God Claims Us All A Biblical Study for Epiphany 2016

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THE EPISCOPAL DIOCESE OF WEST TEXAS God Claims Us All A Biblical Study for Epiphany 2016 Week Four: Grace Experienced Opening Prayer Give us grace, O Lord, to answer readily the call of our Savior Jesus Christ and proclaim to all people the Good News of his salvation, that we and the whole world may perceive the glory of his marvelous works; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen. (Collect for the Third Sunday after the Epiphany, Book of Common Prayer, p. 215). Introduction to this Week s Study The Collect for the Third Sunday after the Epiphany highlights two critical dimensions of God s claim on our lives. First, it is God s grace that empowers us to hear and respond to the many ways we are called into service in the name of Jesus Christ. In some of our biblical passages this week, we will identify Jesus Christ as the source of God s grace in our lives and reflect on how God s grace prepares and empowers us to proclaim the gospel of Christ in our own unique contexts. Second, we proclaim the gospel of Christ by becoming channels for God s grace to enrich the lives of other people around us. These experiences of divine grace reveal the glory of Christ s marvelous works in the world. Simply put, grace is the life-giving power of God that enriches the quality of our lives and relationships in the world. Grace is a gift from God, since the power to create new life rests in God alone. Nevertheless, as we will see in several of our biblical passages this week, God calls us to be good stewards of the grace given to us by offering ourselves in Christ-like service to the world. Through our faithful acts of self-giving for others, we hope to become the means by which other people experience this life-giving power of God and come to know God and our Lord Jesus Christ in deeper and more meaningful ways. Monday, January 25 And the Word became flesh and tabernacled among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father s only son, full of grace and truth. From his fullness we have all received, grace upon grace (John 1:14,16). The first eighteen verses of the Gospel of John constitute a kind of interpretive key to the rest of the Gospel, and verse 14 is the crux of this introduction. Here the Word of God that formed the whole of creation takes on flesh in the person of Jesus of Nazareth, as though dwelling in a moveable tent on the earth [the biblical word tabernacle means, literally, a tent]. In the person of Jesus, God moved among us, listening and healing and feeding and teaching. The Gospel of John shows us how the glory of God can shine forth in the simplest of human

deeds when those deeds are channels of God s grace. While there are occasional miracles in all of the Gospels, most of what Jesus does (and invites us to do as well) is quite ordinary, and that very ordinariness is glorious: showing compassion to the hurting person right in front of us, listening intently, noticing people, being a friend, sharing a meal. God s glory shone forth through everything Jesus did as he listened and healed and fed and taught. In the Gospel of John, Jesus helps us find our way back to the life we were originally made for, by reminding us what true humanity looks like, and by pouring forth grace to empower us to imitate him. The world is made radiant as we partner with God s grace and live into our callings. Think back over the last week, and all of the people you interacted with. Was there a time when you felt as though an ordinary instance of human kindness was tinged with God s glory? Try an experiment today in really engaging the people you come into contact with. Watch for evidence of God s grace manifesting itself in these engagements. Tuesday, January 26 As good stewards of the manifold grace of God, serve one another with whatever experience of grace each of you has received. (1 Peter 4:10) As we see in today s short biblical quotation, God s grace is manifold in our world. Our experiences of grace in daily life are as numerous and diverse as the variety of people and the unique contexts that shape life in our world. Although grace is a gift from God, our experiences of grace are not completely random. As followers of Jesus Christ we have a responsibility for what we do with the grace we have been given in our own lives. In the words of the author of the early Christian letter known as First Peter, we are called to be good stewards of this grace from God. In the ancient world a steward was someone who was given the responsibility to oversee and manage all the resources of the master s household. In this position of trust the steward was given freedom to make decisions with regard to the disposition and use of the master s resources. But the steward was also accountable to the master for making sure that the resources were used for the benefit of the master s household. The author of First Peter utilizes this concept of stewardship to characterize our relationship to God s grace. Through the different experiences of grace in our own lives, we discover many facets of this life-giving power given to each of us by God. Our experiences of grace give rise to a responsibility to use this divine resource faithfully, for the benefit of God s people and the wider world. We faithfully carry out this stewardship responsibility by serving one another and becoming conduits for God s grace to enrich the lives of those we serve. Today s biblical quotation makes it clear that God s grace is not a gift that we receive and hold onto as our own personal possession. We are called by God to 2

serve others with whatever grace we have been given. Describe some of the ways you have experienced God s grace in your own life. In what ways have you become a channel for that grace in your service of others? Are there some areas of your life where you might become a channel of grace for others but have not yet put yourself in their service? Wednesday, January 27 According to the grace of God given to me, like a skilled master builder I laid a foundation, and someone else is building on it. Each builder must choose with care how to build on it. For no one can lay any foundation other than the one that has been laid; that foundation is Jesus Christ (1 Corinthians 3:10-11). In the passage above, the apostle Paul talks about how a faithful community can change over time, while not losing its core identity. He compares his labor in founding the church in Corinth to the work of a master builder. Other ministers had come along behind him, perhaps teaching the people some new or different practices, sometimes enhancing his work and other times altering it. Each minister s task is simply to be a channel of the particular grace given to her or to him. With equanimity, Paul goes on to say that time will tell which of the practices will have staying power. In saying so, Paul gives us some clues as well, for determining how God s grace might be guiding us. Is it clear that our foundation is in Christ? Do our practices of our faith have the quality of building up the people around us? As we look back over time, can we see that our growth in Christ has staying power? This passage calls us to think about what particular aspects of God s grace seem to have been entrusted to us to put into practice for the well-being of the world around us. As you look back over time, how has God most consistently used you as a channel of grace? What practices have had staying power for you? Thursday, January 28 For by the grace given to me I say to everyone among you not to think of yourself more highly than you ought to think, but to think with sober judgment, each according to the measure of faith that God has assigned. For as in one body we have many members, and not all the members have the same practice, so we, who are many, are one body in Christ, and individually we are members one of another. We have events of grace that differ according to the grace given to us: prophecy, in proportion to faith; ministry, in ministering; the teacher, in teaching; the encourager, in encouragement; the giver, in generosity; the leader, in diligence; the one having mercy, in cheerfulness. (Romans 12:3-8) Today s passage follows directly on from Romans 12:1-2, which served as the basis for our reflections on Tuesday, January 12. In those two opening verses at 3

12:1-2, Paul tells the Romans to offer their bodies as a living sacrifice to God, and by doing so, to prove through testing what is the will of God in any particular situation. In today s reading Paul sets out some very concrete suggestions for how the Romans might actually offer their bodies sacrificially so that they become channels of grace to benefit the lives of others. In the first verse today, Paul talks about one of the specific incarnations of grace given to him by God that has proven to be a channel of grace for others. Paul is gifted with practical wisdom about how to embody faithfully the patterns of Jesus Christ in people s lives. So it is important, he says, that we not think too highly of our own capabilities and effectiveness. We are to evaluate the fruitfulness of our own actions with sober judgment, making sure to identify the ways God is gracing others through what we do. Paul also emphasizes the necessity for the diversity of practices in the body of Christ. If we are reflecting on our ministries with sober judgment, we realize how much we need one another. Valuing our various individual contributions ensures that we are a healthy Christian community. In the final sentence of the passage above, pay close attention to the fact that God s life-giving grace is experienced among people in the doing of very particular actions. For instance, in the relationship between teacher and student(s), God s grace is experienced in the teaching. So, too, for the person engaging in ministry, the grace is experienced in the ministering; grace is experienced in the act of encouragement offered by one person in support of the other. In every case Paul describes, the event of grace takes place in the relationship between the actor and the people benefitting from the action. Grace is experienced not only by the people whose lives are enriched as recipient s of God s grace, but also by the actors who offer themselves as living sacrifices in very specific ways. What are some of your actions or ministries that have proven to be regular channels of grace for others? Are there actions you have taken that have proven less effective and fruitful for others? Where have you experienced grace through someone else s actions or ministries? For instance, who is a person that regularly proves to be a source of encouragement in your life? Who is a leader in your community whose diligence in leadership benefits everyone? Have you shared with them that they are channels of grace in your life? Friday, January 29 So then, putting away falsehood, let all of us speak the truth to our neighbors, for we are members of one another. Be angry but do not sin; do not let the sun go down on your anger, and do not make room for the devil.let no evil talk come out of your mouths, but only what is useful for building up, as there is need, so that your words may grace those who hear.put away from you all bitterness and wrath and anger and 4

wrangling and slander, together with all malice, and be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ has forgiven you. (Ephesians 4:25-27, 29, 31-32). In this latest election season, we are constantly being subjected to highly acrimonious political speech in the course of debates about the many contested issues impacting our conflicted world. This season of Epiphany is the perfect time for us as Christians to stop and ask ourselves this crucial question: are the words we are using in our conversations and debates with one other helping people to perceive the glory of Christ s marvelous works in the world? Today s passage from the letter to the Ephesians reminds us that as Christians we have a responsibility to be mindful about the words we use. According to Paul, in Christ our freedom of speech has limits. God calls us to speak the truth to our neighbors, but not with angry words that give Satan an opportunity to divide us and destroy our relationships with one another. Every word that comes out of our mouths should build up our brothers and sisters rather than tear them down. As good stewards of God s grace, the words we use should become channels for God s grace to enrich the lives of people to whom we speak. Paul exhorts us to pay attention to our hard feelings and failed expectations of others that cause us to use words in hurtful and destructive ways. He encourages us to be kind to one another and to forgive each other, suggesting that such practices will lead us to use words and patterns of speech that will find favor in the sight of God. After all, says Paul, God in Christ has forgiven each of us. Should we do any less for others? Describe how you are being impacted by the words of people you hear or those to whom you listen. What practices do you employ to ensure that your own words become channels of God s grace in the lives of those to whom you speak, building them up rather than tearing them down? What practices or disciplines do you employ to harness your emotions, so that they do not lead to destructive actions or words in your relationships with others? 5