Friday, July 30, 2010

Living Mark

But there is more here for us as readers of the prologue in the gospel of Mark. We have what seems to be another confirmation. Previously, there was a voice calling in the wilderness/desert, this time it is a voice from heaven. A voice linkage takes place on the level of hope and fulfillment. God is speaking from outside places that go beyond the norm of everyday life. Heaven and wilderness/ desert voices are confirmatory voices that readers need to hear about as we are moved further inside the narrative world, which in a startling and shocking way, begins to transform and change our own world.

God’s voiced proclamation assures readers that Jesus is the real thing – the beloved authentic Son promised from the times of the OT in whom God is now pleased. These OT images (focus Isaiah 42:1-4 and Psalm 2:7) give readers a striking portrayal of Jesus as the unique son of God who will carry forward God’s promise of a Messiah-servant-being who would bring the long awaited Kingdom of God. Instantly, after this voiced confirmation by God, the Spirit drives Jesus away from one wilderness and into another – to an outside place further away from daily life and everyday contexts, and the flow of crowds coming to John. The role of Jesus is portrayed as entirely passive in the narrator’s recounting. The active verbs in this scene refer to the Spirit and the angels. The narrator offers readers a privileged insight into the outside – to beyond the norms of human affairs in order to show the role of a personal and performative dimension of the Spirit in Jesus’ mission of facing conflict, and a power battle that is not entirely played out in daily life situations. Intriguingly, the vivid and striking verb ekballo—drive out—for the Spirit’s action is used some fifty times in this narrative, most often, as we shall see later, when Jesus drives out demons. This verb usually connotes motions of conservation or resistance, but the narrator chooses to leave any such overt suggestions out of the picture. What is portrayed more clearly is that the authentic unique Son of God faces this time of conflict through the initiative of the Spirit. Whatever testing experience Jesus goes through in this outside place, its overall impact is positive with respect to the unfolding mission of God in these new times. Jesus again receives confirmation as God’s authentic Son. The protagonist Satan, the adversary, tests Jesus in the outside wilderness place for a period, likely here reminiscent of the previous period of Israel’s testing in the outside places—wilderness prior to entering the Promised Land.

The narrator makes very little of this encounter and the testing connected to it. No sense of victory or defeat – winner or loser. The mention of wild animals may reinforce the picture of an outside place and Israel’s wanderings in the wilderness where God’s people are protected from vicious animals, much as Jesus may have now been through the aid of angels.

The focus here seems to be to heighten the drama as the baptized and baptizing Son of God – the coming One is thrust into heavy conflict in a hostile environment that threatens, yet cannot stop God’s unfolding mission to Israel and to the whole world through his Son.

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Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today

Longing for glistening reds and flows of blue sky in permanence – sunrise and sunset – the earth caught in the rhythm of turning and time. Light it up, oh God, and break the rhythm, so that all will be able to see you.

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Monday, July 26, 2010

Reflection for the Week

Lord God, we call out to you for wisdom, strength, and patience. Help us know how to love more deeply, to be courageous when so much that is wrong with us and with the world appears to be out of control, and to have endurance in serving others as we look forward to and await the glorious renewal of all things.

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Friday, July 23, 2010

Living Mark

The prologue of the gospel of Mark continues in verses 9-11 with Jesus’ arrival on the scene. The narrator points out to the readers that Jesus comes out of Nazareth in Galilee to be baptized by John ‘in those days’ – a highly Semitic way of saying, this is someone and something entirely new – who is not from Jerusalem. God is doing a new thing and ironically Jesus, in contrast to the Jewish crowds flowing out of Jerusalem and Judea, arrives from Galilee. The coming One enters the prologue and paradoxically is baptized by John with water, perhaps the narrator’s way of highlighting Jesus’ aligning himself with the people of God and the transfer, for the reader, from one trajectory in the OT to what God was doing now in Jesus. The coming One – Jesus – after baptism reception has a vision of a tear in heaven, no doubt reminiscent for the narrator, of many OT pictures that portray God as opening heaven to descend and be with his people. The drama of tearing open heaven is a powerful way of revealing that something surprising is about to take place.

Just then Jesus sees the Spirit descending to or upon him, which from the narrative perspective, is a confirmation of the fulfillment of the times as Jesus is more and more clearly identified as the long awaited Messiah of God who would be saturated with God’s Spirit and anointed, empowered, and equipped by the Spirit for the task at hand. There does not seem to be, as far as I know, any particular hidden significance as to why the narrator uses the imagery of a dove. Doves, at the time, don’t carry any symbolic or theological overtones, so it is probably best to take this as a way of saying that Jesus saw the invisible Spirit in the visible form of a dove, which represents a confirmation for readers as to who he is as the Christ.

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Thursday, July 22, 2010

The ZigZag Café

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

ZZC will be closed for vacation until the 5th of August. I’m looking forward to renewing the conversation and dialogue then.

For now – Bonjour.

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Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today

Living in a post-trust culture means that cynicism and apathy reign. So many people are infected with an overdose of suspicion, which amounts to being caught up in the cycle of the same. Suspicion produces suspicion, which produces more suspicion. While it is true that it is sometimes appropriate to be suspicious, it is even more important to realize that trust is always primary. That is, God has created humans in such a way that they can’t escape trust. Problem is that we trust and are suspicious of the wrong things and this is where we need direction. A dialogue of trust and suspicion will be instructive, yet it is insufficient to produce sustainable insight as to which is which. Therefore, if we want to break out of the cycle of unknowing who and what to trust and where and why to be suspicious, I suggest that we turn to God as the One who can enter into the dialogue and provide a helpful illumination that will lead to discernment and a new possibility of beginning to live the dialogue in a more accurate and appropriate manner.

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Monday, July 19, 2010

Reflection for the Week

Finding an original is like looking for the first pair of Levis or the first aspirin. God is the only Being, so it seems to me, who is capable of originality. But what is breathtaking is that out of what precedes us, we can produce something new. Sedimentation therefore shrouds who we are and what we do, yet innovation persists to contribute to life in discovering more and more what can be, from what already is.

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Friday, July 16, 2010

Living Mark

The next picture in the prologue portrayed for the reader is the actual coming of John in the wilderness/desert. His role is messenger and his voice is to prepare the way of the Lord, as was mentioned previously. Just as quickly as the narrator moved readers back in God’s story, we are now again in the moving forward mode.

John is baptizing and proclaiming that in the light of what God is doing, Jewish people are to repent in order for the release from sin to take place. This is the time in the wilderness/desert. The location, where John is proclaiming and baptizing is shockingly, out and away from ordinary daily life, hence he’s in the wilderness/desert, and separate from others, and Jerusalem and its ideologies. Repentance without sacrifice in Israel was unheard of, yet John goes against the status quo, and this is truly a sign of hope and fulfillment to all who were present. Apparently, John’s message – repent – and prophetic activity, at least in the eyes of the narrator, stirred up a fair amount of intrigue and interest. Jews flowed out into the wilderness, confessed, and were baptized.

A further element of this interest, and no doubt important to the narrator, was to recount to readers John’s appearance and his diet. These set out to confirm and highlight John’s prophetic role and may even further underline his Elijah connections in the statement, more specifically, of his proclamation. John affirms that the one coming after him has a strength and worth far greater than his own. John’s baptism was a water rite, but the coming one – the stronger one – will saturate Israel with the Holy Spirit in preparation for the incoming eschatological drama. The movement here appears to be from ceremonial washing, which even John indicates is not sufficient, to being a new people of God in light of the fulfillment of the coming One and the front-loaded OT allusions connected to Spirit activities, when God brought an end to the exile and inaugurated the new exodus in the Kingdom of God.

 

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Thursday, July 15, 2010

The ZigZag Café

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

What is preaching for and do you think it is still valid today?

 

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Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today

Uncovering hidden commitments preventing belief in God is a challenge. Recognition of being already committed, if not to God, to someone or something has the ability to empower choice. Excuses for unfaith abound and are often, though not always, buried in the recesses of the undiscovered. When these are exposed, we begin to be freed from the unidentifiable controllers that block belief and enabled to decide on a new direction, or remain in the cycle of the same. Thankfully, God is not a God who lies in waiting, but one who opens possibilities for exposure, choice, change, and transformation, far surpassing that which was covered.

 

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Monday, July 12, 2010

Reflection for the Week

Notions of the possible should illumine our lives. God is the God of the possible. Think of creation. Reflect on humanity. Ponder the incarnation. Envision heaven and earth renewed. Strangely and mysteriously incomprehensible all, but we can know sufficiently and find ourselves known intimately. Being here and there is a wonder of imaginary ontology and representing the incomprehensible on the face of the earth.

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Friday, July 9, 2010

Living Mark

What is the gospel – this good news in Marks prologue (1:1-13)? One of the features of good news in the prologue is Jesus’ arrival as Messiah - it is he who was prophesied to create a new exodus, to liberate Israel from exile, and to establish the Kingdom of God in a world dominated by the forces and powers of evil.

To confirm the newness of what God is doing in this good news, the narrator first of all moves readers of the prologue backwards – reversing the flow. In the impending drama of this story, there had been an assurance in what was already announced that this new time would arrive – the famous day – the long awaited moment – when One would come to mark out the fulfillment of this promise. The time of preparing for the coming of the Lord to liberate his people had now taken place and Christians were, and still are, invited to embrace and embody this thrilling occasion.

The narrator selects well known OT texts that are a key to the gospel’s arrival—a conflation of Malachi 3:1, Exodus 23:20 and Isaiah 40:3 appear under the heading, “As it has been written in Isaiah.” The mention of Isaiah may be due to the aim of the narrator to underscore the prophetic character of three lines now converging in time.

The first line streams from the life of Israel’s Exodus and the direction received during wanderings in the wilderness/desert. The second line evokes, at the end of the OT, one who will come and judge Israel for its sinful ways. And the third line highlights, at the end of Israel’s exile, that God would come to release his people. This streaming, evoking and highlighting are configured in this potent manner to suggest that a new exodus, in the shattering of Israel’s exile, is now going to happen.

The uploading of this picture sets out the development of what is to follow in the prologue, but it also is of considerable importance for the unfolding of the story of the gospel of Jesus Christ as recounted in Mark.

 

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Thursday, July 8, 2010

The ZigZag Café

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

How would you respond to someone who says, “there is no need for progression in sanctification, as all we have to do in the here and now is live in Christ and we're sanctified” ?

 

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Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today

Finding out more about our unidentifiable commitments is impossible to accomplish on our own. It requires openness to people and things like an - other, a story, a film, a work of art, or the natural world. Any of these can potentially tell us more about what we may be unknowingly committed to. Once exposed, such commitments become identifiable and we can then discern whether they are appropriate or inappropriate as to who we are and how we live. Raising awareness may be dangerous for our inapt commitments, as it may challenge us to change what previously was functioning, albeit unconsciously, as an unspiritual and destructive power mechanism in our lives.

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Monday, July 5, 2010

Reflection for the Week

In the midst of catastrophic destructions of the natural world, lamentable economies, and ruinous governmental policies, necessary reform seems far from being a priority on the environmental, financial, and political agendas. Maybe we just don’t like bad news and once it arises, we do everything we can to ignore it. God is not pleased by the folly of our times. Confession, rooted in the foolishness of God expressed in Christ crucified, is a first step in moving to fresh and innovative directions. Embrace the good news of God’s kingdom, and help bring its resources into the whole of life.

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Friday, July 2, 2010

Living Mark

One of the salient features of the twenty-first century is that we are living in post-Christian times. Christianity seems to be losing its traction, coherence, and credibility. Many of our churches have become corporations run by the principles of good marketing skills and consumerism, where the founding stories of our faith are distorted beyond recognition and used as manipulative tools to maintain the status quo of profit for profit’s sake.

Southern Baptist Convention President Frank Page in his book The Incredible Shrinking Church says that half of the thousands of SB churches will no longer exist in 2030, and his estimation probably holds true for many other denominations. Page cites several reasons for this demise including, lower birth rates, changing demographics, and cultures increasingly hostile to the Christian faith. And we might add an internal disintegration, where our love and unity have been replaced by judgment and separation, which in turn raises significant questions about the authenticity of our faith, or perhaps more extremely, why we should even bother to hold onto it at all.

While these reasons help explain our drift towards the post-Christian, I believe there is another key that contributes to the decline. We have not handled Scripture well. There has been a tendency to read the biblical text with a make it up as we go along methodology. The perversion of Scripture, to the degree that we can hardly recognize it as God’s word, has severe consequences when it comes to accurately reading culture, nature, the self, and the other.

To open the text of Scripture means to engage it more deeply, which will hopefully allow it to speak to us in fresh ways, and in so doing to direct us towards a recapturing of the credibility of the Christian faith, perhaps for ourselves, but also for a world that is in desperate need of the message of the gospel; the good news of the Kingdom of God proclaimed by Jesus: truth, love, justice, and salvation for both rich and poor.

The Markan prologue opens with these interesting words – “the beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ.” The narrator wants readers to know that something is now about to happen that hasn’t taken place before. This story of Jesus Christ, his identity, mission, and revelation will point us in that direction.

The aim here is to alert readers straight off that something new is going to take place. Neither Matthew, nor Luke is self-referred as ‘gospel.’ Consequently, the narrator here is likely to be embarking on a new literary adventure, which may nevertheless fit loosely into the context of Jesus/Greco-Roman biography. Yet, what is new? The genitive construction, ‘gospel of Jesus Christ’ immediately raises a query. Should readers take this to be suggesting that Jesus Christ is this gospel or a proclaimer of it? To set off the prologue, it seems likely that we have a touch of purposeful ambiguity that encourages readers not to choose – Jesus Christ is both the proclaimer of and the content of this gospel. We should not always assume that ambiguity in biblical stories is negative, as it may in fact enhance meaning, rather than detract from it. What is important to realize is this: planned ambiguity of this sort, when it occurs, will help readers to envision truths in light of both-and – Jesus Christ is both proclaimer and content of the gospel, rather than either one or the other.

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Thursday, July 1, 2010

The ZigZag Café

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Do you think we should seek to overcome a fear of self-deception, and if so, how, and if not, why not?

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