(~) A Divine Model of Repentance
- From: Ninurebait@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ( Ninure Saunders)
- Date: Wed, 01 Mar 2006 08:03:16 GMT
(~) A Divine Model of Repentance
First Sunday in Lent
March 5, 2006
Genesis 9:8-17
Psalm 25:1-10
1 Peter 3:18-22
Mark 1:9-15
A Divine Model of Repentance
What is the season of Lent about? Probably the most frequent answer is
"Penitence." And this is most certainly true. "Wash me thoroughly from my
iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin. ... Create in me a clean heart, O
God," cries the prayer of Psalm 51 (verses 2,10, NRSV), read on Ash
Wednesday.
But this week's lesson from Genesis suggests a somewhat different starting
point for our penitential journey. Recall the story of the great flood.
God regrets (some translations say "repents of") creating humanity
(Genesis 6:6) because of human wickedness. So God drowns the
world,attempting to wash it clean and start anew.
The problem, however, is that floods do not wash things clean. Instead
what is left behind is a huge mess: mud, garbage, downed trees, drowned
corpses. More significantly, as God recognized, this flood did not change
humanity and humanity's sinfulness. What changed, though, was God. Seeing
the same sinful mess after the flood as before, God said "Never again,"
promising never to use floodwaters again in order to punish humanity
(Genesis 8.21; 9.11)
It's as if God is saying, "I can do better than that." God seems to have a
vision of a different way to address humanity's sinfulness and move them
toward repentance. This is a divine model of repentance we might keep in
mind.
And notice one more thing...
Who makes the covenant? "God said, 'I am establishing my covenant with
you'..." (Genesis 9:8). This covenant does not start with what Noah
believes, how he feels, and not with how he behaves. It does not come at
Noah's request. It is God's initiative, and it is unconditional. There is
nothing Noah, nor you nor I, nor even collective humanity can do to break
this covenant. It is God's promise to God, secured only by God's
integrity. We are privileged to listen in on the divine speech.
And this is as it should be. This is a promise only God can make. Lent
begins by referring not to the bargains we make with God (variations on
"I'll be good and you'll take care of me"), but with the promises God
makes to God. These mighty promises came before, and do not rely upon our
response. Any true penitence of ours is grounded in God's faithfulness.
This week's Reflection was prepared by Paul Bellan-Boyer, who serves as
Parish Deacon at St. Matthew's Lutheran Church, Jersey City, NJ (ELCA),
and is a psychoanalyst in private practice, working with
children and adults.
+ + +
--
Pax Christi,
Ninure Saunders aka Rainbow Christian
Jesus is my Shepherd and He knows I'm Gay
http://Ninure-Saunders.tk
My Yahoo Group
http://Ninure.tk
Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches
http://www.MCCchurch.org
The Bible Site - help provide free scripture
http://www.thebiblesite.org
To send e-mail, remove bait from address
.
- Prev by Date: Re: idiots
- Next by Date: Re: Seed.
- Previous by thread: Re: idiots
- Next by thread: Re: Seed.
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|