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Our lessons for this Sunday conclude the marvelous story of Ruth with a
surprising wedding and the promise of children who will carry on Ruths story of
faithfulness and fruitfulness. In the second lesson, we again hear the pastor/writer
describe the faithful self-giving of the Son who enters the heavenly temple as Priest and
Sacrifice, Lord and Servant, and as Son of man and Son of God. The gospel lesson in Mark
closes the 12th chapter with a sharp indictment and a self-less act of faithfulness and
generosity. Perhaps a connector to these three lessons might be "faithfulness" -
such is certainly a mark of discipleship, a fruit of the Spirit, and a quality that is
sorely lacking in so many places in American culture.
RUTH 3:1-5; 4:13-17-KINSMAN REDEEMER
Although the lesson before us skirts around the central idea of redemption on its way
to connecting Ruth to David, this parable-like story captures well the idea of
redemption-the restoring of what has been lost through poverty, violence, or death. In the
first five verses of chapter three, romance is in the air or at least on the threshing
floor. Naomi coaches Ruth how to capture her suitor, Boaz: get spiffed up, get yourself
down to the threshing floor, and when hes out cold in slumber, uncover his feet and
lie down-the rest is up to him. Though this probably wouldnt be the best approach
for the single scene today, the scene is romantic and leads to Ruth and Boaz getting
married (4:13-17). Not only that but one of their grandchildren will loom large in
Israels monarchy whose lineage will also be significant to Christians: "They
named him Obed, who became the father of Jesse, who became the father of David."
HEBREWS 9:24-28-THE LIFE OF CHRIST POURED OUT FOR US
Our lesson repeats what we dealt with last week in verses 11-14 of this chapter: in one
momentous act Christ became both priest and sacrificial offering on our behalf. Jewish
worship and especially the rituals and sacrifices served as a caricature of what Jesus
accomplished in his life-yielding act. Just as a high priest approached the inner sanctum
of Gods presence once a year on behalf of himself and the people, so Jesus has
fulfilled the caricature in the offering of himself on behalf of the whole world. While
the earthly priestly practice recurred year after year throughout generations, Jesus as
the high priest does not suffer and die annually, but once and for all his sacrifice
removes conclusively and forever sin.
MARK 12:38-44-THE ART OF MIS-READING A BOOK BY ITS COVER
Our lesson falls neatly-perhaps even deliberately placed together-into two sections. In
the first paragraph, Jesus takes the offensive and speaks to the hypocrisy and double
standards that he has observed among certain religious persons, the scribes. These
religious professionals enjoy the fruit of their office-the apparel and the popular
accolades of commoners, and of course, they enjoy the perks of preferential seating at
worship and parties! In contrast to the caricature that Jesus paints, we are introduced to
a nameless, faceless, powerless "commoner," who seems a walking inversion of the
first group. The poor widow puts in but a paltry amount of money, yet as Jesus points out
she is the heavy giver in a story that has wealthy people contributing much larger sums of
money, for Jesus says, "she out of her poverty has put in everything she had, all she
had to live on" (V. 44).
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