Sermon - Proper 5B 2015-06-07


Proper 5B

Old Testament 1 Samuel 8:4–11 (12–15) 16–20 (11:14–15)
Psalm      Psalm 138
New Testament         2 Corinthians 4:13–5:1
Gospel     Mark 3:20–35

Mark’s Gospel

The early church ascribed the authorship of Mark’s gospel to ‘John-Mark’ who appears in Acts, Colossians and 1 Peter.  Tradition goes that he derived his information from the apostle Peter.
So as Mark travelled with Peter he memorized or noted the stories that Peter told about Jesus during his teaching ministry and then arranged  them into this gospel.
Instead of starting with the birth stories about Mary and Joseph and wise men (as in Luke) Mark starts with John the Baptist.
Jesus baptism.
An allusion without any details of the temptation in the wilderness.
And then Jesus begins to preach:
“The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent, and believe in the good news.”
- Mark 1:15
He calls disciples, and then – his first miraculous act – casting out an unclean spirit.
Its quite a simple story.  Jesus taught in the synagogue.
What was he teaching about?
Probably what Mark said:
“The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent, and believe in the good news.”
- Mark 1:21
Strange thing about this message – which sounds like ‘good news’ is that it really upset some people.
Responding to the good news of Jesus - In Mark’s gospel a man with an ‘unclean spirit’ shouts out:
“What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us?  I know who you are, the Holy One of God.”
- Mark 1:25
Quite scary – Jesus orders the Spirit out: ‘Be silent and come out of him…’
This begins a little bit of a controversy which we deal with in the passage today – ‘by whose authority does Jesus cast out demons?
In Luke’s gospel the response to Jesus beginning to teach about the coming of the Kingdom of God:
“They got up, drove him out of the town, and led him to the brow of the hill on which their town was built, so that they might hurl him off the cliff.”
- Luke 4:29
In Matthew’s gospel we get a much longer description of the teaching of Jesus before we reach Matthew 12:14:
“But the Pharisees went out and conspired against him, how to destroy him.”
- Matthew 12:14
For those who pay attention to these things Matthew 12 is where the story of Mark 3 is told.  Giving us a much fuller background to the kind of teaching that resulted in an unclean Spirit becoming violent.
You know Matthew well: How to pray, blessed are the peacemakers, love your enemies… you have heard it said but I say unto you… etc.
All of this stuff makes the scribes and the Pharisees quite angry.

Mark 3:20-35

Mark 3:20-35 is a ‘section’ of Mark’s gospel held together by something Bible scholars call an ‘inclusio’.
Scripture didn’t used to have chapter and verse markers.
But in story telling there were markers that let you know where a certain section of story begun and ended.
In this case vs 21 and 34 form that section opening and beginning.
Verse 21 – “When his family heard it, they went out to restrain him…”
Verse 34 – “Your mother and your brothers and sisters are outside, asking for you.”
*  *  *
Verse 21 – “…they went out to restrain him…”
Verse 27 – “…no one can enter a strong man’s house and plunder his property without first tying up the strong man.”
Verse 34 – “Your mother and… …outside, asking for you.”
*  *  *
Jesus family hear about what Jesus is teaching and doing and they fear for his life – and for his sanity.  Jesus is courageously speaking out against the religious system of his day.
He is speaking up against the political system of the day.
And he is upsetting some powerful people.
Not only that – but he is upsetting some scary spirits.
Chasing them out with the authority of God.

1 Samuel 8

In 1 Samuel we hear the story of how Israel ended up getting a King.
This was not the plan.  The Israelites knew about Kings.  King Pharaoh for instance.  He was a tyrant – he started out all friendly, inviting the Israelites to enjoy his hospitality.  But soon he had them enslaved.
They got out of there and started their own land.
12 separate tribes; not one united and powerful nation.  One of the tribes set aside as priests.  The priests kept the people in relationship with God (the King) and reminded them of the law.
Their constitution was amazing – it made sure the poor were taken care of, land was safe, people had rights – even animals and slaves got a day off… etc.
I’ll skip a whole part of the story but lets just say that the book of Judges ends with the refrain:
“In those days there was no king in Israel; all the people did what was right in their own eyes.”
- Judges 21:23
God raised up Samuel to replace the sons of Eli (who would have inherited the priesthood from Eli at Shiloh).  Surprisingly – this is a story of corruption.
The sons of Eli used to use their authority to steal people’s sacrifices – they had no fear of the living God:
When anyone offered sacrifice, the priest’s servant would come, while the meat was boiling, with a three-pronged fork in his hand, 14 and he would thrust it into the pan, or kettle, or caldron, or pot; all that the fork brought up the priest would take for himself.
- 1 Samuel 2:13-14
This is what Eli said to his sons:
“If one person sins against another, someone can intercede for the sinner with the LORD; but if someone sins against the LORD, who can make intercession?”
- 1 Samuel 2:25
Similar thought pattern and set of words to Jesus in Mark 3:28:
People will be forgiven for their sins… but whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit can never have forgiveness…”
- Mark 3:28
God raises up Samuel to lead the Israelites.  He leads under God’s guidance – calling them back to God and away from the gods of the land. He unites the tribes; they defeat the surrounding armies. But when he gets old his sons (like Eli’s sons) become a problem.
“Yet his sons did not follow in his ways, but turned aside after gain; they took bribes and perverted justice…”
- 1 Samuel 8:3
Mark Twain apparently said:
“History doesn’t repeat itself, but it sure does echo.”
*  *  *
The descendants of the people who ‘longed for the fleshpots of Egypt while they were wandering in the desert now start hankering after a King:
“…appoint for us a king to govern us, like other nations.”
- 1 Samuel 8:6
This upset Samuel because they should have no King but God; Samuel prays to God and God says:
“Listen to the voice of the people in all that they say to you; for they have not rejected you, but they have rejected me from being king over them.  Just as they have done to me, from the day I brought them up out of Egypt…”
- 1 Samuel 8:7-8
God tells Samuel the kinds of things this King will do (read chapter 8 of 1 Samuel) and Samuel passes on the message:
He will take your sons for his army and to plow his grounds and reap his harvest; he will make your daughters work as perfumers, cooks and bakers… he will take your best fields; your slaves, your cattle and donkeys, your flocks…
“And in that day you will cry out because of your king, whom you have chosen for yourselves; but the LORD will not answer you in that day.”
- 1 Samuel 8:18

Binding the Strong Man

Most scholars reckon that Jesus words in verse 27 are about what Jesus has done, is doing to the devil:
“But no one can enter a strong man’s house and plunder his property without first tying up the strong man; then indeed the house can be plundered.”
- Mark 3:27
They say that Jesus is saying that he can bind demons and cast them out because he has bound Satan himself.
But I read this another way.
Jesus’ family is threatening to bind him up.  In Luke Jesus is led to the edge of a cliff to be thrown down (but he escapes).
If you want to plunder the Kingdom you have to bind up the ‘strong man’.  And in this case “The strong man” is Jesus – the Word of the living God.
The words he speaks are too true – too difficult – too challenging.  Lets get rid of him.
*  *  *
The consequence in 1 Sam 8 is you move into oppression under a ‘King’ who seemed like such a great idea at the time.

Your Strong Man

But what about your strong man?
As I’ve watched the news this week and listened to stories of corruption and brokenness… Within Fifa and government.
I’ve been thinking – how did it happen?
Jack Warner’s $10 million bribe?
Mxolisi Nxasana receiving R17 million to quit as National Director of Prosecutions.
A R250 million house in KZN.
A municipal councilor pleading for leniency in the sentencing of a murderous gang boss?
I’m no expert in these things – but there is something very wrong.
I gave a domestic worker a lift the other day – asked her about her day; what time she leaves home 6am, how many kids, 3 what time to you get back 6pm… I didn’t ask “What do you earn?”
Hopefully more than R2 or 3 thousand minimum.
I think every one of these injustices that we face – that we see on the news, that we participate in every day.
They’re the ropes that bind the ‘strong man’ in us.
The living God, the voice of the Holy Spirit that says:
This is not right.
This does not belong in Jesus Kingdom.
That says this is not the principle you learned from Jesus.
But we become desensitized to injustice.
We listen less and less and eventually we can’t hear the voice at all.
Then all falls apart; with the strong man tied up ‘then indeed the house can be plundered.’
*  *  *
The Israelites attempted to bind up the ‘strong man’ in 1 Samuel 8 when they rejected God as King in favour of asking Samuel to appoint someone.
The scribes attempt to bind up the ‘strong man’ when they reject the ministry that Jesus is doing because they’re afraid of his authority, his power over demons that destroy people’s lives and his popularity.
Jesus family attempts to ‘bind up the strong man’ when they decide he ‘has gone out of his mind.’

How are you binding up Jesus?  Ignoring the voice of the Spirit?  What is tying him up?

Privilege of Preaching

Sunday was Synod Sunday - ministers in the district get to swop pulpits for the day and share some of the unity of synod.  (Synod is a meeting of our church leadership over three days to receive reports, make decisions about policy etc.)  The church I serve in Table View has three services on a Sunday so Heather and I managed to worship together with them at 8am and Heather stayed on to teach Sunday School at the 930am service.  Rev Ross Southern from Tokai and Muizenberg Methodist Churches took all three services for me.

I headed to Bishop Lavis straight after the 8am service.  When I arrived in the suburb the rain was pouring down; despite the rain a salvation army band was forming up in the main road.  I found the Methodist Church in Bishop Lavis with the property steward busy sweeping away the leaves that had fallen during the week.

Later - as I met in the vestry with the worship steward for the day I heard the march of the Salvation Army band through the streets.  I asked about the hall they had recently built - only to hear that people kept stealing pieces of it; the gutters, the windows.  At one stage members of the congregation took turns to sleep in the church in an attempt to ward off the thieves.  The steward reckoned that most of the thieves steal pieces of the church to sell as scrap in order to buy drugs.

Table View where I live has its own set of problems - we get so wrapped up in them that we forget what our brothers and sisters in places like Bishop Lavis have to put up with and the history of injustice that determines so much of their lives.

I also need to be constantly reminded that my faith invites me to be part of a family that is not confined to this or that suburb - but that stretches across the diversity of the city and country in which I live.

Pentecost Sermon 2015

Notes from a sermon preached by Rev Angus Kelly at Table View Methodist Church on 2015-05-24 Pentecost Sunday.  Scriptures:  Acts 2:1-21; Psalm 104:24-34, 35b; Romans 8:22-27; John 15:26-27; 16:4b-15.

Note:

A few people asked me for the manuscript of my sermon on Sunday.  I preach from fairly sketchy notes so I’ve written this down as a kind of summary of what I had to say.  I hope it is helpful - I’d be happy to chat to anyone about these things.
God bless,
Gus

Pentecost

Today is Pentecost Sunday; on Pentecost we celebrate the gift of the Holy Spirit.  Promised by Jesus.  We read about the promise of the Holy Spirit in John 16:7
“...it is to your advantage that I go away, for if I do not go away, the Advocate will not come to you…”
“When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth; for he will not speak on his own, but will speak whatever he hears, and he will declare to you the things that are to come.”
- John 16:13
And of course there are many other promises of what the Holy Spirit will do in the Old and the New Testaments.
When Jesus speaks of the Holy Spirit he refers to him as ‘the parakletos’  Paraclete is translated variously as advocate, helper, comforter.  
I’m not sure of the historical truth of this analogy but some say there was a ship in Greek harbours called the parakletos.  The job of this ship was to go out into the sea to meet a ship that was struggling in a storm.  The parakletos would be bound to the other ship and guide it into the harbour.
As the Spirit takes the place of Jesus we are reminded of what Jesus does - and how the Holy Spirit does what Jesus was doing, Jesus reveals the very hear / nature of God to us.  The Spirit continues that ministry - see John 1:18 “No one has ever seen God. It is God the only Son, who is close to the Father’s heart, who has made him known.”
The gift of the Spirit is help and the presence of God with us even after Jesus has gone.
At Pentecost the Holy Spirit is poured out on the first Christians; about 120 of them gathered together in one place.  The arrival of the Holy Spirit is marked by the sound of wind from heaven, flames on the disciples heads, and between them.
When Jesus receives the Holy Spirit at his Baptism he sees the Holy Spirit descending ‘like a dove’ - when John baptises him - John’s gospel says that John the Baptist witnesses the Holy Spirit descending ‘like a dove.’
The Holy Spirit at Pentecost, at the Baptism of Jesus is significantly depicted as moving in.
The importance of this is that the Holy Spirit does not come ‘from inside’ but is a force / presence / reality that comes ‘from outside’.
In Psalm 104 the Psalmist perceives the Holy Spirit giving life to creation:
“When you send forth your spirit, they are created; and you renew the face of the ground.”
- Psalm 104:30
The Spirit of God has a physical effect on creation.
In the gospel of John Jesus alludes to the Spirit as wind.  Wind has power - has an effect, is a present reality - but you can not see it.
These days we know about more than just molecules of air that move through space.  We know about x-rays, about light traveling in particles and waves - we know that beyond our atomic structure as humans.  Beyond what we can see in the world around us there are sub-atomic particles that move through space and even between atoms.
Maybe a 21st analogy would be this - these tiny particles have effects on the world.  Too much exposure to radiation can cause cancer because these particles destroy our DNA.
The Spirit - really exists, interacts with creation - could be compared to this ‘sub atomic’ effect.
I say compared - this is an analogy, not science, and the point is to illustrate the fact that the Holy Spirit is real; not imagined.  The Spirit is as present to us as Jesus was when he was with us in the flesh.

Reality

The Spirit that Jesus promises is ‘the Spirit of truth’ he says that the Spirit will ‘guide us into all truth’.  Truth - says Jesus, will set us free.  Truth - is the fact that Jesus is the Son of God; freedom is liberation from captivity.
Truth - beyond the truth about who God is - is simply a healthy relationship with reality.  The law about conviction in the Old Testament was that there needed to be more than witness to the event.  This would confirm that the event took place.
Truth is grounded in reality.
The Holy Spirit is very real.
On the other hand - the human mind is very easily deceived.  On the carpet where I get dressed in the morning there is a little bundle of thread that looks like a spider.  I look at it closely every morning to check it is not a spider; and I haven’t picked it up because it looks so much like a spider that I don’t really want to touch it.
Hypnosis and hysteria lead people to believe things that are not true.  Under hypnosis a person can feel like they are getting very hot (even though it is cold); they can feel very cold (even though it is hot.)  News24.com posted an article on 24 May about a church in Soshanguve where the minister told the congregation that they were going to be filled with the ‘spirit of snakes’.
Many of the members writhed on the floor with their tongues sticking out.
In a trance like state after singing, dancing and worshipping - the minister / leader - a trusted authority says something and the people experience what they would expect to experience.
Were they really ‘filled with the spirit of snakes’?  Or were their minds playing tricks on them?
The reasonable truth is that they were lightly hypnotised and in a highly suggestible state; in the hysteria of the moment they believed their experience to be true.
The thing is - people crave instant satisfaction; and one of the instant satisfaction experiences people desperately want is ‘spiritual experience’.  The human mind gets what it expects.
‘Spiritual experience’ is not unique to Christianity; people who worship idols have ‘spiritual experiences’ sometimes they ‘babble’ in tongues, sometimes they pass out in a trance.  They believe this experience is an experience of god.  

Blasphemy

When the Israelites were freed from slavery in Egypt - on the forty year journey through the wilderness - they received commandments from God.  One of those commands was:
“You shall not misuse the name of the LORD your God, for the LORD will not hold anyone guiltless who misuses his name.”
- Deuteronomy 5:11
For many this commandment simply means that you should not use God’s name as a ‘swear word.’  The commandment is a little more interesting than that.  To ‘misuse’ the name of God is to ‘misrepresent’ God.  Name signifies identity.
The prefix to the giving of the ten commandments is a description of who God is:
“I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery.”
- Deuteronomy 5:6
This prefix reminds us of the purpose of God’s law, ‘freedom.’
Those who misuse the name of God use it to oppress other people.  In Egypt the Pharaoh claimed the authority of God for his position - later in Israel Kings and even priests would claim the authority of God for the injustice that they perpetrated.  This is a most serious and grave misuse of the name of God.
Blasphemy is a form of misrepresentation - or forgery.  Jesus - in parallel to the fourth commandment issues a warning about those who ‘blaspheme’ against the Holy Spirit:
“I tell you the truth, all the sins and blasphemies of men will be forgiven them.  But whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never be forgiven; he is guilty of an eternal sin.”
- Mark 3:28-29
In this case people are accusing Jesus of false teaching; false teachers were thought to be inspired by demons; they believe Jesus is a blasphemer and that is why they conspire to have him crucified.  Yet Jesus wants them to know that his teaching is of the Holy Spirit and is not false.  He also warns against those who might claim the Holy Spirit’s authority for that which is not of the Holy Spirit.
Jesus is preparing his disciples for the gift of the Holy Spirit to be poured out at pentecost. The privilege of receiving the Holy Spirit means that Christians ‘partner’ with God in the work of the Kingdom.  The danger - is abuse of that privilege.
Just as happened in the time of Jesus spiritual authority is used to oppress and abuse others.  False prophets claim to see the future or speak God’s words to others - yet their words are so vague that you could not tell if they are true or not.
Deuteronomy 18:20 warns against false prophets:
“But a prophet who presumes to speak in my name anything I have not commanded him to say, or a prophet who speaks in the name of other gods, must be put to death.”
- Deuteronomy 18:20
“You may say to yourselves, “How can we know when a message has not been spoken by the LORD?  If what a prophet proclaims in the name of the LORD does not take place or come true, that is a message the LORD has not spoken.  That prophet has spoken presumptuously.  Do not be afraid of him.”
- Deuteronomy 18:21-22
The first warning refers to what is at stake when someone presumes to speak in the name of God.  When the apostles make a decision in Acts they speak very humbly of what they believe the Spirit has led them to:
“For it seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us to impose on you no further burden than these essentials…”
- Acts 15:28
The second statement invites us to test the words of people who presume to speak in the name of the Holy Spirit.  The test: “Is it true?
If it isn’t “...do not be afraid of him.
Those who pretend to have spiritual authority, magical authority, or any kind of ‘fake’ authority can be quite terrifying.  People are superstitious about these things.  Someone who claims God’s authority is especially scary, many Christians are quite insecure about their faith and their experience of the Holy Spirit.
Those who claim authority are very intimidating.
People of faith need to be confident enough to ask questions.  They need to thoroughly investigate claims of the promise of healing / wealth / resurrection that many false prophets offer - without intimidation.  When those prophets are found to be false they need to be held accountable.

Quench

For fear of blaspheming the Holy Spirit we might be tempted to ignore the Spirit completely.  In 1 Thessalonians 5 Paul encourages the congregation not to ‘quench’ the Holy Spirit or despise the words of the prophets.
Do not quench the Spirit. Do not despise the words of prophets, but test everything; hold fast to what is good; abstain from every form of evil.
May the God of peace himself sanctify you entirely; and may your spirit and soul and body be kept sound and blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. The one who calls you is faithful, and he will do this.
- 1 Thessalonians 5:19-24
Remember that the Holy Spirit is real, powerful and present.  The Holy Spirit does not necessarily satisfy our fleshly desires for instant gratification and emotional spiritual experience.  In fact we are capable of deceiving ourselves into believing we’ve had a genuine spiritual experience when in fact our minds are just playing tricks on us.  Many of the spiritual experiences that Christians claim to have are indistinguishable from the spiritual experience of those who worship idols.
So Paul says we should ‘test everything’.  The scriptural test is empirical truth (Deuteronomy 18:20-22); did it really happen?  Is it verifiable?  Another test is ‘fruit’; ‘by their fruits you shall know them’ says Jesus (Matthew 7:20).  The fruits of which Jesus speaks are Christian character / christlikeness - most succinctly described in Galatians 5:22-23:
...the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.
Also in Colossians 3:12-13:
...clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience.
These fruits are no spectacular miracle, but a slow and steady blossoming into Christian Spiritual maturity.  Brought about by the Spirit - as 1 Thessalonians 5:22 says:
...may your spirit and soul and body be kept sound and blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. The one who calls you is faithful, and he will do this.

Receive

An experience of God’s Spirit is an extraordinary gift of God’s grace.  His Holy Spirit is experienced in different ways - sometimes very gently, sometimes powerfully, most of the time slowly and steadily turning hearts of stone into hearts of flesh.  How can you know if you have received the Spirit?
Jesus gives us a promise to hold on to in Luke’s gospel (11:9-13):
“Ask, and it will be given you; search, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened for you.  For everyone who asks receives, and everyone who searches finds, and for everyone who knocks, the door will be opened.  Is there anyone among you who, if your child asks for a fish, will give a snake instead of fish?  Or if the child asks for an egg, will give a scorpion?  If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!”
If you have asked for the Spirit you have received the Spirit.  Invite the Spirit to guide you and transform you.  In John 15 Jesus says the Spirit will guide us into all truth and remind us what Jesus has said and would say to us.  In Romans 8:22-27 Paul reminds us that the Spirit echoes the needs of our hearts to the heart of the Father.  He speaks of how we are being transformed / conformed to the image of his Son (verse 29) because of the power of God in us.
The Spirit reveals the heart of God to our hearts, pours out God’s love into us and gives us the power we need to live in that love.
Be open to the Spirit.  Discern carefully.  And we will see God’s Kingdom, here in this place.

Blog posts...

I decided to start updating my blog every now and again and some folks were surprised to get an email from me. :)

If you get an email of my blog posts you've subscribed either by mistake or on purpose. You probably meant to subscribe to www.readthinkpray.org where I post daily devotions. 

So if you don't want an email when I post random thoughts on the Internet feel free to click unsubscribe.  If it's the lectionary based devotions you're after then go to www.readthinkpray.org  

Otherwise I'm going to be posting random unedited thoughts via revguskelly.blogspot.com and I invite you to engage / comment freely. 

God bless,
Gus. 

Boring Church

Sometimes I think that church is boring.
Other people think so too.

I've found that the degree of interestingness of church depends on my degree of interest.

It is pretty much the same every Sunday.

Same greeting.
Same people (with a few variations).
Different Psalm.
Similar hymns, confession - and even the basic content of the sermon - Love God, love your neighbour; God can help you do this.

And off we go.

But the Sunday service isn't all that church is.
And the Sunday service is not just the message of the minister.

The Sunday service is an opportunity to pray... to come before the living God.
Everything is designed around a community that comes to connect with God.
To listen for God - beyond a preacher - beyond a song - beyond a prayer - and in the Spirit.

If we open our hearts. If we hunger and thirst for righteousness.
Church can not be boring.


Read Think Pray for 29September - Proper 22C


30 September – 4 October
Read Think Pray

Monday

[I have to apologise for getting my weeks mixed up!  This should be next week's reflections.]

 

Read Psalm 37:1-9

Think

Psalm 37 is full of wisdom.  One thing it challenges me to do is be a little less greedy – and learn to be content.  It makes me think of Paul’s words:
…I have learnt to be content with whatever I have.
- Philippians 4:10

Pray

Be still before the LORD,
and wait patiently for him.
- Psalm 37:3

Tuesday

Read Habakkuk 1:1-3; 2:1-4

Think

In the 7th Century before Christ the prophet Habakkuk stood up to speak out against the corruption of those who were powerful.  I particularly like 2:3-4.
You might be tempted to be a part of the corruption – a part of the injustice of the world.  But know that ‘your spirit will not be right within you’.  ‘The righteous live by their faith.’

 Pray

Lord, sometimes I want to take things into my own hands in order to get what I want.  Help me to let go of what I want, and trust you for what I need.  So that my Spirit would be right within me.
Amen.

Wednesday

Read 2 Timothy 1:1-14

Think

Paul speaks so fondly of his friend and son in the faith.  What seems to stand out for Paul as he writes is Timothy’s ‘sincere faith’.  One of my dictionaries describes the word as: ‘lacking in pretense or show.’
Paul is fond of Timothy and he seems to be encouraging him to ‘just be himself’.

Pray

Lord, help me to remember who you created me to be.

Thursday

Read Luke 17:5-10

Think

It might sound strange.  But sometimes we admire ourselves for our own righteousness. In verses 8-10 Jesus speaks about how slaves simply do what they are commanded to do without congratulating themselves for doing it.
Perhaps we ought to a bit more like humble slaves in our service of God?

Pray

Lord, help me to serve you just because you are God and I am not.

Friday

Read Luke 17:11-19

Think

In this story Jesus cleanses all ten lepers but only one of them is ‘made well.’  The one that returns to Jesus to give thanks.  Interestingly; it is not Jesus who makes the leper well.  It is the leper’s faith.

Pray

Spend some time giving thanks for all that God has done for you.

Read Think Pray | 23-27 September

23-27 September

Read Think Pray
Monday

Read Psalm 113

Think

I like the way that this Psalm is divided into two sections.  Verse 1-6 paint a picture of God’s greatness and power.  Verse 7-9 remind us that God is involved in the world at our level.
Raising the poor from the dust (Verse 7).
This is the God we serve; God who comes down to be with us in our difficulty and struggle.

Pray

Tell God what barrenness / dust / ash heaps you need help to get out of.  Concentrate more on telling God what’s happening than on telling him how to rescue you.

Tuesday

Read Amos 8:4-7

Think

Eugene Peterson translates verse 4-6: “Listen to this, you who walk over the weak, you who treat the poor people as less than nothing…”
How have you been a victim of injustice?  How does it feel to hear that God is keeping tabs on what people are up to?
How have you been a perpetrator of injustice?

Pray

Lord I’m very aware of when people are unfair to me, but not very aware of when I am unfair to others.  Help me to see more clearly.

Wednesday

Read 1 Timothy 2:1-7

Think

Paul calls us to pray for kings and all those in high positions, so that we may lead a ‘quiet and peacable life in all godliness and dignity.’
That is what God wants for the world – peace, godliness and dignity.  Paul reminds us to pray!
Do you pray for our countries leaders in business and politics?
Perhaps we should.

Pray

God bless Africa, Guard her children, Guide her leaders.  And give her peace.  Amen.

Thursday

Read Luke 16:1-13

Think

This really is a very confusing story.
In the light of chapter 15 (the story of the lost coin, lost sheep and prodigal son) I think it is about being generous with God’s grace.
Believing that God can forgive sinners like us.  But also knowing that God can forgive other sinners too.  It’s not up to us to do the judging.

Pray

Lord you forgive me so graciously but I am so reluctant to forgive others.  Help me.

Friday

Read 16:19-31

Think

If I listen to this parable as myself I hear it as hard or bad news.  I’m more like the rich man than like Lazarus.
But if I were poor; I would hear this story as incredibly good and hopeful news. The news that justice will prevail.

Pray

Lord help us to recognize Lazarus at our gate.