Our Biblical Blog /'Examined Life'
|
Our Biblical Blog /'Examined Life'
|
(Tuesday after Third Sunday in Advent, BCP old lectionary, Isaiah 38:1-20Mark 7:24-8:10)
Jewish mysticism highlights that God’s creative words through which the wold came into being has remained active! The ‘ten utterances’ remain active for ever! ‘Forever, Our Lord, your word stands firm in the heavens.’ (Psalm 119:89) King Hezekiah prayed for recovery when he was sick unto death. Isaiah tells him to set his house in order for he shall die. He prays in a moving way: ‘Remember now, O Lord, I beseech thee, how I walked in truth and with a perfect heart, and have done that which is good in thy sight. And Hezekiah wept sore.’ As God’s special response, he recovered from his sickness. This recovery was grounded in Hezekiah’s service to the Lord and good life. Good and compassionate life ‘treasures up’ life for the future. This treasure is a vital resource at the time of tribulations. In this specific instance, we can see how God’s creative word remains active in ‘times of sickness’. The life-giving deeds and words of the person, at their depth the vivifying Love of God, remain active…bearing the possibility of renewed life and purpose in life. The prophetic voice, which informed Hezekiah of what challenge he is facing and how God responds, is another instance of how the words of Creation have remained active. ‘Then came the word of the Lord to Isaiah, saying, Go, and say to Hezekiah, Thus saith the Lord, the God of David thy father, I have heard your prayer, I have seen thy tears.’ The mentioned Jewish mystics say that the real miracle is not the Creation of the world, or the departing of the waters of the Red Sea. Even greater miracle is that God’s creative words sustain the world. The same applies to our birth. The day to day renewal of our life is even greater miracle. The renewal of our moral life and compassion is the miracle of miracles. That is the value of our conversion, for a new beginning, expressed in Hezekiah’s thanksgiving ‘Behold, for peace I had great bitterness: but thou hast in love to my soul delivered it from the pit of corruption: for thou hast cast all my sins behind thy back. The living, the living, he shall praise thee, as I do this day: the father to the children shall make known thy truth. The Lord was ready to save me.’ The spiritual composition in Cranmer’s paring of the Old Testament reading with Mark’s Gospel is strikingly beautiful. We can think further what the Chasidic mystics said. Though Mark tells about the healing miracles of Jesus, the real focus of the passage (read in the context of Advent) is the birth of Jesus. We can define Christmas Eve in line with the above mystical approach as follows. The human birth of Jesus is the most powerful confirmation that God’s creative Word remains active throughout the life of Creation. Reading the two healing miracles of Mark’s account, gives a further depth of this understanding. The world was created in compassion! The Saviour was given to us to restore us; to heal our ways. The healings of Jesus reveal that God’s ‘Fiat’ has not remained silent since the beginning of Creation. Through the Gospels we know that these words are compassionate. The Son was sent and made Incarnate through the Father’s compassion for us. God’s words has remained active in order to follow us into our sickness and low-points in life. Thus, the Advent season is a time when we are called to rediscover how God’s permanent creative Love is active since the creation of the world. Nay, since our being individually created! The Lord’s approaching is an ‘audible message’. In Him, the words of the Creator are resounding! 13 Dec. 16, Grahame Park, London.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Soliloquy
These are verbal Icons, expressions of how the world is seen from Saint Augustine's.. Archives
June 2023
Categories |