We ran out of time for a number of questions asked in worship in August. Here is the next installment on responses to those questions.
The onscreen text for the Lord's
Prayer twice used kin dom instead of kingdom. At first glance this seemed
to be a typo, but I suspect method to your madness. If this was intentional,
please explain.
My
initial response to this question was that either I have a sticky “g” key on my
keyboard, or I’m a rampant feminist. I’ve decided I should be more honest than
that.
When I
write, I rarely use the word “kingdom.”
When I say the Lord’s prayer, I always use the words Kin Dom rather than
kingdom. It was an unconscious slip on
my part that that phrase ended up on the screen for worship. But since it did and someone wondered about
it let me tell you about why I have difficulty with the word KINGDOM.
Remember that this is my opinion only. I encourage you to recite this most common
prayer we have exactly as you would like to pray it.
What
comes to mind when you think of a king?
For me, it’s a portly male with an ermine-trimmed cape and a bejeweled,
gold crown with an ivory and gold scepter in his hand. He is seated on a throne
of gold with servants all around him. He
is very wealthy because of the work his serfs do for him, because of the wars
fought at the cost of his subjects’ blood, and because he has complete dominion
over all that is around him. The word,
“Kingdom” means the domain of the King.
The domain of the king is complete control over the layers and classes
of people he rules. There are the elite
who sit with the king and share in the bounty. And there are the common people
and serfs who do the work of the ruling classes. The common people and serfs in a kingdom are
expendable, and pawns for the power of the king. Their only value is what they can add to the
value of the king. In today’s culture, the term King wears a lot of baggage; by
its very nature, kingdoms in today’s culture are oppressive to the common
people and the disaffected.
Now put
that image aside for a moment. What do
you think of when you hear the word, “kin”? For me, it’s a clan, a group of
people with whom I share a common bond, either by blood or by a shared
perspective or experience. Within kinship, there is equal footing, and each
person is valued for what they bring to the brood. All are part of the greater family, and the
aim is to maintain the common good. Kin is family where all around the table
are gathered to share equally in the harvest and the bounty. I think of the Realm of God as a domain of
kin gathered around the table where God is the host.
I’m not
sure this is actually a “feminist” view as much as it is a different
understanding and different connotations of the term “king” between 1st
Century Palestine and 21st Century USA.
If Jesus Christ’s birth, death, and
resurrection fulfill Jewish prophecy, why aren’t Jews Christians? What’s
fundamental difference between Jewish and Christian orthodoxy? The answer lies
within the question: Does the birth,
death, and resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth fulfill Jewish Prophecy? One’s
response to that question marks the fundamental difference between Jewish and
Christian orthodoxy. Christian tradition
reads the Hebrew texts through the lens of their experience of Jesus of
Nazareth. Early followers of “the Way”
(they did not call themselves Christians) did not consider themselves anything
more than a movement of revival of ancient understandings of the Jewish
scriptures. There is truly little that Jesus taught that was not supported by
one ancient Rabbinical writing or another.
By the time the gospel of Matthew was penned, however, there was a split
between the religious leaders and the followers of Jesus’ teachings that was more
about power and control than about orthodoxy.
The spurned followers of the Way looked for support in the Hebrew
writings for support of their correctness.
They read the scripture looking for ways that their narrative could
fulfill the requirements of a “Messiah.”
Matthew and John state specific texts that are fulfilled by their
narratives of Jesus ministry and teachings.
The Pauline writings codify this understanding. And the early church
built all orthodoxy upon it.
Jewish
tradition does not understand the ministry of Jesus as anything more than one
more teacher of an interpretation of scripture. Not necessarily a heretic; just
not the promised one.
what is your favorite version of the
Bible? What translation do you recommend for easy reading? My favorite Bible is
difficult to narrow to one. I always
read 3 - 4 translations and I consult the original languages just to see what
the source says.
If I had to choose between
the vast array of choices of translation to just 2, I'd go with the NRSV (New
Revised Standard Version) AND the Message.
The first is a good translation from the original languages, but often
misses the innuendo of the source in its attempt to be literally accurate. The second is a "paraphrase" in
common American English that completely gets the innuendo but is horrid about
the literal accuracy. The truth is half
way between the two.
With majority of churches holding
virtual services, how do we maintain our identity and distinguish ourselves
from others? Our
“niche” has not changed. We offer inclusive and progressive beliefs; openness
to diversity of thought, background, and creed; excellence of music; and a
caring community. I’d like to think that
because we’ve been broadcasting longer than most congregations (since 2008),
that we are in a better position to offer a better quality broadcast. Many churches are livestreaming raw, unedited
cell phone streams, holding Zoom meetings for worship, and offering poor sound
and graphic quality. I know we’re not
professional quality, but we’re not beginners either.
How do we reconcile all our
possessions with following Jesus who told the rich man to sell all his
possessions and follow him? Can we? Consumerism
is, in my opinion, our biggest idolatry.
We live in an economy that is consumer-product driven – which is why our
sheltering in place is so very dangerous to the state of our economy! It is difficult for 21st Century
US Americans to fathom selling all we have.
We an rationalize giving money to the poor (the part of the scripture
not mentioned in the question). But I
(and I will only speak for myself) cannot imagine living the life of a monk
with nothing to call my own, without the comforts of my furnishings, my
electronics, my warm clothes, my car, my second home.
And so we turn to our rationalizations: “What Jesus really meant
was….”
·
Find
your self worth in how well you walk the path of faith, not in what you own. Or
accomplish.
·
Trust
God to provide for your needs rather than thinking your self sufficient.
·
Depend
upon only God and not wealth.
·
Stockpile
love and honor rather than stuff.
·
Keep
up with Jesus, not your neighbors.
I cannot possibly reconcile Jesus’s teaching about possessions with
what I own. That makes me a hypocrite, a
rationalizer, and probably a fake Christian.
But it also makes me all the more aware of how much I depend upon Jesus’
teachings about grace, forgiveness, and extravagant love.
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