Thursday, October 17, 2013

WwtW: The kingdom's still coming, but God's listening now

Yesterday's Bible Study Notes; OT Year C, Week 29.

2nd Reading:  2 Tim 3:14-4:2
Context.          Second Timothy is one of what are called the “Pastoral Epistles” (the term, as far as I know, was coined by Aquinas).  They are presented as letters from Paul to individual church leaders, in this case, Timothy.  Many scholars think they are the product of a Pauline school, writing in the name of their founder as a mark of respect (much as church documents are ghost-written today).  Regardless of the circumstances of their composition, they are concerned with the continuation of the Church beyond initial proclamation to more settled institution.  Timothy is the only person mentioned in the Bible whose grandmother was a Christian.  The pastorals share a common basic message: hold fast to sound teaching, and you will live a worthy life, though with hardship; good order, structure and hierarchy are needed in the Church; keep on converting people, and look attractive to outsiders in order to do this.


Interpretation. This is Paul’s solemn charge to Timothy.  In the verses just before our reading picks up, Paul reminds Timothy of the suffering for the gospel he has known and the Timothy will experience (3:10-13).  Part of this suffering is the emergence of false teachers within the Church.  This makes it imperative that Timothy be persistent in teaching true doctrine, the teaching he has been nourished with since his youth.  He is to remember his teachers, because Christianity is not just a religion of ideas but revolves around real relationship and personal witness.  It is noteworthy that Timothy is to do everything with patience.  He must be patient even when correcting false teaching.

Gospel:           Luke 18:1-8
Context.           We come to the final stretch of Jesus’ long journey to Jerusalem (9:51-19:48; Wks 13-31), with a section (17:11-19:27, Wks 28-31) summarizing what Jesus has taught previously on the journey and inviting response.  Appropriate response will not be found from the disciples, who are as lacking in understanding as they were at the start of the journey.  Instead, the appropriate response is found in a leper (last week), a widow (this week), some children (skipped), and a tax collector (next week).  In a skipped section leading into this week’s Gospel, Jesus is asked when the kingdom is coming.  He replies that it exists “within you,” and that the Son of Man, having suffered, will return to bring its fullness.

Interpretation.  Jesus’ words follow from a description of the end-times, so it’s important to read this passage in that light: pray always so as to be ready for the coming of the Son of Man.  They will have to wait and endure similar suffering to their Master.  There is an opposition here: prayer and faith on one hand; becoming weary on the other.  This doesn’t mean physical tiredness, but a spiritual dejection.  One could translate ‘losing heart.’  The judge is an impartial stoic (a judicial ideal amongst many Greeks and Romans), not even fearing God.  God, on the other hand, shows preferential love to the poor and outcast, such as widows.  The disciples should respond to the injustice they will face with the same persistence as the widow.  Prayer is faith in action.

Questions
1.      How has Scripture “trained [you] in righteousness”?  Thinking about this group, or other times you’ve studied the Bible, how does the image of ‘training’ resonate with Bible study?
2.      How does the need for personal witness in form how we hand on the faith to the next generation?
3.      How does prayer express faith?  Build up faith?
4.      What are temptations to spiritual weariness?  What is someone who is spiritually weary like?  What are some remedies?

5.      Both our readings talk about persevering as we wait.  How do the images they give of what this looks like complement each other?  

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