Login / Signup

Free Access

Take Over, God!

Commentary
In these passages, God calls on individuals to give up control of their lives and follow a whole new way of living. Abram and Sarai leave the comfort and familiarity of family and home to set forth on a journey with no clear destination. They heard, obeyed, and changed the world. Paul expands on this singular event in Abram’s life and how that changes our world. And Jesus reaches out to someone on the margins, someone well enough off to believe they don’t need direction and calls on that person to follow him.

It all looks good on paper, especially the pages of our Bibles, but how ready are we to let God lead us into new and different territory?

Genesis 12:1-9

Right before this passage the genealogy of Tarah presents us with a dead end. Tarah’s journey to Canaan, which will later be identified as the Promised Land, is cut short. One son died prematurely. Another son has no heir. But where there seems to be no future, God bursts on the scene and promises a future that didn’t exist before to Abram and Sarai.

In return, Abram and Sarai are to set out on a journey to God’s good destiny without knowing all the particulars. They have to leave the dead end. It takes courage to set out as an immigrant, whether literally, emotionally, or spiritually. When you step forward into another land, everything you know is wrong. You are out of your comfort zone, and your language zone. But this move will end up as a blessing for untold billions, Christians, Jews, Muslims, all of whom trace their lineage back to Abram.

The immigrant changes life for her descendants in incalculable ways. We sometimes fail to recognize what a bold move it is when a stranger takes her place among us.

The first stage of this journey takes the couple to Shechem, a sacred site with centuries of religious associations, with the oak of Moreh. Moreh calls to mind the words teacher, oracle, giver. But it is transformed when Abram calls upon the name of the Lord by name, YHWH, I AM. This place now has a new religious history.

Even so, the journey is not close to being over. Abram and Sarai, in one sense, never fully arrive at God’s promised destiny. The promise does not immediately come to pass. Some things they will never see. Their faith will waver, and be restored, and waver again. They will make mistakes, big ones. But God is with them – and God is with us. We are part of something bigger than we imagine. We are on a journey, and though we are citizens of heaven we remain strangers in a strange land, who will not fully arrive at our destination in this lifetime.

Perspective matters. It’s like that old medieval story about the traveler who comes upon two men smashing large rocks into smaller rocks. When asked what he is doing the first man answer, “Breaking up rocks.” The second man, however, answers, “Building a cathedral.”

Romans 4:13-25
The apostle builds on the story of Abraham’s faithfulness, emphasizing as stated above that Abraham did not fully arrive at his destination in his lifetime, and that in part this is because the promise is as much for us as for Abraham. He obeyed God and it was reckoned to him as righteousness. When we obey without fully realizing like Abraham we are taking hold of the same promise, even if we do not see it fulfilled. Paul suggests in some ways we have an advantage over Abraham. We have seen a God “who gives life to the dead and calls into existence the things that do not exist.” That is Jesus. We also have the example of the obedience of Jesus, giving control over to the Heavenly Father even as Abraham gave control over to the Great I AM.

We who are faithful without fully seeing what we believe in, regardless of our ethnic, cultural, or religious background, become part of the family of Abraham, to whom the blessing is promised.

Matthew 9:9-13, 18-26
And now Jesus is calling a new family into being and telling them, like Abram and Sarai, to set out on a journey. In this passage, Jesus comes under criticism for the calling of Matthew, the tax collector, who is an outsider reviled by his own people for his seeming collaboration with the hated Roman occupiers. But this is a member of the family of faith, and just as it was the will of God for Abram and Sarai to set out without a clear path to follow, Jesus calls Matthew, no doubt comfortably installed in a home and profession with more security than many in his era, to get up and go, and follow him to parts unknown. In response to criticism about this move, Jesus reminds his critics that it is the ailing who need a doctor – with a little bit of unspoken irony that maybe his questioners are not as well as they think. And this image of healing, with Matthew now a part of his entourage, takes visible form as Jesus heals a young girl and a woman with a bleeding problem, both marginal figures who may not have been as considered as important in that male-dominated society as others might have been. These might have been controversial choices, but just as the Oak of Moreh, a place of ancient wisdom, is transformed into a place of worship of the Great I Am, so the supposed wisdom of our age is transformed by our relationship with Jesus so that we may heal the outcast, the lost, the forsaken, and the forgotten.
UPCOMING WEEKS
In addition to the lectionary resources there are thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
Proper 16 | OT 21 | Pentecost 11
30 – Sermons
160+ – Illustrations / Stories
30 – Children's Sermons / Resources
29 – Worship Resources
34 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Proper 17 | OT 22 | Pentecost 12
29 – Sermons
160+ – Illustrations / Stories
27 – Children's Sermons / Resources
20 – Worship Resources
29 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Proper 18 | OT 23 | Pentecost 13
34 – Sermons
160+ – Illustrations / Stories
32 – Children's Sermons / Resources
26 – Worship Resources
31 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Plus thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...

New & Featured This Week

The Immediate Word

Katy Stenta
Mary Austin
Dean Feldmeyer
Tom Willadsen
Nazish Naseem
George Reed
Christopher Keating
For September 14, 2025:

CSSPlus

John Jamison
Object: A sheep stuffy or toy.

* * *

Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Are you ready for our story today? (Let them respond.) Great! Let’s get started!

Did you know that Jesus traveled around and hunted for people who were doing something illegal and breaking the laws? (Let them respond.) He really did.And when he found someone who was doing something illegal, do you know what he did with them? (Let them respond.)

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Mark Ellingsen
Bill Thomas
Frank Ramirez
Jeremiah 4:11-12, 22-28
Our text tells us that we are skilled in doing evil (v.22). An anonymous late medieval treatise titled German Theology tells us why:

It is the nature and property of the creature to seek itself and its own things, and this and that, here and there, and in all that it does and leaves undone as desire is to its own advantage and benefit. (Varieties of Mystic Experience, p.162)

Martin Luther King, Jr. offers an alternative to this vision:
David Coffin
All three of today’s texts can be viewed as good news that God never gives up on God’s people. This is despite their resistance to repent or simple straying from the community of faith. We can observe family and loved ones at various points of their faith journey through the lens of each of these texts. Jeremiah 4 informs the people their neglect of honoring their covenant with God is about to result in disastrous consequences. Paul recalls in 1 Timothy 1 how he thought he was falling God’s will until he had his literal come to Jesus moment!

StoryShare

John E. Sumwalt
And when he comes home, he calls together his friends and neighbors, saying to them, ‘Rejoice with me, for I have found my lost sheep.’ Just so, I tell you, there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no repentance. (vv. 6-7)

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:

Jesus told stories to illustrate to the people God's gladness whenever anyone turned to him and chose life. There is still rejoicing in heaven whenever any one of us turns to God.



Invitation to Confession:

Jesus, sometimes I think I'm too insignificant for you to bother with me.

Lord, have mercy.

Jesus, sometimes I don't bother with you.

Christ, have mercy.

Jesus, sometimes I don't bother with other people, but only with myself.

SermonStudio

James Evans
(See Proper 12/Pentecost 10/Ordinary Time 17, Cycle B, for an alternative approach.)

The psalm writer has an interesting perspective on the origin of injustice in our world. He begins this psalm with the assertion that those who do not believe in God are "fools." He goes on to accuse them of corruption and of being incapable of doing good. Later on he writes, "Have they no knowledge, all the evildoers who eat up my people as they eat bread, and do not call upon the Lord?" (v. 4).

Elizabeth Achtemeier
"Now it is I who speak in judgment upon them" (v. 12). Ours is a society that does not accept that as the Word of God. Many people do not believe that God judges anyone. Rather, the Lord is a forgiving God, a kindly deity who overlooks all wrong. As in the Gospel lesson for the morning, the Lord searches for the one lost sheep and returns it gently to the fold, or he hunts for the one lost coin until he finds it. God accepts the lost as they are, we think, overlooking Jesus' teaching about repentance and transformation of life.
Scott Suskovic
We usually don't spend too much time thinking about our own sinfulness. On occasion, of course, our feelings of guilt overwhelm us. We can't stop thinking about our sinfulness. If we are in that situation, we may need to talk that out with someone. Apart from times like that, we don't think much about our own sinfulness. We have ways of getting around that.

R. Robert Cueni
Back before the ways of the Taliban became common knowledge, there was a fascinating little article about how they jailed barbers when they didn't do culturally correct haircuts.1 The newspaper reported that young men in Kabul, Afghanistan, have started wearing their hair the way the actor Leonardo DiCaprio wears his. Long, not only on the sides, but so long in the front that hair can drop over the eyes. They call the style, "the Titanic," named for the blockbuster movie starring DiCaprio about the 1912 sinking of the cruise ship by that name.

Special Occasion

Wildcard SSL