Monday Morning in the Preacher's Study
First thoughts about next Sunday's sermon
(2nd after Pentecost, June 2, 2013)
John W.B. Hill
This Sunday we enter ‘ordinary time,’ and the Revised Common Lectionary
offers a unique opportunity, from now until late November, to attend to three
different voices of scripture, each in sustained discourse (that is, if we are
using the semicontinuous readings for the Old Testament).
This is the moment, therefore, to take stock of such opportunities and
choose homiletic strategies that can make the most of them.
This being the ‘Year of Luke’ (the version of the Gospel known
especially for its compassion for those who are in trouble, and its attention
to what God is doing in history), the Old Testament readings chosen to
accompany this gospel are from the prophets, from Elijah to Haggai, with
Jeremiah as the dominant voice. Prophets
are people who see what the rest of us miss, who speak truth to power, who
summon us to return to the ways of God.
How then shall we honour the unique character of the lectionary during
this stretch of the year? How shall we
help God’s people to weigh the cumulative force of three persistent voices,
from Sunday to Sunday?
First, we can stay alert to the recurring resonances, and draw attention
to them. This Sunday, for example, we
encounter contrasts between a true prophet and false prophets, between a
genuine apostle and self-serving apostles, between a teacher who speaks with
authority and the scribes and teachers of the law.
Second, we can look ahead to discover how to seize the best moment for
gathering up the elements (extended over a number of Sunday’s) of one
particular scriptural voice, inviting people to integrate what they are hearing
from week to week. It is not necessary
to preach on the Gospel text every Sunday — so long as we make clear that it is
a gospel lens through which we look to discover the deepest meaning of a text.
This Sunday’s readings call us to courageous faith. Elijah’s challenge to the prophets of Baal is
a high-risk public drama designed to puncture the undiscriminating assumption
that all forms of piety are equally valid.
But the preacher may wish to wait before commenting at any length until
the second half of this story is told (on June 16).
Paul’s challenge to the disciples in Galatia is no less heated than
Elijah’s challenge to his fellow Israelites.
His appeal to them will be spelled out in readings from this letter over
six Sundays, so this may be the moment to introduce the letter and help people
to hear the extreme tone of Paul’s concern.
Does it really make a difference what you believe about the ways of God?
Sometimes it takes a stranger in our midst to awaken us to the unique
revelation with which we have been entrusted, to break through our dazed
familiarity with the gospel. So it was
in the episode recounted in today’s Gospel reading: a Gentile, a hard-bitten
centurion no less, has recognized something in Jesus to which his fellow
Israelites are still blind.
John Hill is a presbyter in the Anglican Church of
Canada (ACC). A member of APLM Council, John also serves as chair for the
Primate’s Task Force on Hospitality, Christian Initiation and Discipleship
Formation in the ACC.
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