the tentmaker

daily thoughts on the common lectionary

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Location: Sharpsburg, Georgia, United States

"...because he was of the same trade, he stayed with them, and they worked together — by trade they were tentmakers." Acts 18:3. Tentmaker is a title taken by bi-vocational pastors. As such, I am both a pastor and a project manager. I am a pastor of a local congregation of moderate, accepting and affirming people who worship in the Baptist tradition. We call our church "Hope Memorial Baptist" and we are about 40 in number. I am also a project manager of major construction projects for the State of Georgia. My home and church is in rural Coweta County, between Peachtree City and Newnan, with a mailing address of Sharpsburg, Georgia.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Year A - Proper 21


Liturgy of the Word:
Ezekiel 18:1-4, 25-32
Psalm 78:1-4, 12-16
Philippians 2:1-13
Matthew 21:23-32

Are You Giving Lip-Service to God?
Matthew 21:23-32

Background
As Jesus was nearing Jerusalem he sent two disciples ahead to make preparations for his entry into the City. Little did they know what he was up to. And little did they know what kind of entry he planned to make into Jerusalem.

When Jesus rode into the city on the back of a donkey it was the same way that David entered the citadel when he became King. Every king after that, from Solomon down to Josiah, entered the city of Jerusalem riding on a donkey. And when Jesus entered into the city that day it was as her King. A more obvious and provocative political statement could not have been made.

He rode the donkey up to the temple and went in. When inside, he took charge, driving out the money changers and the vendors of sacrificial animals. He said to them,
"My house shall be called a house of prayer, but you have made it a den of thieves."


Jesus then left Jerusalem and went to Bethany where he spent the night, probably in the house of Mary, Martha and Lazarus.


The Questioning of Jesus
Today's gospel reading begins on the very next day. The chief priests were still reeling from the events of the day before. So, they approached him and demanded to know what Jesus' authority was.

The highest authority in the Land was the Roman government, and its Governor, Pilate. Had Jesus come from the Romans, disguised as a Jewish peasant to provoke a rebellion?

The next highest authority was the Sanhedrin, made up of 70 of the elder priests of the Temple. In other words, themselves. Could this upstart peasant be one of the wilderness prophets come to Jerusalem to stir up revolution? What he was doing was a challenge to their authority.

So, they demanded to know the source of his.

Jesus' Trap
Jesus responded to their question by asking them another question. He suggested a trade of information. He bargained to tell the source if his authority if they could tell him the source of John's authority to baptize for the remission of sins.

It was a clever trap. John had come on the scene several years earlier preaching repentance and demanding baptism for the remission of sins. John had a great following among the common people. John told the Pharisees, the Sadducees and the chief priests that they were a "brood of vipers." Snakes in the grass. When they refused to accept his preaching, they claimed that they were God's chosen people and needed no salvation. They believed that one could worship God only in Jerusalem at the Temple by making a proper sacrifice. John told them that God could raise up children of Abraham from the very stones on the ground, and what God wanted was repentance, and right living, not blood sacrifice.

So Jesus caused them to remember John. To remember the trouble he caused. He challenged them to admit their belief about John right then and there in front of the people.

They could not answer. No matter what answer they gave, they would be shown up for hypocrites. The hypocrites that they were.

The Parable of the Two Sons
So Jesus tells a short but poignant story. A parable about a man who had two sons. Like God who had two groups of children, Jews and Gentiles.

He went to the first and said go and work in my vineyard today. The first son responded by refusing to go. Such a refusal would have meant humiliation and disgrace to the father.

He then went to the second son and asked him to go into the vineyard and work all day. This son very responsibly said he would go.

So far we have a parallel between the two groups of God's children, those with whom he has a covenant (the second son) and those with whom he has not (the first son).

Then comes the twist. The first son decides to go to the vineyard and work. The second son decides he has better things to do today and may go there another day.

The parallel is clear. And the meaning does not escape the understanding of the Chief Priests. As the prophets had preached long ago, Jesus was now preaching again:
"My people have deserted me, and the gentiles now come to me with greater humility and more righteous lives than my own people.”


Jesus brings the point home by his question: "Which of the two did the will of his father?" They admitted it was the first. Even though at first he rejected his fathers will, he later repented of his actions and obeyed his father's will. The second son had been faithful in the beginning, promising to obey, but then he actually disobeyed. His obedience was only lip-service.

The Psalmist says,
"O Lord, open thou my lips; and my mouth shall shew forth thy praise. For thou desirest not sacrifice; else would I give it: thou delightest not in burnt offering. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise."

Jesus challenged the power and authority of the religious leaders of his day. He challenged the way in which they had perverted God's love. He challenged the way they had set up a kingdom for themselves and kept out those who needed Gods love and mercy.

Jesus told them that the tax collectors and the prostitutes, who believed in the preaching of John would go into the Kingdom of God before them. What he means here is the sinners who repent and obey the will of the Father, accept God's rule over their lives a lot quicker than those who only give lip-service to God.

Are you Giving Lip-Service to God?

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Year A - Proper 20


Liturgy of the Word:
Exodus 16:2-15
Psalm 145:1-8
Philippians 1:21-30
Matthew 20:1-16

Friday, September 12, 2008

Year A - Proper 19


Liturgy of the Word:
Genesis 50:15-21
Psalm 103:(1-7), 8-13
Romans 14:1-12
Matthew 18:21-35

Saturday, September 06, 2008

Ubuntu (oo-boon-too)

...a Zulu or Xhosa word that describes humaneness, caring, sharing, and being in harmony with all of creation.
"The design is a graphic representation of a community of people dancing together," he explained. "It reflects our practice here at St. Gregory of dancing in a circle after Sunday communion to reflect our life desire to express joy and affection physically." The words "I in you and you in me" are from the Gospel of John.

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Linux Update

I took Sunday off. Those of my congregation who were not out of town for Labor Day Weekend were sick, including my wife, Sandra. So I took the opportunity to do more experimentation with Linux. In my previous posts I have chronicled the installation of Linux on my old desktop. I also downloaded a disk image file of Knoppix which boots and runs from the CD. I have been anxious to try Linux on my new laptop. This machine has Centrino(R) architecture with an Intel(R) Core Duo2 processor. It has 1GB of onboard ram, two internal hard disks and an Intel AGN wireless card. Knoppix booted just fine on the laptop. It had no driver support for either the wireless lan or my HP PhotoSmart(R) printer which also is wireless and on my wireless network. To surf the web I had to hook up the laptop to my router with a patch cable into the ethernet card. OK, but still no printer support. So, back to the web to do some more research. I mentioned that there are two physical hard disks.

One is 100+ GB which has two partitions, one for the Windows Vista OS and the other for the system recovery files. The second hd was not being used. It is a 80 GB drive. There it was waiting to be inhabited by a fresh install of some Linux OS.

Debian, which is installed on the desktop does not support laptops. But I did find a version of Linux, Ubuntu (an African language word loosely translated "Humanity"). Using my ethernet connection to the web, the seed disk (CD .iso file) downloaded quickly (less than 5 minutes for 700 MB with BitTorrent. I booted the Laptop with the seed disk and it installed the operating system on the second hd from the web. I was then up and running. Alas, no wireless. No printer. More research.

It took me about 4 hours to finally find and install the proper driver for my wireless card. I now have wireless. Hooray! Having learned the process for searching, downloading and installing hardware drivers, it took only 30 min. to get the printer up and running. My next task was to get the Adobe flashplayer plugin for Firefox, the standard browser for Linux. This took a bit more time than the print driver install, maybe an hour or so. But it worked and now I can watch Tripps You Tube videos again as well as the CNN and Comcast video news casts.

Ubuntu works great. There is not much that Windows(R) Vista(R) can do that Linux/Ubuntu can't do. Slowly I will migrate all of my work to Linux. Open Office by Sun Microsystems(R) is comparable to MS Word so I have already begun to create my standard templates in that WP. I was already using Firefox browser and have almost completely duplicated my Bookmarks from the Windows version. I have a database for all my songs, sermons, church members with a MS Access front end. I will be migrating that database to MySqld next. MySql is an excellent open source relational database. I have used it before. I went to Access and MS SQL because I was essentially lazy and wanted a GUI to access my data.

I may never go back to Windows(R). One small probllem: I did not realize what a hold Microsoft(R) has on the OS and software markets. Consider this: It is almost impossible to buy a new computer with no OS installed. And did you know that $200.00 of the price of the computer is for the Windows(R) license? A new packaged Windows(R) Vista(R) Home Edition will set you back $500.00. Linux is free. Is there something wrong with this scenario? Almost all (at least 75% to 80%) of the software produced in the world is written for the Windows(R) operating system. Most of the remaining (20% to 25%) is written for the Mac. I paid $50.00 for a year's subscription of Windows($) Live One Care(R) to secure my network. Norton by Symantec and McAfee are about the same price and only for a year's subscription. Linux has its security software built in or available in a free software package that is easily obtainable by downloading from the web.

OK, enough for now...Happy comptuing.

PS I forgot to mention that this post has been composed and published on the laptop running Linux/Ubuntu.

Monday, September 01, 2008

Year A - Proper 18


Liturgy of the Word:
Ezekiel 33:7-11
Psalm 119:33-40
Romans 13:8-14
Matthew 18:15-20