For a guy that doesn’t like to read, it seems like I do a lot of it. Right now I’m working through Les Miserables trying to get it read before going to see the movie after Jan 1. It is 4k pages on my Kindle app. No chance I’ll get though it, but alas I’m reading something not news, youth ministry, theology, or technology specific. Back to topic.
I was reading my local news paper, The Tulsa World, online, and ran across this OP/ED about some folks wanting to place the “Ten Commandments” as a monument on public property. I’ve read many, many OP/ED’s about this issue and this is one of the better ones that asks the question, “Does a block of granite make us better?” Oddly, no where does the writer point out that the “10 Commandments” are based in Judaism and are not specifically, “Christian.” I’ve always found that odd as well that so few Christians know that the “10 Commandments” are not Christian specific. Anyway, a few paragraphs and a link to read more.
Ten Commandments: Does a Block of Granite Make Us Better?”
By MIKE JONES Associate Editor | The Tulsa World
Published: 11/25/2012 2:27 AM
Placing the Ten Commandments on public land does offend me. Why is it that Christians, at least some of them, insist that their way is not simply the best way, but the only way? They often point to John 14:6 which says, “Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.”
Read a few other holy books and you will find the same kind of passages concerning other religions.
This country was founded more on freedom from religion. The fact is, some of those who fled the tyranny of a forced religion, and who we celebrated at Thanksgiving, became religious tyrants themselves.
The Bill of Rights was adopted to set that straight.
Were the Ten Commandments, as well as other religious tenets, influential on U.S. law? Of course. But that does not give them the endorsement of the government.
Read more from this Tulsa World article at http://www.tulsaworld.com/opinion/article.aspx?subjectid=213&articleid=20121125_11_G1_CUTLIN114689
The second Sunday of Advent nears and here are a few words about the Lectionary texts for this week. Remember, if you find these few paragraphs helpful, you can subscribe to Sacres Steps: Children’s Sermon Journal @ www.sscsj.org — Subscriptions are $5 a month or $50 a year. Visit our site to learn more.
Baruch 5:1-9
There is no doubt that some Christians read this text as messianic prophecy (specifically a prediction of Jesus). This is no doubt the “why” behind the Lectionary committees choice to include the reading of this text on the second Sunday of Advent. An interesting phrase in the reading, “Righteous Peace, Godly Glory” points to the names given to the messiah in Isaiah 9:6, (a text that is a traditional reading during Advent or on Christmas Eve). These “nicknames” are descriptive of the work of a person who will reset the community to right relationship with God and with the nations around Israel. It is work that both leader and community undertake together.
Philippians 1:3-11
Can you be a believer in Christ and not actively participate in a community of faith? Paul would argue no. His words here, and in other authentic Pauline writings, demonstrate the need in the first century for believers in Christ to be in community, in relationship, with other believers. Do you feel this need in your life? It is in community, or friendships, that our presumptions about life, culture, politics, and religion can be tested and evolve, and common wisdom is discovered.
Luke 1:68-79 & Luke 3:1-6
The backstory of these texts in Luke is about John the Baptist, so they will be treated as one text this week in SSCSJ. You will probably read portions of Luke 1 during Advent, but it would be good to revisit it if you intend to offer a children’s sermon on this text(s). From the opening line, the writer of Luke wants the reader to know that this is his orderly account of the life of Jesus of Nazareth, based on the writer’s own research. It is the “truth” from this author’s point of view.
This portion of Luke 1 sets up the significance of John the Baptist as the one who prepares the way of the Lord. Which Lord? Zechariah is speaking of Adonai (God) and no one else. Zechariah and Elizabeth’s child is described as doing the work of God’s anointed, of a messiah. “And you, child, will be called the prophet of the Most High; for you will go before the Lord to prepare his ways, to give knowledge of salvation to his people by the forgiveness of their sins” (v. 76-77). Christian tradition has associated knowledge of salvation with forgiveness of sin(s) rather than with the Lord’s ways. The writings of John Calvin and John Wesley on this text show us this theological turn. The “Lord’s ways” are given little interpretative exploration beyond forgiveness of sin in relationship to John, or the life of Jesus, even though much of Jesus’ teachings focus on the kingdom of God and the Lord’s ways.