Angels and wild beasts

First Sunday in Lent; 18 February 2024; Lent 1B (RCL); Genesis 9:8-17; Psalm 25:1-9; 1 Peter 3:18-22; Mark 1:9-15.

We always hear the story of Jesus’ temptation in the wilderness on the First Sunday in Lent. Mark’s account is the shortest and most cryptic. All we’re told is that the Spirit drove him into the wilderness, and he was there for 40 days, tempted by Satan, and he was with the wild beasts, and the angels waited on him. The forty days, of course, recalls the forty years that Israel wandered in the wilderness, but also Elijah’s journey to Horeb after his contest with the prophets of Ba’al (1 Kings 18-19).

Continue reading “Angels and wild beasts”

Christification

Last Sunday after Epiphany; 11 February 2024; Last Epiphany B (RCL); 2 Kings 2:1-12; Psalm 50:1-6; 2 Corinthians 4:3-6; Mark 9:2-9.

I entertain a theory, for which I have little evidence, that one of the primary uses of the Gospels in the early church was as “training manuals” or formation material for the newly baptized. Catechumens were dismissed after the liturgy of the word, and before the reading of the Gospel and sermon, and so would be unfamiliar with the Gospel prior to baptism. I believe that during the long vigil before baptism, in addition to readings from the Old Testament, the baptisands would likely hear whichever Gospel their community used, read from cover to cover.

Think of the emotional impact such a hearing would have on those waiting to enter the water, who had been in training for weeks, and possibly months or years. The Gospels would sound very different in such a context than we are used to hearing them. The baptisands would be invited to hear themselves in the story as they made their way to their own paschal mystery, their own death and resurrection in the waters of baptism.

The voice from heaven comes to Jesus, both at his baptism and at his transfiguration on the holy mountain. Baptisands would be awaiting their own adoption as children of God through the Spirit in baptism (see Romans 6-8). This voice would be speaking to them, and they would understand that baptism was their own transfiguration into glory. In the last thirty to forty years, the western church has begun to recover the doctrine of deification (it was never really lost, just not emphasized; the Wesleys, among others, kept it alive in the idea of sanctification).

The goal or purpose of the Christian life is to be conformed to Christ, to be Christified or deified. We are to become by grace what Christ is by nature, both human and divine. The story of the Transfiguration is placed in the Gospel accounts where it is (prior to Jesus turning toward his passion in Jerusalem) as part of the formational purpose of the Gospels, to remind the baptisands of the journey they are beginning, and its outcome. It is this transfigured Christ who walks toward Jerusalem, just as those to be transfigured in baptism will walk again into their lives in this world, but with the purpose of the deification of the whole creation (Romans 8).

While we speak of Lent as a season of preparation for baptism, we tend not to think of Lent as preparing us for transfiguration, for Christification or deification, but that would have been the purpose of catechetical preparation in the ancient church. Lent is not just preparation for Easter, but eschatological preparation as well.

Baptized in the Spirit

First Sunday after Epiphany; 7 January 2024; Epiphany 1B (RCL); Genesis 1:1-5; Psalm 29; Acts 19:1-7; Mark 1:4-11.

I’ve always had a hard time figuring out what the authors of the New Testament meant by the phrase, “the Holy Spirit.” Part of that difficulty comes from the fact that sometimes it appears with the definite article, and often without it. With the definite article, the phrase refers to some specific thing; without it, to what exactly? perhaps a quality, or some ‘stuff.’ Equally confusing is the word being translated “Spirit” – pneuma, which can also mean (always mean?) “breath.” We recognize this as the root for many words in English having to do with the lungs.

Continue reading “Baptized in the Spirit”

Born from above

Second Sunday in Lent; 5 March 2023; Lent 1A (RCL); Genesis 12:1-4a; Psalm 121; Romans 4:1-5, 13-17; John 3:1-17.

The fact that modern English doesn’t distinguish between second -person singular and plural makes it almost impossible to translate John’s Gospel with it theology intact. In the KJV, verse 7 reads, “Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born again.” It’s not Nicodemus who needs to be born again/from above, but some unnamed “you all.” The passage from Genesis is God’s instruction for Abraham and his household to leave his home and kindred and travel to a new land — and forge there a new identity. In the Romans reading, we skip the verses in which Abraham receives circumcision as a sign of that new identity.

Continue reading “Born from above”

Temptation

First Sunday in Lent; 26 February 2023; Lent 1A (RCL); Genesis 2:15-17, 3:1-7; Psalm 32; Romans 5:12-19; Matthew 4:1-11.

I had a Cambodian friend who read this passage in Genesis as a coming-of-age story. According to him, children in Cambodia were not gendered until about the age of five, “when they put their pants on.” It’s about the same age there were expected to begin to know right from wrong. Adam and Eve recognize their nakedness once they have eaten the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. That throws an interesting light on the story — temptation as a step along the way to growing up.

Continue reading “Temptation”

Tabernacles

Last Sunday after Epiphany; 19 February 2023; Last Epiphany A (RCL); Exodus 24:12-18; Psalm 2; 2 Peter 1:16-21; Matthew 17:1-9.

I’m not sure why I chose Psalm 2 this year. If the leaflets weren’t already printed, I might change to Psalm 99. Psalm 2 is a coronation psalm, and speaks of the victory of the new king over his (God’s?) enemies, who are foolish to try to rebel. The lectionary, of course, assigns it as an option with the Transfiguration because the voice from heaven quotes it — This is my son.

Continue reading “Tabernacles”

Greed

Eighth Sunday after Pentecost; 31 July 2022; Proper 13C (RCL); Hosea 11:1-11; Psalm 107:1-9, 43; Colossians 3:1-11; Luke 12:13-21.

We have skipped over most of the material in Hosea, in which God punishes Israel to try to win their favor and fidelity. Hosea, on God’s instruction, married Gomer, a prostitute, as a prophetic sign of Israel’s unfaithfulness (her prostitution after other Gods). The implication seems to be that Hosea should have similarly punished Gomer to win her love and fidelity. Any battered woman reading Hosea would cringe, or worse.

Continue reading “Greed”

Identity

First Sunday after Epiphany; The Baptism of our Lord; 9 January 2022; Epiphany 1C (RCL); Isaiah 43:1-7; Psalm 29; Acts 8:14-17; Luke 3:15-17, 21-22.

Luke doesn’t actually narrate the baptism of Jesus by John in the Jordan. In fact, the verse that the Gospel reading skips over today tell us that Herod shuts John up in prison. So, narratively at least, John is in prison before Jesus is baptized! This fits with Luke’s three-fold division of history: the age of the prophets (up to and including John the Baptist); the age of Jesus; and the age of the Spirit and the Church. Luke will remove Jesus from the scene before the Spirit shows up, unlike John’s Gospel which has Jesus breathe the Spirit on the disciples.

Continue reading “Identity”

Behold, my servant

12 January 2020; The Baptism of our Lord; Epiphany IA (RCL); Isaiah 42:1-9; Psalm 29; Acts 10:34-43; Matthew 3:13-17

The voice from heaven speaks a phrase that is a conflation of Psalm 2:7 (You are my son; this day have I begotten you) and Isaiah 42:1 (Here is my servant, whom I uphold, my chosen one with whom I am well pleased). This very combination is already asking the reader to make a profound theological move by combining the figure our the King with the figure of the servant.

Continue reading “Behold, my servant”