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Sermon Illustrations for Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 (2021)

Illustration
Job 1:1, 2:1-10
It’s interesting that Job 1:1 does not begin with, “And it came to pass…” (v’ya’he) as would be the case if this were a book of history, but with, “There was a man….” (esh hayah).

In Rabbi Victor E. Reichert’s 1946 Job commentary that is part of the Soncino Books of the Bible series, he reminds us that the Talmud (B.B. 15a) states: “Job never was and never existed but is only a typical figure….” The respected teacher Maimonides said that Job is “a parable meant to exhibit the views of mankind in regard to providence.”

Regardless of whether you believe The Book of Job is based on historical events, it is told in story form because stories draw us in to become part of the action, like a television drama.

This book grapples with the serious mystery we all confront in life: Bad things happen to good people. Job doesn’t deserve what happens to him. That is made clear throughout this book.

Now, spoiler alert, Job will never learn what happened to him. God will never put an arm around his shoulder and say, “Funny thing, Job, you’re not going to believe this, and I hope you find it heartening, but the other day I was in the heavenly court, and in walks the adversary, and I was bragging about you, see, and he says --- “. That’s not going to happen. There are no band aids here. No easy fix. And this suggests we should avoid pat answers (“She’s in a better place.” “Someday we’ll understand all this.”)

As I write this, we’re almost a year into the pandemic. Hopefully by the time you read this we’re past it, but you and individuals in your congregation are still coming to grips with the fact that we didn’t necessarily lose the stinkers to Covid-19. We lost good people, front line workers in hospitals, beloved parents and grandparents, and children. For some of us, even when it’s over, the pandemic is never going to be over.

I’d like to also add, as you think your way through this passage, that Job’s wife gets a bad rap. She does not say “Curse God and die,” as some translations suggest. Now perhaps the writer didn’t like putting the word “curse” and “God” in the same sentence, but the word he used is brk, or “bless.” Literally, she is giving him permission to die in a difficult circumstance. He is persisting in the integrity which God boasted about. Part of faithful living is faithful dying. In a book I co-authored we wrote: “Job’s wife found herself watching someone she cared for who, from her perspective, has no hope of survival. I believe she spoke out of pity for her husband and a desire to see his suffering end.” (Voices in the Book of Job, by Robert W. Neff, Brethren Press, 2005, p.26).
Frank R.

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Job 1:1, 2:1-10
Job’s lot is hard for us to understand…the idea that God and Satan would disagree over Job’s faithfulness and God would allow Satan to have his way with Job. That is, of course, if we are to take the text literally.  Rather let’s look at Job as an example of those good people to whom bad things, in some cases many bad things happen. Harold Kushner wrote the book When Bad Things Happen to Good People in 1981 as a means of exploring this very topic, this topic of suffering and evil in a world created by and supposedly governed by a God who is good. The presence of evil and pain in our world has challenged us all, all we faithful people who believe in the goodness of God. Our human lives are such that we encounter any number of occurrences that may cause us pain and loss. Yet, we are not abandoned by God – rather God walks with us, as God walked with Job, in every moment, feeling our pain, weeping our tears, and providing comfort in all things. That is the truth I cling to.
Bonnie B.

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Job 1:1, 2:1-10
I found this story in “Today in the Word.” As the Union Pacific Railroad was being constructed, an elaborate trestle bridge was built across a large canyon in the west. Wanting to test the bridge, the builder loaded a train with enough extra cars and equipment to double its normal load. The train was then driven to the middle of the bridge, where it stayed an entire day.

One worker asked, “Are you trying to break this bridge?”

“No,” the builder replied, “I’m trying to prove the bridge won’t break.”

As I read this story, I thought about the story of Job. Satan thought Job would break. If Job suffered personally and physically, then he’d curse God. God allowed the test, not so much to break Job, but to show that Job wouldn’t break.
Bill T.

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Hebrews 1:1-4; 2:5-12
Jesus Christ is not just an ordinary human being.  John Calvin noted that this lesson intimates that no good can be found apart from Christ, as he is the heir of all things (Commentaries, Vol.XXII/1, p.33).  Martin Luther notes how Christ cleanses/purifies us:  

To go further: When we accept him [Christ], when we believe he has purified us, he dwells within us because of, and by our faith, daily continuing to cleanse us by his own operation; and nothing apart from Christ in any way contributes to the purification of our sins.  (Complete Sermons, Vol.3/2, p.180)

Have you ever wondered how Jesus can be divine and human and still be one?  Luther offers an intriguing, enlightening image:

For humanity and divinity are not one natural single being; but as one indivisible person they are so united that the one cannot be separated from the other; just as sugar water is still water, but the sugar is so blended with the water that the two cannot be separated even though they are two distinct constituents. (Luther’s Works, Vol.23, pp.148-149)
Mark E.

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Mark 10:2-16
This passage about divorce is a favorite “clobber verse” that some use to pummel wonderful Christians who are trying to escape abusive marriages. The Jewish world, alongside other ancient societies, had protocols in place to protect individuals getting divorces. So, what is happening here?

Briefly, Jesus answers a question from religious authorities (“Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife?”) with a question. “What did Moses command you?” The religious authorities respond by deliberately misinterpreting a passage that is regularly mistranslated into English, and they knew what they were doing.

The passage is Deuteronomy 24:1-5. The passage begins: “Suppose a man enters into marriage with a woman, but she does not please him because he finds something objectionable about her, and so he writes her a certificate of divorce, puts it in her hand, and sends her out of his house; she ten leaves his house and goes off to become another man’s wife.”

Robert Alter, in his translation of his passage, renders the phrase “something objectionable” as “he finds in her some shamefully exposed thing.” The Jewish Publication Society translation says, “he finds something obnoxious” about her. Duane L. Christensen’s translation for the Word Biblical Commentary very literally states “…because he finds in her “a naked thing…’” The implication is that she has engaged in public lewd misbehavior and may be just plain nuts. It has nothing to do with whether she has failed to please or obey her husband. There is something seriously wrong with her.

Then the passage continues: “Then suppose the second man dislikes her, writes her a bill of divorce, puts it in her hand, and sends her out of his house (or the second man who married her dies); her first husband, who sent her away, is not permitted to take her again to be his wife after she has been defiled; for that would be abhorrent to the Lord, and you shall not bring guilt on the land that the Lord your God is giving you as a possession.

Some commentators suggest that what is really happening is that some men are wife swapping -- officially divorcing their spouses temporarily then taking them back and doing this back and forth. And why might they do that? The next verse suggests one reason.

“When a man is newly married, he shall not go out with the army or be charged with any related duty. He shall be free at home one year, to be happy with the wife whom he has married.”

This means the other abuse some were perpetrating was that they were marrying, divorcing, and switching wives back and forth so they could perpetually dodge the draft. Since they got a free pass for a year some might have been swapping wives to get perpetual deferments.

Seems a little preposterous, doesn’t it? But many of the laws in the Torah can be considered case law, laws that were developed because someone abused a situation and a law had to be written to address the abuse.

Therefore, Jesus told those leaders that they were not permitted to divorce, because they were deliberately misinterpreting what was clearly a matter of case law to address particular abuses.

(This is adapted from the sermon on this text included in the CSS book “Mark His Words,” by Frank Ramirez).
Frank R.

* * *

Mark 10:2-16
I found this little story that I thought spoke volumes. First-grader Melanie had announced that she was engaged to marry the young gentleman next door, but the engagement was broken abruptly. When she was asked about it, she said, “Well, he just isn’t ready for marriage yet. And besides that, he scribbled in my coloring book.”

There’s something refreshingly candid about children. Jesus insisted that children be allowed to come to him because the kingdom of God belongs to “such as these.” Marriage and divorce are addressed here, too. God intends for marriage to last. Divorce is not something that God wants or desires. Choosing whether to marry or not is a serious question and one that needs to be prayerfully considered. It is where “two become one flesh.”  First-grade Melanie has it right. If people are not ready for marriage, they should not get married.
Bill T.
UPCOMING WEEKS
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"The Way to God" by Peter Andrew Smith
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The Way to God
by Peter Andrew Smith
Isaiah 58:1-9a (9b-12)

In his story "The Way to God," Peter Andrew Smith tells of a people seeking to know God in their lives who discover the answer is not about what they do but about how they live.

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This is a dangerous psalm -- dangerous, because it is so open to misinterpretation.

"Happy are those who fear the Lord...." Well, who could quarrel with that? Yet this psalm goes on to describe, in concrete terms, exactly what form that happiness takes: "Their descendants will be mighty in the land.... Wealth and riches are in their houses" (vv. 2a, 3a).

Power? Wealth? Are these the fruits of a godly life? The psalmist seems to think so.

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Lesson 1: Isaiah 58:1--9a (9b--12) (C); Isaiah 58:7--10 (RC)
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I had a much-loved professor in seminary who confessed to some of us over coffee one day that he frequently came home from church and was so frustrated he had to go out and dig in the garden, even in the middle of winter. Robert Louis Stevenson once recorded in his diary, as if it were a surprise, "I went to church today and am not depressed." Someone has said, "I feel like unscrewing my head and putting it underneath the pew every time I go to church." Thoughts like these are often expressed by people who have dropped out of church, especially youth and young adults.
Charles L. Aaron, Jr.
Sometimes when we read a passage of scripture, we may need to pay careful attention to who in the text is speaking. Our understanding of the words themselves may change, depending on whose mouth they come from. If we are reading Job, we need to know which character is speaking in the passage. If Job's friends are talking, we know their words cannot be trusted. They are too self-righteous. Sometimes, we are not sure who is speaking. Job 28 is a beautiful poem extolling the virtue of wisdom, but we can't be sure who delivers this elegant piece.
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Of all the pressing questions of the day, a sign on one person's desk asks, "How much can I sin and still go to heaven?" The question seems amusing until we stop to think about it. Inherent in this question is a bold-faced confession that there is no interest at all in pursuing a life shaped wholly by the spirit of God, but at the same time we do not want to be so recklessly sacrilegious that we forfeit completely the rewards of the hereafter.
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Emphasis Preaching Journal

One of the difficulties that confronts us who drive our vehicles is forgetting to turn off the lights and returning to the car after some hours only to discover a dead battery. I have found that the problem occurs most often when I have been driving during a storm in daytime and had to turn on headlights in order to be seen by other drivers. By the time I get to my destination the rain has often ceased, and the sun is shining brightly. The problem happens, too, when we drive into a brightly lighted parking lot at night.
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CSSPlus

Good morning, boys and girls. I brought some salt with me this morning. (Show the salt.) What do we use salt for? (Let them answer.) We use it for flavoring food. How many of you put salt on your popcorn? (Let them answer.) What else do we use salt for? (Let them answer.) We put salt on the sidewalks in winter to keep us from slipping. We put salt in water softeners to soften our water.

In this morning's lesson Jesus said that we are the salt of the earth. What do you think he meant by that? (Let them answer.) In Jesus' time salt was very important. It was used to keep food
Good morning! Once Jesus told a whole crowd of people who
had come to hear him preach that they couldn't get into Heaven
unless they were more "righteous" than all the religious leaders
of that day. Does anyone know what that word means? What does it
mean to be righteous? (Let them answer.) It means to be good, to
be fair, and to be honest. Now, what do you think he meant by
that? Was he telling people that they had to do everything
perfectly in this life in order to get into Heaven? (Let them
answer.)
Good morning! How many of you own your own Bible? (Let them
answer.) When you read the Bible, do you find some things that
are hard to understand? (Let them answer.) Yes, I think there are
some tough things to comprehend in the Bible. After all, the
Bible is God's Word, and it's not always easy to understand God.
He is so much greater than we are and much more complex.

Now, I brought a New Testament with me this morning and I
want someone to read a verse for us. Can I have a volunteer? (Let
Teachers and Parents: The most common false doctrine, even
among some who consider themselves strong Christians, is that we
can earn our way into Heaven by our own works. Our children must
learn the basic Christian truth that Heaven is a gift of God and
that there is no way to be righteous enough to deserve it. We
must rely on the righteousness of Christ for our ticket into
Heaven.

* Make white paper ponchos with the name JESUS written in
large letters on each one. (A large hole for the head in a big

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