The Gift of New Creation [Large Print]: Scriptures for the Church Seasons
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About this ebook
The Gift of New Creation, originally released in 2015, invites us to explore God’s saving and redeeming love through a study of the lectionary Bible readings for Lent and Easter. Key Scriptures call us to prepare and contemplate God’s restoration and new creation through the death and resurrection of Jesus.
Through the readings, we hear the invitation to embrace God’s salvation and the new life offered to us through Christ. The season of Lent offers opportunities to reflect on God’s redemptive action and to explore means of grace that help us move into new life in Christ. Transformation is a key focus of Lenten worship, study, and prayer. We will discover the salvation and renewal of creation revealed through the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus.
The Gift of New Creation is based on the Revised Common Lectionary scripture for church year C, the third of a three-year cycle of Bible readings. The study includes commentary and reflection on readings from the Old Testament, the Gospels, and the Epistles. It offers the opportunity to explore these Bible readings in a seven-session study. It will help participants understand, appreciate, and engage in meaningful and life-changing spiritual practices and offer gratitude for God’s salvation through Jesus Christ.
Thomas L. Ehrich
Thomas Ehrich was a staff reporter for the Wall Street Journal for six years. He then went to seminary and was ordained as an Episcopal priest. In 1995 he left parish ministry to join a colleague in founding a computer consulting firm. He now travels widely, writes a syndicated newspaper column, and continues to write winsome theology through On a Journey which he began eight years ago and now distributes to 3,300 readers daily.
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The Gift of New Creation [Large Print] - Thomas L. Ehrich
Messy Faith
Scriptures for the
First Sunday of Lent
Deuteronomy 26:1-11
Romans 10:8b-13
Luke 4:1-13
The basic proposition of faith can be stated simply: God is in life, and we know God through life as we live it. We don’t worship a God who is impossibly far from us, a God outside the human realm. We worship a God who is among us, a God known as Emmanuel, God with us.
How did the ancient Hebrews know I am
was their God? Because I am
saw their suffering in Egypt, liberated them from bondage, brought them in safety to a Promised Land, and gave that land to them for their use. The fruits of that usage—crops from the land—bear witness to God’s faithfulness.
How close is our God? In your mouth and in your heart,
said Paul. You have but to confess to God and call upon God’s name, and God will bless you with faith.
How could Jesus understand and verify God’s call to him? He went into the wilderness, did battle with the devil, and remembered what God had told him. Jesus just needed to live as God had told him to live.
Faith can get messy when it is this close to real life. It’s easier to form beliefs from a great distance, where order can be imagined and doctrines inferred. It is much more difficult to seek God in the chaos and corruption of the here and now.
This week’s lessons spring from gritty locales and tell stories of God in life. God is known in the offspring of a starving Aramean
(Jacob). God is known in a word so near to us that it changes our lips and hearts. And God is known in a high-stakes contest between a newly baptized young Galilean and the forces of darkness itself.
A GRATEFUL PEOPLE
DEUTERONOMY 26:1-11
The challenge for any believer is to know what they believe and why they believe it. What happened that caused belief to master nonbelief? What changed that made a story grounded in faith seem more vital than a story grounded in, say, one’s career or national pride?
Christians created creeds for this purpose. The Apostles’ Creed and the Nicene Creed are the most widely used. They recount the nature of God and tell the narrative of Jesus, and in so doing they relate the impact God has on humankind.
The ancient Hebrews had a different kind of creed. We read it in the twenty-sixth chapter of Deuteronomy, a book presented as the farewell words of Moses as the Hebrews ended their wilderness wandering and prepared to enter the Promised Land of Canaan. Some have called these verses, Deuteronomy 26:5b-9, the Deuteronomic Creed.
Moses envisioned a harvest festival after the Israelites’ first growing season in the land of Canaan, a festival that would be repeated annually. The people were to gather their harvest, and then bring a portion of it to their holy place. They were to present the first portion (usually seen as the first tenth portion) to the priest. And then they were to explain why they took this action.
Their explanation took the form of telling their story as a people (Deuteronomy 26:5b-9). They were children of a starving Aramean,
namely, Jacob. As told in the Book of Genesis, in Israel’s prehistory, the sons of Jacob went down to Egypt during a famine. Under Joseph’s care they survived, and they eventually became a great nation, mighty and numerous.
But then a new Pharaoh appeared, and he turned the Hebrews into slaves and subjected them to hard labor.
The people cried out to their God, and God heard them, saw their affliction, toil, and oppression, and decided to act. As told in the Book of Exodus, God performed great signs and wonders,
convincing Pharaoh to let God’s people go. When Pharaoh changed his mind, God, with a strong hand and an outstretched arm,
parted the Reed Sea and led the Hebrews to safety. God brought them across the Sinai Desert to the River Jordan—a long journey that formed them as a people—and gave them the land of Canaan, a land full of milk and honey.
So now they brought their offering to God in gratitude, both for the harvest and for the great acts of liberation and guidance that made it possible (Deuteronomy 26:10).
This creed explains what the people needed to know as Israelites. They were a people whose cries God heard. God had set them free from bondage. They would find themselves in bondage again, during their years in exile in Babylon. God would liberate them again and give them a land for planting. Note that God didn’t promise them a powerful kingdom, but a land where they could provide for their needs.
They were a people whose duty was to use the land and to show gratitude for it. The heart of this creed is gratitude. It is not the might and majesty of Israel’s God, nor is it some call to rule the world in God’s name. The heart of the creed is Israel’s duty to give back to God in thanksgiving.
Imagine how world history would have been different—and would be different now—if God’s people understood themselves first and foremost as those who have been liberated and called to gratitude.
Instead of parading our excellence and right opinions, we would tell the story of our humiliation and God’s response. Instead of presuming the right to rule others, we would plant our land and share the harvest with God. Instead of building bigger barns and grander castles, we would lay the first portion of our harvest before God.
Israel’s ancient creed answers perhaps the greatest dilemma in which people find themselves: amnesia. We forget who we are. We forget our descent from the God of creation. We forget the deep love God has for all people. We forget that all we have comes from God. We forget our fundamental obligation to show gratitude for what we have received. We forget to be people of freedom in a world prone to bondage. We forget to go where God leads, rather than where appetite or bullies insist. We forget to do the work God has given us to do, and then be grateful for it and celebrate.
Instead, we allow others to define us—and to believe them when they sell us short. Instead, we take the credit for the good we have and blame God for the bad. We applaud ourselves. We accept bondage as the price we pay for getting the comfort and wealth we crave. We deny any need for gratitude, saying, I did this, I alone.
And we certainly don’t intend to share our harvest. Rather than celebrate our good fortune, we lament all that we don’t have.
It is appealing to define God by creeds of right opinion. It puts us in charge. Telling a story of liberation, on the other hand, a story of journey, harvest, and gratitude, has an entirely different impact. It acknowledges that we are not in charge. You can see why Moses laid two requirements before his people: Have a harvest festival, and give to God in gratitude. Imagine the family of an office worker or factory worker, or teacher or nurse, gathering each week to celebrate the week’s paycheck, laying a portion of it before God and celebrating. Wouldn’t that change family dynamics!
I personally resonate with this narrative creed in Deuteronomy more than the more definitional creeds of the Christian era. They describe the same God. The Hebrew creed focuses on God’s faithfulness, as evident in acts of compassion, power, and steadfast love. The Christian creeds lend themselves to statements of doctrine. Unfortunately, people in our age—and perhaps every age—are susceptible to the malady that usually follows from doctrine, namely, right-opinion. We are all too easily convinced in reciting the creeds that we find favor with God by correctly defining God’s characteristics and knowing how the Trinitarian parts fit together.
The Deuteronomic Creed, on the other hand, points to God and tells a story of divine providence at work. That speaks to the bondage I experience. It is different from the Hebrews’ bondage in Egypt, but because this is a narrative, I can make the intuitive leap to my own form of bondage. I can place myself in the creed.
Faith, then, becomes the act of recognizing the moment of liberation at hand and following God’s mediator across the dangerous place to freedom.
The promise feels more real, too: a land to work; a place where I belong; a setting where I can create, build, and grow something. That feels more compelling than the acquisition of right-opinion and a sense of superiority that comes from it.
What new harvest is happening in your life? How can you give back to God in gratitude?
TOTAL ENGAGEMENT
ROMANS 10:8b-13
Throughout our study of the lectionary selections of Paul’s writings, it will be helpful to remember that Paul was a lot like me on Day One of my cross-country pilgrimage. He was sorting through several elements, all of them overlapping like a driver’s thoughts and road awareness.
One was the faith that came suddenly to him on the road to Damascus. Without any warning or intellectual ground-laying, Paul found himself totally engaged with this Jesus whom he had been fighting. His entire being became caught up in Jesus.
A second was his work founding churches and mentoring the flawed but earnest leaders who were trying to establish Jesus-centered communities in a hostile environment. One moment, he was disappointed in them, and the next moment he was praising their good work. I sense that he wished they, too, could get totally engaged in Jesus.
A third element shaping Paul was the ongoing opposition that he and his fellow Christians were experiencing, especially within the Jewish community where they were initially a subgroup.
A fourth element was his desire to lay the intellectual ground for continuing church life. He was not a legalist or a theologian, but he did have certain ideas he hoped to plant among Christians, such as salvation by grace, not works.
It’s like my drive on Day One of