Readings for Friday December 18

Friday December 18          Advent 3

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Psalm 24
While entering through the doors of the temple the poet sings a hymn of praise to God who brought order out of the dangerous primordial ocean. Appropriate for Christmas as we anticipate God’s arrival in Christ.

Psalm 29
Astonishment at the overwhelming presence of God in nature who rules the untameable ocean and even makes mountains cavort like calves and oak trees “writhe” in a gale! We worship such a God, who makes such strength and peace available to us.

Isaiah 42: 1-12
Today we read a passage from the middle section of Isaiah. This section of the book was written a hundred years later than the passages we’ve read these last weeks. The people have been captured by the Babylonians and are now in exile in Babylon 1000 kilometres across the Syrian desert. The author, called “Second Isaiah,” describes how God will rescue the people.

God speaks of being in charge of global history (a revolutionary new idea) and sending a leader who will enact justice throughout the land. The early Christians understood this to refer to Jesus, and thus the choice of this passage a week before Christmas.

In Luke’s gospel, written 500 years later, Jesus applies the verses about healing the blind and releasing prisoners to himself when he returns from the temptations following his commitment in John’s baptism to enacting God’s kingdom. We will return to this part of Isaiah, after Christmas, in Epiphany.

John 3: 16-21
John’s gospel makes clear that Jesus’ arrival is for the healing of the world and that we are to respond to the light, not to the darkness that keeps the world in death. Jesus warns that it is possible to reject this light, and therefore to live in darkness. This theme of confronting us with the choice of responding to the light is present throughout John’s gospel.

The theme of “believing” in Jesus is better understood as a call to “trusting” and enacting Jesus’ call to self-offering love. When we don’t do that our humanity dies. John wasn’t saying that not “believing” in Jesus will cause God to condemn us.

This week’s collect:

God of power and mercy,
you call us once again
to celebrate the coming of your Son.
Remove those things which hinder love of you,
that when he comes,
he may find us waiting in awe and wonder
for him who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever. Amen.

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