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2nd SUNDAY IN LENT

Our journey into Lent begins in Genesis 12 with a voice inviting a solitary listener to venture out into the vast Fertile Crescent to embrace a new and unknown future. Reflecting on that story in light of Christian faith, Paul concludes that God’s saving help, not human greatness or goodness makes us acceptable to God. That view is exemplified in the gospel lesson in John 3 where Jesus invites another listener to venture out into a new life with Jesus.
 

Psalm 121—Songs of Ascent

This psalm forms one of the Songs of Ascents (Ps. 120-134) which pilgrims sung en route to Jerusalem to worship. The psalm confesses as much as it teaches its listeners to trust in God to sustain and protect on our journeys through life.

Genesis 12:1-4a-Destination: Unknown

The first eleven chapters in Genesis that form a primeval cosmology of the world closes with the mention of Abram of whom we are told his wife Sarai is "barren; she had no child." Sounds like a dead-end story-barrenness and the wilderness of Haran. But in the vocabulary of grace, dead-ends become the starting line for new adventures in God. Such is where our lesson leads Abram-and us on this Sunday. With a single thread from the earlier patchwork, the story of Abraham weaves and bobs through one faith episode after the other. "Go . . ." says God, "and I will . . ."

Romans 4:1-5; 13-17-Vocabulary of Grace

Using a similar vocabulary of grace, Paul presents Abraham as exhibit "A" in his discourse on saving faith. What do we learn from the life of Abraham? he asks. Paul answers from Genesis 15:6-God initiates ("count the stars") and Abraham responds ("And he believed"). That’s enough to justify him, Paul concludes-to believe in God’s saving help alone. Isn't there anything we can do in this adventure with God? Laws to keep? Doctrine to defend? Church attendance pins to win? Etc. The lesson closes with God’s promise and God’s ability to make it happen without our help--the vocabulary of grace.

John 3:1-17-

At night. Two leaders. An intriguing conversation with double meanings and double-talk. Ambiguity. One is a truth-seeker and the other a truth-speaker. Nicodemus’ first words suggest what many acknowledged: "no one can do these signs that you do apart from the presence of God." What follows, however, is a conversation that speaks over and past one another. Jesus uses the word, "from above" spatially (anathon), but Nicodemus hears it temporally, as in being born "again"(anathon). Like the bronze serpent Moses raised up on a pole, so Jesus will be "lifted" up and become the source of eternal life for all who believe in him.