This
entire episode takes place during a dream or vision. God promises Abram a great
reward, and Abram kind of grumps like Han Solo in Star Wars: “What good’s a
reward if you ain’t around to spend it?” Instead, Abram’s spin is “What good’s
a reward if it will go to people outside my family?”
We
can forgive him for being grumpy. Every other time that God has told Abram to
do something, Abram has done it without a single question. Get up and pack
everything and go to Canaan, a land you’ve never seen? Sure, God. Ten years
before, in Genesis 12, God had promised that Abram would be made a great
nation, and a lot has happened since then: famine and a trip to Egypt; his
nephew Lot captured, forcing Abram to go to war (Genesis 13). Abram is rich,
yes, but he has no direct descendants, and a slave from Damascus is his heir. Abram
is a very old man; he moved to Canaan at age 75, and had been living there 10
years when this promise was made to him. He had been married for a very long
time, and his wife was considered to be barren— and yet, when God tells him
that his blood descendants will outnumber the stars, for the first time,
instead of just doing whatever he is told, he asks for clarification.
Here’s
what was omitted—a dream in which God tells Abram that his descendants will be
slaves, will eventually triumph: ‘13Then the Lord said to Abram, “Know this for certain, that your
offspring shall be aliens in a land that is not theirs, and shall be slaves there,
and they shall be oppressed for four hundred years; 14but I will bring judgment on
the nation that they serve, and afterward they shall come out with great
possessions. 15As for yourself, you shall
go to your ancestors in peace; you shall be buried in a good old age. 16And they shall come back
here in the fourth generation; for the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet
complete.”’ I think this omission is actually important and changes the story
considerably—it adds a darker note, and shows that there will be suffering even
in the midst of all the good things. That’s real life.
As
it is, in the version we have, Abram receives the promise, he sacrifices as God
commanded him to do, and he falls asleep into “a deep and terrifying darkness,”
then suddenly there is a smoking fire pot and torch going in between the pieces
of the offerings. Supposedly, it is God passing between the pieces, thus
binding himself and assenting to follow through with giving the land between
the Nile and Euphrates to Abram’s descendants and giving Abram children.
What
is described here is called a “covenant ceremony.” This was described in
Jeremiah 34:18-20: 18 Those
who have violated my covenant and have not fulfilled the terms of the covenant
they made before me, I will treat like the calf they cut in two and then walked
between its pieces. 19 The leaders of Judah and Jerusalem, the
court officials, the priests and all the people of the land who walked between
the pieces of the calf, 20 I will deliver into the hands of their
enemies who want to kill them. Their dead bodies will become food for the birds
and the wild animals. An animal would be sacrificed and split into halves; the parties
would walk between the halves in a figure 8 pattern, and then would stand in
the midst of the blood between the two halves (remember, blood is a symbol of
power and life) and pronounce blessings and curses based upon fulfilling the
terms of the covenant as is described in the Jeremiah passage.
Why
was Abram so favored by God? He wasn’t from any special family, nor was he
particularly wise. It was because he had faith—he was righteous. He was so
righteous he could intercede with God on behalf of Sodom. This is later going
to be a very important theme in the Pauline writings: membership in God’s people
is through faith, not works or ancestry.
Psalm 27
This
psalm is an exercise in building up one’s courage when feeling fearful and
oppressed. It begins and ends with the author advising himself what to do to
enable him to face the things that terrorize him. He starts with reminding
himself that God is his “light and salvation,” God will provide guidance and
protection. He ends with reminding himself to be patient and trust that God
will come through. This God has a
personal, intimate relationship with the author—“MY light,” “MY salvation,”
“the strength of MY life,” “MY helper.” Indeed this relationship is even more
important than human kinship, since father and mother have forsaken the author
(verse 10).
There
are three sections to this psalm. Verses 1-6 talk about being strong and filled
with faith. Verses 7-12 are in the form of a lament, not as confident as the
beginning of the section, wavering and almost getting overwhelmed with the
dangers that the author faces. Verses 13-14 are moving back toward confidence
and trust, with verse 14 once again more sure that, eventually, God will
“comfort your heart” in God’s own time.
Philippians 3:17-4:1
The
biggest question confronting the early church in regards to proselytization was
whether Gentile converts had to live according to Jewish law in order to be
Christian. Early on the original apostles said yes; Paul (and later Peter) are
going to be convinced that this is not necessary. It is this dispute that Paul
is referring to. Those who disagree with him are condemned in some pretty
strong terms here. Instead, the Christians at Philippi are asked to be like
Paul and not try to be a member of the nation of Israel but a citizen of the
heavenly kingdom. Outward signs, such as circumcision or Jewish dietary laws
(“their god is the belly”), are unnecessary. The Pharisaic focus on strict
adherence to hundreds of rules is a fixation upon earthly things, in Paul’s
opinion, and he is speaking as a former Pharisee. This reminder about being
citizens of the kingdom of God applied to the Philippians in another way, since
residents of Philippi were given the privilege of being Roman citizens as well.
But
let’s try to apply this to our situation. We may not have people in the Church
attempting to force us to live according to the Law--- or do we? There
certainly is a split in Christendom as well as in our own Anglican Communion
between those who attempt to apply Levitical precepts to modern Christians.
Luke 13:35-41
Jesus has been going through Galilee, healing and casting
out demons in the face of opposition. He has also been answering questions
about the nature of the kingdom of God. But he’s also been doing something else
in almost all of these activities as well: he’s been criticizing the Pharisees.
Just before this pericope, Jesus had told the parable of the narrow door (Luke
13:22-30), which implies that those who have resisted Jesus’ teaching will not
be able to enter the Lord’s house. The verse just before this (Luke 13:30)
repeats the adage that “some are last who will be
first, and some are first who will be last.’
So
it does seem a bit strange that it is Pharisees who come to warn Jesus that
Herod wants to kill him. Remember Herod the Great, the one who was king
when Jesus was born, who wanted to kill the baby Jesus when told about him by
the Magi, and later slaughtered all the baby boys under the age of two (the
Holy Innocents)? That Herod is not THIS Herod. This Herod is one of the
original Herod’s sons: Herod Antipas, who has been given a fourth of Herod the
Great’s kingdom to rule—the part that includes Galilee. And yet he is still
pretty ruthless himself. It is this Herod who has imprisoned John the Baptist
(Luke 3:20) and then later killed him (Luke 9:7). Jesus is warned by Pharisees
of Herod’s intent to kill him, too. Why? It’s unclear, but we need to remember
that most of Jesus’ ministry has been in Galilee thus far, and Jesus was a
well-known former disciple (it is thought) of his cousin John.
So why do the Pharisees warn Jesus of impending danger? If
we know the context, it could be that they are trying to silence Jesus and get
him to abandon his ministry, which would certainly suit their purposes—lately
Jesus’s ministry has been focused on attacking the Pharisees. Then there’s
another thing implied by Jesus’s response: “Go and tell that fox….” Jesus knows
the Pharisees have been in league with Herod, and Jesus implies that they still
are. Perhaps this is all a ploy by Herod AND the Pharisees to drive Jesus out, somewhere
else where he will be someone else’s problem.
Jesus sneers at the idea that he has anything to fear from
this “fox.” This is an insult, since foxes are unclean, and they are attributed
with the characteristics of being sneaky, slinking, cunning, and manipulative,
living through stealth rather than through honest labor. He has important
business—business that reinforces the difference between God’s kingdom, where
healing and mercy, repentance and faith are the order of the day, and Herod’s
family’s rule, full of malice and threatened murder of innocents. Jesus knows
that he faces death, and he has embraced this and is at peace with it-- but it
will not be at the hands of Herod. This section of the story, or pericope, only
appears in Luke.
Jesus is clear, and he is resolute. He will not be shaken. He will go to Jerusalem, and in doing so he
is fully aware that then his work will be done, and he knows what happens to
prophets who go to Jerusalem. Zechariah was killed in Jerusalem by King Joash
(2 Chronicles 24:20-22), and the prophet Uriah was murdered there too by King
Jehoiakim (Jeremiah 26:20-23). Isaiah was from Jerusalem and ended up being
sawed in two at Menasseh.
But this does not shake his resolve. He mourns the fact that
the people of Jerusalem are so recalcitrant, and reject his attempts to love
and brood over them as a hen broods over her chicks. Jesus foretells the
destruction of Jerusalem (“Your house will be left to you [desolate]”).
Jerusalem will be left desolate because it has refused to obey God and rejected
God’s son and prophet. The last line echoes what will be shouted when Jesus
enters Jerusalem on Palm Sunday (Luke 19:37-38): “Blessed is the King who comes
in the Name of the Lord!” which is a quote of Psalm 118:26.
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