It is almost impossible, at death’s door, to imagine life.
Death always boasts its inevitability. Stripped of its loud theatrics, death is not half as fearsome. But it prefers that secret not get out. (more…)
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Psalms, textures on March 26, 2012| 3 Comments »
It is almost impossible, at death’s door, to imagine life.
Death always boasts its inevitability. Stripped of its loud theatrics, death is not half as fearsome. But it prefers that secret not get out. (more…)
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Deuteronomy, textures on March 26, 2012| Leave a Comment »
When the book of Deuteronomy places the terrified Hebrew slaves before Mount Horeb, they are doubly afraid.
The nascent people of Israel fear not only the traditionally lethal prospect of seeing YHWH. They also express mortal fear of hearing him. The people’s terror of sensory contact with YHWH leads to their counter-proposal that Moses serve as mediator between the Liberator of Sinai and the only half-grateful beneficiaries of his salvation. (more…)
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Exodus, textures on February 1, 2012| Leave a Comment »
With something like the explanatory potency of Genesis’ account of human origins, the story of the Hebrew slaves fleeing their ‘house of servitude’ in the book of Exodus strikes the hearer with stunning immediacy. We recognize our own terror in theirs, hemmed in by the sea ahead, besieged by the tromping of Egyptian boots, driven near to madness by the neighing of Egyptian horses behind them.
The Egyptians—all Pharaoh’s horses and chariots, horsemen and troops—pursued the Israelites and overtook them as they camped by the sea near Pi Hahiroth, opposite Baal Zephon. As Pharaoh approached, the Israelites looked up, and there were the Egyptians, marching after them. They were terrified and cried out to the LORD.
It is too familiar, this trapped-ness, these dashed hopes of freedom, these adrenaline regrets. (more…)
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Genesis, textures on January 7, 2012| 2 Comments »
We sometimes believe God would listen to us if we could just calm things down a little and finish up the dusting.
The patriarchal narratives of Genesis offer no support to such an idea. Hagar’s remarkable interaction with Abraham’s God is unruly from start to finish. Yet the son of this servant of Abraham’s wife Sarai is named to honor God’s listening skills and the place of Hagar’s encounter with him after his powers of observation.
Nothing about the story escapes the prevailing unruliness. (more…)
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Genesis, textures on January 3, 2012| Leave a Comment »
In the ‘account of Adam’s line’ that appears in Genesis chapter five, the genealogy’s structure assumes the very shape of the human situation.
The summary of each individual’s history begins with life and ends with death, this for a race that the narrative presents as deathless until they rebelled against the Creator who blessed them as soon as he had breathed life into them. An example establishes the pattern:
When Seth had lived 105 years, he became the father of Enosh. And after he became the father of Enosh, Seth lived 807 years and had other sons and daughters. Altogether, Seth lived 912 years, and then he died. (Genesis 5:6–8 NIV)
Modern translations rightly tidy up the flow of things with a subordinate clause (‘When A had lived 105 years …). The Hebrew text itself develops the human rhythm to a more austere beat:
And A lived X years and he engendered B … And all the days of A were Y years, and he died.
Always, he lived. Always he played his role in the sustaining of the race by engendering children. Always, he died. (more…)
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, textures, Zechariah on December 28, 2011| 2 Comments »
The twelfth chapter of the book of Zechariah is timid about neither the Zion-centered nationalism that it celebrates nor the corresponding defanging of the nations that besiege Jerusalem ‘in that day’. To the contrary, the Lord announces through his prophet that he will make Jerusalem ‘a cup that sends all the surrounding peoples reeling’. Then, via the extravagant mixing of metaphors that is characteristic of the genre, the Lord ‘will make Jerusalem an immovable rock for all the nations. All who try to move it will injure themselves.’
The harassed Judahite city will become the Archimedean point that cannot be shifted while its attackers are levered violently this way and that, their former belligerence reduced suddenly to drunken impotence. (more…)
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Daniel, textures on November 28, 2011| Leave a Comment »
Pathetic Belshazzar, king of the Babylonians, is that shadowy diminishment of his great father Nebuchadnezzar that is familiar to readers of royal drama.
Our phrase ‘the writing is on the wall’—everyone knows what it means—comes from a frightening incident on the last day of this king’s sad, little life. Yet we struggle to recall Belshazzar’s name. (more…)
Posted in textures, tagged 2 Corinthians, biblical reflection, textures on August 5, 2011| Leave a Comment »
The Bible maintains a consistently high regard for those human qualities and actions that are noble, elevated, and good. Indeed, it encourages one to view such things in proximity to that dignity or glory which belongs in its purest form only to God.
Yet the biblical witness remains unimpressed by the tawdry or ungenuine proxies for those qualities represented by—for example—class or economic potency or impressive speech or educational credentials. It is not that any of these things is necessarily bad, just that they are awful measures of what is truly good. Too often, such things elevate what deserves to remain low and blind our eyes from recognizing what is best esteemed. (more…)
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Proverbs, textures on August 4, 2011| Leave a Comment »
Those well-intentioned stewards of spiritual humility who make ‘the depravity of man’ their first and central principle fall easily into a rigidity that does not characterize the biblical witness which they claim as their source. Scripture’s own assessment of humankind underscores human dignity and potentiality at the same time as it holds tight to the brokenness in which these things are realized.
Yet partisans of human corruption, if it is not unfair to understand their purpose in this way, are on to something. (more…)
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Proverbs, textures on August 1, 2011| Leave a Comment »
One could wish, on a sleepy morning’s reading, for something more inspiring, more … um … spiritual.
Do not love sleep, or else you will come to poverty; open your eyes, and you will have plenty of bread. (Proverbs 20:13 NRSV)
The expression at first seems an exaggeration: Don’t love sleep. (more…)