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Sunday, November 14, 2010

Thirty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time



Weekly Theme
Innite Possibilities

Weekly Prayer
O God, in Christ you give us hope for a new heaven and a new earth. Grant us wisdom
to interpret the signs of our times, courage to stand in the time of trial, and faith to
witness to your truth and love. Amen.

Focus Scripture
Isaiah 65:17-25

For I am about to create new heavens and a new earth;
the former things shall not be remembered or come to mind.
But be glad and rejoice for ever in what I am creating;
for I am about to create Jerusalem as a joy, and its people as a delight.
I will rejoice in Jerusalem, and delight in my people;
no more shall the sound of weeping be heard in it, or the cry of distress.
No more shall there be in it an infant that lives but a few days,
or an old person who does not live out a lifetime;
for one who dies at a hundred years will be considered a youth,
and one who falls short of a hundred will be considered accursed.
They shall build houses and inhabit them;
they shall plant vineyards and eat their fruit.
They shall not build and another inhabit;
they shall not plant and another eat;
for like the days of a tree shall the days of my people be,
and my chosen shall long enjoy the work of their hands.
They shall not labor in vain, or bear children for calamity;
for they shall be offspring blessed by the Lordand their descendants as well.
Before they call I will answer, while they are yet speaking I will hear.
The wolf and the lamb shall feed together, the lion shall eat straw like the ox;
but the serpentits food shall be dust!
They shall not hurt or destroy on all my holy mountain, says the Lord.

All Readings For This Sunday
Isaiah 65:17-25 with Isaiah 12 or
Malachi 4:1-2a with Psalm 98 and
2 Thessalonians 3:6-13 and
Luke 21:5-19

Focus Questions

1. How might we see "the city" as a joy?

2. Where do you see possibilities in your own struggles, and in the struggles of your
community?

3. In these difcult economic times, whose "job" is it to speak up for "the widow, the
orphan, and the stranger in our midst," and for the poor?

4. How do you connect your personal faith with the public life of the community, and this
project, or dream, of God?

5. Where do you nd hope for the innite possibilities of the renewal of the earth?

Reection
by Kate Huey

I look out my ofce window at one of the poorest cities in America: Cleveland, Ohio. The
signs and stresses of poverty are on every block where one is approached by a person
in need. The news on most nights reports another shooting, usually of a young person,
and most often a person of color. Our city's children are gunned down by random bullets
on their way to the store, and a fourteen-year-old suspended from school returns with
guns and shoots two teachers before taking his own life. We are told that he had been
abused as a child. Drugs and high-interest payday loans are readily available, our
schools are struggling, and there are empty storefronts on downtown streets.

Still, there are signs of rebirth and renewal, signs of promise, as this city struggles to
recover its former glory. We're still the home of wonderful arts and medical and
educational institutions, and city planners are hard at work to bring to life a new vision
for the city. One block from our ofces, the main street has been reconstructed, and
shiny new--but empty--storefronts wait for the economy to improve and life to return to
our shopping district. Our impatience with the glacial speed of our progress is tempered
by a slender hope that the time has come for our city to shine once again.

Of course, we're just one city, and not all that unusual. In addition to the latest shooting,
the news tells us that the gap between the rich and poor in this nation resembles the
Gilded Age, when robber barons amassed fortunes at the top and the poor struggled far
below, without the strong middle class that arose in the last century. As a nation, we're
spending hundreds of billions of dollars on war and the cost of the destruction it brings,
and then arguing over whether we can afford health insurance or good schools for our
children. Meanwhile, forest res threaten communities in the West, the people of New
Orleans still live in the midst of destruction, and the oceans yield fewer and fewer sh: it
feels as if creation itself is in revolt over the damage we have done.

Perhaps it really isn't that difcult, then, to imagine how things must have felt for the
people of Jerusalem around 475 B.C.E., two generations after they returned from exile
and tried to rebuild their devastated city. They remembered the former glory of
Jerusalem and its Temple, and the rebuilt version didn't quite measure up to the glory of
Solomon's Temple. Imagine the prophet Isaiah, walking through the rubble of the city.
(The evening news from Afghanistan, Baghdad, or Haiti provides vivid images to help
our imaginations.) Much of the city was still in ruin, including homes and markets, and
many people continued to suffer the effects of oppression and dislocation. Hunger,
thirst, illness and early death, sorrow and grief, economic injustice and political turmoil
were the realities of the day.

Imagine too the rst generation that had returned, excited and full of joy about coming
home to their own land, their own great city: Jerusalem. And yet, by the time the prophet
we call "Third Isaiah" wrote these beautiful words, the people still hungered for a word
of hope. In this setting, Isaiah speaks of a vision from God, who, in the midst of human
suffering and despite the long wait, is about to do a new and great thing: "to create new
heavens and a new earth....be glad and rejoice forever in what I am creating: for I am
about to create Jerusalem as a joy and its people as a delight" (65:17-18).

Joining in the "project" of God

Scholars are in surprising agreement on this poetic, hopeful text about God's
transformation of the present circumstance into a new creation. They hear echoes of the
Genesis creation story, this time with the "curses" undone. Stephen Breck Reid is
especially helpful as he focuses on our hearts that respond to God's promises, God's
"yeses" that counteract the "noes" we live among: "yeses" that connect us to God and
end the "noes" of weeping and wailing from those who suffer, the premature deaths of
our children, the injustice of workers not being able to afford to live in the homes they
labor over and in...all of this suffering will end because of the caring presence of an
attentive, responsive God who will bring transformation not in some apocalyptic sense
but in a concrete, this-world experience of all things made right. Creation will be so full
of peace that even "natural" predators will live gently, side by side. This world may all
sound like a beautiful dream, the dream of God, we might even say, but Reid has a
more concrete word for it: "we are called to start working on this wonderful project of
God--building the church and the people of God." God is the One who wills all this, and
is bringing it to reality, but we're called to join in God's project. What better work is there
for us to do, or to give our lives to? However, if the rebuilding of a city and its hope
leaves out "the widow, the orphan, and the alien"--its most vulnerable ones--is its
foundation a solid one? The dream is for everyone, including people on the land,
because the dream (the project) envisions the innite possibilities of an earth yielding a
harvest shared by all, and everyone's children (not just some of them) enjoying long
lives.

Not surprisingly, Walter Brueggemann has written elegant words on this Isaiah passage
that he calls "perhaps the most sweeping resolve of Yahweh in all of Israel's testimony."
One of Brueggemann's gifts is illuminating the text in its setting while shining its light on
our own situation today. Post-exilic Israel was looking at rubble; so are we. Israel may
have felt overwhelmed and threatened by empires and forces they couldn't inuence let
alone control; we feel overwhelmed, too. Israel may have worried about its children and
lamented their deaths as well as the wasted lives of those who toil in vain; we worry and
lament, too. However, it's right in the midst of such despair-inducing circumstances that
God speaks and moves, Brueggemann writes: "Ours is not an empty world of
machinery where we get what we have coming to us. No! Caring, healing
communication is still possible. Life is not a driven or anxious monologue. The Lord is
ndable....The vision of shalom is most eloquently expressed in times very much like
our own, when resources for faith to endure are hardly available....And that is the song
of the promises and the image of the poets, the voices of Moses and of Jesus, that a
new world is about to be given, and we can trust ourselves to it and live as though in it."
When the evening news continues to be mostly bad, what would it look like to live as
though we are in the new world God has promised?

The reneweal of the earth itself

Natural disasters and environmental degradation sound an ominous note over our lives,
and we wonder how long creation can or will bear the consequences of our actions.
Recognizing the connections between injustice and damage to the environment, how
does the Stillspeaking God challenge us to action on behalf of creation? Life is hard,
and sometimes we need our faith to sustain us in our private, personal struggles. Is faith
only about our private needs and sorrows, or is God calling us in this text to a larger
view? God speaks about what God is about to do, but do we have role in this
transformation, as well?

Some of this good news may not sound so good, at least for some of us, Brueggemann
warns us: "In the coming world of God's rule there will be no basis for aggressive
restlessness. The world can be at trustful rest. In that world there is no cause for
anxious greed, for all will be shared and all will have enough. These promises constitute
a deep threat to the way we have organized the world." Joining in God's project may
require, however uncomfortably, adjusting "the way we have organized the world." The
way we hear this text will be inuenced by our position in life and our level of material
comfort. What are your thoughts about "the way we have organized the world"? We
remember the invitation to join in the project of God: that's one way of seeing ministry.
So is proclaiming the promises of God, and the hope that arises from them. Of course,
ours isn't some pie-in-the-sky hope, but something as "earthy" as bread for all is quite a
project, and again, it will require some adjustments in "the way we have organized the
world." And not just bread, or justice, for all, but peace for all, and peace for all of
creation at last.

A preaching version of this commentary (with references) can be found on http://
www.ucc.org/worship/samuel

For further reection

Marian Wright Edelman, 21st century
Whoever said anybody has a right to give up?

M. Scott Peck, 20th century
The truth is that our nest moments are most likely to occur when we are feeling deeply
uncomfortable, unhappy, or unfullled. For it is only in such moments, propelled by our
discomfort, that we are likely to step out of our ruts and start searching for different
ways or truer answers.

Madeleine L'Engle, 20th century, A Wrinkle in Time
"Oh, why must you make me look at unpleasant things when there are so many
delightful ones to see?" Mrs. Which's voice reverberated through the cave. "There will
no longer be so many pleasant things to look at if responsible people do not do
something about the unpleasant ones."

Verna H, Dozier, 20th century
The important question to ask is not, "What do you believe?" but "What difference does
it make that you believe?" Does the world come nearer to the dream of God because of
what you believe?

****

Weekly Seeds is a source for Bible study based on the readings of the "Lectionary," a
plan for weekly Bible readings in public worship used in Protestant, Anglican and
Roman Catholic churches throughout the world. When we pray with and study the Bible
using the Lectionary, we are praying and studying with millions of others.

You're welcome to reprint this resource and use in your congregation's Bible-study
groups.

Weekly Seeds is a service of the Congregational Vitality Initiative, Local Church
Ministries, United Church of Christ. Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard
Version, 1989 Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches
of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The
Revised Common Lectionary is 1992 Consultation on Common Texts. Used by
permission.

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