"Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. I myself will be with you every day until the end of this present age." -Matthew 28:19-20

Sunday, November 26, 2017

A Reading of the Parable of the Sheep and the Goats

Towards the conclusion of Matthew's gospel, Jesus tells a story which reveals the difference between those who are living as God's people and those who are not.  In the story, those who are identified as God's people are sheet, and those who are not are goats.  The difference between the two appears on the surface to be their behaviors: the sheep are identified as God's people because they have engaged in acts of service to others: feeding the hungry, visiting the prisoner, and otherwise helping those in need.  The goats do not engage in these behaviors.

The tendency when we read this story is to see the point of the story as a code of ethics: as admonitions to do the actions of the sheep in order to gain God's favor, and to avoid the punishment that is given to the goats at the end of the story.  But if we place ourselves in the story, we see that the methodology by which the sheep and goats are distinguished is not known to the sheep and goats until the story is told (i.e. the sheep and goats do not know until this moment of judgment the methodology through which they will be judged).

The behaviors of the sheep is not an exhaustive list of the acts that we must engage in to be God's people.  Rather, they are representative of the things that God's people do.  And as the sheep have not been given prior notice, they do not engage in these acts because they have been commanded to, but because it is their natural propensity to do them.  A clue to understanding the story is that in the ancient world, sheep and goats were thought to have different natures: sheep were sacrificial and virtuous, and goats were not.  Just like we have natures that we attribute to animals today (e.g. dogs and cats).

The purpose of participation in the new covenant community is not to engage in specifically defined behaviors to avoid punishment, but to have our underlying nature changed from one called by Paul as the Old Adam, to the New Adam, Christ.  If we live in the Spirit of Christ, we become holy, our nature changes, and it is our natural propensity to engage in the behaviors described in the story.  We don't have to be told to do them; we do them because it is our nature to do them.  Consequently, the new covenant community should be focused not on the incidentals of what God's people should do and shouldn't do, but on the transformation of our hearts and minds

Sunday, November 19, 2017

The Preoccupation of the Early Church

The Greek culture that Paul evangelized to was crowded with a number of other new religions.  One of the common characteristics of these other religions was a preoccupation with the end of the world.  This is referred to as an apocalyptic orientation.  The point of these religions, based upon an assumption that the end of the world was imminent, was to figure out when the end would happen, what would happen, and how to be protected from the anticipated violence that was associated with it.

The early converts to Christianity brought this preoccupation with them.  Paul did not seek to bring the correct understanding of the end, but to change the underlying preoccupation with it from an emphasis on the end, to an emphasis upon God's presence in the present moment, how we can discern this presence, and how to lead our lives in conformity with it

There will be a final consummation of things.  But God is unchanging and eternal.  That means that God's will for us is unchanging and eternal.  God seeks to make us holy so that we might reflect God's light and be at peace and unity with him.  As this is God's preoccupation, it should be our own, now, and forever

Sunday, November 5, 2017

God's Dream for the World

The Beatitudes, which begin Jesus' sermon on the mount, comprising chapters 5-7 of Matthew's gospel, are not intended to describe the world as it is, but to provide glimpses of the world that God seeks to create.  The word "blessed," from the Greek translation, is best understood as being the recipient of an unexpected benefit.  The gentle, the pure in heart, the peacemakers; all of these persons who are out of place in the kingdoms of this world, will, unexpectedly, be first in God's Kingdom.

God's dream is that God's reign will be revealed on earth, as it is in heaven.  This vision is epitomized in the image in Revelation of the New Jerusalem coming down from heaven, joining God's heaven with earth.  In this new reality, all of values and principals of the kingdoms of this world will be inverted, and there will be nothing but joy and peace.  God has, in Christ, initiated the new covenant community, the Church, to evidence and bring God's vision to pass.