overview
- Verses 1-5 is a psalm of thanksgiving not unlike you would find in the
Psalms. As a psalm, the piece opens up with address and immediate praise of
God followed by the basis of such praise--God is honored for the destruction
of cities on one hand and for providing a refuge for the poor and needy on the
other. Our lesson announces salvation in futuristic tones: a rich banquet on
the mountain of God and bringing an end to suffering.
wiping tears away - Verse 8 is the best-known line in the
entire passage: "Then the Lord god will wipe away the tears from all faces . .
." It expresses the deepest human hope for the cessation to mourning, death,
and grief. We hear these words picked up and used by Paul in 1 Corinthians 15.
life, not death - . . . the prophetic voice declares
that life, not death, is what God endorses. The line between life and death
was not so clear in ancient Israel as it may seem in modern Western societies.
The more one’s capabilities for life diminish, the more one approaches death.
Death is understood as any power that threatens life. So the affirmation of
life, and of God’s affirmation of life, entails the end to grief and mourning.
Such declarations come at the table, the banquet on Mt. Zion [1]
If death is
anything that threatens life, recall several examples of death that you have
encountered.
Recall the most exquisite and pleasurable banquet or party that you’ve ever
attended. What made this evening/event so memorable?
Dream a little! Describe your vision of what would make heaven truly heaven
for you.
[2]
block #1 - Note the texture of the passage-its songs and
celebration as well as its mourning and the inevitability of death. Describe
death in our culture-its inevitability, drawing from our culture: newspapers,
magazines, movies. Note how this passage names the celebration of life and
joy, but also the power of death.
block #2 - Death not only ends life, but also cripples it.
Death exercises power over life, both as individuals recognize their own
mortality, and as they suffer the loss of those they love.
block #3 - This passage is also eschatological in nature,
it is not surprising that early Christian writers drew from it in portrayals
of God’s final victory. As chapter 25 stresses, God affirms life. God does not
desire that any should perish.
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[1] The New Interpreter’s Bible VI (Nashville:
Abingdon Press, 2001), page 217.
[2] Ibid, page 218.
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