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This Sundays lessons fall on very different places along the God/human
relationship continuum. On one side we feel the scorching blast of Gods judgment
upon people who lack understanding and knowledge (Jeremiah 4); on the other end are two
great parables of redemption and rescue (Luke 15). Somewhere in between we find Psalm 14
with its plight of the fools and petition of the righteous and the story of the
enemy-turned-convert to Gods grace (1 Timothy 1).
PSALM 14-INSTRUCTIONS AND PETITIONS
The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God begins
the King James Version of this short and famous psalm. The seven verses weave together the
functions of instruction, petition, and hope in Gods deliverance. In the first
statement which lacks any divine address, begins with a sort of thesis statement and then
imagines God in heaven looking down for a single "straight-walking" soul, but
finding none. At mid-point in the psalm (v. 4), the psalmist raises a question about those
who "eat up my people as they eat bread," and then envisions a day when the
tables will be turned and the evildoers will get the short end of the stick while the
righteous will be glad (vv. 5-7).
JEREMIAH 4:11-12, 22-28-DESTRUCTION AND DESOLATION
As the scorching Socorro wind whistles down through the valley
drying up all of life, so God comes down to judge the people of Gods choosing. How
could people be so foolish as to be unfaithful to their God? Lack of knowledge and
understanding (v. 22), says Jeremiah. The prophet now shifts his vision toward a panorama
of earth and describes total destruction. The earth is just devastated (v. 23) and the
mountains quake (v. 24). Seems that no life has endured this scorching judgment of God-the
birds are gone, the orchards are a desert, no human being is in sight. When God judges us,
the place of normal activity and life ceases as justice calls creation to repentance.
1 TIMOTHY 1:12-17-REDEEMED BY GRACE
This portion of the letter to Timothy is part testimonial and
part doxological. In the first part (vv. 12-16), the writer (not necessarily Paul)
describes the powerful conversion experience of the greatest church planter and evangelist
in the Church-Paul the Apostle. Paul has been a blasphemer, persecutor, and violent man.
Yet Gods grace could reach even to the nascent sects most virulent enemy and
transform him into one of its greatest proponents. The final verse is doxological-King
of the ages, immortal, invisible, the only wise God, be honor and glory for ever and ever.
Amen (v. 17).
LUKE 15:1-10-LOST AND FOUND
We are introduced to two of the three parables that form Lukes triptych of
"lost and found" in chapter 15. Verse one sets up the context which will enable
the writer/listener to understand better the theme of whos lost and needs finding.
In the first parable, Jesus describes a sheepherder who comes up one short in his flock.
Rather than writing off the lost, he goes in search of the one lost wooly fuzz ball and
when found the sheepherder throws a celebration. The second parable repeats the basic
meaning of the first-something is lost (this time a coin) and then found and then the
discovery becomes the grounds for a celebration. Also repeated in both parables is the
line that closes out each of them: Just so, I tell you, there is joy in the presence of
the angels of God over one sinner who repents . . .
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