Pondering for Monday, March 15, 2021

Daily Office Readings for Monday of the 4th Week in Lent: Year 1

Morning Psalm 89:1-18; Evening Psalm 89:19-52 ;  
Jeremiah 16:10 to 21Romans 7:1 to 12John 6:1 to 15;

“Our ancestors have inherited nothing but lies, worthless things in which there is no profit.” (Jeremiah 16:19)

I feel very strongly that some of our Biblical teachings, even Christian teachings, have been tainted to suit those teachers whose purpose is to shape their respective communities into beliefs that would support racist and misogynistic codes of  community conduct. Such biblical teaching taught that slaves should obey their masters, and that wives should be subservient to their husbands.

I believe there should be no slaves at all, and that marriage is an equal partnership where either partner may lead in family the life depending on the individual strengths, not their gender or sex. God says through Jeremiah, “I am now sending for many fishermen, says the Lord, and they shall catch them; and afterwards I will send for many hunters, and they shall hunt them from every mountain and every hill, and out of the clefts of the rocks.” (Jeremiah 16:16)

This is perhaps the first time that the use of fishermen and hunters are used to go do the Lord’s work.  Of course, we hear of fishermen called into the service of the Lord on the shores of Capernaum in the Gospels. These callings are very different. The fishermen and hunters of Jeremiah are called to find and bring in those who, through their iniquity and promotion of idols, are an abomination to God.

The fishermen of Capernaum, and Paul, the hunter of the faithful, are those sent to evangelize the world in the way of God through our Lord Jesus. John and James, Peter and Andrew as well as Paul are among the first saints who speak to us about the truth of who Jesus is and about what God wants for us.  However, even with some of the letters supposedly from Paul, we must be careful.

Too much of the Bible story has been twisted to suit the bigotry and misogynistic rhetoric of self-serving and racist males to suit their own narcissist desires. These are worthless things in which there is no spiritual profit. I consider myself as one called to fish for and hunt down such misguided teachings and set them right.

John, James, Peter and Andrew along with Matthew, Mark and Luke tell the Gospel truth. When the Gospel is read in Church, the whole congregation re-orients itself in turning to face the words therein. The Gospel then changes us in ways that point us to the inclusive truth about God. This is done through living a life of love and listening to the loving saints of God. Love is most important.

Let us live to love more than we love to live, listening to what the Spirit is saying to, and through, the saints of God, while pondering anew what the Almighty can do.  John

Pondering for Sunday, March 14, 2021

Part 1 of 2

Daily Office Readings for Sunday of the 4th Week of Lent: Year 1

Morning Psalms 66 and 67; Evening Psalms 19 and 46;   
Jeremiah 14:1 to 9 and 17 to 22Galatians 4:21 to 5:1Mark 8:11 to 21:

“For freedom Christ has set us free. Stand firm, therefore, and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery.” (Galatians 5:1)

Paul compares the two mothers; Hagar, mother of slaves, and, Sarah, mother of free people. The slavery that Paul speaks of is more than just slavery of an ancient Arabia.  It is slavery to whatever we substitute for God. This could be money, power, modern devices, owning art, or even Church status. God’s plan, since before Abraham, is for us to be free.  We are born of a free mother. Nothing can enslave us if we stand firm in our faith of freedom.

Part 2 of 2

Eucharistic Readings for Sunday of the 4th Week in Lent: Year B

Numbers 21:4 to 9Psalm 107:1 to 3 and 17 to 22Ephesians 2:1 to 10John 3:14 to 21

“Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.”  (John 3:17)

We have heard John 3:16 forever. I think John 3:17 better explains the mission of God in Christ Jesus.  Jesus comes to us as Holy Hope! We have a chance. It is good to know that God loves us in spite of ourselves.

We too often keep loving ourselves more than we love God. We want power, and glory, and wealth. We want these things so that we look better than those looking at us, other people. We need to start caring more about how God sees us. If we put how God sees us ahead of how other people see us we will be seen in a better light by both God and others. There is a reason our two great commandments are to first love God, and then, only then, love your neighbor as yourself.

There is a final kingdom, this is not it. There is an eternal kingdom, this is not it. However, we are invited to come to that eternal kingdom through our Lord and Savior Jesus who is here from the Almighty and eternal God and who can save us from ourselves. This world is temporal, but not condemned. This world is the stepping stone to that heavenly world where for all who take this step of loving the Creator may reside.  Let us live to love more than we love to live.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to, and through, the saints of God, and then ponder anew what the Almighty can do.  John

Pondering for Saturday, March 13, 2021

Daily Office Readings for Saturday, of the 3rd Week of Lent: Year 1

Morning Psalm 87 and  90; Evening Psalm 136;  
Jeremiah 13:1 to 11Romans 6:12 to 23John 8:47 to 59

“Then the Jews said to him, ‘You are not yet fifty years old, and have you seen Abraham?’*  Jesus said to them, ‘Very truly, I tell you, before Abraham was, I am.’ So they picked up stones to throw at him, but Jesus hid himself and went out of the temple.” (John 8:57 to 59)

Our Lord Jesus has always said that He is God’s Presence among us. We interpret that as Son of God. We are truly limited in our language. Incarnate literally means, personified or in material form. From the Gospel of Saint John we learn the God is Spirit, (John 4:24). God being Spirit means that God has always been. God was with Abraham and called him from Err. God was with Moses at the burning bush where God declared God’s name to be “I AM.” This is what God in Christ Jesus said to those who challenged him. He said, as God said to Moses at the burning bush, “God said to Moses, “I am who I am.”He said further, “Thus you shall say to the Israelites, ‘I am has sent me to you.” (Exodus 3:14)

This is the same “I AM,” that speaks to his challengers in our Gospel reading of John for today, who then try to stone him.  What a shame. Couldn’t they just believe? Can’t we today, just believe?

Full disclosure, I am more a teaching and healing Jesus than a Jerusalem crucified Jesus. Having been to the Holy Land, I was really fascinated with the walk of Jesus in Israel, northern Israel, the Galilee area.  It is in Galilee that our Lord Jesus healed the sick, cast out demons, changed water into wine, raised the dead in Nain, taught the Beatitudes, walked on the waters of Lake Galilee, and called his disciples to follow him. And, Galilee is where our Lord Jesus arranged to meet them after His Resurrection. (Matthew 28:6)   Galilee is also where we Christians received the Great Commission. (Matthew 28:19 and 20)

We are still in Galilee, and our Lord Jesus is still calling you to service. Our Lord Jesus, the Great I AM, is calling you through the scriptures, and through your prayers, and through the Saints of God.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to, and through, the saints of God, and then ponder anew what the Almighty can do.  John

Pondering for Friday, March 12, 2021

Daily Office Readings for Friday of the 3rd Week of Lent: Year 1

Morning Psalms 95 and 88; Evening Psalms 91 and 92;
Jeremiah 11:1 to 8 and 14 to 20Romans 6:1 to 11John 8:33 to 47;

I know that you are descendants of Abraham; yet you look for an opportunity to kill me, because there is no place in you for my word.” (John 8:37)

I consider myself a spiritual descendant of Abraham. My prayer is that I do indeed have a space in my heart and mind for the Word of our Lord Jesus. Jesus preached the love of God  in order that we might all be the children of God and in fact call on God as Abba, Father. In this way we may recognize ourselves as children of God and spiritual children to Abraham. Abraham was a strong man of faith who would even destroy his own biological son in his spiritual obedience to God. However, Jesus said to his critics, “If you were Abraham’s children, you would be doing what Abraham did, but now you are trying to kill me, a man who has told you the truth that I heard from God. This is not what Abraham did.” (John 8:39 and 40) Abraham had a place in him for God’s Word.

Abraham left his father’s home and followed the voice of God and believed the promises of God about who he would become. He was blessed, and in this blessing he blessed the nations, and he blesses us today. The blessings we receive are not all for us. We too are blessed only in order to bless others. We bless others with some of our money, some of our time and some of our counsel. We should not take what God has blessed us with and hoard it for ourselves. God has given us that that belongs to those who are out there, some of whom, do not believe in, or know the love of God. But God loves them anyway, and God loves them through you.  Keep and maintain a place for the Word of God in you and then go and be a blessing to others.

Today we also remember Gregory the Great (604)

Pope Gregory was an amazing Pope who considered himself, “a servant of the servants of God.” Gregory sent Augustine of Canterbury to the English people to further organize the Church there. In this way Gregory played an instrumental role in the history of our Episcopal and Anglican Church. He is a key figure for me in our Church History. Gregory was blessed and passed that blessing on in the tradition of Abraham.

Today is Friday. For this evening and tomorrow day my friends; Shabbat Shalom

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to, and through, the saints of God, and then ponder anew what the Almighty can do.  John

Pondering for Thursday, March 11, 2021

Daily Office Readings for Thursday of the 3rd Week of Lent: Year 1

Morning Psalms 42 and 43; Evening Psalms 85 and 86;   
Jeremiah 10:11 to 24Romans 5:12 to 21John 8:21 to 32

“Everyone is stupid and without knowledge; goldsmiths are all put to shame by their idols; for their images are false, and there is no breath in them.  They are worthless, a work of delusion; at the time of their punishment they shall perish.” (Jeremiah 10:14 and 15)

To me, the words of Jeremiah which says, “Everyone is stupid and without knowledge,” simply means that no one is pondering about God and real life. We are often enslaved by the imaginations of artists.  Artists have given angels a pair of wings but nowhere in the Bible, when it speaks of angels specifically, do they have wings.  Leonardo DaVinci has the apostles seated at a long table in such a way that we can see our Lord Jesus centered, and all the apostle’s faces can be seen, as in a photo op.

Jeremiah reports that goldsmiths have poisoned the minds of the community with their craft of golden gods made with human hands that have no power at all. They are a work of delusion. To buy into the imaginations of craftsmen is to not use our skills of reason which God has given to us all.  We do have knowledge, we are not without knowledge. We are not really stupid, but we don’t use our God-given reasoning ability to prayerfully examine Biblical text. If we did, we would not let the imaginations of a few, lead us down roads that are not validated by the ancient stories handed down to us from before Christ, and since Christ.

I love art. I love technological achievements that make life nice. However, I keep a clear distinction between what is nice and what is necessary. God, and worship of God, happens to be both for me, nice and very necessary. I can do without phones, devices and even this laptop that I am typing this on right now. I cannot however do without reaching out to God through my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, whether it is documented or not.  Daily pondering in prayer and meditation is a matter of holy habit now.  I don’t believe we are really stupid and without knowledge as Jeremiah reports. I think we don’t take the time to sit quietly in a room alone. This is the recommendation of Pascal, “All of humanity’s problems stem from man’s inability to sit quietly in a room alone,” Blaise Pascal. Each of us has the responsibility to form for ourselves the pattern of life we want. We get to decide how and when art and technology participate in our lives. We decide the habits we have.

We are the habits we keep, good or bad. What holy habits do you keep?  What holy habits would you like to start? Find a quiet space and ponder this.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to, and through, the saints of God, and then ponder anew what the Almighty can do.  John

Pondering for Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Daily Office Readings for Wednesday of the 3rd Week of Lent: Year 1

Morning Psalm 119:97 to120; Evening Psalms 81 and 82;
Jeremiah 8:18 to 9:6Romans 5:1 to11John 8:12 to 20

“We also boast in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not disappoint us, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us.” (Romans 5: 3 to 5)

I imagine suffering but not dying does lead to some kind of endurance. I mean we have all been in tight spots.  Sometimes it gets down to actually watching the secondhand of a clock tick by and saying to yourself, I got through that second; after second, after second, over and over again. This is the very basics of endurance.

I suppose there is a certain amount of maturation that comes with “getting through” difficult times. Such maturation morphs into character. And somewhere in our character is hope. I know that I hope a lot. Paul will come to say that we hope for what is not seen.  We don’t know how God will act in our lives. God is always so full of surprises. The two biggest surprises that I like to recall is the parting of the sea so that the Israelites could escape capture; and, the birth of our Lord Jesus, the Savior of the world. But before these surprising acts of God happened, there was a tremendous amount of hope. This hope was in a people who were oppressed, be it escaping slaves or occupied Palestinian Jews by Rome. For all of these, and like us today, “God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us.”

I find it amazing that these words about God’s love being, “poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit,” appear today in our reading. Our Women’s Bible Study has been moved to Wednesdays since my retirement and these words of Noon Day Prayers are always prayed at our opening service. The surprise is that these words are appointed for today, the day of the week that I will meet with our faithful group. God is still full of surprises, great and small. Thank You Lord Jesus.

I ask you who read these words, to please try and be aware of the places where God is acting, even in very small ways in your life, because, in fact God is.  I tell people all the time that I can’t always see where God is, in my life, but in reflective pondering, I can always see where God was, and has acted in my life. And I am thankful.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to, and through, the saints of God, and then ponder anew what the Almighty can do.  John

Pondering for Tuesday, March 9, 2021

Daily Office Readings for Tuesday of the 3rd Week of Lent: Year 1

Morning Psalm 78:1 to 39; Evening Psalm 78:40 to 72;   
Jeremiah 7:21 to 34Romans 4:13 to 25John 7:37 to 52;

“No distrust made him [Abraham], waver concerning the promise of God, but he grew strong in his faith as he gave glory to God, being fully convinced that God was able to do what he had promised.”  (Romans 4:20 and 21)

I feel that I share a lot of conviction with Abraham, that is, no distrust about what God is doing among us and with me in particular. I have come a long way. I was a high school dropout who was blessed enough to join the United States Marine Corps in 1972. I left my father’s house in Nashville, Tennessee and have followed a life of duty, service and faith. The faith part occurred when I followed a fellow Marine to St. Anne’s Episcopal Church in Memphis, Tennessee and was Baptized into God’s one holy Catholic and Apostolic Church in 1980. I have been following God ever since through the bread crumbs of Communion left by our Lord Jesus Christ.

Marines have an old poster that comes from a Lynn Anderson’s song, “I never promised you a rose garden.”  I attached it here:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6sWW0nxi9bw. (Hint, you might want to skip the ad at the beginning)

It is an old, old video ad for the Marines. But the Marine Corps was my Godly invitation to leave Nashville and explore the world.  I have been around the earth six times and thought I was done. But then I underestimated God. As an Episcopal Priest now and a member of the Masonic Knights Templar, God once again took me on a trip to Israel to visit the Holy Land. I loved Galilee. I didn’t realize that God was already guiding my life in ways that I did not realize. Abraham was a better man than me. He never doubted or questioned but always believed. I, on the other hand, am still a work in progress. I don’t know where God will take me next but I have a good idea that it will be pleasing to me and to God. but most importantly, to God.

How about you?  Do you not realize that God has been on the periphery of your life for all of your life? St. Paul goes on to tell you that, “Now the words, ‘it was reckoned to him’, were written not for his sake alone, but for ours [yours] also. It will be reckoned to us who believe in him who raised Jesus our Lord from the dead, who was handed over to death for our trespasses and was raised for our [your] justification” (Romans 4: 23 to 25).   My beloved of the Lord, this is real, not just idle dreams or superstition. Faith in God will save you from eternal death. In fact, faith will bring you to eternal life where you will never cry or feel sad again. Thank You Lord Jesus.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to, and through, the saints of God, and then ponder anew what the Almighty can do.  John

Pondering for Monday, March 8, 2021

Daily Office Reading for Monday of the 3rd Week of Lent: Year 1

 Morning Psalm 80; Evening Psalm 77:
Jeremiah 7:1 to15Romans 4:1 to 12John 7:14 to 36:

“Restore us, O God of hosts; show the light of your countenance, and we shall be saved.” (Psalm 80)

This verse shows up three times in Psalm 80. It asks for restoration and the light of God’s countenance.

It appears in different English verbiage depending on which Bible translation you read.  But the message is the same; we Christians need restoration, but this can only be accomplished if we receive the light of God’s countenance. Such a light is revealed to us only as God wishes to do so. We can’t figure it out or achieve it. But we can show God that we believe by the way we live out our lives.  I have observed that God has blessed those who discipline themselves with the light of God’s countenance as God did with Moses at the burning bush (Exodus 3). God also walked with Abraham and revealed many signs to him.

“He [Abraham] received the sign of circumcision as a seal of the righteousness that he had by faith while he was still uncircumcised. The purpose was to make him the ancestor of all who believe without being circumcised and who thus have righteousness reckoned to them, and likewise the ancestor of the circumcised who are not only circumcised but who also follow the example of the faith that our ancestor Abraham had before he was circumcised.” (Romans 4: 11 and 12).  This is Paul reflecting on the importance following in faith and how important it is.  So for me, circumcision was never necessary, and therefore, God’s inclusiveness was always open to women.

This is the long way around the elbow in order to reach my point, and that is, God finds us if we prepare a place to receive God and live our lives open to accept the hints and nudges from God, and to see the burning bush in our own lives. God even went to Saul/Paul not because Paul figured everything out; in fact Paul was wrong about what he thought  God wanted.  He thought he was doing what God wanted until God, in the Risen Lord, stepped into his life and changed him and Christians everywhere, forever.

The message is clear. The light of God’s countenance will restore us if we walk in the light of God’s countenance in prayer and love. I would also recommend studying the lives of the saints of God. We have such wonderful examples in our Church history. Such study is not “figuring it out,” but rather, creating a space, a stepping stone for God to enter your life and change you forever.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to, and through, the saints of God, and then ponder anew what the Almighty can do.  John

Pondering for Sunday, March 7, 2021

Part 1 of 2

Daily Office Readings for Sunday of the 3rd Week of Lent: Year 1

Morning Psalms 93 and 96; Evening Psalm 34;  
Jeremiah 6:9 to 151st  Corinthians 6:12 to 20Mark 5:1 to 20

“Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, which you have from God, and that you are not your own?”  (1st Corinthians 6:19)

I have to be honest about picking these words.  I picked this verse from our Morning Prayer reading because it shares the light of our Gospel reading from the Gospel according to John in our Eucharistic reading for today which follows in Part 2 of 2 below.

Leading to this insight about our bodies being temples of the Lord, Paul, is on a tirade about fornication, which is good advice. But he reminds us that deep within us is the soul, the temple resting place of God. It is a sacred place in us specifically set aside as the dwelling place of God.  It should be taken care of and maintained with prayer and devotion to God.

Part 2 of 2

Eucharistic Readings for the 3rd Sunday of Lent: Year B

Exodus 20:1 to17Psalm 19;   1st Corinthians 1:18 to 25;   John 2:13 to 22;

 He told those who were selling the doves, “Take these things out of here! Stop making my Father’s house a marketplace!”” (John 2:16)

This all started within reason. Worshipers could not afford to bring sacrificial animals to the temple trusting that the sacrifice animals would be okay on the journey. So, “businesses” were set up to satisfy the need to offer healthy animals for sacrifice according to the Law of Moses. But like many good ideas, things that start out with good intentions sometimes end up to be self-serving.

Jesus uses his own body as a metaphor for his own resurrection. As our Lord Jesus uses his body as an example, so too should we look at our own bodies as temples to the Lord. Within us is a space sacred to the Lord.

We have choices.  If we do not reserve our inward temples for the Lord, something else will move in and occupy it. What moves in may not be pleasant or in our best interest. This morning’s Gospel reading was about Legion, the multiple demons that possessed a man. Let us choose Jesus because Jesus can, and will, save us and keep us in heaven for all eternity; so say the saints of God.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to, and through, the saints of God, and then ponder anew what the Almighty can do.  John

Pondering for Saturday, March 6, 2021

Daily Office Readings for Saturday of the 2nd Week of Lent: Year 1

Morning Psalms 75 and 76; Evening Psalms 23 and 27;
Jeremiah 5:20 to 31Romans 3:19 to 31John 7:1 to13:

“For we hold that a person is justified by faith apart from works prescribed by the law.  Or is God the God of Jews only? Is he not the God of Gentiles also? Yes, of Gentiles also, since God is one; and he will justify the circumcised on the ground of faith and the uncircumcised through that same faith. Do we then overthrow the law by this faith? By no means! On the contrary, we uphold the law.” (Romans 3:28 to 31)

So Paul says we are justified by faith apart from works prescribes by the law. I think one of those laws is to remember the Sabbath and keep it Holy. Paul does not annul the law, only says that works are apart from, separate from, but in addition to the faith requirement, and still viable. Sometimes I think Paul needs balance..

He also asks if God is concerned for people outside the “Law People?”  The answer is, “Yes.” God is very concerned for all people. Nobody is wasted. He, Paul, also points out that this faith we have is the same faith of both Jew and Gentile. There is no “them,” or “us.” We are both and, not or. God loves us all.

For us who are Christian, our Lord Jesus has summed up the Law into “Love God with all that we are,” and this is shown by both private prayers and public worship, the latter not to be confused with keeping the Sabbath; and, to love one another. This is the Law handed down to us from our Lord Jesus. So none of us should think that we can just do away with the law to love God and to love one another, and all the faith works that the Lord’s Law requires.

The saints since the time of Jesus have all had the quality of prayer, charity and journaling.  It is this last quality that informs us today about what it means to be a follower of our Lord Jesus. From Perpetua to Mother Teresa, we should all read the words of the saints of God. I think they give St Paul balance and gives us direction.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to, and through, the saints of God, and then ponder anew what the Almighty can do.  John