John was in the wilderness preaching. As noted last week, he wouldn’t let his people get by on a comfortable sense of entitlement. They’d better repent!
The crowds asked him, “What should we do?” They wanted something a little more specific – understandable. Most of us need something concrete, something comprehensible to start working upon. And John gave them a specific answer. If someone is fortunate enough to have two coats, share one with someone who has none. The same with food.
Tax collectors were among the crowds. They must have felt they were in a special category—and they were set apart in the society. Tax collectors were considered collaborators with the Roman occupying forces. They had tremendous power since they could collect the tax and then collect whatever more they wanted as their pay. This “administrative fee” could be quite exorbitant. The tax collectors were despised by fellow Israelites. If they were to do what John asked, must they give up being tax collectors? Could they earn a living any other way at this point? What should they do? John told them to collect no more than was appointed to them.
Soldiers also came an asked the same specific question: What should they do? Now Jews were generally not conscripted into the Roman army, so it is often assumed that these were not Roman soldiers. It is not impossible that there could have been a few among the soldiers who came to hear John preach. With the missionary thrust of Hellenistic Judaism, there were a number of God-fearers among the Gentiles. God-fearers were Gentiles who were attracted to the spiritual and moral nature of Israel’s God and embraced the worship of Yahweh. But they couldn’t be considered Jewish because they didn’t practice circumcision or practice the ritual laws such as those having to do with food. If there were God-fearers among the Roman soldiers (and we know there were a few—the book of Acts tells us about at least one of them), then an off-duty soldier could have come out to hear John speak. Other than these, there were Israelites who served as soldiers for Herod. There would have been opportunities for pad their incomes through intimidation. All soldiers of faith wanted John to speak to their situation. He told them to rob no one by intimidation or false accusation, and to be content with their wages.
It seems notable that John’s advice is not radical. It may be uncomfortable to those who have something when there are people in the world who have nothing. But it is not new. Teachings throughout Israelite history had spoken of the call to help others as a responsibility of faith. The book of Proverbs even said specifically that one who gives to the poor lends to the Lord. Later, Jesus would personalize this saying that helping someone is the same as doing it for him.
John doesn't tell soldiers and tax collectors to leave their jobs, just do them without graft or violence. Be content with their wages. Don’t take advantage of their positions to take from others. Perhaps this can be expanded upon to anyone with power. The temptations of power are extreme. It’s not for nothing that Jesus turned them down. It could be noted that everyone has some kind of power that can be abused, even if it’s just to step on a harmless bug or be unpleasant to the people around them. Most people have considerably more power than that.
What kind of power do you have in your personal and individual sphere of life?
What do you think John might say to us in our individual situations?
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Saturday, February 18, 2012
Luke 3:1-9
We shift from the pleasant story of Jesus as a boy in the temple. Suddenly we are about eighteen years in the future. John the Baptist is out in the wilderness Luke sets the stage by giving dates. It is the fifteen year in the reign of Tiberius. Pontius Pilate is the Roman governor of Judea. Rome allowed Herod (son of Herod) some status as ruler of Galilee. Herod’s brother, Philip, had the same status over Iturea and Trachonitus. Lysanias ruled Abilene. On the local front, Annas and Caiaphas were High Priests in Jerusalem. These are mostly players on the stage of the story to be told. Only Lysanias is little known and Philip is . Tiberius is a presence because he represents the authority of Rome, and Jesus would be crucified by Roman authority mediated through Pontius Pilate. Luke’s dating is not as precise as it might seem because it is unclear whether the fifteenth year it he reign of Tiberius is from the time he succeeded Augustus (A.d. 14) or from the time Tiberius became joint emperor with Augustus in a.d. 11-12. So John the Baptist began his ministry some time in 26-27 a.d. or about 29 a.d.
The Cambridge scholar, E.J. Tinsley points out that Luke’s presentation of John the Baptist is more as a prophet, rather than a second Elijah (the emphasis of Mark and Matthew). The popularity and importance of John is unmistakable. He came proclaiming God’s word, using the words of Isaiah about preparing the way of the Lord. He baptized people as a symbol or token of repentance.
We see in John no trace of encouraging self-pity on the basis of being an oppressed people. John is not a liberation theologian, but an equal opportunity haranguer of sin. Isn’t this empowering? This is not the powerful pointing at the powerless and say ‘you have to repent.’ It is a man among the oppressed crying out, “We have to repent.”
John’s message, harsh as it was, was surprisingly popular. Crowds came to be baptized and were met by more berating. He may have recognized a tendency to pat themselves on the back and think that they were descendants of Abraham and therefore secure. John points out that God could children for Abraham out of stones. It sounds almost as if the people had some vague sense that God needed them, or was dependent upon them because of their heritage from Abraham. (‘what’s God going to do, start all over?’) The situation is familiar in other aspects in the world today. Many of us suffer from a sense of entitlement. John told the people that feeling of entitlement was just an illusion. Instead they needed to demonstrate repentance by the fruits or behavior of repentance.
Repentance is different than simply being penitent or just saying, ‘I’m sorry.” Repentance includes these, but calls upon the penitent to change direction and begin behaving in a different way. In the same fashion a boy kept bugging his sister, then when she cried, would say he was sorry to get her to stop from alerting their mother. After one episode, she cried again, and he said he was sorry and didn’t she believe he was really sorry. She said what she wanted to know was when he was sorry enough to quit. John was asking the same kind of question. “Are you sorry enough to quit?
John’s message is harsh. Why do you suppose people came in such large numbers to hear him and seek baptism?
In what way might Christians in the church today suffer from an illusion of entitlement?
As Lent begins next Wednesday, what do we need to repent?
In what ways are we called to prepare for Jesus?
Saturday, February 11, 2012
Luke 2:41-52
As noted in a previous week’s study, it seems possible that Luke may have met Mary and heard some stories about Jesus. This story is the kind of anecdote a mother might share. The family has traveled up to Jerusalem for the Passover. Every Jew dreamt of doing this at least once in their life. But Mary and Joseph evidently felt it was important to go every year. This couldn’t have been easy. It took money and time away from the carpentry shop. Passover was eight days long, so with travel time this was a significant time away from home. There was also the uncertainties of travel, although this last was lessened by traveling in a large group. (It is tempting to speculate whether the friendship with Martha and Mary’s family in Bethany went back to the childhood of Jesus, having met on these annual trips to the holy city.)
At twelve, Jesus would have had a level of independence. He may have explored the city on his own and visited the temple to listen to the scholars discussing theology. Mary and Joseph don’t seem to have known all his movements but trusted him to be on his own. But, as with many adolescent boys, he may have lost track of time and become focused on his interests, forgetting what his family was doing.
At the end of Passover, Mary and Joseph and the younger children started back with group they had traveled with. It must have been a large party and they likely assumed Jesus was simply spending time with friends. But three days of not seeing him must have been unusual, so after surely searching carefully, they rushed back to Jerusalem. As loving parents, they must have been quite frightened. Passover was a time of unrest in Israel as the people remembered a time of liberation in their history. The parents’ imagination must have gone wild. Could he have been arrested by the Romans? Caught up in violence and hurt? Was he sick?
After searching, Mary and Joseph found Jesus in the temple. Those who were experts in the laws and traditions of Judaism were clearly impressed with the boy. But Mary and Joseph were filled with the anxiety of the search and scolded him for having made them worry. He asked why they’d searched (referring to combing the city instead of going straight to the temple?) for couldn’t they have known he’d be in his Father’s house. He is often pictured as though a mature adult simply responding as though his parents were a bit foolish. But realistically, he was an adolescent boy. It would be natural if there was a bit of childish bravado and embarrassment mixed in with his words. After all, he was being scolded in front of respected men of Israel. And, he had caused his parents a great deal of worry, trouble and expense. Luke reports that he returned home and was obedient to his parents.
Joseph and Mary did not entirely understand the event. But Mary kept these memories and treasured them. If she was sharing anecdotes with Luke, we can well imagine her tone of voice as she told of the little boy she’d loved as a mother long before others came to love him as Lord and Savior.
Luke concludes the story by saying that Jesus grew up, gaining favor with both God and his human community.
Other gospels were written following the death of Jesus. Some purported to tell stories of his childhood as well. One is charming – the little boy making clay birds and bringing them alive. Others are less so, such as him getting angry at some other children and his words causing their death. These gospels were not deemed by the church to be authoritative or helpful accounts of the good news of Jesus. (It should be noted, however, that they contain some information that is also found in the four gospels of the Bible.)
Scholars, such as that of the Interpreter’s Bible Dictionary, point out that the stories of the childhood of Jesus are similar or parallel to that of Samuel in the Old Testament, raising questions for some whether Luke fashioned the story to show this parallel. It might, of course, be equally pointed out that two precocious young boys with a special calling from God might inevitably have parallel experiences in growing up. Luke, as a literary master, might have recognized this. Nonetheless, there are significant differences between the childhood of Samuel and that of Jesus. Samuel was raised by an irascible old man, having been brought to him by his parents at the age of five. On the other hand, Jesus had a more “normal” childhood, growing up with two loving parents. Mary and Joseph were devout in both outward religious practice and in heartfelt spirituality. If we take seriously the fact that Jesus was fully human, (the incarnation) then these influenced him.
What do you feel about the idea of Jesus being a normal adolescent boy?
Can you think of places in Jesus’ teaching where he may have been remembering his childhood home?
Martha and Mary were clearly very good friends of Jesus. What do you think about the possibility that this friendship began when they were all children?
Saturday, February 4, 2012
Luke 2:39-40
Luke makes no mention of the flight to Egypt. He merely states that Mary and Joseph did everything that was required in the law and then returned to Nazareth, in the region of Galilee. He follows this with a statement that, basically, Jesus grew up and was a particularly promising child.
Although Luke may have been writing more specifically to a Gentile audience, he doesn't forget where Jesus began. Mary and Joseph were Jewish peasants. (There was once a Christmas card with Mary on it, labeling her the world's favorite Jewish mother.)
Joseph and Mary seem to have been careful in their following of the law, giving the appropriate sacrifices, making their proper trip to Jerusalem, as every Israelite was expected to do. In fact, as the next scripture will indicate, they did even more. Mary and Joseph came every year to Jerusalem for the Passover, something that could not have been easy to accomplish. Neither would Jesus later scorn traditional aspects of religious observance. He simply made clear the message that they were to be practiced for the right reasons.
When they had accomplished the rituals and sacrifices, the family returned home to Galilee. Perhaps for the Gentile readers, this would have had less emotional impact than for Jews living in Israel. Galilee was considered back country and the Galileans had accents other Israelites disliked. Nazareth had such little respect in the popular opinion that people asked, disparagingly whether it was even possible for anything good to come from there. It is significant that ancient, non-Christian references don't mention it. In other words, Luke sets Jesus squarely into a town that was unknown to the Gentile world and considered unimportant and lacking promise in the Jewish opinion. Yet, there, growing up in that quiet backwater, was this child who would eventually shake the foundations of the world.
In what quiet places of the world might God be working today to change the world?
In what quiet places of your own heart and soul might God be active to change your life?
In what way can the individual and the church grow with wisdom?
Although Luke may have been writing more specifically to a Gentile audience, he doesn't forget where Jesus began. Mary and Joseph were Jewish peasants. (There was once a Christmas card with Mary on it, labeling her the world's favorite Jewish mother.)
Joseph and Mary seem to have been careful in their following of the law, giving the appropriate sacrifices, making their proper trip to Jerusalem, as every Israelite was expected to do. In fact, as the next scripture will indicate, they did even more. Mary and Joseph came every year to Jerusalem for the Passover, something that could not have been easy to accomplish. Neither would Jesus later scorn traditional aspects of religious observance. He simply made clear the message that they were to be practiced for the right reasons.
When they had accomplished the rituals and sacrifices, the family returned home to Galilee. Perhaps for the Gentile readers, this would have had less emotional impact than for Jews living in Israel. Galilee was considered back country and the Galileans had accents other Israelites disliked. Nazareth had such little respect in the popular opinion that people asked, disparagingly whether it was even possible for anything good to come from there. It is significant that ancient, non-Christian references don't mention it. In other words, Luke sets Jesus squarely into a town that was unknown to the Gentile world and considered unimportant and lacking promise in the Jewish opinion. Yet, there, growing up in that quiet backwater, was this child who would eventually shake the foundations of the world.
There is an old story that a Jewish teacher was once asked why on earth God would bother talking to Moses from a lowly thorn bush. The teacher's answer? Perhaps to teach us that God is everywhere, including lowly thorn bushes!
In what quiet places of the world might God be working today to change the world?
In what quiet places of your own heart and soul might God be active to change your life?
In what way can the individual and the church grow with wisdom?
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