Collect for Epiphany 5—O Lord, keep Your family the
Church continually in the true faith that, relying on the hope of Your heavenly
grace, we may ever be defended by Your mighty power; through Jesus Christ, Your
Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, one God, now
and forever. Amen.
Daily
let pray-
Sunday – For the joy of the resurrection
among us; for the fruit of faith nourished by the Word and Sacraments
Monday- For faith to live in the promises
of Holy Baptism; for one’s calling and daily work; for the unemployed; for the
salvation and well-being of our neighbors; for schools,, colleges, and
seminaries; for good government and for peace;
Tuesday – For deliverance against
temptation and evil; for the addicted and despairing, the tortured and
oppressed; for those struggling with sin.
Wednesday – For marriage and family, tht
husbands and wives, parents and children lives in ordered harmony according to
the Word of God; for parents who must raise children alone; for our communities
and neighborhoods.
Thursday – For the church and her pastors;
for teachers, deaconesses, and other church workers; for missionaries and for
all who serve the Church; for fruitful and salutary use of the blessed
Sacrament of Christ’ body and blood.
Friday – For the preaching of the holy
cross of our Lord Jesus Christ and for the spread of His knowledge throughout
the whole world; for the persecuted and oppressed; for the sick and dying.
Saturday – For faithfulness to the end; for
the renewal of those who are withering in the faith or have fallen away; for
receptive hearts and minds to god’s Word on the Lord’s Day; for pastors and
people as the prepared to administer and receive Christ’s holy gifts.
Sunday’s readings give the seamy side of life. Life
can be rough and tough. Suffering, hardship, and adversity are facts of life.
This is illustrated in the prayer offered in the Introit for the week. The
Gospel tells us of Jesus healing physical and mental diseases resulting in
“Every one is searching for you.” (v.37)
Paul becomes all things to all men in whatever condition they are in –
“those under the law,” “outside the law,” and “weak” in order to win them for
Christ. In Epiphany we see the glory of God in Christ as the healer of
suffering humanity.
Time
in the Word
2–7 February, 2015
Preparation for next week, The Fifth Sunday after Epiphany
2–7 February, 2015
Preparation for next week, The Fifth Sunday after Epiphany
Healing
for a Suffering Humanity
Monday, 2 February 2015—Psalm 13:3–5; antiphon, Psalm 13:6—This
psalm of David reflects the believer’s trust in the Lord to deliver him from
the tribulations of this world. When we are in misery, the psalm encourages us
with the good news that the Lord has accomplished the salvation of those who
trust in Him (v. 5). Our response, then, is reflected in the antiphon: I
will sing to the Lord, because he
has dealt bountifully with me.
Tuesday, 3 February 2015—Psalm
147:1–11—This is a song of praise to the
greatness of the Lord, who manifests His greatness not just in mighty works,
such as determining the number of stars, and giving them all their
names, but especially because of His steadfast love which causes Him
to heal the brokenhearted and lift up the humble. For this
reason, it is no chore to sing praises to Him, but it is good to sing
praises to our God, for it is pleasant, and a song of praise is fitting.
Wednesday, 4 February 2015—Isaiah 40:21–31—This is part of a larger
section in which the Lord directs Isaiah to Comfort, comfort My people
(Isa 40:1) with the good news of forgiveness of sins. This portion tells us
that nothing can stand in the way of the Lord and His plan of salvation. He
brings those who would oppose Him to nothing, and makes the rulers of the
earth as emptiness. There can be no doubt that He will accomplish that
which He promises, for the Lord
is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth. He does not faint
or grow weary. When our human frailness would cause us to despair, we take
comfort that He gives power to the faint and that they who wait for
the Lord shall renew their
strength.
Thursday, 5 February 2015—1 Corinthians 9:16–27—St Paul boasts,
not of himself, but of the Gospel. What a privilege it is for him, and all of
us, to proclaim the Good News of salvation in Christ Jesus! He cannot but go
out to all—Jew, Gentile, weak, strong—and proclaim the forgiveness that belongs
to all men through the merits of Christ.
Out of divine necessity Paul
preaches, and to win people to Christ he identifies with them. In this chapter Paul defends his ministry
against those who condemn him for not taking pay from his churches, for”the
laborer is worthy of his hire.” Paul was economically independent by working as
a tent-maker. Paul explains that he preaches out of necessity, for he was
called to preach. He performs out of this commission and not for monetary
remuneration. This had mader him free
from being obligated to men and made him free to be all things to all men in
the hope of winning them to Christ.
Friday, 6 February 2015—Mark 1:29–39—The Epiphany—manifestation—
of our Lord continues as Jesus makes known who He is by demonstrating His
authority.
Last week, He showed that He has
authority over the unclean spirits; this week, He demonstrates His authority
also over sickness and disease. He does His proper work, delivering people from
the effects of sin. By healing diseases and casting out demons, He foreshadows
His eventual defeat of the power of sin and the devil by His death at Calvary.
Everyone searches for Jesus because
he heals all kinds of diseases. Jesus begins His public ministry with healing
both physical and mental illnesses. He does not allow the demons to reveal His
divine identity. This is a messianic secret until, at the cross, the centurion
confesses Jesus as the Son of God. Several of the Disciples want Jesus to
return to Capernaum from His place of prayer to heal, but Jesus wants to move
on to other areas of Galilee.
Did Jesus heal the woman to get
service from her? At once Peter’s mother-in-law got busy waiting on them – a
meal perhaps? It was a normal response to being helped and healed. Service is
the result of gratitude for service rendered. Service flowing from love is
service with love and a smile.
Strange, isn’t it, that only the
demons know who Jesus was. Jesus ordered them to keep silence as to His
identity. He wanted the people to discover for themselves who He was. The
secret was revealed at Calvary when the Centurion saw He was the Son of God.
The Disciples told Jesus that
everyone was searching for Him in Capernaum because of His healing. Would that
it were true that all people were searching for Jesus! And searching for Him
for the right reason! They wanted Him as a healer only. Jesus says He came not
primarily to heal but to preach – “that is why I came out.”
Saturday, 7 February 2015—The hymn
of the day, Hail to the Lord’s Anointed (LSB 398), is a fitting
hymn of praise to the Son of God made flesh and anointed at His Baptism.
Especially in stanza 2, it recounts His coming to heal those beset by the
consequence of sin in the world. But more than providing just physical relief,
He comes that their darkness turn to light, to relieve us from the
eternal consequences of sin.
Prayers
from Lutheran Service Book © 2006 Concordia Publishing House, St. Louis
Lectionary
Preaching Workbook Series B John Brokhoff © 1980 CSS Publishing, Lima, OH
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