Musings
on the Lectionary Readings for
Proper 12 - Ordinary 17 Sunday (paired to the Gospel) July
27, 2003 by Philip W. Gilman |
Psalm
145: 10--18
·
All
Your works shall praise You, O LORD,
and Your
faithful ones shall bless You.
They shall talk of the majesty of Your kingship,
and speak of
Your might,
to make
[YHWH's] mighty acts known among [all people]
and the
majestic glory of [God's] kingship.
(10-12)
2Kings 4: 42--44 & John 6: 1-[-14][suggested]
·
A
man... brought the man of God some bread of the first reaping-- twenty loaves
of barley bread.... And [Elisha] said, AGive
it to the people and let them eat. His
attendant replied, AHow can I set this before a hundred men?@ But he said, AGive it to the people and let
them eat. (2Ki. 4:
42..43a,b, sic)
·
It
was near the time of Passover, the great Jewish festival. ...Jesus said to Philip, 'Where are we to
buy bread to feed these people?' He
said this to test him.... Philip
replied, 'We would need two hundred denarii to buy enough bread for each of
them to have a little.' ...Andrew...
said... 'There is a boy here who has five barley loaves and two fish, but what
is that among so many?' Jesus said,
'Make the people sit down.'
(Jn. 6: 4..10a)
Both readings mention
barley bread, which is significant. For
Elisha, it was the time of the first reaping; for Jesus, around the time of
Passover. Both authors are directing
our thoughts to the "Omer, a measure of the newly harvested barley,
[which] was brought to the Temple on the second day of Passover."[1] "According to the Talmud (Rosh
HaShanah 13a), the Jews first offered the Omer and then ate the new crops.
.... It was the offering of the Omer which lifted the ban on the new
crops."[2] "It was the ritual of the Omer, the
offering of a measure of barley, the earliest of the new cereal crops, that
marked the harvest season."[3]
Perhaps therein you will
find some "food" for thought.
Gehazi, Philip and
Andrew exhibit three very human traits by their responses. Gehazi thought of himself and demurred, lest
he be humiliated. Philip spoke with the
voice of pragmatism, accompanied by a subtle sneer at Jesus' presumption. Andrew gave a factual report, but his
editorial question conveyed a gently sarcastic skepticism. Common to all three gentlemen is their
doubt: "This just can't be done.
There isn't enough here."
Elisha and Jesus, on the
other hand, expressed trust: absolute, blind faith in God's grace, benevolent
provision, and power. "God is
love", they proclaim; God cares equally for every one in the crowd, even
"the least of these". Just as
the Sovereign LORD God does not follow
mankind's rules of arithmetic and the multiplication tables, so neither may we
expect, and preach, that the Sovereign LORD God will follow
mankind's rules of membership, belonging and exclusion.
·
The
eyes of all look to You expectantly,
and You give
them their food when it is due.
You give it openhandedly,
feeding every
creature to its heart=s content.
The LORD is beneficent in all
[Her] ways
and faithful
in all His works. (Psa. 145:
15-17)
Eph. 3: 14--21
With this in mind, then,
I kneel in prayer to [God], ...that through faith Christ may dwell in your
hearts in love. .... [M]ay you... be strong to grasp what is the breadth and
length and height and depth of Christ's love, and to know it.... So may you be filled with the very fullness
of God. (14..19)
·
The
LORD supports all who
stumble,
and makes all
who are bent stand straight.
(Psa. 145: 14)
(Comments to Phil at enapxh@juno.com )
[1] Bloch, Abraham P. 1980. The Biblical and
Historical Background of Jewish Customs and
Ceremonies. New York: KTAV
Publishing House, Inc., p.241.
[2] Bloch, Abraham P. 1978. The Biblical and
Historical Background of the Jewish Holy Days.
New York: KTAV Publishing House, Inc.,
p.115.
[3] Bloch, Abraham P. 1978. The Biblical and
Historical Background of the Jewish Holy Days.
New York: KTAV Publishing House, Inc.,
p.180-1.