Above: The Baptism of the Eunuch, by Rembrandt Van Rijn
Image in the Public Domain
Divine Grace and Mutual Responsibility
JANUARY 16 and 17, 2023
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The Collect:
Holy God, our strength and our redeemer,
by your Spirit hold us forever, that through your grace we may
worship you and faithfully serve you,
follow you and joyfully find you,
through Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord. Amen.
–Evangelical Lutheran Worship (2006), page 22
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The Assigned Readings:
Exodus 12:1-13, 21-28 (Monday)
Isaiah 53:1-12 (Tuesday)
Psalm 40:6-17 (both days)
Acts 8:26-40 (Monday)
Hebrews 10:1-4 (Tuesday)
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O Lord my God,
great are the wonderful things you have done,
and the things you have in mind for us:
there is none to be compared with you.
I would proclaim them and speak of them:
but they are more than can be numbered.
–Psalm 40:6-7, A New Zealand Prayer Book (1989)
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The laws of God which are written on hearts and minds are laws of grace, love, and responsibility for and to each other. They are laws of love for and responsibility to God. The essence of them is to love God fully and others as ourselves. The rest is commentary–mostly culturally-specific commentary–examples (bound by time, space and circumstances) of universal principles. Therefore to become so fixated on examples as to ignore or minimize the universal principles is to miss the point and fall into legalism.
This internalized covenant is for all people, not that everyone embraces it or will do so. It is for Hebrews and Gentiles alike. It is for those like us and those quite different from us. It is as much as for Hebrews as it was for a confused Ethiopian eunuch who needed a good catechist. Fortunately, God sent him one.
The reading from Exodus speaks of the Passover meal instructions and of the importance of blood in deliverance–the latter being a theme in other readings for these days. In the case of the Passover, the blood protected the Hebrews not from their own sins, but those of Egyptians. This is a point which one might overlook out of imagined familiarity with the text. Anyhow, the metaphor of the Passover as applied to Jesus (perhaps most explicitly applied to Jesus in the Gospel of John, where he dies on Passover itself–is the sacrificial lamb) carries meaning beyond just saving us from ourselves–from our sins.
A traditional American hymn speaks of
What wondrous love
that
caused the Lord of bliss
to
lay aside his crown for my soul.
May we–you, O reader, and I–respond favorably to that grace with heart and mind engaged fully, giving neither short shrift. May we understand correctly and act accordingly, helping others to whom God sends us and others whom God sends to us, to do likewise. For we are all responsible to and for each other.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
SEPTEMBER 5, 2013 COMMON ERA
THE FEAST OF MOTHER TERESA OF CALCUTTA, ROMAN CATHOLIC NUN
THE FEAST OF GREGORIO AGLIPAY, PHILIPPINE INDEPENDENT BISHOP
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http://blogatheologica.wordpress.com/2013/09/06/divine-grace-and-mutual-responsibility/
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