Thoughts on Sunday’s Lessons for July 14, 2019
First Reading (Track One): Amos 7:7-17
The great commandment to love God and to love our neighbor echoes through our Sunday readings, culminating in the beloved story of the Good Samaritan.
We have to listen closely to find its shadow in our Track One first reading, though, as we hear the angry prophet Amos foretelling gloom and destruction, warning of an angry God who threatens to lay waste to the promised land that God once protected. Amaziah and Jeroboam, the high priest and king of Israel, want Amos to shut up, go home to Judea, and leave them alone. Why is Amos so angry? Israel has failed to be righteous. Like the priest and the Levite in the Good Samaritan story, the people of Israel have failed to love their neighbors as themselves, and that broke Israel’s covenant with God.
First Reading (Track Two): Deuteronomy 30:9-14
Our Track Two first reading reminds us of the deep history and tradition of the commandment to love God with all our hearts and with all our souls. These verses from Deuteronomy reminded the people that God took delight in assuring their prosperity because they turn to God with just this abundance of love. Indeed, we hear these same words again in Sunday’s Gospel when the lawyer responds to Jesus’ invitation to describe the law. And just as Jesus goes on to demonstrate in the parable of the Good Samaritan, the most basic instruction of the law – Torah, God’s beloved teaching – is to love God and to love our neighbors as ourselves.
Psalm: (Track One): Psalm 82
The great commandment to love God and to love our neighbor runs like a great river through both testaments. Moreover, Scripture leaves us in no doubt whatsoever that this duty to our neighbor is directed preferentially to the weak, the poor and the oppressed. The Psalmist sings, “Give justice to the weak and the orphan … the lowly and the destitute … the weak and the needy.” Just as Jesus showed us in the parable of the Good Samaritan, so are we called to love our neighbors – all of our neighbors – as we love God.
Psalm (Track Two): Psalm 25:1-9
Attributed by tradition to King David, this Psalm of praise expresses the joy of holding up our hearts and souls with willing trust in God’s everlasting compassion and steadfast love. The Psalmist’s call for protection against their enemies and those who would humiliate them may seem far afield from the Good Samaritan’s action, but the Psalm soon turns, calling on God to lead us in truth and teach us. As God guides the humble and teaches God’s way to the lowly and to sinners, so are we called to keep God’s covenant to love our neighbors as the Samaritan did.
Second Reading: Colossians 1:1-14
Today we begin a three-week visit with the letter to the people of Colossae, a small city in Asia Minor (now Turkey). Although the letter’s opening phrases name Paul as author, most modern Bible scholars believe this letter was written by a follower. The letter begins with hopeful, prayerful words: He prays for them constantly. He is glad that their new faith is bearing fruit. He prays that they will love one another, grow in good works and knowledge of God, gain strength, and be prepared to endure whatever comes their way for their love of Christ.
Gospel: Luke 10:25-37
This week, try thinking of the story of the Good Samaritan in a new way: Put yourself in the place of the injured person on the side of the road. You are injured, bleeding, and worried. Then someone different and scary approaches you, a person you would cross the street to avoid under normal circumstances. How do you feel? And then when they tenderly nurse your wounds and take you for help at their expense. How would you feel? How would this experience change you? Take note, too, that this parable does not come out of nowhere. It is Jesus’ answer to the question, “Who is my neighbor?” Jesus reiterates the fundamental commandment to view everyone as our neighbor. Not just the friend who looks and thinks and acts like us, but those who are different, and even those we think of as enemies.
What are “Track 1” and “Track 2”?
During the long green season after Pentecost, there are two tracks (or strands) each week for Old Testament readings. Within each track, there is a Psalm chosen to accompany the particular lesson.
The Revised Common Lectionary allows us to make use of either of these tracks, but once a track has been selected, it should be followed through to the end of the Pentecost season, rather than jumping back and forth between the two strands.
For more information from LectionaryPage.net, click here.