Friday • 8/9/2024 •
Friday of Proper 13
This morning’s Scriptures are: Psalm 88; Judges 9:1-21; Acts 4:13-31; John 2:1-12
This morning’s Canticles are: following the OT reading, Canticle 10 (“The Second Song of Isaiah,” Isaiah 55:6-11; BCP, p. 86); following the Epistle reading, Canticle 18 (“A Song to the Lamb,” Revelation 4:11; 5:9-10, 13, BCP, p. 93)
Abimelech. Abimelech’s story stretches over two days of reading in the Daily Office. It is a sad tale of just retribution. Abandoning the redeeming, covenant-making God of grace, Yahweh, to worship a false god of covenant, Baal-berith, Israel is, consequently, at the mercy of the iron law of retribution. Gideon had seventy sons. One of them, the son of a concubine, Abimelech, conspires with the leaders of his hometown Shechem to become Israel’s sole ruler. Following this, he murders all but one of his seventy half-brothers (who likely have a stronger claim to rule Israel). His half-brother Jotham hides and survives this massacre. Jotham tells a fable of faithless trees that select as their ruler a bramble that will rain down fire that will destroy both the faithless trees and the bramble itself.
The fable, which is actually a curse, plays itself out (in tomorrow’s reading) in ruthless precision. “This happened so that the violence done to the seventy sons of Jerubbaal might be avenged and their blood be laid on their brother Abimelech, who killed them, and on the lords of Shechem, who strengthened his hands to kill his brothers” (Judges 9:24). God sends an evil spirit which turns the lords of Shechem against Abimelech. This hostility results in the ruin of both Shechem and Abimelech. Abimelech burns the Shechemites’ stronghold by fire. As he is doing so, a woman throws down a mill stone crushing Abimelech’s head, recalling the fact that it had been on a certain stone that Abimelech had murdered his half-brothers (Judges 9:5, 53).
Scriptures observes, “Thus God repaid Abimelech for the crime he committed against his father in killing his seventy brothers; and God also made all the wickedness of the people of Shechem fall back on their heads, and on them came the curse of Jotham son of Jerubbaal” (Judges 9:56-57).
During Midday Eucharist one day at the Cathedral Church of St Luke, Father Peter Tepper reminded us of U2 singer Bono’s remark that there are only two religions in the world, one of grace, and one of karma. Bono says, “the thing that keeps me on my knees is the difference between Grace and Karma. You see, at the centre of all religions is the idea of Karma. You know, what you put out comes back to you … And yet, along comes the idea called Grace to upend all that… Love interrupts, if you like, the consequences of your actions, which in my case is very good news indeed….”
Abimelech’s story is a perfect illustration of “what you put out com[ing] back to you.” It’s a picture of the whole age that Paul will much later describe as life “under the law.”
Wedding in Cana. With the coming of Christ, however, grace walks into the world. The wedding scene at Cana is one of the most beautiful demonstrations of the difference that God’s grace in Christ makes.
Despite the fact that his “hour” has not yet come, Jesus graciously assents to the “first sign” of his “glory.”
Water set aside in jars for purification turns to wine that will fill goblets of celebration. Because the Lamb of God has come to take away the sin of the world (as announced at Jesus’ baptism in the previous chapter of John), our baptism will not only purify, it will lead to the Eucharist of joy.
In John’s meta-narrative, Jesus’s blessing of this wedding in 1st century Galilee forecasts his invitation to the Wedding Feast of the Lamb at the end of time (Revelation 19).
The Lord of History shows himself as the ultimate host who has saved the best wine (his Son) for last (John 2:10).
The Acts of the Apostles and the triumph of grace. In today’s passage in Acts, we find the ultimate transformation of Bono’s “karma” into “grace.” Actually, let’s put it in more biblical terms: “The law indeed was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ” (John 1:17). After Peter and John are released from prison, their friends gather and raise their voices in worship and thanksgiving—they praise God for transforming the violence done to Christ into grace for the healing of the nations. In a kind of mini-Pentecost, they are “filled with the Holy Spirit and [speak] the word of God with boldness” (Acts 4:31).
Citing Psalm 2, the community recalls the evil that had been brought against Christ, God’s Anointed: “Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and the peoples of Israel” taking the part of Psalm 2’s Gentiles raging, of peoples imagining vain things, of kings of the earth taking their stand, and of rulers gathering together “against the Lord and against his Messiah” (Acts 4:26-27, quoting Psalm 2:2).
While the psalm addressed the revolt of earthly powers with God’s wrathful and derisive laughter (Psalm 2:4-5—which would be the legitimate response of pure justice), the church sees something different, by virtue of Christ’s resurrection from the dead. The violence that Herod, et al., have perpetrated against the Lord’s anointed turns out to have been, instead, a boomerang—this is God’s predestined means to bring liberation from sin, and freedom from death’s power. If there is laughing now, it’s God’s laugh of victory, as he “stretch[es] out [his] hand to heal,” and his people’s laugh of joy.
Grace has triumphed—may you walk in the knowledge and the confidence that His grace is for you!
Be blessed this day,
Reggie Kidd+