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TRINITY SUNDAY
This is our first Sunday after P-Day and the lessons for the day promises great
possibilities for proclamation. The first lesson is a story about encounter, presence, and
transformation which confronts us with the unearthly God of Isaiah. We enter Pauls
teaching about the Spirit and adoption in the second lesson, while the gospel lesson
supplies the well-known story of a conversation that Jesus has with a religious leader
under the cover of night. One connecting motif might be transformation or new life or
perhaps "the Spirits transformative work." The lessons can easily stand
alone as a helpful word about the Spirit / new life, but this is one of those special
times when all three lessons can be interwoven with integrity and unity of theme. Enjoy!
Isaiah 6:1-8-A Deeply Moving Experience
Isaiahs call to be a prophet came in the Temple amidst a celebration in honor of
God. In the setting of this feast with its singing, its incense, its emotional atmosphere,
Isaiah penetrated to the meaning of God. He experienced Yahweh as something "wholly
other." From this time God was to be for him the wholly Other. This moment of
awareness will mark Isaiah as no other experience he has encountered. From this time
onward God will be for him the Holy One of Israel, completely above all so that anything
by contrast is limited and sinful. Such an epiphany first levels before it exalts. Thus,
Isaiah becomes acutely aware of his own unworthiness. He identifies with the sinfulness of
His People and God who cannot abide sin. The Good News? God takes the initiative and
cleanses Isaiah. Then, as God debates with his heavenly advisers, Isaiah offers himself
for the mission to which God has called him.
Romans 8:12-17-New Life in the Spirit
This lesson joins Paul in the middle of his great discussion of life in the Spirit at
the point where he states that no one is obliged or need cave into compulsions that take
us down the wrong path. Sounds a little like Becks "cognitive therapy" in
that he spends little time rehearsing past causes that lead to wrong behavior as much as
in urging his listeners to change their thinking. "Son/s (or children, better) of
God" is an appellation that occurs in the Hebrew Scriptures, sometimes referring to
the "heavenly court," at other times referring to a single person or group. At
the source of this familial relationship with God for the Christian is the triune God who
provides the actions necessary for son/daughter ship, and who also provides a way to make
us aware of this new relationship through Christ.
John 3:1-17-Jesus and a Son of Israel
What a rich fabric of text for the exegete and proclaimer! A familiar narrative begins
the passage with a religious leader coming to Jesus by night pondering Jesus
identity. The conversation is profound and laden with insight as the reader listens in on
the conversation. This story has probably been the single greatest factor in supplying
fodder for new birth theology. The paragraph that immediately follows the famous dictum of
John 3:16 is an intriguing move that recalls Israel in the wilderness and one particular
episode-the serpent on the pole.