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Oppression, unity in diversity, and confessions mark this week’s passages.
Most likely, even proclaimers new to the Revised Common Lectionary, will be conversant
with these passages. The first begins the narrative of the bondage of Israel in Egypt and
the promise of a new leader in Moses.
Exodus 1:8-2:10—What Makes Old Satan Hate Me So?
As we pick up the story, several generations have passed from where we left off last
week. Jacob’s future now moves the story forward. The core of gravity lies in a
single phrase, "Now a new king arose over Egypt, who did not know Joseph." Such
ignorance, the writer hints, will prove Pharaoh’s and his court’s undoing. With
these words, however, the Hebrew tribes in Egypt fall upon hard times. Fearing a military
coup, Pharaoh takes murderous steps to down-size the Israelite population. First, Pharaoh
enslaves and oppresses the Israelites. Then, Pharaoh commands all Hebrew male babies to be
destroyed upon birth. Mercy is extended through the faithfulness of Shiphrah and Puah and
in the extraordinary event of Moses.
Romans 12:1-8—You Want Me to Do WHAT?
After eleven chapters of theology, heilige Geschichte, midrash, questions, and doxology
we go forward with Paul’s oun, or "therefore." In view of all that has
preceded, Paul says his readers are to offer their very lives as a worshipful response to
God’s merciful action. Philip’s translation is so memorable for what comes next
in Paul’s thinking: "Don’t let the world around you squeeze you into its
own mould, but let God re-mould your minds from within . . ." And with that, we are
ushered into a marvelous section on spiritual chrisms that God personally assigns to
individual Christians and that account for the variety of form and function within the
community of God.
Matthew 16:13-20—Right Answer, Wrong Conclusion
"But who do you say that I am?" That’s the one-liner that we all wrestle
with. So uncompromising and closed-ended. Jesus raises the question and we all join the
disciples to overhear what response Peter will give. Noticeably quite different from
Mark’s version of the story, Matthew has Jesus blessing Peter for his answer while
Mark says that Jesus rebuked his prize student. At any rate, that’s not all we
wrestle with in the text, for we also must come to grips with the Son of Man title and the
issue of authority (I will give you the keys of the kingdom . . . whatever you bind . . .
whatever you loose . . . will be [done] in heaven.)
