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The intent of Pilgrim Processing is to provide commentary on the Daily Lectionary from the 1979 Book of Common Prayer. The format for the comment is Old Testament Lesson first, Gospel, and Epistle with a portion of one of the Psalms for the day as a prayer at the end.

Monday, December 31, 2012

31 December 2012




Isaiah suggests that there is a relationship between righteousness and peace.  We are encouraged to seek after righteousness, to set Him and the pursuit of righteousness above all other things.  We are to look for the kingdom of God, to long for it to be established, in order that we may know true peace from our enemies.  He says that when this day comes, evil will be trampled on by the poor and needy.  True strength comes from righteousness.  Do we understand and believe that truth?  If we are guilty of sin, unconfessed and unrepented of sin, then we lack the power of God in our lives, we block that power, we stand without assurance, we are fearful and doubtful.  Jesus is the only righteous man who ever lived and His power came from that righteousness.  He had no fear of man because He had no fear of God.  He needed not fear judgment.  Isaiah connects judgment and the pursuit of righteousness.  The more we fear God's judgments the more we seek after righteousness, the way to avoid that judgment.  The perfect righteousness required to avoid judgment is imputed to us, it is an alien righteousness, the righteousness of Jesus.  The preaching of the Gospel is not complete unless the need for grace, the judgment of God, is not in view so that people may seek Jesus rightly.

Could anyone actually believe that Jesus is the light of the world, that if you follow Him you will not walk in darkness?  Is that not a truly amazing thing for anyone to say?  We have to give the Pharisees a bit of a break for not believing, if we didn't have the Holy Spirit we couldn't believe it either.  It is, however, true and it would have been wrong for Jesus not to state it thus.  They argue that they need further evidence, someone else to give such testimony if they are to believe it.  He offers a second witness, His Father.  Their response is to ask where His Father is and Jesus uses what would seem to be circular logic, you can't know the Father because you don't know me.  In order to know the Father you have to believe in the Son and disbelief in the Son proves you don't know the Father.  We understand this to be not circular logic, but the logic of the Trinity, the three are One and to deny one is to deny both the particulars and the whole.

Paul says that he isn't going to repeat the same mistake over and again.  When he regarded Jesus according to the flesh he was wrong, he needed a spiritual revelation of the truth in order to make a right judgment.  Now, he says, he isn't going to judge anyone according to the flesh, according to what he sees because it has already been proven to him that such judgment is faulty.  In Christ we are new creations, new beings, not to be judged by the flesh, our standing in society.  We are to be judged spiritually.  As Jesus' ministry was reconciliation so is ours.  We are called to be reconciled to God and that is a two step process, recognizing we are at odds with God, and then pursuing His given means of reconciliation.  If we are at odds with one another because we did something to another that caused that division we no longer control the means of reconciliation, that prerogative lies with the one who was sinned against doesn't it?  Jesus, then, is the only way given by God to bring about reconciliation.  Again, Trinitarian logic, the Holy Spirit is given that we may discern truth and that truth is Jesus, the only way to the Father, a closed loop.

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