Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Readings for October 16, 2011


If the days are evil, and I think they certainly are, we can't afford to walk as though they aren't.  We could imagine a world in which Christians could get away with being foolish, but that's not the world in which we live.  The only way to make your way through evil days without arriving at an evil outcome is to walk in the way of wisdom.  
So I'm going to talk specifically about what that means and how to go about doing it, making clear the sense in which the days are evil, that we all might be properly motivated.

Call to Repentance
James 1:12-15  (page 1881)

Call to Worship
Psalm 81 (page 920)

OT Reading
Proverbs 4:1-9  (page 989)

NT Reading
James 3:13-18  (page 1883)

Message
Wisdom for the Wicked Day
Ephesians 5:15-16 (page 1823)

Wednesday, October 05, 2011

Readings for Sunday, October 9, 2011

This week we'll be considering a good portion of Ephesians, chapter 5.  In this passage Paul does a lot of comparing and contrasting in an effort to make us feel how unbecoming it is when we behave as though we had not had a life-changing run-in with the Son of God, and how sweet and joyful the freedom is that we experience when we allow him to bring us fully into the light.  
I have had two experiences of sleeping in the day time:  I have slept (or tried to) when, because of fatigue or sadness, I desperately wanted to block out all the light and every sunlit sound and fall asleep and stay that way.  In those instances it's almost as much a hostility to the daytime that motivates me as it is a desire for sleep and the comfort of my bed.
But I have also been confined to my bed when to lie still was an insufferable agony.  I remember as a child in Washington, D.C. being sent to bed in the summer at a time when the sun and my mother seemed to be paying attention to different clocks.  The curtains were drawn against the late day rays of sun, but it was too warm to close the window, and I smelled barbecues and grass cuttings, heard lawnmowers, children laughing and the pleasant sounds of traffic, of people going places to do things.  And it seemed that the world was a party to which I had not been invited.  
Paul's point seems to be that we've mistaken our coffins for beds and done our best to silence the alarms.  Paul challenges us to see how filthy are the sheets underneath which we huddle and squeeze shut our eyes.  He wants to open the window on us so that we can smell and hear the evidence of the party on the other side of the world, a party to which we have been invited.  He says to us "Sleepers awake . . . "


Call to Repentance
Psalm 139:23-24 (page 975)

Call to Worship
Psalm 139:1-18  (page 974)

OT Reading
Daniel 12:1-9  (page 1393)

NT Reading
John 11:30-46  (page 1669)