Women don't often get to make an appearance in the Bible. I can think of a few who are pretty famous- Ruth, Esther, Mary, Mary Magdalene, and a few others, but not many. So when I come across a woman I haven't heard of, my ear (eyes?) perk up. Today, I came across Anna. She's only given about three verses in Luke, but it's enough to get a small glimpse into who she is. She's a 84 year-old prophet (I didn't know women could be prophets). Sadly, her husband died after only seven years of marriage, so she decided to live as a widow and never leave the temple. Her devotion to God is poignantly clear in these few verses. She;s spent almost her entire life, day and night, fasting and praying. While Simeon is talking with Mary and Joseph about their son, Jesus, Mary comes up and starts praising God and talking about Jesus to all the people who had been waiting for God to rescue Jerusalem. That's all it says about her. She doesn't do anything fantastic, and her presence doesn't really even move the story along, but she got to make an appearance in the Gospels! I don't know that I have anything profound to say about her, I just wanted to write a little something because she stood out to me while I was reading. I ilke to see women in the Bible.
Showing posts with label New Testament. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Testament. Show all posts
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Signs of a Believer
My students used to always tell me crazy things, and when I believed them, they'd say, "Man, such a believer!" That's not the same kind of believe we're talking about here, though...
"These miraculous signs will accompany those who believe: They will cast out demons in my name, and they will speak in new languages. They will be able to handle snakes with safety, and if they drink anything poisonous, it won't hurt them. They will be able to place their hands on the sick, and they will be healed." Mark 16:17-18
Well, geez, if these are the signs, maybe I don't believe, maybe I've never believed. According to Mark, these are Jesus' words. Jesus says if we believe we'll be drinking poison unharmed, handling snakes, casting out demons, and healing the sick. When I've heard about big gatherings where this is done, it generally makes me pretty uncomfortable. I've tended to think those sorts of gathers were for strange fanatics. I don't know if my mind has changed about that, but if Jesus really said these are the signs of a believer, well, maybe I need a bit of a paradigm shift.
Thursday, March 8, 2012
The Greatest Commandment
When one of the teacher of religious law asked Jesus what the greatest commandment was, he replied, "Love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind, and all your strength. The second is equally important: Love your neighbor as yourself" (Mark 12:30-31). This is the God I worship. Again, so starkly different from what I read in the Old Testament. Jesus tells us to love God and love our neighbor; that is what is most important. He doesn't qualify who our neighbor is. I assume he's exactly that, our neighbor, the person on the street whom we may not know, or maybe only know by acquaintance. I'd say it's selfless, but it's more than that, because we're to love them as ourselves, so it's not exactly selfless. It puts us all on the same level, all deserving of the same treatment, care, and love. That's how I want to love people.
As for the first half of those verses- the part about loving God with all our heart, all our soul, all our mind, and all our strength- that's a big charge. What does that look like? Mother Theresa? The pios hermit hidden in the mountains? To love God with all our heart... my heart so often feels divided between many different loves, how can those loves be reconciled with a heart completely devoted to God? To love God with all my soul... how is this different from the heart? To love God with all my mind... how, when I don't even understand who God is? To love God with all my strength... in order to love God with all those other things, I think it'll take all my strength. Maybe this is just a rhetorical device used by Jesus- the message is clear: we are to love God with everything in our being.
As for the first half of those verses- the part about loving God with all our heart, all our soul, all our mind, and all our strength- that's a big charge. What does that look like? Mother Theresa? The pios hermit hidden in the mountains? To love God with all our heart... my heart so often feels divided between many different loves, how can those loves be reconciled with a heart completely devoted to God? To love God with all my soul... how is this different from the heart? To love God with all my mind... how, when I don't even understand who God is? To love God with all my strength... in order to love God with all those other things, I think it'll take all my strength. Maybe this is just a rhetorical device used by Jesus- the message is clear: we are to love God with everything in our being.
God of the Living
I'm not sure if anyone is reading these posts, and that's okay. It's helpful to write things out, and it forces me to read and be thoughtful. I do hope, though, that if you're reading and you've got thoughts, PLEASE share them!
I came across a pretty familiar passage in Mark today that made me think. The story is the one where the Sadducees are asking Jesus about the woman whose husband dies before they have children, so his brother marries her, then he dies and the next brother marries her and so on until she's married all seven brothers. They ask him whose wife will she be in the resurrection.
At the end of his answer (which is the part that made me think), Jesus says "Long after Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob had died, God said to Moses, 'I am the God of Abraham, The God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.' So he is the God of the living, not the dead." (Mark 12:26-27)
So my question is- what does this mean? Those three guys rose from the dead already? Like we die and are resurrected soon after? Are they up in heaven, hanging out with the Most Holy? That what this seems to be saying, they are no longer dead because God is only the God of the Living.
Interesting to say the least...
I came across a pretty familiar passage in Mark today that made me think. The story is the one where the Sadducees are asking Jesus about the woman whose husband dies before they have children, so his brother marries her, then he dies and the next brother marries her and so on until she's married all seven brothers. They ask him whose wife will she be in the resurrection.
At the end of his answer (which is the part that made me think), Jesus says "Long after Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob had died, God said to Moses, 'I am the God of Abraham, The God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.' So he is the God of the living, not the dead." (Mark 12:26-27)
So my question is- what does this mean? Those three guys rose from the dead already? Like we die and are resurrected soon after? Are they up in heaven, hanging out with the Most Holy? That what this seems to be saying, they are no longer dead because God is only the God of the Living.
Interesting to say the least...
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