“Vigilant” by Rev. Paul Berghout (@FatherPB)
Piety
See, the eyes of the LORD are upon those who fear him, upon those
who hope for his kindness, to deliver them from death and preserve them in
spite of famine. (Psalm 33:18-19)
By faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to go out to a place that
he was to receive as an inheritance; he went out, not knowing where he was to
go. (Hebrews 11:8)
Blessed are those servants whom the master finds vigilant on his
arrival. Amen, I say to you, he will
gird himself, have them recline at table, and proceed to wait on them. (Luke 12:37)
Study
Each of the three punishments evokes a mood of fear according to Jewish
biblical-era legislation also called "halakhic" [huh-lah-khik,
-lak-ik] law.
Reading and hearing Scripture is "imaging the real" in all of
its "moods"—and letting the tone of the text bring one to the truth
of the book.
The first servant acts out of false knowledge (thinking he knows his
Master is delayed in returning) in contrast to genuine knowledge (knowing that
he does not know). In Alcoholics Anonymous, you will hear people demonstrate
their awareness of their faulty thinking with the words "my best thinking
got me here."
That servant finds reproach, severe punishment and is assigned to a place with the unfaithful for usurping power, physically raging against others
in the household, and getting drunk.
Not quite so bad is the case in verse 12:47, where the person is
neither prepared for action nor doing what is expected, though the person fully
knows the Master's will. That servant "shall be beaten severely."
The least bad case (verse 12:48) is found to be doing something
"deserving punishment" because of not bothering to know the Master's
will, wish, or desire.
The Good News is that Jesus confronts the anguish of these judgment
scenarios
with a kind of cognitive therapy of correct thinking in the same
Gospel today. He reveals that there is a
treasure which we do not lose in death.
In Luke 12:32, "Do not be afraid any longer, little flock, for your
Father is pleased to give you the kingdom."
By Lawton Blandford |
The critical point: Human beings
accumulate their treasury of good deeds through Christ. The Lord rewards each person immediately in
accordance with one's works and faith.
Action
How does my hope in God's kingdom dispel my fear? How can I help build
God's kingdom? How is God part of my vision for the future?
We get a hint at those answers from the second example of correct
thinking. Be in a constant state of
preparedness.
Protestant children learn this bedtime prayer:
Now I lay me down to
sleep
I pray the Lord my
soul to keep
If I should die
before I wake
I pray the Lord, my
soul, to take.
It would be better if they were taught to pray, "If I should
wake before I die."
The servants in our Gospel today were half awake. They were not
tuned-in to what the Master wanted of them.
"Gird your loins" from verse 12:35 means "be
prepared;" tuck your garments into your belt so you can run. Similarly, in
1 Peter 1:13 is the expression "gird up the loins of your mind."
The Israelites were told to eat the first Passover meal ready to depart
from Egypt, "with your loins girt, sandals on your feet and staff in your
hand, you shall eat like those in flight."
We are called to be vigilant and faithfully active in this life, to
nurture others by our service.
I will close with a story that sums up the tone and teaching of our
main Gospel text about the servants—
There is a story about a lazy boy who went with his mother and aunt on
a blueberry-picking hike. The boy carried the smallest bucket or pail possible.
While the others worked hard at picking berries, he lolled about, chasing a
butterfly and playing hide-and-seek with a squirrel.
Soon it was approaching time to leave. In a panic, the boy filled his
pail mostly with moss and then topped it off with a thin layer of berries, so
that the bucket looked full of berries. His mother and aunt commended him highly
for his effort.
The next morning his mother baked some pies, and she made a special
"saucer-sized" pie just for the boy. He could hardly wait for the pie
to cool. Blueberry was his favorite! He could see the plump berries oozing
through a slit in the crust, and his mouth watered in anticipation.
As he sunk his fork into the flaky crust, however, he found...mostly
moss!
2 comments:
I remember the blueberry story.
Great arrangement and editing as usual, thanks Tony D
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