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Tuesday, 04 October 2005
Disclosing New Worlds: Lectionary Commentary
I have been meaning to publicise Wol's new lectionary commentary blog, Disclosing New Worlds, (also on BlogSpirit) for some time now. Basically, every Tuesday morning Wol offers his own reflection on the Lectionary texts for the coming Sunday and the reflections are among the best you will find online (The other main resources can be accessed through Jeanne Woodward's The Text This Week which you should take a look at, but many of the sites referred to there are Australian / N. American). Basically you should go and take a look for yourself. But as a taster, here is the penultimate paragraph of Wol's reflection on this week's texts: Isaiah 25.1-9; Psalm 23; Matthew 22:1-14, taking the gospel text as a focus.
"The temptation for the good people who receive grace is to lapse into an overemphasis on purity and legal obedience that makes outcasts of those whom God wishes to be part of the kingdom. The temptation for the bad people is to see grace as licence to do as they wish. This is the point of the second half of the parable (or, as is most likely, a separate parable that Matthew has incorporated into the story of the royal wedding feast). Grace is intended for a purpose – the transformation of the recipients and their transformation of the world. It is unconditional in that it is offered regardless of desert – in fact, the more undeserving we are, the more gracious God is to us! But grace is not some consumer product, given for our endless titillation and narcissistic pleasure. It is given in order that we might share in Christ’s relationship to God as Abba, and that, as God’s children, we bear fruit for the kingdom. "
Sounds good stuff to me, and what is more, the reflections are rooted in the exegesis of this passage given by Richard Bauckham in a JBL article - this is enough to warm the heart of any NT teacher who is tempted to think that NT scholarship makes little or no difference to what countless millions of people hear from the pulpit Sunday by Sunday. So keep up the good work Wol (and look forward to working with you in November).
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