The theme this week is a powerful follow on from last week. The issues of suffering, judgment, repentance, compassion, and justice all come together in ways that are both comforting and disturbing.
I thought I would add one quick word of explanation for something I regularly do on this site. With many of the contemporary hymns (worship songs) that I suggest each week, I provide links to videos on YouTube. The main reason I do this, is that it is hard to know which songs are known by readers of this blog and which aren’t. And, since there aren’t really any sites that provide good free recordings of these songs to listen to and learn from, I offer the videos simply as a way of hearing the song, and learning how it goes, in absence of any other resources. I hope this is helpful.
May you continue to be drawn deeper into the mystery of grace as you journey through Lent in worship.
READINGS:
Isaiah 55:1-9: God’s higher thoughts: food and drink for those who have no money; forgiveness, influence and life for those who have sinned and are called back.
Psalm 63:1-8: A psalm of longing for God’s nourishing presence, and of thanksgiving for God’s satisfying care and life.
1 Corinthians 10:1-13: The disobedience and rebelliousness of the Israelites in the wilderness is a warning to us to resist the temptations we face. But, God provides, and strengthens us, if we will allow it.
Luke 13:1-9: Jesus confronts the idea that natural or human-initiated disasters only befall the sinful or the evil, and challenges the self-righteousness of his hearers, calling them to repentance, even as he reflects, in parable, on God’s mercy that gently waits for us to wake up and start bearing fruit.
REFLECTIONS ON THEME:
This week the readings move us very powerfully from last week’s theme, into a “next step”. Last week, we were challenged to recognise that faith, on one level, is not a protection from the world’s woes, but rather, it is a call to take up the cross, and embrace God’s life even when we have to suffer to do so. On another level, though, we were invited to celebrate that faith does lead us into a life that is deeper, richer and more meaningful than one of faithlessness. This week, we are taken one step further – we are to reject the idea that suffering is God’s punishment for sin, and blessing (or the avoidance of suffering) God’s reward. Rather, we are called to recognise our own need of God’s mercy and grace, and to respond by “bearing fruit” – manifesting the life of God’s reign, and bringing grace and mercy into the world. This week we are shocked out of our complacency, and challenged to be more determined in our commitment to follow Christ, even as we are assured of the gifts of God’s presence and God’s provision to fulfil our calling.
CONNECTING WITH LIFE:
But pain insists upon being attended to. God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our pains: it is His megaphone to rouse a deaf world. – C.S. Lewis
GLOBAL APPLICATION: The significance of this week’s Gospel reading, while the Haiti earthquake remains fresh in our memories, while the suffering and chaos still remains, and while the work of rebuilding is still a future hope, is nothing less than obvious. While much can be said – and has been said – about whether this is God’s punishment or not, Jesus closes the book on that discussion very firmly. But, he doesn’t close the book on the significance of this event for every person – it reminds us that we all need God’s grace and mercy, and that we cannot stand off and debate the pain of others academically while ignoring the part our self-righteousness plays in their pain. There is a sense in which Haiti is not a judgement on the Haitians – it a judgment on those who have allowed the inequalities that made them vulnerable to this disaster. We cannot help but be challenged that in 1989 a major earthquake (7.0 on the Richter scale) hit California and left only 63 people dead, but this earthquake (also at 7.0 on the Richter scale) has left over 200 000 people dead. To read more of this analysis check Julie Clawson’s blog.
LOCAL APPLICATION: There is an unfortunate tendency in our world to turn away from pain – to stop looking, to avoid it and to distract ourselves. And when this doesn’t work, we sometimes turn to judgement and self-righteousness. But suffering is, as C.S. Lewis says, God’s megaphone to rouse us. Not that God creates suffering (we can debate that another time), but that God speaks very loudly through pain. And it’s not only our own pain that God speaks through. When others are in pain, God’s voice is clear and challenging – calling us repent of our avoidance and self-protection, and challenging us to bear the fruit of caring, compassionate action on behalf of the suffering. While Haiti is still on all of our minds, it may be that God is speaking to you through this disaster to be more aware of those who are suffering right on your doorstep. Who needs you to release your self-righteousness and complacency and offer them compassion and help right now in your community?
RESOURCES FOR WORSHIP:
Prayers:
The Sound Of Tears
Seeing
The Call Of Compassion
Hymn Suggestions:
The Voice Of God Is Calling
How Firm A Foundation
Guide Me, O Thou Great Jehovah
O Master Let Me Walk With Thee
We Shall Go Out With Hope Of Resurrection
God Of Justice (Link to YouTube video)
Forever (Link to YouTube video)
Your Grace Is Enough (Link to YouTube video)
God Will Make A Way (Link to YouTube video)
Consider It Joy (Link to YouTube video)
Liturgy:
A Liturgy Of Compassion
Video Suggestions:
Invitation To The Thirsty
You Out There?
Other Resources:
GBOD Worship Planning Helps







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