Dictionary: Hope
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Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... . It was “Odie,” the local plumber, volunteering to come over and do some work. He offered to drain out the hot water tanks and outside pipes ahead of the blast of arctic air headed our way. “Odie” wasn’t trying to drum up any business for himself. In fact, if all our pipes burst he would make a lot of money repairing the damages. He was simply thinking of others and offering the gift of his unique talents to help out a family with a man with no handy-man skills. Odie’s phone call has been the ...

Ephesians 1:1-14
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... the tongue. The cosmic imagery of John’s prologue. The poetry of Mary’s Magnificat. The storybook details of Luke’s birth narratives. This week’s lectionary epistle reading, Ephesians 1:3-14, is NOT one of those texts. In fact, within the linguistic linguini that makes up this lengthy unit there are some of the most broad-ranging, theologically controversial, eschatologically enigmatic ideas, all rolled into one long Greek sentence. The grammatically convoluted, densely woven text, while filled with ...

Mark 6:30-44
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... tender compassion that guides Jesus' actions. "The Good Shepherd" first tends his newly gathered flock, not with food but with words of life. Jesus' compassion is for their aimless spiritual wandering, and it is to alleviate this ennui that he begins teaching the multitude. In fact he is so caught up in ministering to the hearts and minds of the crowd that Jesus forgets the demands of the body. It is not until the disciples (whose exhaustion had given way to hunger) remind him that it's high time they eat ...

John 6:24-35
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... to do is believe in him as the one sent by God. This simple act of faith yields the gift of life for all who "work" it Peter F. Ellis, The Genius of John (Collegeville, MN: The Liturgical Press, 1984), 122. But the crowd is not satisfied. Despite the fact that a scant twenty-four hours has passed since Jesus miraculously fed the whole lot of them with a handful of loaves and fishes, they have the audacity to demand that he give them a sign. Eager to re-direct this conversation in the way they want it to ...

1 Corinthians 13:1-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... as they may appear, are themselves only further indications of our living in the "between times" of God's eschatological fulfillment. Verses 9 and 10 make it clear that the loss of tongues and prophesy and knowledge are not to be mourned. Indeed, we in fact lose nothing, for as the "partial" recedes, it will be replaced by the "complete" and whole. Should we wail when someone takes away our broken fragment of pie-crust and replaces it with an entire pie? The elegant mystical language Paul uses in verses 11 ...

2 Corinthians 5:16-21
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... reconciling work and God's is very close and clear. The second half of verse 20 demonstrates Paul putting his God-given commission into action. In the cantankerous, contentious CorinthianChurch, there seemed ample evidence to Paul that reconciliation was not a fact. Even as he himself is the cause of some of the unreconciled attitudes, Paul pleads with the Corinthians to listen to his message of reconciliation. Paul concludes his appeal by posing one of the greatest paradoxes of the faith. Rudolf Bultmann ...

Luke 10:25-37
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... prisoners, give them wine and anoint them, and then - placing the most feeble upon asses - lead them all back to their waiting families in Jericho. So much for the spoils of war. Jesus' own version, of course, is filled with poignant details. There is the fact that the first two travelers who pass by the wounded man are members of the professionally religious - a priest and a Levite. The behavior of these two men, who of all people we might expect to show compassion for their fellow human - is shocking to ...

Luke 13:22-30
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... still underway, with Jesus going "through one town and village after another, teaching as he made his way to Jerusalem." In fact, this pericope begins the second stage of this travelogue section, extending from 13:22-17:10. Scholars have recognized that ... of Jesus' presence, but just recognizing this identity is not enough to allow those clamoring at the narrow door safe entry. In fact, the master of the house now rejects them even more completely. The ones seeking entry are now not just unknown. They are ...

Hebrews 13:1-8
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... grasping-gasping-greed, as the expression of Christian trust. This advice is not an out-of-context statement. The risks this author has been asking this community to take in befriending Christian strangers or reaching out to imprisoned brothers and sisters may, in fact, call for endangering their financial security. But since wealth is not an end itself, one is not being asked to risk anything of ultimate value. As verse 6 sings, Christian dependence is to be on Christ, not on material things. Verse 7 might ...

Exodus 17:1-7
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... this second confrontation that Moses seems to take the thirst of the people as a serious threat to his own position and the future of the Exodus trek. In verse 4, Moses now directly petitions the Lord - but still not specifically for water. In fact, the only concern Moses expresses is for his own continued well-being, not that of the thirsty people: "They are almost ready to stone me." Moses perceives the threats and insubordination as the only real and active danger in the present situation. Whether it ...

John 11:1-45
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... life of Jesus. It falls away in the revelation that Jesus "loved" Lazarus and his two sisters, Martha and Mary (v. 3, 5). Some scholars posit that the emphasis the Johannine writer places on Jesus' love for Lazarus may indicate that Lazarus is in fact the unnamed "beloved disciple" referred to later in the gospel. Others view Lazarus as Jesus' best friend. Yet this love does not immediately compel Jesus to rush to the ill Lazarus' side. Instead, Jesus delays even beginning his journey for two days, and does ...

1 Peter 2:19-25
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... sins (for Christ already suffered and died for those, once and for all). Suffering is a natural consequence of a faithful Christian response to the world. In verses 22-25, 1 Peter invokes the Hebrew Scriptures' theology of the "suffering servant" (Isaiah 53). In fact, there is a creedal feel and sound to these verses. It is quite likely that here we have an established creedal formula already used in the church which 1 Peter imports here into his text. The image of Christ as the suffering servant further ...

Jeremiah 1:4-10
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... to sympathize. Perhaps the reason Jeremiah has always found favor is that two basic factors have always defined life _ things always change and people don't like change. Nearly all people can look at their own age, their own times, and deplore the fact that they have been born into a period of tremendous upheaval and change. It always appears that past generations enjoyed a stability and continuity unknown in our own day. For all who keenly feel the movement of the earth under them, Jeremiah is a greatly ...

Deuteronomy 26:1-11
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... _ and God hears and responds to their cries. All of the exodus is condensed into verse 8. But never has such a brief summary brought together all the elements of that deliverance so succinctly or so well. The most miraculous event of all is the fact that the Lord "heard" the cries of the people and then turned a "mighty hand and an outstretched arm," the "signs and wonders" and powers at God's command, to bear on the Israelites' situation. The ultimate result of all this divine intervention was the final ...

Philippians 2:5-11
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... more than justified to hold Jesus up as an example of humility and obedience to the Philippians because he was, in fact, a good human example. Of course, neither the exalted Christocentric focus of all Pauline theology nor the concluding verses of this ... divinity and takes on human form reveals the true essence of divinity. Self-emptying on such a level demonstrates divine love revealing in fact the core of divinity: God is love (1 John 4:8,16). Kenosis, as the most genuine expression of divinity, is the free ...

Acts 5:27-32
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... . Peter closes by repeating the words Jesus spoke to his disciples when he appeared to them Easter Sunday. As they were still huddling in that upper room, Jesus commissioned all of them as "witnesses of these things" (Luke 24:48). Appropriately, Peter highlights the fact that it is not just the apostles themselves, but the "Holy Spirit" who also acts as witness. Perhaps more dramatically than anyone else, Peter stands as an example of the Holy Spirit's ability to act as a witness for Christ. The apostle who ...

John 21:1-19
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... community reading this gospel, the author intends this conversation to be pointed also toward the future, not just the past. In the vocabulary employed here by the author, there is both an issue and a non-issue to discuss. The "non-issue" refers to the fact that while the author has Jesus use the word agape (love) in his first two questions to Peter, he employs another Greek term phileos (love) in the third instance (v.17). In all three of his responses, Peter confesses to having phileo (love) for Jesus ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... psalm as a "pilgrimage song" steeped in the communal history of exodus and wilderness wandering that all Israel shared. They cite the mention in verse 6 of "the house of the Lord" as a clear reference to the temple in Jerusalem. If this is in fact intended to be a reference to the temple proper and not, as others insist, a heavenly dwelling place with God this gives Psalm 23 a historical background probably set during the second exodus and the experiences of exile and restoration. In this interpretation, a ...

Romans 5:1-5
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... dominant in the minds of Paul's audience as they continue to read about the role endurance, character and hope play in the lives of the faithful. But in 5:1-11, Paul becomes primarily concerned with demonstrating how all the spiritual gifts are in fact contained within that one gift that overwhelms all else "justification by faith." Through the gracious gift of Jesus Christ, we now are able to stand in a right relationship with God the gift that backgrounds all other gifts in the Christian life. Romans 5:1 ...

Luke 12:49-56
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... that verses 51-53 were an editorial expansion that dealt with realities facing the first-century church. Luke has repeatedly stated that Jesus is, in fact, God's peace on earth (1:79; 2:14, 29; 7:50; 8:48; 19:38; 24:36). But the events that first-century Christians ... blood relatives all testified to the yet unrealized fullness of Christ's peace. Jesus' words acknowledge this situation he does, in fact, bring division. But this does not mean that creating strife was the purpose of his mission. It is only when ...

2 Timothy 1:1-14
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... that Paul has been "appointed a herald and an apostle and a teacher" (v.11). It is because he is a messenger for this gospel that Paul finds himself "suffering" (imprisoned). Paul's "not ashamed" declaration probably refers not to the gospel itself, but to the fact that he is imprisoned. What Paul has "entrusted" to God (v.12) is not wholly clear - but it seems likely that this is a reference to his own life, his own commitment to Christ. This trust remains with God, Paul insists, until "that day" - a term ...

Luke 17:11-19
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... 10 were cured, then they all could have "seen" this much. What this one leper "sees," then, is something more. We should recall that in Greek, the same term is used for "healing" as is used for "salvation." This leper's eyes are opened to the fact that he is not only "healed," but "saved" as well. Accordingly, he "returns" to Jesus and begins "praising" or "glorifying" God. This type of behavior is repeated several times in Luke to mark the occasion of a miraculous event that signifies God's active presence ...

1 Samuel 3:1-10
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... had a vision for Samuel's life, and by responding to that vision Samuel found his vocation for life. Samuel is, in fact, called into being by the voice he responded to that night. Samuel had difficulty correctly discerning God's voice and vision for ... defining the qualities a faithful community should possess. Jesus was not a solo performer. This week's gospel text highlights the fact that Jesus' first course of action upon entering into his active ministry was to begin gathering a community of faithful, the ...

Mark 6:30-44
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... tender compassion that guides Jesus' actions. "The Good Shepherd" first tends his newly gathered flock, not with food but with words of life. Jesus' compassion is for their aimless spiritual wandering, and it is to alleviate this ennui that he begins teaching the multitude. In fact he is so caught up in ministering to the hearts and minds of the crowd that Jesus forgets the demands of the body. It is not until the disciples (whose exhaustion had given way to hunger) remind him that it's high time they eat ...

John 6:24-35
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... to do is believe in him as the one sent by God. This simple act of faith yields the gift of life for all who "work" it Peter F. Ellis, The Genius of John (Collegeville, MN: The Liturgical Press, 1984), 122. But the crowd is not satisfied. Despite the fact that a scant twenty-four hours has passed since Jesus miraculously fed the whole lot of them with a handful of loaves and fishes, they have the audacity to demand that he give them a sign. Eager to re-direct this conversation in the way they want it to ...