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Verses
1-5 recount a covenant lawsuit. The prophet calls upon the
mountains, which have been established throughout Israel’s
history, to the jury box.
• The judgment: the people have become
weary of God; that is, they have become tired of following God’s
moral demands-perhaps the WIIFM wasn’t sufficient for their
efforts.
• Salvation-history 101. God reminds them
who has delivered, saved, and sustained them.
• Micah 6:1-8 is similar to the kinds of
passages where God gets fed up with the disconnect people have
between worship and life.
• Micah 6:8 is a form of
reductionism-shrinks the 613 commandments of the Law into three
requirements-do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with your
God.
What
controversy would the mountains tell about us? About our
congregation?
• How might we get wearied in our
spiritual journey with God? Too over-committed? Too much
administration and meetings and not enough spiritual nourishment?
• What disconnects might make our worship
anemic or ineffective?
• If our Christianity could be reduced to
justice / kindness / humility, what verdict would the mountains
arrive at?
In
Praise of Simplicity - you might
begin the sermon by reflecting on the positive qualities of
simplicity - books have been written on this: simplifying life.
Contrast, use humor, have fun with complex directions to put
gadgets together, etc.
• Shift to Text - Notice
how Micah 6:8 seems to offer us a simplified version of faith; how
marvelous to reduce all of Jewish or Christian faith to three
requirements. Neat. Clean. Clear.
• Define Micah’s three virtues -Justice
seeks to make right what is wrong; kindness, according to the Talmud
is “doing loving deeds,” which translates into acts of charity;
and humility means to recognize our limitations and hubris in our
achievements.
• Raise the question - Are
Micah’s three requirements actually as simple as we think? Maybe
God’s three requirements are like an acorn-more than meets the
eye. You could explore what lies behind these requirements. For
example, “justice” requires that we seek to balance the scales
of fortune, to free the oppressed from their oppressors, to enable
the poor to gain dignity, to reverse injustice and make God’s will
for those who suffer a viable option. How well are we “doing
justice?” Etc.
• Shift to Christ as our model for
Micah 6:8 - He stands as a model to
emulated. He asserts justice as well as dispenses mercy. In Jesus,
God confronts injustice and embodies acts of compassion. He alone
stands as the supreme example of humility.
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