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  • A Lukan Emphasis

    After two weeks steeping ourselves in a bit of Matthew's gospel - parables from chapters 18 and 13 - we are now jumping gospel to Luke and picking up three stories about 'people' from Luke 15 and 16.  Although we are skipping the linking text, it seems to me fairly clear that Luke has a specific emphasis in mind in ordering and grouping the material as he does.

    If anyone is looking for a bit of homework ahead of Sunday, then maybe they'd like to cast an eye over the Nazareth manifesto (Luke 4) and/or the Lukan (rather than Matthean) version of the beattitudes and solemnitudes (Luke 6).  These serve well as bits of 'scene setting' for what the gospel does, the emphasis the early readers/hearers needed... all of which leads me to speculate what church(es) in Jerusalem for whom Luke-Acts was written might have been like and what challenges they faced (as one of my commentaries notes, Acts 2 and 4 give hints about wealth and attitudes towards it that the writer may have felt a need to address).

    Three different and challenging parables to play with - a fun week in prospect!

  • Just Wondering...

    Arising from a flip comment I made to someone yesterday, and maybe Dave Walker or ASBO Jesus have already done this...

    If you had a remote control for your minister/vicar/rabbi/holy-person, what functions would it have?

    If you had a remote control for your congregation, what functions would it have?

    Obvious ones seems to be:

    • fast forward through boring sermon
    • mute button for people who drone on and on in open prayer times
    • 'gentle shake' function for those who snooze during the sermon
    • 'self-collecting' function for used communion cups (Baptist/URC model)
    • volume control for singing
    • 'make encouraging noises/smile' function for audience congregation

    Others?

  • Oh My Giddy Aunt...

    ... I happened upon this yesterday which has to be the most cringingly awful parody of worship ever.  I was waiting for the spoof to be delcared, waiting for the punchline, but no, it seems it is actually someone's idea of worship.  What can I say?  'Sorry God' seems to be the only response possible.  (So why am I posting it then?  Maybe as a kind of reminder to self and others of our potential for self delusion)