Seventh Sunday after Pentecost: Living in God’s Community

Readings

2 Kings 5:1-14

Psalm 30

Galatians 6:1-16

Luke 10:1-11, 16-20

Devotion

Peace be with you!

One of my favorite songs is “Cloud of Witnesses” by Mark Schultz. The first two verses remind me of my church when I was going up. The song goes:

We watched them runnin’ down the aisles, /Children’s time, Sunday morning. /The preacher asked them who they loved, /They all smiled and started pointing to their mom, /Their dad, /The teacher from their kindergarten class; /And each and every one /Had just come from/

A cloud of witnesses /That would see them through the years /Cheer them with a smile /And pray them through the tears /A cloud of witnesses that would see them to the end, /And shower them with love that never ends /A cloud of witnesses (ChristianLyricsOnline.com 2010).

As I grew up, it was my church family who supported me through life’s challenges. I was not an object, “the girl in the electric wheelchair.” I was a special girl who just happened to need the help of a wheelchair . I swear the guys just enjoyed showing off for us girls as they lifted my electric wheelchair into the back of our youth group leader’s van. No matter where the weekly meeting was, my friends made sure I was there.

Paul’s letter the Galatians concludes with him reinforcing how important it is to live in community, to live in the new covenant, and to live by the Spirit. Life is about being in community with each other and God. Nothing else matters when you live according to the Spirit, because the community becomes your family, shelter, and protection. The community keeps you going when the world seems to be against you or when it is confusing you.

Living in community allows you to be in a relationship with the Triune God – God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. We worship, pray to, lament and rejoice with God as a community. I just found a church home in Florida, a place where I enjoy going – not just because the pastor gives awesome sermons (although he does), but because the community has welcomed me into their fold. During announcements one Saturday night, I asked if someone could pick me up because my stepdad was going away for two months. Ron and Kathy volunteered to pick me up for church, help me get dinner, and take me home. Over the last four weeks, I have been adopted into their dinner group at Angelo’s. We share what we did the last week and what we have planned for the next week. It feels good to belong to a group again.

Community gives us a feeling of belonging. The members of a community take care of each other by providing support through a difficult time, lending a hand when someone needs help, and offering items someone may need. My favorite part of my church is its outreach programs – pet food for those who cannot afford to feed their furry friends, a soup kitchen, and a food pantry. These ministries are not hidden either. Whatever is donated on the weekend is rolled to the altar during the offering. The needs of others are constantly visible in my church.

Paul reminds the Galatians of the new covenant God the Father created with his children through Jesus Christ. Under the new covenant, God does not care if you are circumcised or uncircumcised, free or slave, male or female, or Jew or Gentile. All are welcomed to be in a relationship with God the Father under the new covenant. Living under the new covenant restores our relationship with God, because Jesus Christ makes it possible for everyone to know God and to enter heaven. Jesus restores us to eternal life.

Paul also emphasizes the importance of living according to the Spirit by loving one another. The Spirit leads us to live according to God’s will. Living according to the Spirit allows us to live the way God planned for us all along.

The members at my church are an incredible cloud of witnesses. During the prayers, we pray for everyone. We lament as a community when someone dies, is sick, or is going through a difficult time. I had a staph infection a few weeks ago and was not able to go to worship. Kathy checked in on me every few days to see how I was doing. We rejoice when someone has good news. We give weekly birthday and anniversary blessings to individuals and couples. It is a community that lives solely according to the Holy Spirit.

Thanks be to God!

Dear Heavenly Father, Thank you for giving us communities to be a part of and to support us. Help us to live under the new covenant according to the Spirit in our daily lives. Guide us to love one another by caring for others and respecting each other. Remind us to break down divisions by welcoming everyone into our community. Thank you for sending the Holy Spirit to lead us in our daily lives. Amen.

Works Cited

Thanks to the Triune God – God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

Reflective Questions

Please answer the following reflective questions in the comments below.  Please agree to disagree and be respectful to each other. (If you have not already done so, please also take a moment, to sign the comment covenant.)  You can answer as many questions as you would like. 

1. How do you live in community with others?

2. How do you live by the new covenant?

3. How do you live according to the Spirit?

Sixth Sunday after Pentecost: Living by the Fruits of the Spirit

Readings

2 Kings 2:1-2, 6-14

Psalm 77:1-2, 11-20

Galatians 5:1, 13-25

Luke 9:51-62

Devotion

Peace be with you!

When I lived in St Paul, I had a personal trainer named Ashley. She is awesome at her job. She could get me to do things I did not know I could do. Shortly after I moved away, Ashley made a difficult decision to move back to her small hometown and work at a local rehab center. She enjoyed her clients and co-workers at a big health club, but her job consistently required Ashley to sell herself as a personal trainer to new members. The health club required Ashley to have so many clients and personal training sessions that her clients were becoming numbers, not individuals with personal goals. Ashley grew weary of the corporate personal training world, and she decided to instead take a job where she could help people without having to sell herself. Her new job did not require Ashley to draw in new clients by working on commission; instead she can focus on the individual needs and goals of her clients. Ashley is able to put aside the numbers and focus on the individual.

Paul continues his letter to the Galatians with a warning about the flesh. Operating out of the flesh prevents us from doing good works that honor God and instead makes us impure and causes us to sin. The work of the flesh causes us to “fornication, impurity, licentiousness, idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, jealousy, anger, quarrels, dissensions, factions, envy, drunkenness, carousing, and things like these” (Galatians 5:19b-21a NRSV). These actions place our lives in bondage to the Devil who continues to try to separate us from the Triune God.

Ashley felt like a slave to selling person training sessions at a big health club. As a result, she wasn’t really free to live out her God-given passion to help people achieve their personal wellness goals. After four years of moving up the corporate chain and learning all she could from a big health club, Ashley had enough of the corporate world and was really for a new challenge. At some point in our lives, we have all been there – the wrong career or place of employment, a bad relationship, or [whatever “it” is] that made you give up your core principles for an exterior motive. Life seems to lose its appeal when we give up our core principles to achieve someone else’s goals.

Fortunately, the fruit of the Spirit works against the flesh by giving us freedom from [whatever “it” is] that binds us to the evil things in world. The fruit of the Spirit creates “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control” (Galatians 5:22b-23a NRSV) in the world. The flesh does whatever it can to keep the fruit of the Spirit out of the world. However, God the Father sent Jesus Christ into the world to free us from the bondage of sin. Jesus frees us from the Devil’s grip on us by giving us eternal life.

Yet we are given a choice as to how we use our energy in the world: the work of the flesh or the fruit of the Spirit. Paul warns us that doing the work of the flesh will not allow us to inherit the Kingdom of God (Galatians 5:21b). The work of the flesh takes us away from the Triune God who loves us unconditionally. When we do the work of the flesh, we choose destruction and pain by living apart from the Triune God.

However, when we do the fruit of the Spirit, we live into eternal life with the Triune God – God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. We choose to be set free from our sinful selves. By doing the fruit of the Spirit, we are free to serve others and God in love without any self interest. The goal of the Spirit is to ensure no one is homeless, hungry, or naked. The Spirit creates a community to take care of God’s children. By loving our neighbor, we are living according to God’s way of being. Our fruit of the Spirit gives glory to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

The corporate world of a big health club kept Ashley from what she loved and found most freeing: helping people meet their individual wellness goals. Ashley took a scary step of faith by leaving a big health club and moving to a small town to work at a small rehab clinic. By doing so, Ashley directed her skill set to help people who would not be able afford to work with someone otherwise. Ashley’s passion for others’ wellness is visible by how she dedicates herself to her work.

Thanks be to God!

Dear Heavenly Father, Thank you for giving us the opportunity to do the fruit of the Spirit. Help us to love our neighbor according to your way of living. Keep us from being captives to the flesh, and free us from its grip. Guide us as we go about our day to bring you glory through the fruit of the Spirit. Thank you for setting us free from the flesh. Amen.

Works Cited

Thanks to the Triune God – God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

Reflective Questions

Please answer the following reflective questions in the comments below.  Please agree to disagree and be respectful to each other. (If you have not already done so, please also take a moment, to sign the comment covenant.)  You can answer as many questions as you would like. 

1. What does it mean to be free?

2. How do you do the fruit of the Spirit?

Fifth Sunday after Pentecost: Faith Frees Us

Readings

1 Kings 19:1-15a

Psalm 42 & 43

Galatians 3:23-29

Luke 8:26-39

Devotion

Peace be with you!

Somewhere hidden in my office is a postcard my mom sent me while she was on a business trip during my first semester of college ten years ago. She talks about the conference, which she is attending to pick out product for her Christian book and gift shop. My mom rambles on about her sister is enjoying people-watching and how hot it is. She ends with a note of how proud she is of me for going to college – something she never did. Of course, going to college was not to supposed to be possible for me according to the doctors who first diagnosed me with Cerebral Palsy. I enjoy randomly finding the beat up postcard when I am looking for something or reorganizing my office. The postcard reminds me of how far I have come and how proud my mom is of me.

Paul continues his letter to the Galatians by discussing how we should live faithfully according to the good news. Jesus reveals how we are supposed to relate to each other and work together to build a solid community of faith. We do not have to worry about making right our relationship with God the Father, because Jesus Christ did it for us when he was crucified, died, and was resurrected. Jesus provides a way for us to know and be loved by God.

The Jewish Christians guard themselves by their laws and by observing their festivals. The law was valuable before Jesus came for it provided discipline for God’s people to live by (Galatians 3:23-24). Now that Jesus has come into the world we are no longer subjects to the law (Galatians 3:25) for he releases us from our bondage to the law. The law ultimately revealed to us our need for a Savior, but we could never match up to its unrelenting demands.

We are justified by faith as God’s children (Galatians 3:24b, 26). Jesus embodies how we are to live our lives as God’s children. Paul writes, “No longer is there Jew or Greek, slave or free, or male or female.” (Galatians 3:28). The divisions of the past no longer have value in the world where Jesus has died for our sins. Jesus radically changes the way individuals enter into a relationship with God the Father. He destroys any roadblock that held people back from knowing the Triune God. Jesus frees us from the law by being crucified on the cross and dying for our sins.

By destroying these divisions, Jesus provides a way for us to live in community with each other. We are no longer divided by our differences. Now we are bound together by our faith in Jesus Christ who allows us to be in a relationship with the God the Father. Our unique personalities and gifts belong to the community to help it grow and prosper. Jesus uses our unique traits to further God’s plan for our community. Divisions are a thing of the past; our unique traits give the community life in the world where it is easier to be divided. The world preys on our past divisions, but Jesus brings us with all of our differences to be the community to share the good news.

Paul’s letter to the Galatians has survived thousands of years. As Christians, it is a letter we go back to to remind ourselves we are justified by faith in Jesus Christ. For the Galatians, the letter tells how to live faithfully in the world, with our unique personalities and gifts. The letter provides a blueprint of life as a Christian.

Letters have a way of putting things in perspective, reminding us of how life is and what we are to do. They also give us something to go back to remind ourselves of a relationship close to our hearts. The letter to the Galatians reminds us to end the divisions among ourselves, to live in community with each other, and to use our unique personalities and gifts to further God’s plan. Paul understood the power of the written word and physically having a letter read and reread. Nothing is more powerful than a letter from a true friend who shares their heart with you.

Thanks be to God!

Dear Heavenly Father, Thank you for Paul’s powerful words to the Galatians encouraging us to work together as a community of believers. Help us to read Paul’s letter to the Galatians with an open heart as we work towards ending the divisions of this world and instead work to further God’s plan. Bring us together as your children and use us for your mission. Thank you for the letter to the Galatians to read and reread. Amen.

Works Cited

Thanks to the Triune God – God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

Reflective Questions

Please answer the following reflective questions in the comments below.  Please agree to disagree and be respectful to each other. (If you have not already done so, please also take a moment, to sign the comment covenant.)  You can answer as many questions as you would like. 

1. Who has written you an important letter?

2. What divisions exist in today’s world? How does Jesus end these divisions?

3. What challenges do we face as Christians living in community? How can we overcome those challenges?

Fourth Sunday after Pentecost: Faith Saves, Not Ourselves

Readings

1 Kings 21:1-21a

Psalm 5:1-8

Galatians 2:15-21

Luke 7:36-8:3

Devotion

http://www.impawards.com/2012/les_miserables_ver11.html

Peace be with you!

In the musical Les Miserables, Jean Valjean is an ex-convict who stole a piece of bread for his niece. Upon coming out of prison, Valjean is determined to turn away from the harsh life of prison and help those in need no matter the consequences. However, Valjean has also broken parole and is hiding from the police. He has his own factory where he gives women jobs to support their families. Javert is the police inspector who releases Valjean after warning him what will happen if he breaks the law. Javert believes the law comes before anything else in life. When he finds Valjean after several years of thinking he was dead, Javert is determined to bring him back into custody.

Paul is writing Galatians because the Jewish Christians are telling them they have to earn their way into Heaven by doing good works. The Jewish Christians believe that they have to be justified by their works. They have to keep the laws handed down to them by Moses and their ancestors.

However, Paul writes that the Galatians are justified by their faith in Jesus Christ who died for their sins on the cross. There is no way anyone can earn their way into Heaven on their own merit (Galatians 2:16). If we live according to the law, we are dead (Galatians 2:19) because we cannot fulfill the law on our own. We have nothing without Jesus Christ dying on the cross. Jesus’ crucifixion, death, and resurrection give us life with the Triune God – God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

If we believe we can be justified by the law, then Jesus died for nothing (Galatians 2:21). This is not the case because we cannot uphold the law on our own. Our sinful nature has been crucified through Jesus and now we can have life and know God the Father.

Paul calls the Galatians to live by faith in Jesus Christ who gave up his life out of love for them (Galatians 2:20). God did not have to send Jesus to die for our sins, but he loves us so deeply he gives us eternal life in him. There is nothing we can do to undo his love for us. By living in faith, we receive the gift of life given to us through Jesus Christ’s crucifixion, death, and resurrection.

In Les Miserables, Valjean and Javert meet in different situations over the years. Somehow Valjean always escapes and goes into hiding until Javert finds him again. At one point Valjean has an opportunity to kill Javert, but he lets him go. Javert realizes Valjean lives by a different moral code than the strict law. Valjean strives to help those who cannot help themselves even if it means breaking a law. This is what Paul is telling the Galatians. It is better to love each other than to judge one another. When we love each other, we are living out our faith in Jesus Christ.

Thanks be to God!

Dear Heavenly Father, Thank you for having Jesus Christ die for our sins so we can have life. Help us to live according your word. Remind us we are nothing without your love and grace. Thank you for life in your son Jesus Christ. Amen.

Works Cited

Thanks to the Triune God – God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

Reflective Questions

Please answer the following reflective questions in the comments below.  Please agree to disagree and be respectful to each other. (If you have not already done so, please also take a moment, to sign the comment covenant.)  You can answer as many questions as you would like. 

1. How do people live by the law? Why?

2. How do people live out their faith?

Third Sunday after Pentecost: Good News of Jesus Christ, Not the People

Readings

1 Kings 17:8-24

Psalm 30

Galatians 1:11-24

Luke 7:11-17

Devotion

Peace be with you!

Everyone has his or her critics – people who will never understand what you are doing.  These individuals know the world around them and think it will never change. When you make the change, these individuals freak out and tell you are wrong. How dare you challenge their traditions and ways of life? Paul is answering his critics in his letter to the Galatians.

Paul’s critics have been in Galatia questioning his credentials among the people who are supporting his church and mission. His critics are reminding the Galatians that Paul has persecuted Christians in the past and questioning how they could follow such a person. They do not understand how a man who grew up as a faithful Jew can turn his back on the Jewish traditions and speak about salvation through faith in Jesus Christ alone. Paul now calls Jesus, the very person he used to persecute people for following, his own Savior now. Not only that, but he is now calling others to follow the leader he formerly maligned.

Blasphemy!

The Jewish contemporaries of Paul resist any change to their faith traditions and do not accept Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior. Paul’s message of the good news threatens their faith system and questions their way of life. His critics question Paul’s authority to start churches in the name of Jesus and to tell people that they are saved by grace through faith in Jesus Christ. After all, Paul never personally knew Jesus when he was alive. How can someone have faith in an individual whom he has never met?

In his true fashion, Paul answers his critics with the snarky truth. Paul explains that his accreditations come from Jesus Christ through a revelation  he had on the road to Damascus (Galatians 1:11-12). His accreditations do not come from human origin; they come from the Lord God. As we noted last week, Paul is not looking for a  “thataboy” from his contemporaries. Paul has made a lifestyle change; he is living for Jesus Christ – no one else.

Paul does not give in to his critics. Paul confesses his past sins: he persecuted Christians before his revelation and advanced quickly within the Judaism structures (Galatians 1:13-14). He is upfront with the Galatians and hides nothing about his past.

However, Paul is not who he was before his revelation. Now he takes no orders from man; Paul’s orders come from God the Father through Jesus Christ. Through a revelation, Jesus calls Paul to share the good news wherever he goes and with whomever he meets. Paul’s life is transformed by his revelation from Jesus. Paul goes from being a persecutor of Christians to a preacher of the good news. He lives as a called Christian.

Just like Paul, we are made new when we accept Jesus Christ as our Savior who over comes death and gives us eternal life – new life to be in a relationship with the Triune God (2 Corinthians 5:17). We are all called to share the good news wherever we go and with whomever we meet. You do not have to be called to preach in order to share the good news. You can be a doctor or a nurse who shares God’s compassion with your patients, a lawyer who shows mercy and grace to your clients, a chef who feeds the hungry, an accountant who protects the poor, an advocate who gives a voice to the silent, a parent who loves your children, a bus driver who cares for your passengers, or [whatever “it” is] you do to share the good news. No matter what you do, you are called to share the good news by living out the Christian faith. Paul uses the skills he learned in the Jewish faith system and as a Roman to spread the good news with the world.

Thanks be to God!

Dear Heavenly Father, Thank you for giving Paul a revelation through Jesus Christ, a revelation which changed his heart towards you. Help us to work past the criticism of others and continue to spread the good news no matter who tries to stand in our way. Remind us that we are all called to share the good news in our daily lives. Guide us to use our resources to feed the hungry, to protect the poor, to give the silent a voice, to heal the sick, and to clothe the naked. Thank you for calling us to be your voice and to act on your behalf in this world. Amen.

Works Cited

Thanks to the Triune God – God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

Reflective Questions

Please answer the following reflective questions in the comments below.  Please agree to disagree and be respectful to each other. (If you have not already done so, please also take a moment, to sign the comment covenant.)  You can answer as many questions as you would like. 

1. How are you called to share the good news?

2. How do non-Christians or even other Christians criticize you? How do you handle the criticism? How does Paul’s example change how you will handle criticism?

Second Sunday after Pentecost: Listen Up, People

Readings

1 Kings 18:20-39

Psalm 96

Galatians 1:1-12

Luke 7:1-10

Devotion

Peace be with you!

Have you ever watched a football coach of a losing team during a game? The coach is always exasperated with his players, frustrated that they are not doing anything he taught them during practice. The players are letting the opposing team break through their weaknesses.

Paul shared the good news with the Galatians, founded a church there, and had shared with them the freedom of forgiveness through Jesus Christ. He left the Galatians believing that Jesus welcomes them into a relationship with God the Father. The Galatians knew they could not earn their way into the Kingdom of God through their good works; they had to believe Jesus Christ died on the cross for the forgiveness of their sins and that faith was their ticket into the Kingdom of God – nothing more and nothing less.

Reports of the activities of the Galatians have been shared with Paul and what he hears does not make him very happy. So Paul writes the Galatians a little letter. Paul is frustrated with the Galatians, because they falling preytrap to Jewish Christians false teachers who have announced they need to be circumcised and do good works in order to earn their way into the Kingdom of God. Paul is jumping up and down saying, “NO! You cannot earn your way into the Kingdom of God on your own accord. Jesus Christ came into the world, walked with us, died on the cross, and ascended into heaven, so we may come into a relationship with God the Father and enter the Kingdom of God.” Over the next six weeks, we will see Paul direct the Galatians (and us) away from earthly solutions and point them and us towards God’s grace, love, and forgiveness.

Paul is not looking for a pat on the back or a “good job, bro.” Paul is not looking for approval from his call committee or synod to begin ministries in the world. Jesus Christ commissioned Paul through a vision on the road to Damascus (Galatians 1:12). If he wanted approval from his earthly counterparts, Paul would have stayed doing his job for the Roman Empire (Galatians 1:10). But that would have been the easy way out. Paul chose the path to salvation, the road less travelled.

Life would be easier if it came with a checklist. For the Galatians, the false teachers were giving them a checklist to complete in order to enter the Kingdom of God: circumcise all males, follow the Ten Commandments, and observe the Jewish festivals. However, Paul will argue this checklist only gains you earthly approval – not God’s approval. Maybe in Old Testament times this checklist was important, but Jesus Christ changed all of that. Both we and the Galatians are living in a new age where faith in Jesus Christ gives us passage into the Kingdom of God.

Remember taking algebra in high school and having the teacher make you do problems the long way before showing you the easy and shorter way? Why didn’t he just show you the shorter way to begin with?

Well, Paul has given the Galatians the easy way into the Kingdom of God: admit you are sinner who needs forgiveness and believe in Jesus Christ as your Savior. But it seems too easy for the Galatians and for us. We want to earn our own way into heaven. Paul jumps up and down and says, “No, listen up people, you cannot earn your own way into heaven; you need Jesus Christ who came into the world, walked with us, died on the cross, and ascended into heaven to offer us God’s love, grace, and forgiveness, so we may come into a relationship with God the Father and enter the Kingdom of God.” Paul is begging the Galatians not to get wrapped in some unnecessary checklist to meet the requirements to enter heaven. All you need is faith in Jesus Christ as your Savior.

Thanks be to God!

Dear Heavenly Father, Thank you for giving Paul the vision to spread the good news across the Roman Empire. Help us to resist the temptation to complete checklists to try to earn our way into heaven. Direct us instead to have faith in Jesus Christ as our Savior. Remind us that you sent Jesus into the world to die for our sins and to give us eternal life. Thank you for Paul’s commitment to the good news. Amen.

Works Cited

Thanks to the Triune God – God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

Reflective Questions

Please answer the following reflective questions in the comments below.  Please agree to disagree and be respectful to each other. (If you have not already done so, please also take a moment, to sign the comment covenant.)  You can answer as many questions as you would like. 

1. What vision has Jesus given you?

2. How do you attempt earn approval from the world? From the Triune God?

Trinity Sunday: God’s Peace

Readings

Proverbs 8:1-4, 22-31

Psalm 8

Romans 5:1-5

John 16:12-15

Devotion

Peace be with you!

The storm has passed. The initial shock has worn off. The damage has been evaluated, accessed, and documented. Now the rebuilding begins amongst the rubble and the dust. The government promises funding to rebuild homes, schools, and other public places, but what does it mean to rebuild? Where do you even start? In forty minutes, twelve to thirteen thousand homes were destroyed by the second biggest tornado in history. What do you do when you don’t understand what God is doing or where to go from here?

Jesus has been talking with his disciples about his death and ascension to heaven. There is not enough time for Jesus to explain everything he wishes he could to his disciples. Even if he could, they would not understand (John 16:12). Sometimes you truly have to live through an event to understand the outcome. Jesus’ disciples will experience extreme loss and grief when he is crucified and dies.

However, through Jesus’ crucifixion, death, and resurrection, God the Father gives us the peace (Romans 5:1b) that comes from being in a relationship with him and believing in the good news. Our faith in God the Son justifies us in the eyes of God the Father (Romans 5:1a).

God gives the kind of peace that you feel when you hold a newborn baby and see his innocence and beauty. God gives the kind of peace that you feel at dawn just as the sun wakes up the birds as you sip your coffee before the rush of the day. God gives the kind of peace that you feel when you sit quietly in a garden, chapel, or [wherever “it” is] reflecting on life. God gives the kind of peace that you feel when everything is going right in the world. God gives that kind of peace – the peace of understanding (Philippians 4). But he gives the same feeling of well-being and peace even when everything seems to be going wrong.

Yet with all good news comes responsibility. We are given peace, grace, and love to share with others (Romans 5:2). Peace, grace, and love are not things we can keep to ourselves; they have spirits of their own that show themselves through our actions. With the responsibility of believing in the Good News comes suffering (Romans 5:3). Not everyone will come to believe in God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit and they will torment us for believing. Some of us will die sharing the good news, while others will be banished. And we will all face the human sufferings that come with living in this broken world.

But we continue to share the good news to give the Triune God glory, because without them we have no hope, peace, grace, or love. Our relationship with the Triune God outweighs the threats this world throws at us. Once we give God’s peace to others in the darkness, we are blessed with a community that will continue to grow and flourish.

Suffering never goes away since Satan rules the world. People will always judge us based on our belief in the unseen, unheard, and untouched. Nothing about our beliefs makes sense to those who are not in a relationship with the Triune God.

In those times of suffering, Jesus promises us the Holy Spirit will give us guidance in the truth (John 16:13a). Like God the Father sending God the Son, Jesus sends the Holy Spirit to tell and show us the truth by glorifying Jesus Christ (John 16:13-14).

Jesus could not possibly tell the disciples everything; therefore he sends the Holy Spirit to claim us and to declare to us (John 16:14) God the Father’s hope, peace, grace, and love for us. God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit work together to declare the glory of the Trinity. The Triune God works towards a common goal – to declare love for the whole world.

Even during and after the storm, the Trinity is in control and has a plan. You may feel lost in the rubble and dust; you may feel lost in the destruction; you may feel hopeless in midst of rebuilding. In these times, we need to trust in the Triune God and hang on to the hope, peace, grace, and love that Jesus’ resurrection brings us. Nothing else matters but his love for us. It is that love that will see us through.

Thanks be to God!

Dear Heavenly Father, Thank you for working with Jesus and the Holy Spirit to declare your love for us. Help us to share your good news with others by expressing the hope, peace, grace, and love only you can give us. Remind us that even though Jesus Christ ascended into heaven we are not alone – the Holy Spirit shares the truth with us. Thank you for your love that reaches into the darkness and pulls into the light. Amen.

Works Cited

Thanks to the Triune God – God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.

Reflective Questions

Please answer the following reflective questions in the comments below.  Please agree to disagree and be respectful to each other. (If you have not already done so, please also take a moment, to sign the comment covenant.)  You can answer as many questions as you would like. 

1. Where do you find God’s gifts of hope, peace, grace, and love? How do you share them?

2. How do you feel the presence of the Holy Spirit?

Book Review: Amos Yong’s The Bible, Disability, and the Church

Book Review:

The Bible, Disability, and the Church: a New Vision of the People of God by Amos Yong

Before I jump right into my first book review, you have to understand who I am as a person and as a Biblical scholar. I am a person with a disability who is the token Christian among my friends with disabilities. When I say “token Christian,” I mean I was the one who always went to church with her family growing up. I was the one who was supposed to know why God allowed us to have disabilities. As a scholar, I look for way to answer those kinds of questions and to expand the definition of healing in order to create a more welcoming atmosphere for individuals with disabilities in the church.

So it seems fitting that my first book review would be Amos Yong’s book, The Bible, Disability, and the Church: a New Vision of the People of God. Yong’s brother suffers from Down syndrome. His parents are pastors. He writes from the point of view of a man who watched his parents question why God gave them an imperfect son. These kinds question often hunt parents of children with disabilities and individuals with disabilities.

Yong introduced me to important terms in the first chapter of the book: normate and ableism. Normate is the standard society lives by based on the needs and abilities of people without disabilities. The normate bias subjects people with disabilities to an unfair standard, not recognizing that their lifestyle is different than that of a normate. Ableism names the discrimination of the normate bias. Yong makes the point to make a distinction between the normate bias and ableism. The normate bias is the unconscious views of society regarding people with disabilities, while “…ableism names the discriminatory attitudes, negative stereotypes, and sociopolitical and economic structures and institutions that function to exclude people with disabilities from full participation in society” (Yong 11).  Fortunately, people with disabilities have come a long ways with the Americans with Disabilities Acts of 1970 and 1990 and the Disabilities Education Act.

In the next three chapters Yong carefully analyzes Biblical stories where there is a character with blemishes. I will choose one story from each chapter to show how Yong builds his argument. In chapter two, Yong rereads the story of Jacob, Israel, and the limp (Genesis 32:24-32) with the lens of disabilities. Jacob wrestles with the Lord in the form of a man for a whole night and comes out with only a limp. Yong argues that Jacob’s disability does not make him weaker but gives him the status of an equal with the human/divine man. Furthermore, Jacob is blessed by the man for struggling with humans and with God and having prevailed (Genesis 32:28). This frees the normate bias of the story of Jacob and gives him redemption.

In chapter three, Yong does a rereading of the story of Pentecost where “each one heard them speaking in the native language of each” (Acts 2:6) and “in our own languages we hear them speaking of God’s deeds of power” (Acts 2:11) (71). Yong argues that first God creates ways for the mute and those who stutter to communicate (Exodus 4:10-12). Second, God inspires people to listen and hear what the other person is saying. Third, God uses our other senses to communicate, such as touching, feeling, and perceiving. This would expand society’s ways of thinking of how individuals communicate with each other.

In chapter four, Yong does a rereading of First Corinthians 13. Yong argues Paul describes an inclusive theology of disabilities. When Paul talks about the “weaker” body parts, Yong urges his readers to see how Paul is describing how the “stronger” protects the “weaker” and how both groups need the other one to function as a whole. Therefore, Yong argues that Paul is addressing the unnecessary stereotypes that society has about the “weaker” by using phrases such as “that seem to be weaker” or “that we think less honorable” (1 Corinthians 12:22-23). Furthermore, Paul sees the “weaker” as the “stronger” with his explanation of the “varieties of gifts but same Spirit” (1 Corinthians 12:4-7, 11-13). God gives everyone – people with and without disabilities – gifts to further his mission of the good news.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading Yong’s retelling of the Biblical stories through the lens of disability hermeneutics. The disabled community finally has a book to engage congregations in the discussion of what it means to be an inclusive community. Yong provides discussion questions for small groups in order to help them find ways to include people with disabilities in worship and other activities, even before they walk through the door. A lot of churches do not think about these issues until someone with a disability shows up. But an unprepared church can actually be a barrier that keeps a disabled person from joining their community.

I do disagree with Yong on one matter. He says that we will not get new bodies in heaven. Although I do like Yong’s thought process that God accepts us as we are in our current state, I argue that we saw Jesus before he went to heaven (so his disciples could recognize him by his piercings) and that we get new bodies in heaven because the Devil and imperfections will not be there. Truth be told, I pray heaven takes away the disadvantages of this world and creates the perfect world God planned for us all along. Yet any argument on heaven is speculation, because we simply do not know.

Yong does an excellent job of articulating the disability hermeneutic and challenges churches to be inclusive communities. Hopefully churches take the time to read and discuss this book.

Recommended for: church small groups and parents of children with disabilities (physical and psychosocial)

Star Rating: 4.5 out of 5 (highly recommended)