"To eat with unwashed hands does not defile":
Such shocking teachings vexed the Pharisees
Whose laws, delineating pure from vile,
Had boiled faith down to following decrees.
For purity meant life in ancient days,
Pronounced one clean or foul, who's in or out.
Upending their religion, Jesus says
That sin corrupts within, not from without.
But soon his teaching moment gains a face
When Jesus, now in Gentile territory,
Receives request from someone deemed as base
Yet sees her faith as vessel for God's glory.
Like her, I beg for crumbs of grace, dear Lord:
To be proclaimed your child, to life restored.
Tuesday, August 09, 2011
Tuesday, August 02, 2011
Deuteronomy door jambs
One of the service projects on our recent youth group servant trip involved painting the entire interior of a church in a small community in South Carolina. The congregation had hit hard times and was unable to pay to have their new worship and office space completed, and so they were depending on different volunteers working intermittently to get the job done. What our group found was the shell of a building that still has a long way to go. The structure didn't even have any interior doors. As we were putting paint on the walls, I noticed that one of the groups before us had left some "graffiti" in the door jambs by scrawling Scripture verses on bare wood. Of course, eventually their graffiti will disappear once the doors are installed and the jambs are painted, too. But, in the meantime, their message sustains the laborers. I can only imagine that the graffiti artists used verses that they had already committed to memory and were not standing there with a Bible in their hand as they did it.
Apparently the King James is the preferred version.
A little less uplifting, perhaps, but still good to be reminded...
This one had actually been left on the leg of a sawhorse. Perhaps appropriately, for "on this hangs all the law and the prophets" (at least partly, according to Jesus):
This little encounter occured to me to be one way of heeding the command in Deuteronomy 11: "You shall put these words of hime in your heart and soul, and you shall bind them as a sign on your hand...Write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates, so that your days and the days of your children may be multiplied in the land that the LORD swore to your ancestors to give them, as long as the heavens are above the earth" (vv18-21). I pray the congregation who inhabits this buildling also has better days ahead of it.
"I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me." Phillippians 4:13 |
Apparently the King James is the preferred version.
This would be the verse I'd memorize:
"Jesus wept." John 11:35 |
A little less uplifting, perhaps, but still good to be reminded...
"For all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God." Romans 3:23 |
This one had actually been left on the leg of a sawhorse. Perhaps appropriately, for "on this hangs all the law and the prophets" (at least partly, according to Jesus):
"Love the Lord thy God with all thine heart and all thine soul, and all thine strength." Deuteronomy 6:5 |
This little encounter occured to me to be one way of heeding the command in Deuteronomy 11: "You shall put these words of hime in your heart and soul, and you shall bind them as a sign on your hand...Write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates, so that your days and the days of your children may be multiplied in the land that the LORD swore to your ancestors to give them, as long as the heavens are above the earth" (vv18-21). I pray the congregation who inhabits this buildling also has better days ahead of it.
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