Time in the
Word
2-7 March, 2015
Preparation for next week, The Third Sunday in Lent
2-7 March, 2015
Preparation for next week, The Third Sunday in Lent
The theme for the Third Sunday in Lent
is Meeting the demands of the Law. Lent points to the cross as the only means of
fulfilling God’s demands. These demands are spelled out in the Old Testament
lesson with the giving of the Ten Commandments and in the Gospel lesson which
shows us that these demands are not being met so that Jesus, in righteous indignation,
cleanses the temple of the commercial traffic conducted in the name of
religion. The solution to the problem is in the cross where the price of
disobedience was paid and where perfect obedience to God was demonstrated.
Since Christ has fulfilled the demands of the Law, believers in Christ are free
from the curse of the Law as a means of finding favor with God. The suggested
Psalm emphasizes the excellence of God’s law the Lord requires.
Prayer for the Lent 2: O
God, You see that of ourselves we
have no strength. By Your mighty power defend us from all adversities that may
happen to the body and from all evil thoughts that may assault and hurt the
soul through Jesus Christ, Your Son our Lord, who lives and reigns with You and
the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen
A Prayer for aid against
temptation: O God, You justify the ungodly and desire not the death of the sinner.
Graciously assist us by Your heavenly aid and evermore shield us with Your
protection, that no temptation may separate us from Your love in Christ Jesus,
our Lord.
A Prayer in times of
temptation: Almighty and everlasting God, through Your Son You have promised us
forgiveness of sins and everlasting life. Govern our hearts by Your Holy Spirit
that in our daily needs, and especially in all time of temptation we may seek
Your help and, by a true and lively faith in Your Word, obtain all that You
have promised; through the same Jesus Christ, our Lord.
A Prayer for humility: O
God, You resist the proud and give grace to the humble. Grant us true humility
after the likeness of Your only Son that we may never be arrogant and prideful
and thus provoke Your wrath but in all lowliness be made partakers of the gifts
of Your grace; through Jesus Christ, our Lord.
For blessing on the Word: Lord
God, bless Your Word wherever it is proclaimed. Make it a word of power and
peace to convert those not yet Your own and to confirm those who have come to
saving faith. May Your Word pass from the ear to the heart, from the heart to
the lip, and from the lip to the life that, as You have promised, Your Word may
achieve the purpose for which You send it; through Jesus Christ, our Lord.
Amen.
Collect for the Third Sunday in
Lent—O
God, whose glory it is always to have mercy, be gracious to all who have gone
astray from Your ways and bring them again with penitent hearts and steadfast
faith to embrace and hold fast the unchangeable truth of Your Word; through
Jesus Christ, Your Son, on Lord, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy
Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen
Monday, 2 March 2015—Psalm 69:14-16; antiphon, Psalm 69:9—The Introit sets the theme for the day:
meeting the demands of the law. Without
the Lord by our side, there is nothing we can do but fall. Yet, with the Lord,
we are sustained and rescued, and we rise to new life rather than sink.
Tuesday, 3 March 2015—Psalm 19
key verse v.8 and John 6:68 —Here
you have the words of eternal life. In this psalm, David reminds us once again
and emphasizes the excellence of God’s Law. The Theme of the Day reminds us
that eternal life is in the words of Christ and not in the words of the Law.
Wednesday, 4 March 2015—Exodus 20:1-17—The demands of God’s
Law. God gives the Ten Commandments to
Moses and his people. The Ten Commandments are the unconditional demands of
God. They are absolute laws that express the will of God for His people. Israel is His people for a covenant was
established at Mt.
Sinai . The Commandments
follow the covenant relationship as the people’s response to God’s grace in
making the covenant. They are not conditions to be met before God is their God
but rather because He is their God. They will live as His children according to
these absolute laws. The laws were written on two tablets of stone by the
finger of God indicating that the laws come from God and not from social
development. The two tablets refer to the division of the laws as they relate
to God and to people.
Thursday, 5 March 2015—1 Corinthians 1:22-25—The fulfillment of
God’s law in the cross. The crucified Christ is preached as the power and
wisdom of God. The message of Christ crucified has difficulty in gaining a
sympathetic hearing in the world. Both Jews and Greeks were opposed to it. The
Jews demanded a sign and found the cross to be a stumbling block. The Jews
asked how God’s Son, the Messiah, could die on a cross, reserved for the worst
criminals. Moreover, the Jews looked for signs in terms of their being
spectacular and startling. How could Jesus be the Messiah when He came as one
meek and lowly and refusing to use violence?
The Greeks, too, were hostile to the cross, for they wanted wisdom. But
to them the message of the cross was foolishness. In spite of this hostile
environment, Paul is determined to preach Christ crucified, the power and
wisdom of God.
Friday, 6 March 2015—John 2:13-22—Man’s failure to keep God’s
law. Jesus cleanses the temple of those who traded in it. In the first three
Gospels, Jesus begins His ministry in Galilee, but in John’s Gospel the focus
is on Jerusalem. In the first three Gospels, the cleansing of the temple comes
at the end of Jesus’ ministry, but John’s Gospel puts it at the beginning. In
the first three Gospels, the cleansing of the temple becomes the immediate
cause of Jesus’ arrest. In John, the
cleansing is related to the Jew’s demand for a sign authorizing Him to take
such dramatic action. Jesus’ sign was the destruction of the temple and
rebuilding it in three days – a forecast of His death and resurrection.
“Who are you to say or
do what you said or did?” This question
is the same as the Jews’ asking Jesus for a sign. The temple with its activities,
services, and programs is in the charge of the priests who were authorized to
take care of the temple. Who is this itinerant peasant preacher to say what is
right to do in the temple? This question
is certainly in order. Jesus gives them the sign of the cross. He is the one
whose temple will be destroyed and rebuilt on the third day. This proves who He
is – the Messiah – and He has the right and the authority to cleanse the
temple.
Saturday, 7 March 2015—
Psalm 67:1-2— The hymn of the Day is May God Bestow on Us His Grace {LSB
823}. These verses introduce a prayer.
The heart of the prayer is found in verse one, echoing the priestly benediction
that God’s people have received for thousands of years. The Lord blesses us as
He comes to us in the person of Jesus Christ our Savior.
Prayers
from Lutheran Service Book © 2006 Concordia Publishing House.
Lectionary
Preaching Workbook Series B John Brokhoff © 1981 CSS Publishing Lima , OH
Illustration from a woodcut by Baron Julius Schnoor von Carolsfeld, 1794-1872, a
distinguished German artist known especially for his book, Das Buch der
Bücher in Bilden (The Book of Books in Pictures).
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