Epiphany 6 / OT 6
Devotional
Water From the Well
Lectionary Devotional For Cycle A
Object:
... I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Choose life so that you and your descendents may live.
-- Deuteronomy 30:19
There is something within us that rebels against the ambiguity of life and is attracted to simple "either-or" choices. Deuteronomy suggested that God has set before us the basic choice between life and death, blessings and curses. While, at first, it might seem a simple choice of choosing the positive over the negative, the implication of the choice is a lot more complex. Deuteronomy declared that choosing life meant "loving the Lord your God, obeying him, and holding fast to him...." Choosing to love and obey God required a fundamental choice of faith over appearances. The risks that lead to death seem so real that we tend to live our lives in response to the power that death holds over us. The story of Israel, beginning with Abram in Genesis 12:1 ff, was a struggle to be obedient to the mysterious promises made by an invisible God. The temptations to build one's own security through greed and hating one's enemies versus obeying God who asks us to take risks of loving our enemy are overwhelming. Churches will often decide to protect their own future rather than risk some behavior in faith. To protect oneself, rather than make oneself vulnerable in love, especially toward those who have not been loving toward us, seems natural. It is hard for us to comprehend that in the Garden of Gethsemane Jesus chose life as he headed for the cross. Choosing life is not as simple as it seems.
-- Deuteronomy 30:19
There is something within us that rebels against the ambiguity of life and is attracted to simple "either-or" choices. Deuteronomy suggested that God has set before us the basic choice between life and death, blessings and curses. While, at first, it might seem a simple choice of choosing the positive over the negative, the implication of the choice is a lot more complex. Deuteronomy declared that choosing life meant "loving the Lord your God, obeying him, and holding fast to him...." Choosing to love and obey God required a fundamental choice of faith over appearances. The risks that lead to death seem so real that we tend to live our lives in response to the power that death holds over us. The story of Israel, beginning with Abram in Genesis 12:1 ff, was a struggle to be obedient to the mysterious promises made by an invisible God. The temptations to build one's own security through greed and hating one's enemies versus obeying God who asks us to take risks of loving our enemy are overwhelming. Churches will often decide to protect their own future rather than risk some behavior in faith. To protect oneself, rather than make oneself vulnerable in love, especially toward those who have not been loving toward us, seems natural. It is hard for us to comprehend that in the Garden of Gethsemane Jesus chose life as he headed for the cross. Choosing life is not as simple as it seems.

