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VBS or *Don’t* Skip Verse 6…

So I’m teaching the 5th grade class at VBS this summer.  We’re using a Protestant product called Rainforest Adventure. Our seminarian had told me that they were planning modifications to add more depth among other things.  Someone else had given me this little booklet of five pages that covered each of the days, one leaflet per day.  I took one look at that and said whoa, this can NOT be it.  There is NO WAY I can make this last 30 minutes, there’s nothing here! So I spoke again to the Seminarian and asked if the VBS planning meeting had been held and if there were more materials. (Please oh please oh please…) He said there had not yet been a meeting but that he could give me the packet of materials they had prepared. *Que the Hallelujah Chorus*

As he briefed me on the packet he showed me a page which detailed the rearrangement of the topics on subsequent days and the added materials recommended for our use.  He pointed at the first day which covered love using John 15: 1-17.  Beside this was an admonition in all caps, bolded, and underlined, which stated “DO NOT SKIP VERSE 6!”  He took care to point that out to me.  I said to him that I was not in the habit of skipping verses when I read scripture.  He said yes, but don’t skip verse 6.  I said WHY would I skip verse 6?? He said well, the original materials tell you to skip verse 6, but we do not want the teachers to skip verse 6.  I said ooooooooooooh ok then, thinking to self ‘not a problem because I DON’T SKIP VERSES WHEN READING SCRIPTURE.’

Today I sat down to work on VBS lesson plans and, remembering the ‘skip this verse’ exchange, dug out my little booklet to see if that verse was skipped on what I had.  Sure enough, it was.

With the lovely new packet of materials the Priest and Seminarian had put together, I started my prep at the top, opening my Bible to the scriptures in John.  As I began to read, I looked forward to that verse with great interest, wondering what on earth needed to be ‘cut’ from the scripture being studied by the children.  Then I began to laugh and thought, ‘Of. Course!’ What can I say, it was either laugh or cry.

Remember now, this is a verse in the gospel of John.  In fact, if your Holy Bible has the words of Christ in red, THIS verse would be in red.  In fact, there are red verses before it and red verses after it so THIS verse being in red wouldn’t be a printing error.  So WHY would we be advised EVER to ‘skip and not read’ the very words of our Lord Jesus Christ?

Well, let’s take a wee peek at what those words are and see, shall we? (I’ll even give you a little context.)

5

5 I am the vine, you are the branches. Whoever remains in me and I in him will bear much fruit, because without me you can do nothing.

6 Anyone who does not remain in me will be thrown out like a branch and wither; people will gather them and throw them into a fire and they will be burned.

7 If you remain in me and my words remain in you, ask for whatever you want and it will be done for you.

That verse might be kind of hard to reconcile with the Once Saved Always Saved theology to which so many Protestant denominations adhere. Still, wow.  It’s one thing to know that people have stripped out scripture that they don’t agree with (ie the Deuterocanonical books and those pesky bits in Daniel and Esther).  It’s one thing to know that people still strip away and deny the truth of the scripture they’ve kept by twisting and misrepresenting the teachings therein. After all, it’s somehow detached from us, historical or theoretical.  It’s something else entirely to see it done so blatantly, in practice, and in order to deceive children. 

What was that Christ said about letting children come to Him?  I think He said something about causing children to sin and a millstone as well (Luke 17:1-2) or are we skipping that scripture too? Skipping scripture is a dangerous thing… sort of like giving a mouse a cookie… skip one and you have to skip another… and another… like this one in Matthew (4:4)…

4
He said in reply, “It is written: ‘One does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes forth from the mouth of God.’

(Emphasis mine.) Interesting how all those scriptures you’d have to skip to be comfortable skipping the first one are ALSO straight from the mouth of our Lord (and in a Holy Bible those are all in red). Wonder if that is why so many Protestants I talk to quote Paul more than they quote Christ.

Dunno about you, but I don’t skip verses when I read scripture… It isn’t life unless it is lived by every word that comes forth from the mouth of God… and He came that I might have life, and that more abundantly (John 10:10)!

Oh, and about not having enough material? Not a problem anymore… Now I don’t have enough time!

 
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Posted by on August 13, 2008 in Protestantism, Scripture, Sin

 

I am the vine…

When I was ‘growing up protestant’, scripture verses were something which became as familiar as breath.  Various verses stood out particularly to me over time, and one of those verses was John 15:5.

I am the vine, you are the branches. Whoever remains in me and I in him will bear much fruit, because without me you can do nothing.

This is a verse that caused a great deal of frustration and doubt for me.  My father is very active in teaching in his church, and outside of it.  He’s led Bible studies in a prison ministry, Sunday school classes, private Bible studies in homes, worked Kairos and Walk to Emmaus Weekends. He’s impacted a lot of people for the Lord.  My eldest brother was a missionary for seven years behind the iron curtain (before it fell). Big shoes to follow in… and this verse was often referred to in such a context. 

I never liked the whole ‘street corner/tract/accost people’ type of evangelism, and it seemed to me to do more damage than good. In study of scripture, it didn’t seem to be what we were told to do anyway. Witness meant LIVING it, not TALKING about it. So despite my strong conviction about living my faith as my witness and using words only when necessary to share it, which I did my best to do, this verse haunted me. Despite every effort I made to ‘remain in him’, despite every effort to be and do what God wanted from me… I bore no fruit. I wasn’t ‘reaching anyone’ like these members of my family were… and for sure no one every ‘came to Christ’ because of me.  I couldn’t help but feel like that was an indicator that something wasn’t right, that somehow I was failing God, I wasn’t a good enough believer, a good enough follower… and so it went.

Then God made me Catholic, and I didn’t think about winning anyone to Him anymore, I just wanted to sit at His feet and learn, absorb all that I had been cheated of, and incorporate the devotions etc into my life that would help me to love Him, know Him, and serve Him better. It was just enough to be His… enough to live my life in service to Him, even if I was never good enough to be of any real use… I’d give what I had and it was a joy to do what He had called me to do.  I was excited to share what I was learning and discovering, but that was it… and in doing so I had come to understand that reaching others wasn’t my job. It never had been.  That was the Holy Spirit’s job and it was a relief to stop trying to be good enough to do it myself.   

I understood, accepted, believed that in my head… but the teaching of one’s youth is not easily to rise above… even when it was in error. Then today, my paradigm shifted… again…

Today, on the Spitfire Grill, someone posted saying that “The Journey Home”, currently playing on EWTN, had a woman on with an experience very similar to ours.   Her name is Carol A. Fletcher, a former charismatic pentecostal.  It was an excellent testimony to her journey and many things stood out to me, but one thing stopped me cold and I had to turn off the audio feed to process it.

John 15:5 was mentioned and the ‘fruit’ discussed… but it wasn’t about winning souls.  As I realized they were talking about a familiar verse, but in an unfamiliar way, I listened closer and suddenly it hit me like that proverbial two-by-four and I turned off the audio feed as tears welled up and flowed down my cheeks. This ‘fruit’ that had tormented me for so long wasn’t the ‘fruit’ of winning of souls at ALL… it is the fruit of the SPIRIT! All this time I had been judging myself so harshly, and not even by the right standard (ok, so I had been judging myself by the ‘fruit of the Spirit’ verse too, but you see what I mean). It took me awhile, sitting there in shock, allowing that understanding to seep in, and felt a big burden I hadn’t even realized was still there, lift and fall away.

I’ve come so far, have learned so much and yet, I know nothing. I am still a child and have so much yet to learn. I am so grateful for the great blessing and gift of a faith filled upbringing.  I owe much to my father for such a great gift… he gave me the most precious thing he had to give… faith… I would not be here were it not for him, for that foundation, for the things he taught me, for teaching me to always hunger for everything of God.  Were it not for him, and the leading of God, I would not be here… and I wouldn’t have missed it for anything in the world.

 
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Posted by on December 19, 2006 in Evangelism, Scripture

 

Did Jesus have brothers?

In Luke 2:41-51 is the story of Jesus at age 12 having been left in Jerusalem. We hear of his parents searching for him among their friends and relatives, of their travel back to Jerusalem and their search for him there as well as the finding in the temple etc. What we hear absolutely NOTHING of here is any siblings. Jesus is still an only child at the age of twelve. He has relatives, but no siblings.

41
Each year his parents went to Jerusalem for the feast of Passover,
42
and when he was twelve years old, they went up according to festival custom.
43
After they had completed its days, as they were returning, the boy Jesus remained behind in Jerusalem, but his parents did not know it.
44
Thinking that he was in the caravan, they journeyed for a day and looked for him among their relatives and acquaintances,
45
but not finding him, they returned to Jerusalem to look for him.
46
After three days they found him in the temple, sitting in the midst of the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions,
47
and all who heard him were astounded at his understanding and his answers.
48
When his parents saw him, they were astonished, and his mother said to him, “Son, why have you done this to us? Your father and I have been looking for you with great anxiety.”
49
And he said to them, “Why were you looking for me? Did you not know that I must be in my Father’s house?”
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But they did not understand what he said to them.
51
He went down with them and came to Nazareth, and was obedient to them; and his mother kept all these things in her heart.

We do see a reference to brothers and sisters in Matthew 13:55-56…

55
Is he not the carpenter’s son? Is not his mother named Mary and his brothers James, Joseph, Simon, and Judas?
56
Are not his sisters all with us? Where did this man get all this?”

Again, in Matt 27:56 we hear another reference to Mary and the sons James and Joseph…

56
Among them were Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of James and Joseph, and the mother of the sons of Zebedee.

However, John 19:25 says…

25
Standing by the cross of Jesus were his mother and his mother’s sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary of Magdala.

This shows that what may at first appear to be the mother of Jesus, and by extension his siblings, in Matthew 13:55-56 and Matthew 27:56 is in fact Jesus mother’s sister, who is also named Mary and apparently a frequent companion to Mary Magdalene. This makes it abundantly clear that James, Joseph, Simon and Judas are not Jesus brothers in the sense that they are born to the same mother. On the contrary, they are his cousins. In Middle Eastern cultures, it is very common for male relatives to be called one’s brothers, and one’s female relatives to be called sisters. Even other familial appellations often are used in a more general sense in the Middle East than they are in most Western cultures.

Fr. William Saunders explains: The problem emerges in understanding the meaning of the word brother. In the original text of the gospel, we find the Greek word adelphos, meaning brother, used. However, adelphos does not just mean blood brothers born of the same parents. Rather, adelphos was used to describe brothers not born of the same parents, like a half-brother or step-brother. The word also described other relationships like cousins, nephews, etc. For example in Genesis 13:8 and 14:14-16, the word adelphos was used to describe the relationship between Abraham and Lot; however, these two men did not share a brother relationship, but one of uncle and nephew. Another instance is that of Laban, who was an adelphos to Jacob, not as a brother, but as an uncle.

The same understanding is true for the word sister. For example, in the Gospel, Mary of Clophas is called “the sister” of Mary, the Mother of Jesus. Obviously, St. Ann and St. Joachim would not have named two daughters “Mary”; instead, the “sister” used here denotes a cousin relationship.

Actually this verbal confusion originates in Hebrew and Aramaic, the languages of most of the original Old Testament texts and of Christ. In these languages, no special word existed for cousin, nephew, half-brother, or step-brother; so they used the word brother or a circumlocution, such as in the case of a cousin, “the son of the brother of my father.” When the Old Testament was translated into Greek and the New Testament written in Greek, the word adelphos was used to capture all of these meanings. So in each instance, we must examine the context in which the title is used. In all, the confusion arises in English because of the lack of distinct terms for relatives in the Hebrew and Aramaic, and the usage of the Greek adelphos to signify all of these relations.*

In the light of this, while it is clear that Mary, the mother of James, Joseph, Simon and Judas is a near relative to Mary the mother of Jesus it is unlikely that she is actually the daughter of Mary’s parents, as it would be highly unusual to name two daughters the same name. In fact, she may be a sister-in-law, and not of the same mother, which would explain the apparent oddity of two sisters being given the same name. In light off this passage, and the cultural literacy, it is also easy to understand how in the Matthew 13 passage it would be easy for acquaintances to know Jesus relatives but misunderstand to which ‘Mary’ he belonged. Either way, it is abundantly clear from the John 19:25 passage that the Mary, mother of James, Joseph, Simon and Judas is NOT Mary the mother of Jesus. Therefore we still see no evidence of siblings born of Mary, the mother of Jesus.

Also in this passage in John 19:25, we see Jesus mother and his mother’s sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary of Magdala at the foot of the cross. In Middle Eastern culture, the males in the family are responsible for the women. Once the husband is dead, the responsibility of caring for mother and sisters falls on the eldest son and should the eldest son die, on down through the succession of sons. In this case, Joseph is long gone from the scene and Jesus has obviously taken responsibility from his mothers care. So here is Christ upon the cross, he is dying and he knows it and here before him is his mother for whose care he is directly responsible. Had he brothers younger than he, and he died, the care of his mother would pass on to the next son in line and there would’ve been no need to address the issue of her care. Yet here Jesus turns to the ‘disciple whom he loves’ and says to his mother, ‘Woman, behold your son’ and then to the disciple, ‘behold your mother’ and the passage says from that hour the disciple took her into his home. That means he took over the care and responsibility of Jesus mother… the responsibility that should’ve passed on to the next son… unless Jesus was the ONLY son of Mary, in which case he would’ve known she was going to be left without provision. We see in the case of Ruth and Boaz that such responsibilities were not overlooked lightly. If someone other than the nearest kin wants to take on a responsibility that by right belongs to someone else, that person must give up the right to the care of the dependant person before someone else may assume it. We hear nothing in this passage of such a thing happening. Jesus gives over her care and it is done. Instantly. Very strong evidence that Jesus was, in fact, the only son Mary had.

In John 7:3-5 we see ‘brothers’ giving Jesus advice as an elder would do…

3
So his brothers said to him, “Leave here and go to Judea, so that your disciples also may see the works you are doing.
4
No one works in secret if he wants to be known publicly. If you do these things, manifest yourself to the world.”
5
For his brothers did not believe in him.

This is not the behavior of younger siblings. Neither is it the rebellious and angry urges of jealous younger siblings, but counsel such as elders in a family would give. Likewise, Jesus does not rebuke them as he would have the authority to do with younger siblings… but responds with respect even as he disagrees with them. Once again we are seeing a cultural use of familial language in a general sense… male relatives referred to as ‘brothers’.

We see yet more references to ‘brothers’ in Mark 3:21 but nothing that does not also fit within the cultural language, nothing to suggest that these ‘brothers’ are anything more specific than male relatives of Christ. In fact, if anything the authority they exhibit in trying to seize him supports the understanding of them as elder male members of the family.

Another scripture often used to argue for siblings, or at the very least against the perpetual virginity of Mary, is Mathew 1:24-25.

24
When Joseph awoke, he did as the angel of the Lord had commanded him and took his wife into his home.
25
He had no relations with her until she bore a son, and he named him Jesus.

Yet this does not say that Joseph ‘knew’ her AFTER she bore her son. It clarifies that he had no relationship with her UP UNTIL she bore the son. In the conversation with my Dad that sent me to typing up the reasons for my belief, Dad asked how it might have made any siblings of Christ feel to know of the special nature of his conception etc, specifically the overshadowing of the Holy Spirit. I suggest that the same question should be asked of Joseph. Would a man not feel some reservation at BEST about engaging in marital relations with a woman whom he KNEW had born the son of the Living God? Might he not have seen her as set apart and refrained from such relations? Such a possibility must be considered, especially since this passage in no way indicates that Joseph had relations with Mary AFTER the birth, but instead is obviously making it crystal clear that no relations existed BEFORE the birth of Christ

*I realize that some would prefer a reference not ‘in league with the Catholic Church’ for this but it is late at night and I’m tired so I’m not going digging for the others, though I know they exist, and settling for one as this is hardly a hidden or obscure cultural practice.

 
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Posted by on August 20, 2006 in Perpetual Virginity, Scripture

 

Shekinah Glory…

The first homeschool support group meeting of the year was held last night.  As I was driving over, with silence (oh blessed silence) in the car, I took the opportunity to pray the rosary.  Starting with the Joyful Mysteries, the first Mystery was the Annunciation. 

Recently, on the homeschool forums, we got into a pretty heated discussion of Mary (and all things Marian in the Roman Catholic Church).  As usual, several of us (the Catholic ladies on the forum) found ourselves defending practices we don’t engage in personally.  However, one thing considered Marian (I disagree with that by the way, I find it much more Christocentric than I do Marian. In reality, the rosary is a meditation on the life of Christ.) that I have found to be an incredible blessing is the Rosary (and all the prayers associated with it, even the Hail Mary, Hail Holy Queen, Memorare, etc).  During the course of that discussion one of the Catholic ladies said something about the presence of the Lord ‘covering’ Mary during the Annunciation.  Being well familiar with the sacred scriptures, this was not new to me although it did sort of roll lazily around in the pinball game of my mind a little longer than usual, as though there were something MORE there that I just wasn’t seeing.  In the end, it rolled quietly on down and off the board of my mind without any lights or bells going off.

Back to praying the rosary on the drive, here I am praying through the scriptures on the Annunciation and I get to the 8th Hail Mary bead and read the scripture for that bead…

And the angel said to her in reply, “The holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you.  Luke 1:35a

…and all the bells and lights and whistles on the ol’ pinball machine went off like lightening had run through it. It HIT me what that meant. When one thinks of the power of the Most high overshadowing something, what comes to mind? The column of cloud (and fire) that led the people in the wilderness in Exodus, the cloud/fire of the Presence that filled the Tabernacle in Exodus, the cloud on the mountain which encompassed the Presence and out of which the Voice called to Moses, also in Exodus, and in 1 Kings when the Temple is completed and the cloud, the Presence, the Shekinah of the Lord comes to dwell there in the Holy of Holies.  What did that ‘overshadowing’ of the ‘cloud’ show? The dwelling place of the Lord. Every. Time. It was a physical sign that the Lord was present and ’taking up residence’ as it were. That is what is happening in Luke 1:35!!!!  The impact of that expanded understanding broke over me like the first warm and sunny day after 8 months of winter and I could’ve basked in it for much longer than the short drive I had left. 

I never could’ve imagined that the Lord would teach me as much as He has through ’praying’ the rosary… Instead of the ’idol worship’ it was claimed to be, the rosary has proven to be an intimate time of communion and communication with the Lord and He delights in teaching me through it.  Once again I find myself treasuring a new pearl of great price found during its use.

 
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Posted by on August 4, 2006 in Devotions, Rosary, Scripture

 

Dante’s Inferno…

As I struggle with getting our lives back into the routine after several months of chaos due to circumstances beyond our control, I opened my Catechumen’s Lectionary to prepare for next Sunday, the 33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time.  The first reading was from Proverbs 31… Ouch.  I bear so little resemblance to the Proverbs 31 woman right now that if entry to heaven were based on it I would experience every level of Dante’s hell so quickly that only a swift red blur and I would slide up against the back wall of the last level with a resounding THUNK.  I think God set me up again.  I’ve been getting ‘messages’ lately about the need for order, etc… Ok, ‘messages’ might be a bit strong… how bout ‘heavenly hints’. I kept saying, “but I HAVE a routine, I HAVE a schedule that works… it just isn’t working RIGHT NOW!” I think He’s been saying it is time for a NEW ONE… and I’ve been resisting. (WHY do I do that? What is it about me that it is necessary for Him to SHOW me how badly something is broken before I’m willing to change?) I know women joke about the Proverbs 31 woman, but I firmly believe God put her there to inspire us, as what we CAN attain, not to rub our faces in the impossible.  I know that is what HE wants for me.  I know that is what CAN be.  It is what I WANT for myself…

The second reading was 1 Thess 5:1-6.  A reminder that the Lord’s coming will be as a thief in the night.  I need to be ready… physically, mentally, emotionally… but not only for the return of the Lord.  I need to be ready in all those ways for ANY thing He sends to me each day.  I can’t do that if I’m living a chaotic life, regardless of how hard I’m trying to dig myself out of that chaos.   I must be ready in order to be of use to the Lord.

The gospel was in Matt 25:14-30.  The parable of the talents.  I have been given much, four talents in particular, and I need to be working with those talents and preparing them for the return of the Lord.  I am doing that… but I would be able to do so much MORE with those ‘talents’ if my life were more ordered.

For SOME reason God has allowed this testing to come.  He has allowed our schedule, our routine, to be blown apart and seems to desire that it not remake itself in the same fashion.  Oh Lord, as I read through A Mother’s Rule of Life and work through the MOTH scheduling, help me to form the routine, the schedule that YOU desire for our family.  Guide my hand, give me wisdom, and love my family through me.  As we continue to seek You first each day, show us how You desire our steps to be directed that our ways might be pleasing to You and glorify you in all we do and say.

 
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Posted by on November 8, 2005 in Parenting, Scripture

 
 
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