Above: Gideon’s Fountain, Between 1900 and 1920
Image Source = Library of Congress
Reproduction Number = LC-DIG-matpc-11402
The God of Surprises
JANUARY 23-25, 2023
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The Collect:
Lord God, your loving kindness always goes before us and follows us.
Summon us into your light, and direct our steps in the ways of goodness
that come through he cross of your Son, Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord. Amen.
–Evangelical Lutheran Worship (2006), page 23
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The Assigned Readings:
Judges 6:11-24 (Monday)
Judges 7:12-22 (Tuesday)
Genesis 49:1-2, 8-13, 21-26 (Wednesday)
Psalm 27:1-6 (all days)
Ephesians 5:6-14 (Monday)
Philippians 2:12-18 (Tuesday)
Luke 1:67-79 (Wednesday)
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You speak in my heart and say, “Seek my face.”
Your face, LORD, will I seek.
–Psalm 27:8, Book of Common Worship (1993)
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Gideon, in Judges 6:13-14a, lamented:
Pray, my lord, if the LORD really is with us, why has all this happened to us? What has become of all those wonderful deeds of his, of which we have heard from our forefathers, when they told us how the LORD brought us up from Egypt?
—The Revised English Bible
He received his answer and won a victory by God’s power, the subsequent narrative tells us. This saving, delivering deity was the same God of Jacob and of Sts. Mary and Joseph of Nazareth. This deity is the God of the baby Jesus also.
I do not pretend to have arrived at a complete comprehension of the nature of God, for some matters exist beyond the range of human capacity to grasp. Yet I do feel confident in making the following statement: God is full of surprises. So we mere mortals ought to stay on the alert for them, remembering to think outside the box of our expectations, a box into which God has never fit. This is easy to say and difficult to do, I know, but the effort is worthwhile.
The Bible is full of unexpected turns. Gideon’s army needed to be smaller, not larger. God became incarnate as a helpless infant, not a conquering hero. The selling of Joseph son of Jacob into slavery set up the deliverance of two nations. The hungry will filled and the full will be sent away empty, the Gospel of Luke says. Outcasts became heroes in parables of Christ. Saul of Tarsus, a persecutor of nascent Christianity, became one of its greatest evangelists. The list could go on, but I trust that I have made my point sufficiently.
So, following God, however God works in our lives, may we walk in the light, for the glory of God and the benefit of others.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
SEPTEMBER 7, 2013 COMMON ERA
THE FEAST OF THE SAINTS AND MARTYRS OF THE PACIFIC
THE FEAST OF ELIE NAUD, HUGUENOT WITNESS TO THE FAITH
THE FEAST OF JANE LAURIE BORTHWICK, TRANSLATOR OF HYMNS
THE FEAST OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER, POET
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http://blogatheologica.wordpress.com/2013/09/07/the-god-of-surprises/
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