Massachusetts Bible Study Course Five months from today is Christmas Eve! It's almost upon us! What are we going to do???? If you haven't finished your Christmas shopping yet, why not think about adding the "Exploring the Bible" series to your list? This is the text that we will be using beginning in the Fall as we meet again for Bible Study. When we read Mark's Gospel, we went line by line. This series offers an overview of the entire Bible.
This Bible Study will require those attending to do reading at home so that we are ready to actually discuss the biblical texts when we gather. I envision us meeting on alternate weeks starting in September, which will give us plenty of time for our homework. This Bible Study is open to anyone who would like to join us. If you are interested in purchasing this three-volume series, here's a link to do so: https://www.amazon.com/kindle-dbs/entity/author/B001JS8I0G?_encoding=UTF8&node=283155&offset=0&pageSize=12&searchAlias=stripbooks&sort=author-pages-popularity-rank&page=1&langFilter=default&fbclid=IwAR1fS9Jz9PslDxJrwaLLm5zfzlZT8x-FRynUrP0GFKlAsfP2Hr5AST1Xl3k#formatSelectorHeader If you have any questions, don't hesitate to ask. Rev. Randy We're a go for CROP Walk 2019 at the Sunderland Congregational Church. The Recruitment Rally will take place on Thursday, August 15th at 6PM. Amy Novak, chair of the Benevolence Committee, and Rev. Randy will attend. At that time we will receive materials for team members to begin collecting donations for this worthy cause.
25% of everything collected stays in our own area to help those in need. The other 75% is used to support efforts around the globe to help people in need become more self-sufficient. If you would like to become a member of our church's team, please speak to either Amy or Rev. Randy. The Walk will be held in Sunderland on October 13th with registration beginning at 1PM. Even if you can't walk on that day, you can be a team member and help us with your fundraising assistance. And if you can walk, even better! What a great feeling it is to join with others for such a good cause. Thanks to everyone in advance for your time, effort and generosity. Rev. Randy In the Fall, we are going to start a new Bible Study Group. This past Spring we finished reading the Gospel of Mark. We read each line and discussed the text. What we are going to be doing in our next round of Bible study, is look at the Bible in an overview, and to do so we will be using the Massachusetts Bible Society's "Exploring the Bible" series.
It comes in three volumes: What is the Bible; Introduction to the Old Testament; and Introduction to the New Testament. These texts will need to be purchased by each member of the class. I saw on Amazon that the price is anywhere from $11 to $4 per text. Wunderley mentioned to me before Service yesterday that she was raised with the tradition that you discover three biblical quotes that are extremely meaningful to you, and that you memorize them and then use them as guides in life. The only way to do this is to be familiar with the Bible. We're hoping this Bible Study Group will help with this. If you are interested in joining our Fall Bible Study Group, please let Rev. Randy know. Thanks. Good Samaritan Sunday“May the words of my mouth and the meditation of our hearts be acceptable to you, O Lord, my rock and my redeemer.” (Ps 19:14) Let’s jump right into this morning’s Gospel. I think it has to be the most famous of all parables – the parable of the Good Samaritan. And it begins with a question. The answer, which is the Good Samaritan parable, is so familiar that it can capture all the attention, and then the question gets ignored. But it’s the question that sets the stage for everything that follows. A lawyer, a man of precise definitions and expectations, is the questioner. A good contract lays out what is expected and what is paid. This congregation, for example, has a contract with me. It explains what the church expects and what I can expect in return from the church. The lawyer’s question of “‘What must I do …?’” asks Jesus what he is obligated to do in a virtual contract with God. In return for doing his part, the lawyer expects to be paid, which is the second part of his question: “‘What must I do … to inherit eternal life?’” The lawyer, as a lawyer would, approaches his faith as a contract of obligations and payments. This guy is not like Peter, Andrew, James and John who immediately left their fishing businesses behind to follow Jesus. He’s not like Matthew who left a lucrative tax collecting job to follow Jesus. He’s not impassioned. He only wants to know what must be done, just enough in other words to fulfill the contract, and then “‘inherit eternal life’” for himself. The lawyer has no qualms or questions about love God completely. What he needs Jesus to clarify is this notion of “love your neighbour.” Let’s try and think about this in terms of paying taxes quarterly. We approximate as closely as possible how much we’ll owe on April 15th. Then imagine though that our taxes need to be paid in full or face a heavy, harsh penalty, but that there will be no tax refund for anything we overpay. Imagine how upset we would be if we overpaid and wouldn’t get it back. That’s sort of like the logic of the lawyer. He wants Jesus to tell him what must be done so he can get into heaven, but he doesn’t want to go overboard with this love-your-neighbour-stuff. So he asks a second question: “‘And who is my neighbour?’” I have heard amazing sermons based on this parable that Jesus gives as His answer. I’ve heard it told from the perspective of the Good Samaritan, of the man who has been left for dead, and even from that of the priest and the Levite. But for me, at least for me right now, the key to unlocking this perfectly Christian parable is the context, that it is an answer to the question “‘What must I do to inherit eternal life?’” In answer, Jesus offers something completely, radically unexpected. Let’s give the priest and the Levite the benefit of the doubt that they are not completely uncaring men. Maybe we’ve been in situations ourselves where to help seemed dangerous. Maybe seeing someone hitchhiking on a dark road, for example. Do you stop or do you continue on wondering about the possibility of being robbed or worse? The priest and the Levite think through the options and choose not to do anything, but the Good Samaritan helps immediately, without thinking. He acts spontaneously, naturally. What the Good Samaritan did cannot be expressed in the language of “What must I do ..?” and the Good Samaritan does not act because of some reward about getting into heaven. The Good Samaritan acts because he can’t not act. When Jesus finishes the parable and tells the lawyer “Go and do likewise,” it’s a broad rejection of the whole idea of loving God and loving neighbour as a contract, if I do this then God gives me that. The parable speaks to Jesus’ expectation that there’s a better self within every person. The Samaritan would not have been accepted as a religious person by the Jews around Jesus or even as a good person, but here he is held up as the one who gets what God is all about, and what God hopes us to be all about. This had to be disconcerting. It’s really a whole new way of looking at humanity and human nature. It’s hope-filled. It's in no way contract.
Apollo 8 was the first time human beings left earth’s gravity and ventured out into space. It was the first time we left home in a sense. Some science historians consider this to be even more important than Apollo 11’s landing on the moon. It was our first step that would take us to the moon, the planets and then beyond. When the astronauts came around from the dark side of the moon, they captured the first-ever image of an Earth-rise. That’s this picture. Against the barren landscape of the moon and the darkness of the sky, one of them mentioned that the earth was the only colour out there in space. When we look at our home from this perspective, I hope we realize that we all live in the same house. We’re all in this together. In God’s eyes, we’re all one people, more similar than we’d like to admit. Maybe in the Good Samaritan parable Jesus is asking us to try and see like this, like from space, like from God’s perspective. Maybe our ideas of borders would become more all-encompassing. Maybe this perspective helps us humans become more humane, and maybe that’s what the parable of the Good Samaritan is trying to help us see, our shared humanity. Can we accept a new way to see? To see like God sees, that we are a glorious mess of colour all mixed together haphazardly, but oh so beautifully. Can we see that others and us aren't all that different, and can this Good Samaritan insight inspire us to compassion and empathy?
For this may we pray in Jesus’ name. Amen. 3rd Annual WATER PALOOZA FAMILY FUN WALK/RUN To SUPPORT MENTAL HEALTH AWARENESS Saturday July 20, 2019 9:30am Registration starts at 9:00am Start/Finish Lawn Adjacent to library 39 Main Street Hatfield, MA Easy 2 mile loop around town with optional water obstacles along the way **New Color Run Option** To register go to https://www.RunReg.com/water-palooza-family-fun-runwalk or register at the Event $15 pp or $25 per family Rain or Shine! |
NewsFaith, love and chitchat. Categories
All
Archives
June 2024
Follow
|
SERVICE TIMES
Sunday 9:30-10:30am Children Sunday School 9:30-10:30am Nursery care available during worship DONATE Make a single or recurring contribution by clicking here |
FOLLOW
|