Tuesday, January 27, 2015

A MISSIONARY REJECTED (15th Sunday in Ordinary Time - Cycle B)

Homily for the 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time (Cycle B)
Based on  Mk 6:7-13 (Gospel),  Am 7:12-15  (First Reading) and Ep 1:3-14 (Second Reading)
From the Series: “Reflections and Teachings of the Desert”

A MISSIONARY REJECTED
The gospel narrative for this 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time (Cycle B) is Mk 6:7-13, under the title “The mission of the Twelve.”  
Parallel texts are:
a.       Mt 10:1,9-14 - He summoned his twelve disciples,a and gave them authority over unclean spirits with power to cast them out and to cure all kinds of diseases and sickness (v. 1).  Yourselves with no gold or silver, not even a few coppers for your purses (v. 9), with no haversack for the journey or spare tunic or footwear or a staff, for the workmen deserves his keep (v. 10).  Whatever town or village you go into, ask for someone trustworthy and stay with him until you leave (v. 11). As you enter his house, salute it; e (v. 12) and if the house deserves it. Let your peace descend upon it; if it does not, let your peace come back to you (v. 13). And if anyone does not welcome you or listen to what you have to say, as you walk out of the house or town shake the dust from your feet f (v. 14). Footnote a says: “Matthew supposes that the reader already knows about the choice of the Twelve; Mark and Luke mentions it expressly and distinguish the choice from the mission” Footnotes for Mt 10:11-14 are: e that says: “The oriental greeting is a wish of peace In v. 13 this wish is treated in concrete fashion as an entity which, if it fails to secure its effect, nevertheless remains in being and returns to its original owner”; and f that says: “The phrase is Jewish in origin. The dust of any country other than the Holy Land is reckoned unclean: in this passage the impurity attaches to any place that refuses the word.”
b.      Lk 9:1-6 - He called the Twelvea together and gave them power and authority over all devils and to cure diseases (v. 1), and he sent them out to proclaim the kingdom of God and to heal (v. 2). He said to them; ‘Take nothing for the journey; neither staff, nor haversack, nor bread, nor money; and let none of you take a spare tunic (v. 3).  Whatever house you enter, stay there; and when you leave, let it be from there (v. 4). As for those who do not welcome you, when you leave their town shake the dust from your feet as a sign to them’ (v. 5). So they set out and went from village to village proclaiming the Good News and healing everywhere (v. 6). Footnote a says: “Add. ‘apostles’.”
c.       Lk10:4-11 - Carry no purse, no haversack, and no sandals. Salute no one on the road (v. 4). Whatever house you go into, let your first words be, ‘Peace to this house!’ (v. 5) And if a man of peaced lives there, your peace will go and rest on him; if not, it will come back to you (v. 6). Stay in the same house, taking what food and drink they have to offer, for the laborer deserves his wages; do not move from house to house (v. 7). Whenever you go into a town where they make you welcome, eat what is set before you” (v. 8). Cure those in it who are sick and say, “The kingdom of God is very near to you” (v. 9). But whenever you enter a town and they do not make you welcome, go out into the streets and say (v. 10), ‘We wipe off the very dust of your town that cling to our feet, and leave it with you. Yes, be sure of this; the kingdom of God is very near” (v. 11). Footnote d says “Lit. ‘son of peace’, a Hebraism  for those who deserve ‘peace’, i.e. all the spiritual and temporal blessings the word implies. CfJn 14:27+.”


Verses 7 up to 12 say: He made a tour round the villages teaching. Then he summoned the Twelve and began to send them out by pairs giving them authority over the unclean spirits. And he instructed them to take nothing for the journey except a staff b- no bread, no haversack, no coppers for their purses.
They were to wear sandals but, he added, ‘do not take a spare tunic’. And he said to them, ‘If you enter a house anywhere, stay there until you leave the district. And if any place does not welcome you and people refuse to listen to you, as you walk away shake off the dust under your feet as a sign to them.’ So they set off to preach repentance. Footnote b for Mk 6:8 says: “In Mt and Lk the staff is forbidden, but the sense is the same, the missionary must be detached.”

Verse 13 says: and they cast out many devils, and anointed many sick people with oil and cured them.
Parallel text is Jm 5:14 that says: “If one of you is ill, he should send for the elders of the church, and they must anoint him with oil in the name of the Lordd and pray over him (v. 14). The prayer of faith will save the sick man and the Lord will raise him up again; and if he has committed any sins, he will be forgiven (v. 15).”  Footnote d says “Om. ‘of the Lord. The tradition that these prayers and this anointing with oil in the name of the Lord, and for the purpose of helping the sick and forgiving their sins, are the origin of the Church’s ‘sacrament of the sick’ (or Holy Unction) was endorsed by the Council of Trent.”
The First Reading is taken from Am 7:12-15. Verse by verse, it says:

Verses 12 and 13  -  To Amos, Amaziah said, ‘Go away, seer;h get back to the land of Judah; earn your breadi there, we want no more prophesying in Bethel; this is the royal sanctuary, the national temple.’ Verse 12’s Footnote h says “Here the term is possibly contemptuous (visionary’)”; and Footnote isays “Amaziah speaks as is Amos were one of the professional prophets for whom prophecy was a livelihood, cf. 1 S 9:7+.”

Parallel text is Am 2:12 that says: But you have forced the nazirites to drink wine and gave orders to the prophets, ‘Do not prophesy’.

Verses 14 and 15 say: ‘I was no prophet, neither did I belong to any of the brotherhoods of prophets,’j Amos replied to Amaziah ‘I was a shepherd,k and looked after sycamores: but it was Yahweh who took me from herding the flock and Yahweh who said, ‘Go, prophesy to my people Israel”.   Footnote  j says ‘neither did I belong…’ lit. ‘nor the son of a prophet’, cf. 2 K 2:3+”; and Footnote k says ‘shepherd’ corr., cf. 1:1; ‘herdsman’ Hebr.”

Parallel texts are:
a.       Am 3:3-8 - The prophetic call cannot be resistedd Do two men take the road together if they have not planned to do so?e(v. 3) Does the lion roar in the jungle if no prey has been found? Does the young lion growl in his lair if he has captured nothing? (v. 4) Does the bird fall to the groundf if no trapg has been set? Does the snare spring up from the ground if nothing has been caught? (v. 5) Does the trumpet sound in the city without the populace becoming alarmed? Does misfortune come to a city if Yahweh has not sent it? (v. 6). No more does the Lord Yahweh do anything without revealing his plans to his servants the prophetsh (v. 7) The lion roars who can help feeling afraid? The Lord Yahweh speaks who can refuse to prophesy? (v. 8). Footnote d says “In all this passage the prophet is justifying his intervention. There is neither effect without cause, vv. 3-5b, nor cause without effect, vv. 5c-6, 8a. If the prophet exercises his office, it is because Yahweh has spoken; if God speaks, the prophet cannot but prophesy, v. 7-8b. The images chosen suggest that the message will be one of disaster”; Footnote e–says “Or ‘without having met’; Greek ‘without knowing each other’; Footnote f–Hebr. Adds ‘in the snare’; omitted by Greek.; Footnote g says “Or ‘no bait’, or ‘no sling’.; and Footnote h says “This verse may be a gloss.”
b.      2 S 7:8 - This is what you must say to my servant David, “Yahweh Sabaoth says this: I took you from the pasture, from following the sheep, to be the leader of my people Israel…
c.       Ps 78:70-73 - Choosing David as his servant, he took him from the sheepfolds, called him from tending ewes in lamb to pasture his people Jacob and Israel his heritage: who did this with unselfish care and led them with a sensitive hand.


The Second Reading is from Ep 1:3-14. Verse by verse it says:

Verse 3 says: Blessed be God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with all the spiritual blessings of heaven in Christ.b Footnote b-  All the way through the letter, 1:20; 2:6; 3:10; 6:12, Paul reverts to this opening reference to heaven. The spiritual blessings listed in the following verses must wait till the end of the world before they can be fully realized in heaven where they had been formulated since all eternity.

Parallel texts are:
a.       Tb. 13:1 - Blessed be God who lives forever, for his reign endures throughout all ages!
b.      Ga. 3:14 - This was done so that in Christ Jesus the blessing of Abraham might include the pagans, and so that through faith we might receive the promised Spirit.f Footnote  f says “Lit. ‘the promise of the Spirit’. Var. ‘the blessing of the Spirit’.”

Verse 4 says: Before the world was made, he chose us, chose us in Christ, to be holy and spotless, and to live through lovec in his presence. Footnote c says “First blessing: through their union with the glorified Christ the faithful already enjoy, in a hidden sort of way, the eternal happiness to which the chosen are called. ‘Love’ here is primarily the love God has for us, and that leads him to ‘choose’ us and to call us to be ‘holy’, cf. Col. 3:12, 1 Th. 1:4, 2 Th. 2:13, Rm. 11:28, but does not exclude our love for God that results from and is a response to his own love for us, cf. Rm. 5:5.”

Parallel texts are:
a.       Jn. 17:24 - Father, I want those you have given me to be with me where I am, so that they may always see the glory you have given me because you loved me before the foundation of the world.
b.      1 P. 1:20 - Who, though known since before the world was made, has been revealed only in our time, the end of the ages, for your sake.
c.       Ep. 5:27 - So that when he took her to himself she would be glorious, with no speck or wrinkle or anything like that, but holy and faultless.f Footnote f says: “It was customary in the middle east at the time this letter was written, for the ‘sons of the wedding’ to escort the bride to her husband after she had been bathed and dressed. As applied mystically to the Church, Christ washes his bride himself in the bath of baptism, and makes her immaculate (note the mention of a baptismal formula) and introduces her to himself.”

Verses 5 and 6 say: Determining that we should become his adopted sons,d through Jesus Christ for his own kind purposes, to make us praise the glory of his grace,e Footnote d says: “Second blessing: Jesus Christ, the only Son, is both the source and the model of the way God has chosen for us to become holy, i.e. adopting us as his heirs, cf. Rm. 5:5; and Footnote e says “The word grace (charis) as it is used here emphasizes not so much the interior gift that makes a human being holy, as the gratuitousness of God’s favor and the way he manifests his glory, cf. Ex 24:16f. These are the two themes that run through this account of God’s blessings: their source is God’s liberality, and their purpose is to make his glory appreciated by creatures. Everything comes from him, and everything should lead to him.”

Parallel texts are:
a.       1 Co. 1:8 - And he will keep you steady and without blamed until the last day, the daye of our Lord Jesus Christ.  Footnote d says “Cf. Ph 1:10; 2:15f; Ep 1:4; Col 1:22; 1 Th 3:13; 5:23; Jude 24’;  and  Footnote e says “This ‘day of the Lord’, 5:5; 2 Co 1:14, 1 TH 5:2; 2 Th 2:2; cf. 2 P. 3:10, called also the ‘day of Christ’, Ph 1:6,10; 2:16, or simply the ‘day’, 2 Th 1:10; 2 Tm 1:12, 18; 4:8; cf. Mt 7:22; 24:36; Lk 10:12; 21:14, or ‘the day of the Son of Man’, Lk 17:24, cf. v. 26, or ‘the day of God’, 2 P 3:12, or ‘the day of visitation’, 1 P 2:12, or ‘the great day’, Jude 6; Rv 6:17; 16:14, or ‘the last day’, Jn6:39,40,44,54; 11:24; 12:48, is the fulfillment in the eschatological era, ushered in by Christ, of the ‘day of Yahweh’ foretold by the prophets, Am 5:18+. The fulfillment begins with the first coming of Christ, Lk 17:20-24, and the punishment of Jerusalem, Mt 24:1+; and this final stage in thehistory of salvation, cf. Ac 1:7+, will be completed by the glorious second coming, 1 Co. 1:7+; 15:23+; 1 Tm 6:14+, of theSovereign Judge, Rm 2:6+; Jm 5:6-9. A cosmic upheaval and renewal will accompany it (cf. Am 8:9+), Mt 24:29p+; Heb 12:26f; 2 P 3:10-13; Rv 20:11; 21:1; cf. Mt 19:20; Rm 8:20-22. This day of light is coming, Rm 13:12; Heb 10:25; Jm 5:8; 1 P 4:7; cf. 1 Th 5:5,8, but exactly when is uncertain, 1 Th 5:1+, meanwhile we must prepare for it. 2 Co. 5:2+.”
b.      1 Jn. 3:1 - Think of the love that the Father has lavished on us, by letting us be called God’s children; and that is what we are. Footnote a –says “Om. ‘and that is what we are’; var. (Vulg) ‘and may we become precisely that’.
c.       Jn. 1:12 - But to all who did accept him he gave power to becomei children of God, to all who believe in the name of himj.  Footnote i says “Var. ‘to be called’; and Footnote j says “‘to those who believe in his name’ omitted by many of the Fathers.”
d.      Rm. 8:29 - They are the ones he chose specially long ago and intended to become true  images of his Son,q so that his Son might be the eldest of many brothers. Footnote q says “Christ the image of God in the primordial creation, Col. 1:15+, cf. Heb. 1:3, has now come by a new creation, 2 Co 5:17+, to restore to fallen man the splendor of that image which had been darkened by sin, Gn. 1:26+, 3:22-24+, Rm. 5:12+. He does this by forming man in the still more splendid image of a son of God (Rm. 8:29); thus, sound moral judgment is restored to the ‘new man’; Col. 3:10+, and also his claim to glory which he had sacrificed by sin, Rm. 3:23+. This glory which Christ as the image of God possesses by right, 2 Co. 4:4, is progressively communicated to the Christian, 2 Co. 3:18, until his body is itself clothed in the image of the ‘heavenly’ man, 1 Co. 15:49.”
Verses 7 and 8 say: his free gift to us in the Beloved,f in whom, through his blood, we gain freedom, the forgiveness of our sins.g Such is the richness of the grace which heh has bestowed on us in all wisdom and insight. Footnote f says “Var. (Vulg) ‘his beloved Son’”; and Footnote g says: “Third blessing: our redemption by an event in time, i.e. the death of Jesus.”

Parallel texts are:
a.       Rm 3:24 - And both are justified through the free gift of his gracei by being redeemedj in Christ Jesus. Footnote  i says “This word (charis) when used with reference to human relationships can mean as the quality that makes a person attractive (Ac. 2:47), or it can mean thank for a gift (Lk. 6:32-34; 17:9); or it can mean something given free and unearned (Ac. 25:3, 1 Co. 16:3, 2 Co. 8:6-7, 19). This last sense predominates in the NT and especially in Paul. (John uses agape), who uses the word to describe the way God saves through Jesus: it is a work of spontaneous love to which no one has any claim It was an act of ‘grace’ for Jesus to come on earth (2 Co. 8:9, Tt. 2:11, Jh. 1:14,47); to die (Heb. 2:9), for his Father to give up as a gift that includes all divine favors (Rm 8:32; cf. 1 Co 2:12; Ep 1:8f): justification, salvation, and the right to inherit by having faith in him, without having to perform the works of the Law ( Rm 3:24; 4:4f; Ep 2:5,8; Tt. 3:7; cf. Ac 15:11): it will also be an act of ‘grace’ for Christ to come again at the end of the world and for us to receive everlasting glory (1 P1:13; 2 Th 1:12). It was by grace that Abraham received the promise (Rm 4:16; Ga 3:18) and that a few Israelites were chosen to survive  (Rm 11:5f). Since grace is God’s love for us, it is inexhaustible (Ep 1:7; 2:7; cf. 2 Co 4:15; 9:8,14; 1 Tm 1:14) and it conquers sins (Rm 5:15,7,20). The one word ‘grace’ is so useful and full of meaning that it can be used to indicate the entire messianic era that was once proclaimed by the prophets (1 P.1:10) and is now proclaimed as the  Good News (Col 1:6; cf. Ac 14:3; 20:24,32). The word sumps up the gifts of God so well that Paul begins and ends his letters by wishing ‘grace’ to all his readers (1 Th 1:1 and 5:28, etc.; cf 1 P 1:2; 5:10,12; 2 P 1:2; 3:8, 2 Jn 3; Rv 1:4; 22:21). It is by an act of grace that ‘the God of all grace’ (1 P 5:10) calls men to salvation (Ga 1:6; 2 Tim 1:9; 1 P 3:7), leads them with all spiritual gifts (1 Co 1:4-7; cf 2 Th 2:16; Ac 6:8), makes Paul an apostle of the pagans (Rm 1:5; 12:3; 15:15f; 1 Co 3:10; Ga 1:15f; 2:9; Ep 3:2,7,8; Ph 1:2) and assigns to each Christian a part he has to play in the life of the Church (Rm 12:6; 1 Co 12:1+; 2 Co 8:1;  Ep 4:7;  1 P 4:10); similarly, it is a ‘grace’ to suffer for Christ (Ph 1:29; 1 P 2:19-20). Mary ’found grace’ with God (Lk 1:30; cf Ac 7:46; and LXX passim); Jesus himself received the ‘grace’ of the highest name of all (Ph 2:9; cf. Lk 2:40). For human beings to be agreeable to God depends primarily on God’s initiative and secondarily on human response. It is possible to receive grace I vain (2 Co 6:1; cf. 1 Co 5:10), to fall from grace (Ga. 5:4), to forfeit grace (Heb 12:15), and thus to insult the Spirit of grace (Heb 10:29). Grace obtained must be carefully guarded (Rm 5:2; Heb 12:28; 1 P 5:12) and used wisely (1 P 4:10); it is not enough to remain in grace (Ac 13:43; cf 14:26;  15:40), it  must increase (2 P 3:18), to strengthen us (2 Tm 2:1), and help us to persist in our good intention (Heb 13:9). This divine help is given to the humble (Jm 4:6; 1 P 5:5) and is obtained by prayer, since this is to approach ‘the throne of grace’ confidently (Heb 4:26). Grace will be granted and will be found sufficient; it is the power of Christ operating in weak man (2 Co 12:9; cf/ 1 Co 15:10) and this grace of Christ triumphs over unspiritual wisdom (2 Co 1:12). The same word charis is also used for thanksgiving (Rm 6:17; 7:25; 1 Co 10:30; 15:57; 2 Co 2:14; 8:16; 9:15; Col 3:6; 1 Tm 1:12; 2 Tm 1:3;and cf. the verb eucharistein), since gratitude to God is the fundamental and necessary disposition for grace. From all these shades of meaning, it is clear that the word charis is always used to emphasize that the gift  is absolutely free: to bring out its power and its inwardness Paul also uses the word pneuma (cf. Rm 5:5+)’”; and Footnote j  says: “Yahweh had ‘redeemed’ Israel by delivering her from slavery of Egypt, to provide himself with a nation for his ‘inheritance’ Dt 7:6+. When the prophets spoke of the ‘redemption’ from Babylon, Is 41:14+, they hinted at a deliverance more profound and less restricted, the forgiveness that is deliverance from sin, Is 44:22; cf Ps 130:8; 49:7-8. This messianic redemption is fulfilled in Christ, 1 Co 1:30; cfLk 1:68; 2:38. God the Father through Christ - and indeed Christ himself- has ‘delivered’ the new Israel from slavery of the Law, Ga 3:13, 4:5; and of sin, Col 1:14; Ep 1:7; Heb 9:15, by ‘acquiring’ her, Ac 20:28, making her his own, Tt 2:14; purchasing her, Ga 3:13; 4:5; 1 Co 6:20; 7:23; cf. 2 P 2:1. The price was the blood of Christ, Ac 20:28; Ep 1:7; Heb 9:12; 1 P 1:18f; Rv 1:5; 5:9. This redemption, begun on Calvary and guaranteed by the present gift of the Spirit, Ep 1:14; 4:30, will be complete only at the parousia, Lk 21:28, when deliverance from death is secured by the resurrection of the body, Rm 8:23.”
b.      Col 1:13-14 - Because that is what he has done: he has taken us out of the power of darkness and created a place for us in the kingdom of the Son that he loves (v. 13), and in him, we gain our freedom,d the forgiveness of our sins (v. 14). Footnote d – “Lit. ‘In whom we have the redemption’. Add. (Vulg.) ‘by blood”, cf. Ep 1:7.”
c.       Heb 1:3 - He is the radiant light of God’s glory and the perfect copy of his nature,c sustaining the universe by his powerful command; and now that he has destroyed the defilement of sin, he has gone to take his place in heaven at the right hand of divine Majesty. Footnote c says “These two metaphors are borrowed from the Sophia and logos theologies of Alexandria, Ws 7:25-26; they express both the identity of nature between Father and Son, and the distinction of person. The Son is the brightness, the light shining from its source, which is the bright glory, cf. Ex. 24:16+, of the Father (‘Light from Light’). He is also the replica, cf. Col 1:15+, of the Father’s substance, like an exact impression made by a seal on clay or wax, cf. Jn 14:9.”
d.      Ep 2:7 - This was to show for all ages to come, through his goodness towards us in Christ Jesus, how infinitely rich he is in grace.


Verses 8 and 9 say: which heh has bestowed on us in all wisdom and insight. He has let us know the mystery of his purpose,i the hidden plan he so kindly made in Christ from the beginning. Footnote h says “God the Father”; and Footnote  i- says “Fourth blessing: the revelation of the ‘mystery’, Rm 16:25f.”

Parallel text of verse 9 is Rm 16:25  that says: Doxologyj Glory to him who is able to give you the strengthk to live according to the Good News I preach, and in which I proclaim Jesus Christ, the revelation of a mysteryl kept secret for endless ages  Footnote  j says “Most authorities place this doxology here, but in some it appears at the end of ch. 15 or 14; others omit. A solemn presentation, cf. Ef 3:20; Jude 24-25, of the main points of the letter”; Footnote ksays “Firmly grounded in doctrine and strong in Christian practice. Cf. 1:11; 1 Th 3:2,13; 2 Th 2:17; 3:3; 1 Co 1:8; 2 Co 1:21; Col 2:7;  Footnote l says “The idea of a ‘mystery’ of wisdom, v. 27; 1 Co 2:7; Ep 3:10; Col 2:2-3, long hidden in God and now revealed, v. 25; 1 Co 2:7,10; Ep 3:5,9f; Col 1:26, is borrowed by Paul from Jewish apocalypse, Dn 2:18-19+, but he enriches the content of the term by applying it to the climax of the history of salvation: the saving cross of Christ, 1 Co 2:8; the call of the pagans, v. 26; Rm 11:25; Col 1:26-27; Ep 3:6, to this salvation preached by Paul, v. 25; Col 1:23; 4:3; Ep 3:3-12; 6:19, and finally the restoration of all things in Christ as their one head, Ep 1:9-10. See also 1 Co 4:1; 13:2; 14:2; 15:51; Ep 5:32; 2 Th 2:7; 1 Tm 3:9,16; 2 Tm 1:9-10; Mt 13:11p+; Rv 1:20; 10:7; 17:5,7.”

Verse 10 says: To act upon when the times had run their course to the end;j that he would bring everything together under Christ as head, everything in the heaven and everything on earth.k Footnote j says “ Lit. ‘for a dispensation of the times’ fullness’, cf. Ga 4:4f. Footnote k - The main theme of this letter is how the whole body of creation, having been cut off from the Creator by sin, is decomposing, and how its rebirth is effected by Christ reuniting its parts into an organism with himself as the head, so as to reattach it to God. The human (Jew and pagan) and the angelic worlds are brought together again through the fact that they were saved by a single act, cf. 4:10f.

Parallel text
a.       Mk 1:15  - ‘The time has come’ he said ‘and the kingdom of God is close at hand. Repent, and believe the Good News.’
b.      Ga 4:4 - But when the appointed timec came, God sent his son, born of a woman, born a subject of the Law. Footnote c - Lit. ‘fullness of time’; the phrase indicates how when the messianic age comes it will fill a need felt for centuries, rather like filling up a jug. Cf. Ac 1:7+ and Mk 1:15; 1 Co 10:11; Ep 1:10; Heb 1”2; 9:26; 1 P 1:20.
c.       Col. 1:16,20… - “for him were created all things in heaven and on earth: everything visible and everything invisible, Thrones, Dominations, Sovereignties, Powers - all things were created through him and for him (v. 16). …and all things to be reconciled through him and for him, h everything in heaven and everything on earth,I when he made peace by his death on the cross ( v. 20).” Footnote h - i.e. through and for  Christ, cf. the parallel ‘though him and for him’ of v. 16. Alternatively, it could read “God wanted everything…to be reconciled to himself, though him who made peace…’ cf. Rm 5:10; 2 Co 5:18f; Footnote i - This reconciliation of the whole universe (including angels as well as human beings) means not that every single individual will be saved, but that all who are saved will be saved by their collective return to the right order and peace of perfect submission to God. Any individual who do not join this new creation through grace will be forced to join it, cf. 2:15; 1 Co 15:24-25 (the heavenly spirits) and 2 Th 1:8-9; 1 Co 6:9-10; Ga. 5:21; Rm 2:8; Ep 5:5 (men).


Verses 11 and 12 say: And it is in himthat we were claimed as God’s own,m chosen from the beginning, under the predetermined plan of the one who guides all things as he decides by his own will; Chosen to be, for his greater glory, the people who would put their hopes in Christ before he came. Footnote lsays “Christ.” and Footnote m says “Fifth blessing: the pagans are called to share the salvation that had, till then, been reserved for the Jews; that they will be saved is proved by the fact that they receive the Spirit as was promised.”

Parallel texts for verse 11 are:
a.       Dt 7:6 - For you are a people consecrated to Yahweh your God, it is you that Yahweh your God has chosen to be his very own people out of all the peoples on earth.b Footnote b - Declaring Israel’s election, as in 14:2. To ‘find himself a nation’ God made use of wonders, 4:34, cf. 4:20; 26:7-8, vv. 7-8 of this chapter explain the reason for God’s choice, namely, loyalty to the promises which, of his own loving will, he had made to the Fathers, cf. 4:37, 8:18; 9:5; 10:15. This choice, ratified by the covenant (v. 9; 5:2-3) makes Israel a dedicated people (v. 6; 26:19). The idea of election, strongly emphasized in Dt., pervades the OT. Israel as a nation set apart, Nb 23:9, God’s people, Jg 5:13, consecrated, Ex 19:6+, a covenanted race, Ex. 19:1+, God’s son, Dt 1:31+, the nation of Immanuel, (God-with-us), Is 8:8,10. The election marks Israel off from the world but the prophets foretell the recognition of Israel’s God by all nations and the universality of salvation Zc 14:16; Is 49:6; 45:14+. The coming of Jesus inaugurates this ‘messianic’ era.
b.      Col 1:12 - …thanking the Father who has made it possible for you to join the saints and with them to inherit the light.c Footnote c - Lit. ‘Thanking the Father (for) having made you (var. ‘us’) fit for the part of the lot of the saints in the light’; var. ‘for having called you (var. ‘us’) to…’ The ‘lot of the saints’ is what all holy people are to inherit, i.e. the ‘salvation’ that had been thought of as a bequest made exclusively to Israel. Now, non-Jews are called to share it, cf. Ep 1:11-13. The word ‘saints’ (lit. ‘holy ones’) here can mean either Christians, i.e. people called to live the ‘life of light’ while still living on earth, Rm 1:7f, cf. Jn 8:12f, or it can mean the angels who live with God in the eschatological ‘light’, cf. Ac 9:13+.
c.       Is 46:10 - From the beginning I foretold the future, and predicted beforehand what is to be. I say: my purpose shall last; I will do whatever I choose.
d.      Rv 4:11 - You are our Lord and our God, you are worthy of glory and honor and power, because you made all the universe and it was only by your will that everything was made and exists.k  Footnote  k - Lit. ‘though your will they were (var. ‘they were not’) and they were created’; text uncertain.
Parallel text for verse 12 is Ps 66:2 that says:   …play music to the glory of his name, glorify him with your praises, say to God, ‘What dread you inspire!’


Verses 13 and 14 say: Now you too, n in him, have heard the message of the truth and the good news of your salvation, and have believed it; and you too have been stamped with the seal of the Holy Spirit of the Promise.o The pledge of our inheritance which brings freedom for those whom God has taken for his own, p to make his glory praised. Footnotes n says “Sixth blessing: the Jews are chosen to be the human share allotted to God, and are to be his witness until the coming of the Messiah. Paul, being a Jew, here uses ‘we”; Footnote o says “Paul completes his Trinitarian account of God’s plan with the Spirit, since the giving of the Spirit shows the plan has reached its final stage. Nevertheless, though this gift has already begun, it is only given in a hidden way while the unspiritual world lasts, and will only be given fully when the kingdom of God is complete and Christ comes in glory”; and Footnote  psays “Lit. ‘the setting free of that (enslaved people) which had been acquired’, i.e., by God, and at the cost of the life of his son. This is one of the occasions when Paul widens an OT concept (like ‘blessing’, ‘saint’, ‘choice’, ‘adoption’, ‘redemption, ‘share’, ‘promise’) by applying it to the Church as the new Israel and the body of the saved.”

Parallel texts for verse 13 are:
a.       Ac 1:4 - When he had been at table with them, he had told them not to leave Jerusalem, but to wait there for what the Father had promised. ‘It is’ he had said, ‘what you have heard me speak about:
b.      Col 1:5 - …because of the hope which is stored up for you in heaven. It is only recently that you heard of this, when it was announced in the message of truth. The Good News…
c.       Col 2:9  In his body lives the fullness of divinity,e and in him you too find your own fulfillment… Footnote e says “The word pleroma here, cf. 1:19+, is defined as the ‘divinity’ that is actually ‘filling’ Christ now in his body: in other words, the risen Christ, through his incarnation and resurrection, unites the divine and the created. The former is what he is by his pre-existence and his present glory; the latter is, as human, what he has assumed directly, and, as cosmic, what he assumed indirectly through being human. In this way he himself is the pleroma of all possible categories of being.”
d.      Heb 6:12 - …never growing careless, but imitating those who have the faith and the perseverance to inherit the promises.  
e.       Ep 4:30 - Otherwise you will only be grieving the Holy Spirit of God who has marked you with his seal for you to be set free when the day comes. q Footnote  q says “ The one Holy Spirit that keeps the one body of Christ united, 4:4, 1 Co. 12:13, is ‘grieved’; cf. 4:30, Is. 63:10, by anything that harms the unity of the body.”
f.        2 Co 1:22 - …marking us with his seal and giving us the pledge, the Spirit, that we carry in our hearts.
g.       Ac 2:33 - Now raised to the heights by God’s right hand,s he has received from the father the Holy Spirit, who was promised,t and what you see and hear is the outpouring of that Spirit. Footnote ssays “Words borrowed from Ps. 118 (v.16 LXX ‘The right hand of the Lord has raised me up’) used in their preaching by the apostles who took it to be messianic: Ac 4:11, 1 P 2:7, Mt 21:9p,42p, 23:39, Lk 13:35, Jn 12:13, Heb 13:6. But it is possible to translate. ‘ Having raised up to the right hand of God’ and to se in this an introduction to the quotation (v.34) of Ps. 110); which is another name of Apostolic preaching: Mt. 22:44p,26:64p, Mk 16:19, Ac 7:55,56, Rm 8:34, 1Co. 15:25, Ep. 1:20 Col. 3:1, Heb. 1:3,13, 8:1, 10:12, 12:2, 1 P.3:22”;  and  Footnote t – says “According to the prophets, the gif of the Spirit would characterize  the messianic era, Ex. 36:27+. Peter explains the miracle his bearers have witnessed as the ‘pouring out’ of this spirit, foretold in Jl 3:1-2 by the risen Christ”.
h.      Rm 5:5 - And this hope is not deceptive, because the love of Gode has been poured into our hearts by the Holy Spirit which had been given us.f Footnote e says “God’s love for us; of this the Holy Spirit is a pledge and to this, by his active presence within us, he bears witness, cf. 8:15 and Ga. 4:6. Through him we stand before God as sons before their father; the love is mutual. This text therefore, in the light of its parallel passages, asserts that the Christian shares in the life of the Trinity through ‘sanctifying grace’”; Footnote f says “The promised Spirit, Ep 1;13, cf. Ga 3:14; Ac 2:33+, distinctive of the new covenant as contrasted with the old, Rm 2:29; 7:6; 2 Co 3:6; cf. Ga 3:3; 4:29; Ezk 36:27+, is not merely exhibition of healing or charismatic power, Ac 1:8+; is also, and especially, an inward principle of new life, a principle that God ‘gives’, 1 Th 4:8, etc., cf. Lk 11:13; Jn 3:34; 14:16f; Ac 1:5; 2:38 etc.; 1 Jn 3:24, ‘sends’, Ga 4:6; cf. Lk 24:49; Jn 14:26; 1 P 1:12, ‘supplies’, Ga 3:5; Ph 1:19, ‘pours out’, Rm 5:5; Tt 3:5f; cf. Ac 2:33. Received into the Christian by faith, Ga 3:2,14;cf. Jn 7:38f; Ac 11:17, and baptism, 1 Co 6:11; Tt 3:5; cf. Jn 3:5; Ac 2:38; 19:2-6, It dwells within him, Rm 8:9; 1 Co 3:16; 2 Tm 1:14; cf. Jm 4:5, in his spirit, Rm 8:16; cf. the Spirit of Christ, Rm 8:9; Ph 1:19; Ga 4:6; cf. 2 Co 3:17; Ac 16:7; Jn 14;26; 15:26; 16:7, 14; makes the Christian a son of God, Rm 8;14-16; Ga 4:6f, and establishes Christ in his heart, Ep 3:16. For the Christian (as for Christ himself, Rm 1:4+) this Spirit is a principle of resurrection, Rm 8:11+, in virtue of as eschatological gift which even in life signs him as with a seal, 2 Co 1:22; Ep 1:13; 4:30, and which is present within him by way of pledge, 2 Co 1:22; 5:5; Ep 1:14, and of first-fruits, Rm 8:23. It takes the place of the evil principle in man that is ‘the flesh’. Rm 7:5+, and becomes a principle of faith, 1 Co 12:3; 2 Co 4:13; cf. 1 Jn 4:2f, of supernatural knowledge, 1 Co 2:10-16; 7:40; 12:8f; 14:2f; Ep 1:17; 3:16, 18; Col 1:9; cf. Jn 14:26+, of love, Rm. 5:5, 15:30, Col. 1:8, of sanctification, Rm 15:16, 1 Co. 6:11, 2 Th .2:13, cf. 1P 1:2, of moral conduct, Rm 8:4-9, 13; Ga. 3:16-25, of apostolic courage, Ph. 1:19; 2 Tim 1:7f; cf. Ac 1:8+, of hope, Rm 15:13, Ga. 5:5, Ep. 4:4, of prayer. Rm. 8:26f,cf. Jm 4:35; Jude 20.  The Spirit must not be quenched, 1 Th. 5:19, or grieved, Ep. 4:30.  It unites man with Christ, 1 Co 6:17, and thus secures the unity of his Body, 1 Co. 12:3, Ep. 2:16,18, 4:4.


Parallel texts for verse 14 are:
a.       2 Co 1:22 - …marking us with his seal and giving us the pledge, the Spirit, that we carry in our hearts.
b.      Rm 3:24 - And both are justified through the free gift of his gracei by being redeemedj in Christ Jesus.  Footnote i says  “This word (charis) when used with reference to human relationships can mean as the quality that makes a person attractive (Ac. 2:47), or it can mean thank for a gift (Lk. 6:32-34; 17:9); or it can mean something given free and unearned (Ac. 25:3, 1 Co. 16:3, 2 Co. 8:6-7, 19). This last sense predominates in the NT and especially in Paul. (John uses agape), who uses the word to describe the way God saves through Jesus: it is a work of spontaneous love to which no one has any claim It was an act of ‘grace’ for Jesus to come on earth (2 Co. 8:9, Tt. 2:11, Jh. 1:14,47); to die (Heb. 2:9), for his Father to give up as a gift that includes all divine favors (Rm 8:32; cf. 1 Co 2:12; Ep 1:8f): justification, salvation, and the right to inherit by having faith in him, without having to perform the works of the Law ( Rm 3:24; 4:4f; Ep 2:5,8; Tt. 3:7; cf. Ac 15:11): it will also be an act of ‘grace’ for Christ to come again at the end of the world and for us to receive everlasting glory (1 P1:13; 2 Th 1:12). It was by grace that Abraham received the promise (Rm 4:16; Ga 3:18) and that a few Israelites were chosen to survive  (Rm 11:5f). Since grace is God’s love for us, it is inexhaustible (Ep 1:7; 2:7; cf. 2 Co 4:15; 9:8,14; 1 Tm 1:14) and it conquers sins (Rm 5:15,7,20). The one word ‘grace’ is so useful and full of meaning that it can be used to indicate the entire messianic era that was once proclaimed by the prophets (1 P.1:10) and is now proclaimed as the  Good News (Col 1:6; cf. Ac 14:3; 20:24,32). The word sumps up the gifts of God so well that Paul begins and ends his letters by wishing ‘grace’ to all his readers (1 Th 1:1 and 5:28, etc.; cf 1 P 1:2; 5:10,12; 2 P 1:2; 3:8, 2 Jn 3; Rv 1:4; 22:21). It is by an act of grace that ‘the God of all grace’ (1 P 5:10) calls men to salvation (Ga 1:6; 2 Tim 1:9; 1 P 3:7), leads them with all spiritual gifts (1 Co 1:4-7; cf 2 Th 2:16; Ac 6:8), makes Paul an apostle of the pagans (Rm 1:5; 12:3; 15:15f; 1 Co 3:10; Ga 1:15f; 2:9; Ep 3:2,7,8; Ph 1:2) and assigns to each Christian a part he has to play in the life of the Church (Rm 12:6; 1 Co 12:1+; 2 Co 8:1;  Ep 4:7;  1 P 4:10); similarly, it is a ‘grace’ to suffer for Christ (Ph 1:29; 1 P 2:19-20). Mary ’found grace’ with God (Lk 1:30; cf Ac 7:46; and LXX passim); Jesus himself received the ‘grace’ of the highest name of all (Ph 2:9; cf. Lk 2:40). For human beings to be agreeable to God depends primarily on God’s initiative and secondarily on human response. It is possible to receive grace I vain (2 Co 6:1; cf. 1 Co 5:10), to fall from grace (Ga. 5:4), to forfeit grace (Heb 12:15), and thus to insult the Spirit of grace (Heb 10:29). Grace obtained must be carefully guarded (Rm 5:2; Heb 12:28; 1 P 5:12) and used wisely (1 P 4:10); it is not enough to remain in grace (Ac 13:43; cf 14:26;  15:40), it  must increase (2 P 3:18), to strengthen us (2 Tm 2:1), and help us to persist in our good intention (Heb 13:9). This divine help is given to the humble (Jm 4:6; 1 P 5:5) and is obtained by prayer, since this is to approach ‘the throne of grace’ confidently (Heb 4:26). Grace will be granted and will be found sufficient; it is the power of Christ operating in weak man (2 Co 12:9; cf/ 1 Co 15:10) and this grace of Christ triumphs over unspiritual wisdom (2 Co 1:12). The same word charis is also used for thanksgiving (Rm 6:17; 7:25; 1 Co 10:30; 15:57; 2 Co 2:14; 8:16; 9:15; Col 3:6; 1 Tm 1:12; 2 Tm 1:3;and cf. the verb eucharistein), since gratitude to God is the fundamental and necessary disposition for grace. From all these shades of meaning, it is clear that the word charis is always used to emphasize that the gift  is absolutely free: to bring out its power and its inwardness Paul also uses the word pneuma (cf. Rm 5:5+)’; and  Footnote j says “Yahweh had ‘redeemed’ Israel by delivering her from slavery of Egypt, to provide himself with a nation for his ‘inheritance’ Dt 7:6+. When the prophets spoke of the ‘redemption’ from Babylon, Is 41:14+, they hinted at a deliverance more profound and less restricted, the forgiveness that is deliverance from sin, Is 44:22; cf Ps 130:8; 49:7-8. This messianic redemption is fulfilled in Christ, 1 Co 1:30; cfLk 1:68; 2:38. God the Father through Christ - and indeed Christ himself- has ‘delivered’ the new Israel from slavery of the Law, Ga 3:13, 4:5; and of sin, Col 1:14; Ep 1:7; Heb 9:15, by ‘acquiring’ her, Ac 20:28, making her his own, Tt 2:14; purchasing her, Ga 3:13; 4:5; 1 Co 6:20; 7:23; cf. 2 P 2:1. The price was the blood of Christ, Ac 20:28; Ep 1:7; Heb 9:12; 1 P 1:18f; Rv 1:5; 5:9. This redemption, begun on Calvary and guaranteed by the present gift of the Spirit, Ep 1:14; 4:30, will be complete only at the parousia, Lk 21:28, when deliverance from death is secured by the resurrection of the body, Rm 8:23.”

c.       Ps 66:2 - …play music to the glory of his name, glorify him with your praises, say to God, ‘What dread you inspire!’

No comments: