persis and rufus? - Paul and his fellow church planters name
twenty-eight people that they seem to share a history and story with. Though Paul spends
no recorded time planting churches in Rome, we can only guess the adventures of bravery,
compassion, and transformation that binds writer and recipients together. With Christians
in Rome and specifically those names ones, Paul offers this marvelous benediction that
begins with the formulaic "Now to him . . . " and ends with "the only wise
God be glory forever through Jesus Christ. Amen." What lies sandwiched between this
sentence are more than modifiers, prepositional phrases, and verbs and direct objects. We
see some insight into Pauls basic mission statement that includes and defines his
mission to the non-Jewish population groups.
nib on this passage:
It should not surprise us that the letter ends in most manuscripts with an
invocation of the one true and wise God, made known in and through Jesus the Messiah . . .
. . . Ultimately, Pauls vision of the renewed community is of united worship,
based on shared faith (15:6; 8-13). The praises that arise to the one God from the renewed
community will thus reflect Gods righteousness, the covenant faithfulness in which
the Jew first, and also equally the Greek, are drawn into one family . . . that is what
all this letter has been about. [1]
Recall some of those "around
the world" before Christmas day meal prayers that we hear offered every once in
awhile at public or family gatherings-especially when everyone is salivating over the
cooling food.
- Why might prayer be a good vehicle for ones theology or passion?
- If we knew nothing of Paul or his mission and passion for spreading the gospel to
everyone, what could we gather from this prayer? What might your congregation pray
"between the lines?" That is, what would fill the content of our community
prayers?
block #1 - Explore
the unique qualities of these closing words . . . the opening phrase and the closing
phrase and the expanded in-between parenthesis.
block #2 - Shift to contemporary contexts-when have you seen this sort
of thing? Prayer around the world? The dinner table? (Ive seen similar kinds of
clarifiers stuck right into the name of churches or their mission statements-my favorite:
"____ Church, a undenominational church" which suggests that this group has not
joined any organization or ministerium and are proud of it!)
block #3 - Shift to the parenthesis to unpack what the content is
about. What would our local congregation put into these lines that reflects what we
passionately believe and are about?
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[1] New Interpreters Bible X (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2002), page 760-770.
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