
Friday, January 1, 2010
Eighth Day of Christmas
“On the eighth day of Christmas my true love gave to me…eight maids a milking.”
Of all the twelve days of gifts, these are the most radical. The Beatitudes go to the heart of our deepest passions and life circumstances. They point to gut-wrenching realities of life: poverty and emptiness, loss and grieving, powerlessness and social contempt, spiritual hunger and yearning for right to prevail, seeing needy persons being treated unjustly and neglected, bitter division and violence, religious persecution, insults, gossip, and false accusations. Only heaven-borne grace can conceive of and make possible the radical outlook and actions described in the Beatitudes.
Scripture
Psalm 46; Matthew 5:1-12
For Reflection
Opening the gifts from our True Love today, we come to the heart of the Good News shared and lived by Jesus Christ. As only sharing apprehends the seven gifts of the Spirit, so the Beatitudes are most often perceived as blessing when we have lived through the tough circumstances to which they are the gracious response. When we respond in Beatitude responses, we will know we have embraced today’s gifts.

It is one thing to learn the Beatitudes, to have memorized them and to be able to quote them. This is often as far as it goes in Christian catechism or Sunday School. But, like the Ten Commandments or the Lord’s Prayer, familiarity does not mean we understand them or joyfully cultivate them as a heart and life orientation beyond a merely formal and legal application. Compliant and eager to be an ideal Christian as I was as a child, I remember inwardly revolting at most of the Beatitudes. It was easier to just recite them and keep them as stained glass phrases. As I have continued to revisit them, my understanding and appreciation has increased, but they are no less challenging forty years later.
The Beatitudes run counter to American machismo and status quo. They unsettle the presumptions of consumer Christianity. On the surface the Beatitudes seem to be a se-up for certain failure in society that apparently rewards rugged individualism, conformity to sameness, upward mobility, the appearance of mental or physical toughness, and a thoroughly materialistic and self-indulging orientation to value and action. Dig deeper in the Beatitudes and it gets increasingly difficult to straddle kingdoms. What emerges is that Jesus actually declares people blessed whom Western civilization has over the millennia come to despise or disparage. The rest of Jesus’ ministry is one way or another verification that his is an upside down kingdom, an invitation to downward mobility, and an lifting up of all who sorrow, who are relegated to the margins.
Above all, the Beatitudes call for trust. They call for what Brennan Manning names “ruthless trust.” Because the blessedness or results described in the Beatitudes seem so far-fetched or distant, they call for ruthless trust in the invitation, worldview, Kingdom order, and certain future Jesus describes. As Manning puts it: “Faith in the person of Jesus and hope in his promise means that his voice, echoing and alive in the Gospels, has supreme and sovereign authority over our lives.” Does it get any more radical than that?
It is appropriate that the Beatitudes are received on the first day of the New Year. And in this case they are received on the first day of a new decade. So while we wish each other a Happy New Year, we might do better by offering each other a prayer for Beatitude grace. Receive these eight maids a milking, these extraordinary gifts for the year’s journey. And may we also receive the ruthless trust to see them come to fruition in our hearts, lives, and world.
Journaling/prayer possibilities
Turn the Beatitudes into prayers for those you know are in the circumstances they describe. Who is poor, empty, at the end of themselves? Who is grieving? In need of mercy? Persecuted? Hungry for God and for justice? Turn the Beatitudes into prayers for yourself. This may be confession or petition. Offer thanks for the promises of each Beatitude. Embrace these deeply in expression of ruthless trust.
Song
Scandalon by Michael Card
The seers and the prophets had foretold it long ago,
That the long awaited One would make men stumble.
But they were looking for a king to conquer and to kill.
Who’d have ever thought He’d be so meek and humble?
He will be the Truth that will offend them one and all.
A stone that makes men stumble and a rock that makes them fall.
And many will be broken so that He can make them whole.
And many will be crushed and lose their own soul.
Along the path of life there lies this stubborn Scandalon
And all who come this way must be offended.
To some He is a barrier, to others He’s the way,
For all should know the scandal of believing.
He will be the Truth that will offend them one and all.
A stone that makes men stumble and a rock that makes them fall.
And many will be broken so that He can make them whole.
And many will be crushed and lose their own soul.
It seems today the Scandalon offends no one at all.
The image we present can be stepped over.
Could it be that we are like the others long ago?
Will we ever learn to listen and to stumble?
He will be the Truth that will offend them one and all.
A stone that makes men stumble and a rock that makes them fall.
And many will be broken so that He can make them whole.
And many will be crushed and lose their own soul.
Benediction
“Ruthless trust is an unerring sense, way deep down, that beneath the surface agitation, boredom, and insecurity of life, it is gonna be all right. Ill winds may blow, more character defects may surface, sickness may visit, and friends will surely die; but a stubborn, irrefutable certainty persists that God is with us and loves us in our struggle to be faithful. A nonrational, absolutely true intuition perdures that there is something unfathomably big in the universe, something that points to Someone who is filled with peace and power, love and undreamed of creativity; Someone who inevitably will reconcile all things to himself.” Amen. -- Brennan Manning in Ruthless Trust
Thursday, December 31, 2009
Seventh Day of Christmas
“On the seventh day of Christmas my true love gave to me…seven swans a swimming.”
Scripture
Psalm 133; Romans 12:3-8; 1 Corinthians 12:1-31
For reflection

Go ahead, open the seventh gift. What is it? Oh, it is a gift! What is inside that gift? Oh, another gift! And what is inside THAT gift? Hey, another gift! And another. And another. And another. And still another. You get the feeling that you could keep opening boxes inside of boxes, gift upon gift. Such is the multiplicity and diversity of spiritual gifts given by God.
The specific gifts recalled on the seventh day of Christmas since the sixteenth century are those listed in Romans 12: Prophesying, serving, teaching, encouraging, giving, leading, compassion. Many more could be named. But whatever the gift, it is vital to know this: spiritual gifts are given for the sake of empowering people of faith to join God in sharing Good News, bearing grace, and making real the anticipated Reign of God.
The spiritual gifts described in Romans 12, as well as in 1 Corinthians 12 and elsewhere throughout the Epistles, are essential gifts for forming, sustaining, and extending community. Spiritual gifts are about community. Not about personal advancement. Not about possessing. A spiritual gift is not a spiritual gift unless it is selflessly shared. A community will be a thriving and vital community when graciously given gifts are freely and strategically shared. What better follow-up to Christmas than for gifts, great and small, to be turned toward serving and building up the community?
It has become an inadvertent tradition in our household to keep a few opened gifts on the skirt around our Christmas tree for days after the 25th. Big gifts get whisked away, played with, put on, plugged in. But to this day a few small ones remain under the tree: a box of fireplace matches, a bottle of cologne, a bag of potpourri, a couple of games, a basket of crafts, a book, a flashlight, a quote a day calendar of the 365 Stupidest Things Ever Said. Not the most expensive or desirable gifts, but useful ones just the same. They remind me of the diversity and usefulness of spiritual gifts, particularly less desirable ones.
Like the faith, hope, and love received on the third day of Christmas, the gifts we receive today are spiritually perceived, inwardly apprehended, and entirely relational. Perhaps we will never know our gifts, or what impact on a relationship, neighborhood, church, or community we can have until we start to serve, to give, to lead, to show mercy, to teach, to encourage, to declare what is burning in our hearts. Why not start today?
Journaling/prayer possibilities
Have you observed or explored spiritual gifts? If so or if not, reflect on the seven gifts listed today. To what extent do you have opportunity to express, explore, or develop these or others? Thinking of the upcoming New Year, build one or more gifts that you believe you have been given into your priorities and plans. Be intentional about expressing gifts or they will be useless to you and others. Offer thanks for whatever gifts you have or that you see in others.
Song
Because I Have Been Given Much by Grace Noll Crowell
Because I have been given much,
I too must give.
Because of Thy great bounty, Lord,
Each day I live.
I shall divide my gifts from Thee
With every brother that I see
Who has the need of help from me.
Because I have been sheltered, fed,
By Thy good care,
I cannot see another’s lack
And I not share
My glowing fire, my loaf of bread,
My roof’ safe shelter overhead,
That he too may be comforted.
Because love has been lavished so
Upon me, Lord,
A wealth I know that was not meant
For me to hoard,
I shall give love to those in need,
Shall show that love by word and deed:
Thus shall my thanks be thanks indeed.
Benediction
And now may the Spirit which was in Jesus Christ be in me, enabling me to know God’s gifts and empowering me to share them freely. Amen.
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Sixth Day of Christmas
“On the sixth day of Christmas my true love gave to me… six geese a laying.”
Scripture
Psalm 139
Genesis 1:1-2:3
Colossians 1:15-23
1 John 1:1-4
For Reflection

“In the bleak midwinter
Frosty wind made moan
Earth stood cold as iron
Water like a stone.”
What a time to receive our True Love’s sixth round of Christmas gifts: six days of creation.
Today’s gifts are as mysterious and wonderful as a goose laying an egg and a live gosling hatching from it. Who can fathom the miracle of life? Four times I have assisted and watched our children be delivered and draw their first breaths. Four times all that is rational and scientific and explainable has been tearfully eclipsed by wonder and mystery and sacredness. I sing with Michael Card: “Give up on your pondering and fall down on your knees.”
If you want to argue for or against evolution or scientific creationism, you’ve lost my interest. If you need to try to reduce the incomprehensible and grand process of the formation of life into an argument for six literal days, you’ve missed the point. If you need to try to prove that what we know as life just happened by chance, my heart goes out to you. The invitation today is not about proving or arguing or convincing or taking sides. The invitation today is to receive all life as sacred, to dare to perceive the world as a God's gracious gift, to look unto Jesus as the Apostle John looked unto him: “That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have looked at and our hands have touched—this we proclaim.”
Light. Sky and atmosphere. Land and seas, plants and trees. Sun by day and moon by night. Living creatures in the seas and sky. Living creatures on the land and humans in the image of God. The summation of each day or epoch of creation is this: “And God saw that it was good.” Whether Genesis 1 is poetry or pattern of life’s progress, above these it is rooting us all in an infinitely creative, life-giving, beauty-loving, relation-building, grace-bearing God. Creation speaks both of God’s infinite greatness and God’s intimate interest in the smallest detail. And like God, in God’s image, we are created to be.
The Gospel writers and Apostles did not miss the connection between creation and Christ. Paul describes Jesus as the “firstborn over all creation” and that “by him all things were created.” John writes: “That which was from the beginning…our hands have touched.” Michael Card captures something of this mystery: “A mother made by her own child!” In receiving the six days of creation as Christmas gifts, and embracing creation as a mysterious grace, we join with Jesus Christ in bearing life and grace in our world in our generation.
Journaling & Prayer Possibilities
Let your mind wander over the events of the past year. What personal, family, or relationship changes made an impact on your life? What took place in the neighborhood or community or nation that made you thoughtful and responsive? What world events triggered more than a casual response in you? What happened in your community of faith that created challenge and change?
The Holy Spirit often acts as “agitator,” challenging our responses, moving us toward creative stewardship of the resources and relationships we’ve been given. How has that happened this year? For each point of growth or challenge or change, offer thanks. Take this time to listen and still learn from these challenge points.
Song
To The Mystery by Michael Card
When the Father longed to show
A love He wanted us to know,
He sent His only Son and so
Became a holy embryo.
Refrain
That is the Mystery!
More than you can see.
Give up on your pondering
And fall down on your knees.
No fiction as fantastic and wild
A mother made by her own child.
The hopeless babe who cried
Was God Incarnate and man deified.
Refrain
Because the fall did devastate
Creator must now recreate.
And so to take our sin
Was made like us so we could be like Him.
Refrain
Benediction
O Divine Word, we are the offspring of Your purpose. And that purpose reaches down into our flesh. It was fashioned by You and for You. I feel that destiny pulsating within me, and when I respond I respond to the pull of your Creation’s fulfillment. I thank you. Amen. (E. Stanley Jones in The Word Became Flesh)
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Fifth Day of Christmas
“On the fifth day of Christmas my true love gave to me…five golden rings.”
Scripture
Psalm 98; Deuteronomy 6:10-25; 31:24-26; Romans 10:1-13
For reflection

Open the gifts given to you today by your True Love: Five gold rings: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. They are known in Judaism as the Torah, or Pentateuch. Together they are what is referred to in both the Old and New Testaments as the Law. This is the backbone and skeletal structure of the Biblical community of faith. It is the plumb line in an idolatrous and crooked world. It is the narrative and standard for much of what has held Western civilization together for millennia.
The Law is not so much “law” as it is a woven story of faith in which a covenant between the Hebrew people and Yahweh is developed, solidified, interpreted, and applied. This people without identity or land, this people who were slaves in Egypt, find identity (Israel), deliverance (the Exodus), and a home (Canaan, roughly contemporary Palestine). The common denominator in the formation of Israel is faith in and obedience to one unseen God, who is revealed as Yahweh, or I Am.
Genesis traces the roots of a chosen and faith-formed people. Exodus walks us through slavery in Egypt, miraculous deliverance, and the formation of the Sinai covenant. Leviticus outlines the terms of the covenant, establishing everything from the calendar to minutia regarding food preparation. Numbers takes great pains to name every tribe and family; it creates a sense of community, belonging, and relationship. Deuteronomy renews the Sinai covenant as the nation prepares to enter Canaan after forty years of wandering in the desert.
How the people of Israel live in light of Torah is the subject of much of the rest of Bible. The historical narratives (Joshua through Esther) tell of the rising and falling of Israel based on adherence to or apostasy from the Law. The prophets (Isaiah through Malachi) are essentially passionate pleas for Israel to voluntarily return to live within the terms of the covenant, within which there would be joy and shalom. The New Testament is about rescuing the Law from legalism and vain traditions and of the fulfillment of Torah in Jesus Christ. The Apostle Paul declares, “Christ is the end of the law so that there may be righteousness for everyone who believes” (Romans 10:4).
So much of what it means to live by faith is learned from the Pentateuch. Abraham took God at God’s word and it was credited to him as righteousness. Joseph first survived then thrived by faith. Moses led people out of slavery in Egypt singularly by faith in the promises of God. The invitation made to these ancient people was extended to Zechariah, Mary, and Joseph. It’s extended to us, too.
Journaling/prayer possibilities
Reflect or read again of one of the “faith heroes” in the Pentateuch: Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, etc. Note how simple and daily responses of faith to God’s counsel have become larger than life, formative for generations. What simple invitations to “walk by faith and not by sight” are presented to you daily? What “mini idols compete” with God for reliance for need satisfaction or security? What simple but profound decisions can you make to set these aside, to challenge your fears, and to live by faith? What would it mean to accept the gift of the Pentateuch today?
Song
O God, Who Called the Hebrews by Melvin Farrell, S.S.
O God, who called the Hebrews once of old
To follow Moses to the Promised Land,
This day you gather us, your chosen fold,
To lead us heavenward in Christ’s command:
As then you saved your race from slavery,
So now from Evil’s bondage make us free.
On Sinai Moses held a sacred feast
To offer homage when your voice was heard,
So we assemble here with Christ, our Priest,
That we may worship and embrace your Word:
O God who taught your chosen flock to pray,
Look kindly on our sacrifice today.
Benediction
O merciful heart of God, grant me yet again Your forgiveness. Hear my sorrowful tale and in Your great mercy blot it out from the book of Your remembrance. Give me faith so to lay hold of Your own holiness and so to rejoice in the righteousness of Christ my Savior that, resting on His merits rather than on my own, I may more and more become conformed to His likeness, my will becoming one with His in obedience to Yours. All this I ask for His holy name’s sake. Amen. (from A Diary of Private Prayer by John Baillie)
Graphic by Raette (www.artbyraette.com)
Graphic by Raette (www.artbyraette.com)
Monday, December 28, 2009
Fourth Day of Christmas
“On the fourth day of Christmas my true love gave to me, four calling birds...”
Scripture
Isaiah 61:1-2; Luke 7:21-23; John 20:30-31
For reflection
Still celebrating Christmas? Still reveling in the afterglow of the Word become flesh? As you put away Christmas decorations, and as the gifts you have received merge into your wardrobe or take their place in the household to become part of the fabric of living, keep the candle of Christmas glowing. You have received greater gifts! And you are yet to receive more!

Pay close attention to the Scripture readings today. Isaiah 61 describes the year of Jubilee, a comprehensive and radical personal and social reordering of life according to God’s reign. Jesus proclaimed Jubilee fulfilled in his coming. Luke 7:21-23 offers confirmation to the followers of John the Baptist that, in fact, Jesus is the Good News for which generations of people had longed. John 20:30-31 makes clear that the Gospel writers did not, could not capture it all. It also makes clear the intent of the Gospel writing itself: that we may believe and have life through Jesus Christ.
What Christmas promises and implies, the Gospels write large by walking us through the life of Jesus with heart-opening, gut-wrenching lucidity. The Gospels document and detail the evidence that the hopes and fears of all the years were, indeed, met in Jesus Christ. The “birth narratives” in Matthew and Luke conspicuously hint at the broad, troubling, and grace-bearing impact Jesus would have. And John’s eloquent introduction sets the stage for a story in which the Word came to that which was his own, but his own did not receive him. But to as many as received him, to those who believed on his name, he gave the right to become the children of God.
The four Gospels make no attempt to reconcile differences in details or to paint a seamless, air-brushed picture of Jesus. Each is written from a different perspective for a different audience at a different time and from a different place. The fact that they are individually so raw and make no pretense at orchestrating events so as to present a united front adds to their authenticity and believability. Though incredibly diverse, the common threads and penetrating message of the Gospels witnesses to something that has forever changed the world.
I grew up saturated with stories from the Gospels. It was a gift unappreciated and taken for granted. I didn’t awaken to the radical nature of the Gospel message and its claims upon my life and the community of faith until I was well into my twenties. I am still waking up to this gift, still being converted by the challenging invitation, still being apprehended by the call. I am still realizing this is, indeed, Good News for all humanity, for every person, for even me.
The Gospels are Good News on their own terms, not mine. Only as I let go of my flimsy excuses, shallow attachments, grandiose notions, self-serving interpretations, and uncertain certitudes, the Gospel finds me and I find my home in the Gospel. Our own stories are significant when they find their place in the Story. Every person takes his or her place in the Gospels. We must to decide how the Gospels tell our own stories.
Journaling/prayer possibilities
Recall one story from one of the four Gospels. Explore the various places you might take in the story: a well-intentioned Pharisee, an accused sinner, a seeking Zacchaeus, a lost sheep, a hired hand, a confounded disciple, etc. Let the Gospel be gift to you by receiving the grace expressed in the story: forgiveness, hope, a sense of place, dignity, personhood, healing, comfort, faith, love. Offer thanks for the gift of the Gospels. Seek to listen and explore them more fully, letting their radicality lead where it may.
Song
May the Mind of Christ, My Savior by Kate B. Wilkinson
May the mind of Christ, my Savior,
Live in me from day to day,
By His love and power controlling
All I do and say.
May the Word of God dwell richly
In my heart from hour to hour,
So that all may see I triumph
Only through His power.
May the peace of God my Father
Rule my life in everything,
That I may be calm to comfort
Sick and sorrowing.
May the love of Jesus fill me
As the waters fill the sea;
Him exalting, self abasing,
This is victory.
May I run the race before me,
Strong and brave to face the foe,
Looking only unto Jesus
As I onward go.
May His beauty rest upon me
As I seek the lost to win;
And may they forget the channel,
Seeing only Him.
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his face shine upon you and be gracious to you; the Lord turn his face toward you and give you peace. Amen. Numbers 6:24-26
Graphic by Sara Tyson (www.saratyson.com)
Graphic by Sara Tyson (www.saratyson.com)
Sunday, December 27, 2009
Third Day of Christmas
“On the third day of Christmas my true love gave to me three French hens…”
Scriptures
Psalm 103; 1 Corinthians 13:1-13
For reflection
Two days past Christmas Day, the realization of this journey to Epiphany begins to set in. It’s such a different rhythm than the usual post-holiday let down. At the same time we are usually beginning to put away Christmas decorations, this way of living Christmastime keeps the gifts coming and the celebration building. If you put everything into the Big Day, you may find yourself letting down emotionally or spiritually this week as you get back to routine matters or delve headlong into New Year revelry. May this simple spiritual journey and the gifts you are receiving sustain and steady you.

If you observe Advent, you know that faith, hope, and love, together with joy, are at the center of the Christmas story: HOPE for a Messiah sustained longingly over many generations; the FAITH of Zechariah, of Mary and Joseph; the LOVE of God for the world expressed in Jesus; the response of JOY by all who drew near to see this thing that has come to pass.
In Advent, we learned about these gifts. But now receive the faith of Zechariah, Mary, and Joseph. Now receive hope for the in-between times--which is most of the time! Now receive love enough to eclipse all hurts, forgive all sins, and forge the deepest commitments.
What would it mean for us to move from teaching our children or loved ones about faith to offering them the gift of faith? How do we move from talking about hope to living and modeling hope? Why not quit trying to teach love; let yourself be loved and express unequivocal and unqualified regard for others?
The reality of these core gifts is that we will never realize them unless we exercise them. Faith is not faith until you’ve trusted. Hope is not hope until I’ve lived from here to there in unflagging anticipation that what was promised shall be. Love is not love until we’ve opened our heart to risk forgiving or extending ourselves when reciprocity is far from guaranteed.
And it isn’t until we dare to move these gifts from being nouns to verbs that we realize that faith itself is more grace than effort, that hope is more grace than will, that love is more grace than feeling. In the decision to act in faith, we receive it afresh. In the decision to hope instead of live down to lowered expectations, hope is born anew in us. In the decision to love, the love of God is unleashed in us all over again. No wonder these “French hens” are so valuable, so prized as gifts.
Journaling/prayer possibilities
Journal (write reflectively about) an occasion in which you chose to act in faith or hope or love rather than in predictability, calculated risk, or typical rationality. Why did you choose faith, hope and/or love? What did you learn in the process? How can you relay this experience to your children, loved ones, or friends? Give thanks for the gifts of faith, hope, and love, and for the experiences in which they are exercised. Reflect on your present life choices and consider what it might mean to choose to exercise faith, hope, or love in them.
Song
Above What We Can Ask or Hope by Charles Wesley
Above what we can ask or hope,
The God of grace delights to give,
To fill the empty vessels up;
And when we grace for grace receive,
Enough in Christ remains behind
To fill the souls of all mankind.
Long as our faith’s capacity
Is stretched to admit the blessing given,
We drink the streaming Deity,
And gasp for larger tastes of heaven!
But when we lose our emptiness,
The oil, the joy, the Spirit stays!
Empty us then, most gracious Lord,
And keep us always empty here,
Till Thee, according to Thy Word,
We see upon the clouds appear,
Thy glorious fullness to reveal,
And all Thy saints forever fill.
Benediction
“And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the saints, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God. Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever! Amen.” (Ephesians 3:17b-21, NIV)
Graphic by Sara Tyson (www.saratyson.com)
Graphic by Sara Tyson (www.saratyson.com)
Saturday, December 26, 2009
Second Day of Christmas
“On the second day of Christmas my true love gave to me two turtle doves.”
Scriptures
Psalm 119:33-40; Deuteronomy 6:4-9; Galatians 3:1-25; 4:4-7
For reflection
Today’s Christmas gifts -- the Old and New Testaments -- are foundational gifts. Together, they weave the connected and continuing story of salvation history. It begins with the people of Israel and continues in the Church of Jesus Christ. The books of the Old and New Testament are authoritative in that Christians hold that no other documents or sources are needed to lead us to faith in God and life in fellowship with God and one another.
Christmas is the transition point from Old Testament to New Testament. Ancient anticipations, expectations, and interpretations of the Law and prophecies of a Messiah (Christ) are fulfilled in the life of Jesus of Nazareth. Many good people were so deeply entrenched in their traditions that they simply could not make Jesus fit into their worldview. Many others -- hungry for grace, liberation, and restoration – in faith opened their hearts to Jesus, in whom they found the embodiment of God’s promises.

The word “testament” is pretty heavy. It’s similar to “covenant.” Testaments have binding promises and obligations--many assumed and unspoken--for the parties who enter into their terms. So, when Jesus says to the disciples, as they share the Passover meal together, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood” (2 Corinthians 11:25), it must have been rather mind-boggling. We are still exploring and living the full implications of this new covenant. Reading and seeking to understand the the Old and New Testaments, we live, learn and appropriate the terms of this new covenant.
One of the things I find most helpful as I read both Old and New Testaments is to try to grasp and apply the appropriate genre--the literary form--of writing that is being used. We read legal documents differently than we do songs. We understand letters differently than we do histories. We appreciate the difference between a matter-of-fact statement and hyperbole (intended exaggeration). Noting this helps us interpret and apply the Bible more effectively in our lives and world. The fact that we believe the books of the Bible are inspired and useful for “teaching, etc.” doesn’t mean we read flatly. To take the Bible literally does not mean we take it literalistically. The difference is profound.
The dramatic diversity of the writings in the Bible makes it difficult to find a common thread running throughout. But both Old and New Testaments point rather commonly to a Kingdom of God -- people living in harmonious and abundant community through the gracious reign of God as Lord. God’s reign is depicted in the Old and New Testaments as a kingdom of peace. So it is fitting that today’s gifts are depicted as “turtle doves,” the dove being the ancient and contemporary symbol of peace, or shalom. I like to think of the Old and New Testaments being at peace with each other. The dove is also a symbol of the Holy Spirit, who brings the Word of God alive in our lives. Embrace God’s gift peace expressed in the new covenant mediated and sustained by Jesus Christ, the partridge in a pear tree.
Journaling & prayer possibilities
Try to imagine yourself a Catholic parent in 16th Century England and your expression of faith has been banned because of international politics. What essential gifts of the Christian faith would you want to instill in your children, even at the risk of your life? Make a short list of essential gifts are vital for faith for children and adults in contemporary America, gifts worth living or dying for? What simple daily steps can you take to increase awareness of and love for the Word of God in your life and the lives of your loved ones? For what in the Old and New Testaments may you offer thanks today?
Song
Come, Holy Ghost, Our Hearts Inspire by Charles Wesley
Come Holy Ghost, our hearts inspire;
Let us Thine influence prove;
Source of the old prophetic fire,
Fountain of light and love.
Come, Holy Ghost, for moved by Thee
The prophets wrote and spoke.
Unlock the truth, Thyself the key;
Unseal the sacred Book.
Expand Thy wings, celestial Dove;
Brood o’er our nature’s night.
On our disordered spirits move,
And let there now be light.
God, through Himself, we then shall know
If Thou within us shine;
And sound, with all Thy saints below,
The depths of love divine.
Benediction
“May the God of peace, who through the blood of the eternal covenant brought back from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep, equip you with everything good for doing his will, and may he work in us what is pleasing to him, through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.” (Hebrews 13:20-21)
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