Gospel (Lk 12:49-53)
Context. This is part of Jesus’ long journey to Jerusalem
(9:51-19:48; Wks 13-31). For the last
few weeks, we’ve been reading a section (12:1-13:9; Wks 18-20) on vigilance in
the face of eschatological crisis. To
ready themselves for the end of the world, disciples have been invited to some
pretty extraordinary acts: being liberated from possessiveness (even with
regard to one’s basic bodily needs), and serving as a table-slave in the Household
of God. We now come to a reading that
looks at the consequences of this.
Interpretation. The consequences will be division. Jesus’ question regarding peace should
surprise us, because this has been a key theme of the Gospel so far:
from the angels announcement of his birth, to his instruction to the 72 disciples
to announce peace as they go out. But,
division has come: people have reacted differently to Jesus. Was this an accident? No, it is part of God’s plan. An incident that illustrates it is when Jesus
communicates peace to the sinful woman (7:36-50; Wk 11). The Pharisees respond with division. Peace will come, but only through
division. It is up to us how we respond.
Hebrews 12:1-4
Context. The origins of this “letter” are shrouded in mystery: we
don’t know who wrote it, who is was intended for, or whether it was even a
letter (it may well have been a homily).
We do know that it’s the only Biblical book to substantially engage an
important strand of its surrounding culture: neo-Platonism. Its central theme is the priesthood of Christ,
crucified and exalted: Christ did what Jewish cult could not do – provide permanent
cleansing from sin, through the New Altar of the Cross. We are called to follow our “forerunner” on
his pilgrimage, bringing us home to heavenly rest. The sections of the letter we’ll read over
the next few weeks deal with quite how we’re to walk this walk; they’re the
consequences of earlier Christological section of the letter. Like master, like disciple: suffering is the
inevitable consequence of obedient faith.
Interpretation. The previous section of Hebrews celebrated
Jewish heroes of the faith, such as Abraham (which we read last week). These stand as evidence the race can be run,
and as supporters in the stadium, cheering us to victory. The language of cloud reminds us of God’s
appearances to mortals. Supreme among
our cheerleaders in Jesus, who perfects our faith. We put our faith in the faithful one who
trusted in God to vindicate him despite the shame of the cross (the Greek could
be translated “disregarding the shame” or “despising the shame”; the point
remains the same).
Questions
1.
Most commentators understand the reference to “fire”
as being to eschatological judgment, along with a possible reference to Elijah’s
attack on the prophets of Ba’al. But,
some read it as a reference to the coming of the Holy Spirit. How would this affect your reading?
2.
Have you experienced division because of your
Christian commitment?
3.
Who are some of your best supporters in the
crowd? Saints, friends, mentors?
4.
How does the Christian life resemble a race?
5.
What are some ways to “keep our eyes on Jesus”? What can distract us from doing this?
6.
Who or what do we identify as what we need to
resist? Is it other people, our own
tendency to sin, something else?
Credit where credit's due.
The main books I used to prepare:
Joel B. Green, The Gospel of Luke. NICONT. Wm. Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, Mich.: 1997.
L.T. Johnson, The Gospel of Luke. SP. Liturgical Press, Collegeville, Minn.: 1991.
_______, Hebrews. NTL. Westminster John Knox, Louisville, Kentucky: 2006.
Frank J. Matera, Strategies for Preaching Paul. Liturgical Press, Collegeville, Minn.: 2001.
No comments:
Post a Comment