The language of the landscape rejoicing is particularly powerful because one normally thinks of the ground beneath our feet as a stage, not a performer. It is inert, the platform and the background of the interesting and significant activities of those who appear upon it. (more…)
Posts Tagged ‘biblical reflection’
drenching the desert: Isaiah 34-35
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on October 6, 2007| Leave a Comment »
shared life: Philippians 1
Posted in denkschrift, tagged biblical reflection, Philippians, textures on October 5, 2007| Leave a Comment »
When the apostle Paul turns to address his much-loved friends in Philippi, the warmth of his rhetoric flows like the melting waters of Springtime. Gone is the parental indignation of Galatians, the costly renegotiation of wounded relationships that is never far away in his correspondence with the Corinthians.
In his letter to the Philippian Christians, Paul writes like a man who has come home. The sweet absence of drama flavors the exchange. (more…)
militancy: Ephesians 6
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Ephesians, textures on October 4, 2007| 1 Comment »
Paul might be accused of possessing a rather egregious blind spot when it comes to matters of what we blithely label ‘social justice’. In this final chapter of his letter to the Ephesians, he counsels submission and a posture that is easily misconstrued as passivity in the face of the regnant social stratifications of Greco-Roman society.
‘Stay where you are’ is—prima facie—about as radical a statement as his social conscious is able to produce. (more…)
the apostolic paradox: Ephesians 3
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Ephesians, textures on October 3, 2007| Leave a Comment »
Paul, who with a purist’s zeal plundered the lives and networks of the earliest Christians, remains in his apostolic career deeply aware of how his actions had stripped him of all credentials based in status or achievement. Something akin to guilt with its barb removed presses him to describe himself with self-deprecating clauses like ‘the greatest of sinners’ or—as here in Ephesians 3—’the very least of all the saints’. (more…)
all and nothing: Ephesians 2
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Ephesians, textures on October 3, 2007| Leave a Comment »
Pauline phrases reverberate in literal translation through hearts and minds that have been attuned to the apostle’s vocabulary and cadence. Take, for example, the alliterative spotlight that Paul casts upon divine life with a clause that anchors human destiny to the motor that is divine love: ‘out of the great love with which he loved us’. (more…)
great expectations: Ephesians 1
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Ephesians, textures on September 29, 2007| Leave a Comment »
Were Paul the misanthropic curmudgeon he is often taken for, we would not have lines like this:
In Christ we have also obtained an inheritance, having been destined according to the purpose of him who accomplishes all things according to his counsel and will, so that we, who were the first to set our hope on Christ, might live for the praise of his glory.
People bogged down in what is wrong—or will be if so-and-so is left to run things—do not make statements like this. These words and the lines that surround them are full to bursting with hope for those whom ‘the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ’ has called. Indeed they speak about placing hope in Christ so that Paul and the Ephesians might grow into the rather large stature that it is their vocation to realize. (more…)
high-minded: Isaiah 10-12
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on September 27, 2007| Leave a Comment »
The moral architecture of the book of Isaiah is one of its sustaining threads, holding together deep complexity by the persistence of a singular theme. With its recurrent promise that ‘YHWH alone shall be exalted on that day’, the book establishes that when things are as they should be, YHWH is lifted up and all his creatures stand below him in proper submission. Indeed, chapter six’s vision tells us that the view from the heavenly throne room is just this way. Only matters on earth have gone temporarily akilter. (more…)
double edge: Isaiah 7-9
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on September 26, 2007| Leave a Comment »
YHWH’s proximity is an inconvenient wealth.
The Lord’s covenanting labors with Israel in the desert before Sinai are paradigmatic of the demanding consolation that his presence brings to a people with whom he chooses to live in close quarters. Rightfully, the Israelites of the Exodus narrative have a difficult time deciding whether this is precisely what they wanted. (more…)
exasperation: Isaiah 4-6
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on September 25, 2007| Leave a Comment »
In spite of its structural intricacy, the Song of the Vineyard in the book of Isaiah’s fifth chapter comes across with formidable blunt force. As parables go, it is brief. One surmises that the prophet led his listeners along the path of a well-told tale, then hit them in the gut with its damning burden. (more…)
here and there: Isaiah 2-3
Posted in textures, tagged biblical reflection, Isaiah, textures on September 24, 2007| Leave a Comment »
Isaiah’s complex journey will celebrate beloved Zion even as it works out a deep, genetic yearning for distant nations to know and serve Israel’s God. The book releases its energy in both centripetal and centrifugal form without denying either motion, as though gathering opposing forces into one insistent, polychromatic song. The book of Isaiah is not simple. Neither is it complicated. Instead, it is complex, a careful gathering of layers into one coherent statement that stretches the imagination while nourishing the reader’s capacity to allow multiple plates to spin. Attention to any one does not cancel out the rotation of the others. (more…)