We are a small Episcopal Church on the banks of the Rappahannock in Port Royal, Virginia. We acknowledge that we gather on the traditional land of the first people of Port Royal, the Nandtaughtacund, and we respect and honor with gratitude the land itself, the legacy of the ancestors, and the life of the Rappahannock Tribe. Our mission statement is to do God’s Will in all that we do.

Lectionary, Aug 21, 2022 – Pentecost 11

I. Theme – The universality of God’s invitation to wholeness and the difficulty of responding to it.

Woman set free from ailment

The lectionary readings are here or individually:

First Reading – Isaiah 58:9b-14 Psalm – Psalm 103:1-8 Epistle – Hebrews 12:18-29 Gospel – Luke 13:10-17

Today’s readings remind us of the universality of God’s invitation to wholeness and the difficulty of responding to it. Isaiah identifies some characteristics of the right relationship with God. The author of Hebrews reminds us that the trials we undergo, though painful, come from the hand of a loving Father who is training us in holiness. Jesus’ words and actions reveal the tension between God’s desire for healing and our need for genuine conversion in order not to hinder God’s plan.

We are all too often concerned about rules—either rules such as the Ten Commandments, which throughout tradition we have assumed were passed down from God—or unspoken rules in society, such as who is in and who is out, who gets to speak and who must be silenced. We become so consumed by rules that we forget the original reason for them. The Sabbath was a gift from God to the people, but some leaders had forgotten and made the Sabbath into following rules. Jeremiah didn’t think he could speak because he was only a boy, and only elders (being men) could speak in public, but God called him to do so anyway. God shows us time and again there is another way—when we love one another, show compassion, have mercy, and do justice for others—we are following God’s ways much more than following a list of rules. The writer of Hebrews shows us that Jesus fulfilled a rule—the rule of sacrifice—in order to break it forever. And so must we follow the rule—the law—of love, in order to break the chains that keep us from loving our neighbors as ourselves.

II. Summary

First Reading –  Isaiah 58:9b-14

Isaiah 58:9b-14 is from our second thread, showing how God’s promises are fulfilled through God’s covenant even when the people fail

Offering a classic example of empty religious ritual, this passage addresses Israel’s reliance on external practices of piety. Isaiah points out that many religious activities had become a form of manipulation. Through fasting, the people hoped to gain God’s approval even though the pious facade masked a mire of injustice and oppression.

Today’s verses are part of a longer section in which God redefines the role of fasting. An expression of humility, fasting offers the people an opportunity to do for others what God has already done for them. God had chosen to free the captives (52:1-3), feed the hungry (55:1-2) and bring Israel’s homeless back to their homeland (49:8-12).

True spiritual practice attracts God’s attention and results in a new exodus. Verse 8 is reminiscent of Israel’s deliverance from Egypt.  Isaiah would have us put into our mind’s eye the situation at the Red Sea, with God serving in the pillar of fire before Israel, and serving not only as the one who leads, but also as the one who takes up the rear guard. Given that context, Isaiah sees the remnant returning to the ruined and dark places of the past, which are now illuminated by God’s light.

The attitude of the heart and use of the tongue must also reflect charity.   The people are bidden to “rebuild”, “raise up”, “restore,” and “repair”.   The people must give more than food, clothing or shelter: they must give themselves. Instead of seeking their own pleasure, they must first satisfy the desires of the needy, finding their own desires satisfied by God (v. 11).

Light shines through us, and we become witnesses of what God is blessing, when we bless others. When we bring healing, we are known as “repairers of the breach” (vs. 12). God will bring restoration to the people who have faced utter destruction, when they bring restoration to others.

This is a description of God’s work that apparently supersedes the normal observance of the Sabbath.  It is more than the community’s work; it is God’s work.  It is a completion of the return from Egypt.

Psalm –  Psalm 103:1-8

Psalm 103:1-8 sings of God’s justice and blessings for those who seek God’s justice. God is the one who brings goodness, and God is the one who works all things towards justice for the oppressed. The psalmist sings of God’s blessings of love and mercy, the one who redeems life.

This hymn of thanksgiving is cast in very general terms, but verses 1-5, in which the psalmist speaks to himself, indicate that it may have come from an individual situation, perhaps of recovery from illness (vv. 3-4a). In verse 4, “the Pit” refers to Sheol, the place of the dead, who retain only a semblance of existence.

The psalmist compares his deliverance to that of Israel in the exodus (v. 7). He affirms the lord’s steadfast love for the covenant people and invites all of creation to join his song of praise.

What we are bidden to do, in this psalm, is not merely an external act of praise, but a deeply internal (Bless the Lord, O my soul) realization of God’s blessing.  The reasons are rehearsed, “he benefits,” “he forgives and heals”, “he redeems”, and “he satisfies” as the list of God’s interactions continues.  Verse 8 repeats Exodus 34:6, when God passes before Moses, shielding God’s glory,

Epistle-  Hebrews 12:18-29

Hebrews 12:18-29 contains a powerful metaphor, a blazing fire that cannot be touched. Recalling the burning bush in which God spoke to Moses, and the pillar of smoke that traveled with the Israelites out of the slavery of Egypt, we remember that the presence of God is near us and yet untouchable; beautiful and terrifying. Jesus has given himself for us, for a new covenant with God, bringing us closer to God and yet this action can never and will never be repeated. Jesus was a sacrifice we desired by taking him to the cross, and yet death was conquered through this act. The act of sacrifice is removed from worship forever. Jesus’ sacrifice ends all sacrifice.

The author presents us with two distinctly different visions.   He contrasts the revelation given to Moses at Mt. Sinai with the revelation given through Jesus, on Mount Zion, which represents the heavenly Jerusalem.  The first transports us to Sinai that rumbles and shakes with the divine presence.  What is seen and felt there is not touchable for it is the abode and presence of God.  The revelation at Sinai is characterized as one of fear, darkness and dread

 The contrasting vision is that of Jerusalem, and not just the earthly city, but the heavenly presence of promise.  If Sinai recalls the presence of sin and judgment, then Jerusalem is a sign of acceptance and righteousness. They join with angels, with “the firstborn enrolled in heaven” (perhaps the whole communion of saints, living and dead), with “the spirits of the just made perfect” (perhaps the pre-Christian saints). In this revelation of a new covenant, Jesus’ blood speaks of redemption rather than vengeance, which the shedding of human blood usually demanded.

A brief comparison in verse 24 is a delightful literary construct where the blood of Abel is compared with the blood of Jesus.  The results are the difference of condemnation and redemption.  The vision is continued with a sense of “words of warning”.  One is earthly, Sinai, and the other is heavenly, Jerusalem.  The author wonders, which one will we hear, which one will renew life and our praise of God?

As earthquake was an important sign of the revelation at Sinai, so it was also expected as an indication of the end of the world-order at the lord’s return. Thus the author quotes Haggai 2:6, emphasizing the Hebrew notion of the end of the universe (v. 26) against the Greek conception of its eternal and indestructible nature. God who is “a consuming fire” will purify the people.

Gospel –  Luke 13:10-17

In this reading, we discover the tension between God’s bountiful gift of salvation through Jesus and the human desire to control it.

The center of concern is the Sabbath, and the situation is one that used to be found in Galilee – teaching in the Synagogue  Both of these elements are combined here as a dramatic confrontation of Satan (the situation of the woman) and of the prevailing attitudes regarding the Sabbath.

Luke 13:10-17 contains the account of one of the healings on the Sabbath that Jesus conducts. Jesus is teaching in the synagogue on the Sabbath and heals a woman who is bent over, setting her “free” from her “ailment” (vs. 12).  The woman is bent over – she is a disfigurement of the perfection of creation, and as such becomes as sign of what Jesus intends to do about both sin and Satan.   Jesus’ compassion for the ailing woman, whom he identifies with the surprising description as a “daughter of Abraham,” spurs him to initiate a cure before she can even ask. The woman stands up and praises God.

But the leader of the synagogue can only focus on the action of Jesus that happened on the Sabbath, not the result of that action that was in healing and freedom for this woman. He is unable to understand that the healing is just as much a cause of praise as the religious observance required for the Sabbath day.

Jesus’ rebukes the man and reminds him that God’s desire for our freedom from bondage knows no limit and can never be restricted to times that we find convenient. Jesus’ healing acts invite us to see every place as a healing place and every moment as the right moment for creative transformation.  Providence is broadcast everywhere without limits or exclusion. To participate in God’s saving work on the Sabbath cannot violate the restrictions forbidding human work

Jesus doesn’t soften his warning that a time will come when it will be too late, too late to start caring about the kingdom, too late to come in. Those who have spent their lives dispassionately witnessing Jesus’ work, hearing Jesus’ call and benefiting from Jesus’ teaching without identifying themselves with him will be shut out. It is not enough to eat and drink at his table; it is not enough to hear his word.

When we take rules to the extreme, they are no longer about God but about control and power. Rules such as not having women speak in church, which was probably a specific cultural context for the early Christians in certain communities—rules like these are not about following God’s ways but rather about controlling who gets to preach and lead in a church. We’ve lost the meaning behind them completely. We become so concerned about rules we fail to actually do the right thing.

Poem for the Week – “Kindness” – Naomi Shihab Nye

“Your Life Is a Poem. Growing up, the poet Naomi Shihab Nye lived in Ferguson, Missouri and on the road between Ramallah and Jerusalem. Her father was a refugee Palestinian journalist, and through her poetry, she carries forward his hopeful passion, his insistence, that language must be a way out of cycles of animosity.” She has been a poet for most of her life, sending out poems at age 7.

 

Listen to her read her poem, “Kindness”

She feels this poem was given to her. Here is the background to the poem – she had just married and was with her husband in South America, in Columbia. They were to travel 3 weeks. However, they were robbed on a bus in the first week. It was serious, one person was killed and they lost all their possessions. (She did have a notebook in a back pocket). They had no passports, no money. Where would they go ?

In a plaza a man came up to them on a street and exhibited kindness. He could see their disarray and asked what happened. He listened and was sad for them – he expressed sorrow in Spanish. Her husband was ready to embark alone to go to another city to try to get their travellers checks. As she was alone, a voice came across the plaza as night was coming on and she reached in her pack pocket for the notebook and she felt like as a secretary as a female voice dictated this poem:

“Kindness” – Naomi Shihab Nye

“Before you know what kindness really is you must lose things,
feel the future dissolve in a moment
like salt in a weakened broth.
What you held in your hand,
what you counted and carefully saved,
all this must go so you know
how desolate the landscape can be
between the regions of kindness.
How you ride and ride
thinking the bus will never stop,
the passengers eating maize and chicken
will stare out the window forever. 

“Before you learn the tender gravity of kindness,
you must travel where the Indian in a white poncho
lies dead by the side of the road.
You must see how this could be you,
how he too was someone
who journeyed through the night with plans
and the simple breath that kept him alive. 

“Before you know kindness as the deepest thing inside,
you must know sorrow as the other deepest thing.
You must wake up with sorrow.
You must speak to it till your voice
catches the thread of all sorrows
and you see the size of the cloth. 

“Then it is only kindness that makes sense anymore,
only kindness that ties your shoes
and sends you out into the day to mail letters and purchase bread,
only kindness that raises its head
from the crowd of the world to say
It is I you have been looking for, and then goes with you everywhere
 like a shadow or a friend.”

Sunday Links for August 7, 2022 – Pentecost 9

Aug.7, 11:00am – Eucharist

Waiting

  • Zoom link for Aug.7
  • Bulletin Aug. 7, 2022
  • Lectionary for Aug. 7, 2022, Pentecost 9
  • Sermon for Aug. 7, 2022, Pentecost 9
  • Videos for Aug. 7, 2022, Pentecost 9
  • Photos for Aug. 7, 2022, Pentecost 9

  • All articles for Aug. 7, 2022
  • This Week

  • Village Dinner, Wed, Aug 10, 4:30pm,-6 PM. Take out only this month due to high Covid rates. Call Susan Linne von Berg to make your reservation. 804-742-5233.


    15 in house and 10 online. Two of our members have COVID returning from a summer trip.COVID have shifted our events as local numbers are up. Today was a return to masks. Wed for the Village dinner will be take out.

    This was first Sunday and coffee hour was all tomatoes. Johnny brought tomatoes from the garden and Cookie made stuffed tomatoes with many delights from the Summer. A summer delight!

    The key words this week in the lectionary are “faith” and “waiting.” Faith is about trust in things unseen – the trust in the reality of the relationship with, and the promises of, God is especially exemplified by Abraham.

    In the Gospel, we need to be ready and waiting for Christ to come in a new way. Paired with the parable of the Rich Fool from last week, we once again are reminded that living for the ways of the world is foolish.

    So what shall the faithful Christian do? First of all, “have no fear”. The promise from God is that the kingdom will be given to those who believe. What follows are two images: be properly dressed for action and movement, and take a flashlight, ready to move and to see when the Bridegroom comes. We are called to expect the unexpected and be ready to act.

  • Videos – July 31, 2022 – Youth Sunday

    1. The Bell Ringers

    2. Intro to Service and For the Beauty of the Earth

    3. Opening Acclamation and This is the Day

    4. Scriptures and Themes

    5. The Gospel Book

    6. Sermon – with Everyone!

    7. Affirmation

    8. Prayers of the People

    9. Confession of Sin and Peace

    10. Preparing for Communion

    11. Communion

    12. Distribution of Communion 1

    13. Distribution of Communion 2

    14. The Blessing

    15. Closing Hymn Through North and South

    Commentary, July 31, 2022, Pentecost 8

    I. Theme – Finding True Riches to Enjoy a Happy Life 

    “St. Lawrence Delivering the Riches of the Church” –  Master of the Osservanza (1440)

    The lectionary readings are here or individually: 

    First Reading – Ecclesiastes 1:2, 12-14; 2:18-23
    Psalm – Psalm 49:1-11
    Epistle – Colossians 3:1-11
    Gospel – Luke 12:13-21 

    Today’s readings encourage us to discover true riches in order to live a happy life. In Ecclesiastes (Track 2), a Jewish wisdom teacher ponders the vanity of human life. The psalmist invites us to bow in worship and praise before God our Maker. The second reading encourages followers of Christ to focus on the things that are above. In the gospel, Jesus tells the parable of the rich fool.

    God suffers or celebrates, depending on how we live our lives. Injustice is an affront to God; it literally pains God and leaves in its wake divine sorrow and anger. God is not an amoral force, but God’s energy encompasses us all – believer and atheist, pacifist and terrorist, humankind and the non-human world.

    To live for earthly things “is vanity and a striving after wind,” and work that is driven by such vanity “is an unhappy business” (Eccl. 1:13–14). The man who lives like that has nothing to show for “all the toil and striving of heart with which he toils beneath the sun … all his days are full of sorrow” (Eccl. 2:22–23). We can’t take it with us. So why do we worry so much about it?

    The foolish live their lives solely for their own pleasures on earth and ignore the poor, the oppressed, the marginalized. The Wisdom Tradition of the Bible tells us this is vanity, a chasing after wind, something that will never be fully realized or satisfied. Life is empty. On the other hand, the foolish also live their lives focused solely on heaven and not caring about this life or the people in this world.

    So, too, your “covetousness, which is idolatry” (Col. 3:5), makes a god out of that which cannot give you life or happiness. For “one’s life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions” (Luke 12:15)

    The wise look to living their lives for God, which means living for others. But “Christ who is your life” (Col. 3:4), in giving you Himself, gives you all the wealth of heaven. Instead of striving to lay up treasures for yourself, be “rich toward God” in Him (Luke 12:21). We are called to love and care for others, but especially the ones in need. With that, we live with the hope of resurrection, knowing that life continues after death, though we may not know what that looks like, we hold on to that hope. We live our lives on earth with the same hope for eternity—to live into God’s ways of love and justice that restores and heals and brings wholeness.

    II. Summary

    First Reading –  Ecclesiastes 1:2, 12-14; 2:18-23

    The Book of Ecclesiastes recounts a wisdom teacher’s exploration of the meaning of life. The author is described in 12:9-10 as a teacher and writer. The name of the book, derived from the Greek word ecclesia, is a translation of the Hebrew, Qoheleth, which probably identifies the one who gathers an assembly. This is the only passage from the book anywhere in our Sunday Lectionary. It was probably written at the end of the third century B.C.E. and polemicizes against an understanding of wisdom as the guarantee of a long, successful, and happy life. Another theory is that it is an attempt to profit as much as possible from the Greek understanding of the world, without forcing Israel’s wisdom to give up its status.

    The concept of Wisdom Literature is included in 3 books -Job, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes. What Wisdom concerned itself with were the values of a culture and the moral life of society in general. . In the three books we see different approaches and themes. Job is undergirded with a theological sense as the arguments about life are made. Proverbs with its pithy sayings is commentary on daily life, and Ecclesiastes takes a radical approach, twisting standard thought and commentary on life.

    The selections from Ecclesiastes, from one of the Wisdom books, shares the Teacher’s (the writer of Ecclesiastes) view that much of human life is a “chasing after wind.” What is often translated as “vanity” in the New Revised Standard Version is more closely related to mist or vapor—something that appears but we can’t grasp it, can’t attain it. The work we do for things, for earthly success—this is vanity, a chasing after wind. Life passes by and the endless grind of work changes nothing . What good is all that effort when the fruit of one’s work and efforts are simply turned over to someone else.

    This passage marks a break in our thread of following God’s keeping of the covenant, though the last two verses of chapter 2 show that when we enjoy our work, when we have enjoyment from what we are doing in our lives, there is nothing better than this. Perhaps this is a response of God from the covenant—to those who are faithful, perhaps there is more joy in one’s life, more fulfillment. The old question of if it all turned out to be false, if there was no God or heaven, did we waste our lives can be answered by the Teacher: no. The vanity and chasing after wind is worrying about the question. The joy is found in living one’s life for God.

    Psalm –  Psalm 49:1-11

    Psalm 49:1-12 sings from the Wisdom tradition about the importance of one’s life, for both the wise and the foolish face the same fate. Fools trust in riches, while the wise trust in God. For us today, with the economy over the past few years, we know the folly of trusting in riches, in stock markets, in corporations and conglomerates. Our trust must be in God, and our work must be for this life for God.

    The psalmist proposes to enlighten us about our situation, our life, and our condition. Humanity hangs in the balance between a situation of wealth, which seems to condemn us to a life that cannot respond to the needs of others, and the situation of poverty that is unmet by the resources of the wealthy. The poor person will perish as will the wealthy one. What is common to both is mortality, and all are “fools” in the face of it. This is a most appropriate text to follow the Ecclesiastes reading

    This psalm encourages confidence in God’s justice, especially when it seems that evildoers prosper. The psalmist urges his audience to remember that the ungodly and those who rely on their wealth are deluded for they cannot protect themselves from death.

    Epistle-  Colossians 3:1-11

    This is the end of our tour of Colossians, which Paul wrote to combat certain doctrinal and disciplinary errors afoot in the Christian community at Colossae. Paul’s letters (and letters of those using Paul’s name) often start with doctrinal matters and then end with moral injunctions. The cosmic powers mentioned there have no claim on Christians’ loyalty. The demands of earthly religions (required rituals, dietary restrictions, fasting, etc.) are null and void for those whose allegiance is to the heavenly Christ

    Paul now turns to discuss the practical consequences of the believer’s acceptance of Christ as lord. He uses a form of teaching probably developed as a part of baptismal instruction (Ephesians 4:22-5:5). In living out the reality of having been “raised with Christ” (v. 1) the Christian is to exhibit a transcendent quality of life here and now. In baptism those to be baptized put off their old clothes and put on the new white baptismal robe as a token of their having put off the old nature and put on the new.

    While Colossians does not forsake personal images of God, it places them in a global – indeed, cosmic – perspective. Christ moves in our lives and Christ is also the moral and spiritual energy moving through the universe, not limited or confined to a particular religion, nation, or planet. God is the circle whose center is everywhere, that is, God is the inner movement and energetic force within all things. God’s circumference is also nowhere, unbounded and unlimited in care and activity. The transpersonal nature of divine omnipresence is the complement to divine presence in this passing moment. It keeps us from absolutizing our relationship to God to the detriment of others’ well-being.

    We cannot live in the worldly ways, seeking worldly success, living off of worldly pleasures. We must live a better way, for God, which requires us to become a new person, a new creation that lives for God and not for the foolishness of the world that puts one’s self above others.

    This fact must now be lived out in putting to death the old way of life and putting on the new life in Christ (Romans 13:14). They are to show forth the characteristics proclaimed and exhibited in Jesus’ ministry. Being clothed with this “new self,” they experience a continual process of renewal, the goal of which is the knowledge of God. Barriers are broken and all live in Christ as a community of believers.

    Gospel –  Luke 12:13-21

    Today’s reading comes from a section of the travel narrative (12:1–13:21) that stresses readiness for the coming crisis when a decision for the kingdom must not be delayed. The man who approaches Jesus is presumably a younger brother who wishes his elder brother to divide the inheritance that he was likely given as the oldest son. Jesus rejects the request for arbitration and tells a parable that challenges the greed in us all.

    The rules and regulations regarding inheritance can be found in Numbers 27:1-11The point here, however, is not the inheritance itself, but rather the attitude about the inheritance and the wealth that it implies.

    Jesus then speaks words of warning about greed . To make certain that his words on greed are heard a parable is offered, Parable of the Rich Fool

    Falling into the Wisdom tradition, we hear from Jesus’ own words that storing up treasures on earth is not worth it. The farmer in the parable is wealthy, and product of both work and blessing. The temptation is that these things are enough in and of themselves. It is time for relaxation, a time to send anxiety away. What is forgotten, in Jesus’ telling of his story, is that God and Neighbor (the two focal points of the Law) are forgotten

    We are called to live our lives for God, and that requires us to live our lives for others, especially for those who fall through the cracks of life. Jesus tells us that whoever is first must become last of all and servant of all. We cannot become last when we are busy storing up our own treasures in bigger barns. Death comes unexpectedly – ” This very night your life is being demanded of you.”

    The parable of the rich fool has many parallels, both in classical literature and in Old Testament Wisdom writing (Sirach 11:18-19; Ecclesiastes 8:15; Wisdom 15:8). The rich man is “a fool,” that is, one who in practice acts as if God does not exist (Psalm 14:1). He has made provision for his own comfort but not for his ultimate destiny because without warning, his “soul” (Greek, psyche), meaning his life or self, is required of him. He illustrates the fate of all who confuse their priorities and rely too confidently on their own power.

    The division of the world’s population into the haves and the have-nots is not new. The Bible hammers away at social and economic injustice. The massive volume of ethical legislation in the Pentateuch was meant to become the operating principle of everyday life; it was intended to insure responsible conduct in all phases of human life and relationships. These unparalleled ethical precepts depended on the Israelites’ unique knowledge of the majesty and holiness of God and were binding upon them because God had said, “Be holy: for I am holy” (Leviticus 11:45).

    When Jesus came, he dramatized God’s infinite mercy toward all creatures–rich, poor, sick, well, religious and non-religious, sinner and righteous. In parable and sermon and in his own life, Jesus put flesh-and-blood on the observance of the law. Imagine the change in world affairs if human beings ordered their lives to honor and glorify God–if everything were done “in the name of the lord Jesus.”

    Jesus was no sentimentalist who reduced God’s judgment to kindly indulgence. He knew that a true reflection of God’s mercy could only come from knowing one’s self to be forgiven for offenses against God’s clearly defined standards. In seeking out the lost and the outcasts of society, Jesus embodied God’s absolute love and mercy.

    It is clear that God has created all that is necessary for our well-being; God desires that we should prosper and be in good health. There is nothing desirable or uplifting in poverty and sickness. True, adversity may serve to strengthen our faith, but there is no guarantee that trouble makes us into spiritual giants. Nor is it certain that prosperity and health would free us to pursue a godly life.

    Neither circumstance is advantageous to us in the kingdom of God. Our real life does not consist in either abundance or the lack of earthly possessions. The proper attitude toward our heavenly treasure in Christ delivers us from false guilt over our abundance and from coveting the good fortune of others. A heart steeped in God’s love can be a trustworthy guide to sharing with others. Stewardship and gratitude to God are directly related.

    Read more…

    The Rich man in Luke, Pentecost 8, July 31, 2022

    The Sermon in 2019 using Luke, Ecclesiastes and Colossians. The rich man in Luke only knew life in the horizontal feeding his own wishes but not the vertical leading to God. “What the rich man has forgotten in his grasping focus on this horizontal line of his life is the vertical line that reaches up toward God.”

    Catherine showed how the early Christians prayed – “The early Christians prayed like this—by reaching up and out with their palms up. As they prayed in this way, they remembered this vertical line of their lives, their feet rooted in the goodness of God’s creation, while they reached up to God with open hands…”This prayer posture with open hands stretched out and up reminds us that God is the one that fills our open hands when we ask. Open hands are open to all that God wants to give us, and all that God intends for us to share. Open hands reach beyond the finite into the infinite. Open hands reach up into God’s light.

    “In the Colossians reading for today, the writer shows us that reaching up into the infinite helps us become rich toward God and generous toward our neighbors…In the light of God’s love, then, our lives are not meaningless, but full of meaning, full of light and God’s goodness that we shine into the world.

    Finally Catherine used a story Rabbi Daniel Cohen writes in his book What will they say about you when you are gone? Creating a Life of Legacy

    “And then he tells a story about a man who wanted to decide which of his three sons would inherit his estate. So the man came up with the idea of giving his inheritance to the son who could best fill an empty room. The third son won with a candle, lit a flame which filled the room with light.

    Cohen says, “When we lighten a dark world, we emulate God, and our souls will be on fire. When we make small differences in the world for even one person, we align ourselves with life’s purpose,” and, I would add, we align ourselves with God’s purpose for us.

    “When we live with open hands full of God’s light, everything that we do in this life, on this horizontal line, is full of meaning that will stretch far beyond the day when our hearts stop beating because we have become conduits for God’s infinite light to flow into the world through our us long after our hearts have stopped beating.

    “Stand up again. Reach up into God’s light in prayer, open your arms in love, open your hands, and go be God’s light in this world. ”

    Today’s readings encourage us to discover true riches in order to live a happy life. In Ecclesiastes, a Jewish wisdom teacher ponders the vanity of human life. The psalmist invites us to bow in worship and praise before God our Maker. The second reading encourages followers of Christ to focus on the things that are above. In the gospel, Jesus tells the parable of the rich fool. 

    Ecclesiastes 1:2, 12-14, 2:18-23

    The Book of Ecclesiastes recounts a wisdom teacher’s exploration of the meaning of life. The author is described in 12:9-10 as a teacher and writer. The name of the book, derived from the Greek word ecclesia, is a translation of the Hebrew, Qoheleth, which probably identifies the one who gathers an assembly.

    Today’s reading centers on the supreme futility of life, which like a cloud or a mist is a vanity–not substantial and stable but ephemeral and passing. Life passes by and the endless grind of work changes nothing. What good is all that effort when the fruit of one’s work and efforts are simply turned over to someone else. 

    Psalm 49:1-11

    This psalm encourages confidence in God’s justice, especially when it seems that evildoers prosper. The psalmist urges his audience to remember that the ungodly and those who rely on their wealth are deluded for they cannot protect themselves from death. 

    Colossians 3:1-11

    Paul now turns to discuss the practical consequences of the believer’s acceptance of Christ as Lord. He uses a form of teaching probably developed as a part of baptismal instruction (Ephesians 4:22-5:5). In living out the reality of having been “raised with Christ” (v. 1) the Christian is to exhibit a transcendent quality of life here and now. In baptism those to be baptized put off their old clothes and put on the new white baptismal robe as a token of their having put off the old nature and put on the new.

    This fact must now be lived out in putting to death the old way of life and putting on the new life in Christ (Romans 13:14). They are to show forth the characteristics proclaimed and exhibited in Jesus’ ministry. Being clothed with this “new self,” they experience a continual process of renewal, the goal of which is the knowledge of God. Barriers are broken and all live in Christ as a community of believers. 

    Luke 12:13-21

    Today’s reading comes from a section of the travel narrative (12:1–13:21) that stresses readiness for the coming crisis when a decision for the kingdom must not be delayed. The man who approaches Jesus is presumably a younger brother who wishes his elder brother to divide the inheritance that he was likely given as the oldest son. Jesus rejects the request for arbitration and tells a parable that challenges the greed in us all.

    The parable of the rich fool has many parallels, both in classical literature and in Old Testament Wisdom writing (Sirach 11:18-19; Ecclesiastes 8:15; Wisdom 15:8). The rich man is “a fool,” that is, one who in practice acts as if God does not exist (Psalm 14:1). He has made provision for his own comfort but not for his ultimate destiny because without warning, his “soul” (Greek, psyche), meaning his life or self, is required of him. He illustrates the fate of all who confuse their priorities and rely too confidently on their own power.