You are hereFaith Matters / Living the Word
Living the Word
Biblical reflections, prayers, news and perspectives on the Christian faith.
Protest March
Even if we've set out on the Lenten pilgrimage on Ash Wednesday and taken every step in penitence and prayer, we are still not prepared for the arrival. Neither were those who joined Jesus in Galilee and made their way up to Jerusalem. For many it was an annual pilgrimage, this Passover. Others, having to travel greater distances, saw the Holy City through the joyful tears of those who know they will never make the journey again. But in one particular year, the pilgrimage was a once-in-a-lifetime experience because it was made in the company of Jesus of Nazareth. For him too, Jerusalem was the end of a pilgrimage.
by Fred Craddock
Who would Jesus torture?
Christians of strong religious faith and sound moral conscience often end up in disagreement. But there are certain acts that a follower of Jesus simply cannot accept. Here is one: A Christian cannot justify the torture of a human being.
by David Batstone
Valentine's Day 1985 Remembered
From The Inside Looking Out: Report-48
by Jerry Levin
People I meet still ask, why
this one time completely secular Jewish American atheist and
mainstream television network foreign correspondent gave up that
career to become a full time volunteer member of CPT (Christian
Peacemaker Teams). And I tell them it has everything to do with my
kidnapping by the Hizballah in 1984 back when I was running CNN's
Middle East bureau in Beirut. Up until that time, I had believed
quite emphatically and unquestioningly in what you might call the
efficacy of violence. In other words, I was convinced that in certain
situations violence worked. Coupled with that belief was also my
atheistic or perhaps only agnostic disbelief, a disdain for the
entire concept of faith, which perceived no rational connection
between my sometimes "yes" belief in the efficacy of violence, and my
always "no" disbelief in God.
But in captivity after ten days of intense contemplation, I reasoned
my way to a complete conceptual turn around: to an always belief in
God and a never belief in the efficacy of violence. It was triggered
in part because of an ah! ha! moment in which I experienced a sudden
insight as to the absolute inability of human violence to achieve any
condition that can be of permanent value to humankind.
With respect to nonviolence, it became clear to me in captivity that
the absence of nonviolence as a primary motivating force in terms of
conduct--in terms of human behavior in other words--remains
undoubtedly one of the most crucial problems that the world needs to
face up to without blinking, if humankind is to survive.
We need to face up to the undeniable effects of rationalized
violence, because, to begin with, too many people--especially here at
home in the United States, and, of course, elsewhere--only give lip
service to teachings about nonviolence as taught for instance by
Jesus during his Sermon on the Mount. By their actions however, it is
clear they are doing their best to turn Jesus into a nationalistic
tribal God of war.
A Biblical Reflection On Genesis 12:3
by Naim Ateek
One of the biblical texts that is often used by Christian Zionists is Genesis 12:3. I still recall the first time I heard it mentioned. It was Christmas 1989 when Archbishop Desmond Tutu came to visit us in Jerusalem. The first intifada was at its peak. Yet in spite of the worsening political situation, the restrictions on movement, and the oppressive Israeli army measures, we managed to have the festive Christmas services with overflow crowds at every event.
On the day after Christmas, we went on a courtesy visit to the Israeli minister of religious affairs. Archbishop Tutu spoke "truth to power" and combined courage with candor. He told the minister about the importance of giving the Palestinians justice and freedom. As we were leaving the government building, we were followed by a man who kept repeatedly shouting the words at us, "Genesis twelve three; Genesis 12:3." I could hardly wait to get home in order to look up the text in the Bible. It read, "I will bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you I will curse; and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed." The message that the man wanted to communicate to us was simple and clear. For him the text meant that God blesses all those who stand with and support Israel and curses those who stand against it. Furthermore, he presumed that if we were critical of Israel's policies we were incurring God's curse and he wanted to invoke that curse on us.
Captive and Imprisoned: Lectionary reflections for the Seventh Sunday of Easter
By Johncy Itty
Readings for Easter 7, Year C, May 23, 2004
Acts 16:16-34
Psalm 97
Revelation 22:12-14, 16-17, 20-21
John 17:20-26
As we draw closer to the season of Pentecost, we are constantly reminded of the power of God to change human hearts, minds, and attitudes. On the eve of Pentecost, we pray that the presence of the Holy Spirit will help to inform and direct the course of our lives as members of a Christian family.
Our meditations for the seventh Sunday in Easter include a well-known passage from the book of Acts in which Paul and Silas were imprisoned and caused to suffer a great deal because of their faith and their steadfast proclamation of the Good News of Jesus Christ. Despite their mistreatment and false arrest, Paul and Silas slowly transformed the minds and hearts of their captors and others who were imprisoned, through their deep sense of faith and, especially, their behavior. Our text notes: "About midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the prisoners were listening to them."
