Friday, June 29, 2018

The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection in Leawood, Kansas, United States Grow Pray Study Guide for Friday, 29 June 2018 "The first evangelists" John 4:25-30 & John 20:17-18
Daily Scripture:
John 4:
25 The woman replied, “I know that Mashiach is coming” (that is, “the one who has been anointed”). “When he comes, he will tell us everything.” 26 Yeshua said to her, “I, the person speaking to you, am he.”
27 Just then, his talmidim arrived. They were amazed that he was talking with a woman; but none of them said, “What do you want?” or, “Why are you talking with her?” 28 So the woman left her water-jar, went back to the town and said to the people there, 29 “Come, see a man who told me everything I’ve ever done. Could it be that this is the Messiah?” 30 They left the town and began coming toward him.
 (Complete Jewish Bible).
John 20:
17 “Stop holding onto me,” Yeshua said to her, “because I haven’t yet gone back to the Father. But go to my brothers, and tell them that I am going back to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.” 18 Miryam of Magdala went to the talmidim with the news that she had seen the Lord and that he had told her this. (Complete Jewish Bible).
Reflection Questions:

The Samaritan woman Jesus met at the well became his first preacher. This story found its echo 16 chapters later when Mary Magdalene became the first witness to the risen Messiah, and in turn became the first preacher of this new miracle. John called his past and present audience to listen to women’s voices. Jesus did not ignore or devalue any voices. He recognized women (and others who were routinely silenced) as being powerful conduits for His miraculous message.
  • In Isaiah 42:14, the prophet used an image of God as a woman in labor. God promised to gasp, pant, and deliver his children from exile. That image, and Jesus' later making the woman at the well and Mary Magdalene the first ministers, showed that God identified with women and invited women to identify with God’s amazing story. What images of God particularly compel you? Do you most often think of God as a shepherd or a king? How would it deepen and enrich your faith if you focused on Isaiah’s image of God as a woman in labor?
  • Scholar and priest Lauren Winner invites readers of Isaiah 42 to picture God as a pregnant woman in prison, because forty-thousand women experience childbirth while imprisoned each year in America. Winner reminds readers that God regularly identifies with people who are suffering and marginalized and asks: “What can I do to meet this God? How can I serve this God? How can I befriend this God?”* How can you intentionally listen to the voices you may usually ignore, but who God readily identifies with?
Prayer: Lord God, I know that you have chosen to carry out your great story through me and others. Call me to recognize the holiness in the people around me. Bless the women in my life who gather water, share your good news, and labor to create new life. Amen.
* Winner, Lauren, Wearing God: Clothing, Laughter, Fire, and Other Overlooked Ways of Meeting God. New York: HarperOne, 2015, p. 158.

Read today's Insight by Darren Lippe
Darren Lippe helps facilitate Journey 101 “Loving God” classes, guides a 7th-grade Sunday school class, is a member of a small group and a men’s group, and serves on the curriculum team.

When I graduated from college, my first job was in Birmingham, Alabama. After 3 weeks, I went to a local barbershop. When the roomful of old codgers discovered I was from Kansas, they peppered me with questions like anthropologists learning of a strange new culture. (We are a land of brave freedom fighters, Eisenhower, & aeronautical innovation, not just the Yellow Brick Road. Sigh.) Then, as my barber put warm shaving cream on my neck & proceeded to sharpen his straightedge razor on the strap hanging from the chair, I was asked, “Who did I like? Alabama or Auburn?” Even without my glasses, as I looked around the room for the 1st time, I could see all of the magazines were vintage sports magazines with Alabama on the cover & the wood paneling was plastered with Alabama notables like Joe Namath & Bear Bryant. I replied that even though I’d been here just a few weeks, I was partial to Alabama. Everyone smiled & we had a rousing conversation about the upcoming season.
The Alabama/Auburn rivalry runs 365 days a year & there is no shortage of jokes at each other’s expense:
  • Did you hear they finally found a sign of intelligence on the Alabama campus? It read: Auburn 157 Miles
  • Hey Auburn fans, don’t call your license plate “personalized” just because your Dad made it.
  • Auburn Fan: Did you hear the new joke about the 'Bama grad? (Three large men appear.) We are 'Bama grads. Still want to tell your joke? No way. I don't have time to explain it 3 times.
  • An Alabama & Auburn fan face the firing squad. Each is given one last request. The Alabama fan tearfully asks to hear the ‘Bama fight song one last time. The Auburn fan asks to be shot first.
Sadly, today it seems like our rivalries are no longer good-natured, but are quickly getting out of hand. We are encouraged to openly dislike, despise, & detest anyone who disagrees with our political, theological, or sociological views. Ala the Godfather, we “go to the mattresses” over every single disagreement or debate.
If only there was someone who could model for us a way to deal with those with whom we disagree. This is when every Sunday School student eagerly shouts out, “Jesus!” This is correct, but for today’s purposes we’ll focus on The Woman At The Well. (Since writing Woman at the Well is rather clunky, let’s call her Brooke. Since when did clunky writing bother you? – Editor.)
Brooke arrives at the well & sees a traveler resting there. The traveler is alone & probably looks a bit dusty & disheveled. By all rights, she should promptly return home.
Jesus starts a conversation. Brooke should not listen to a man, let alone a stranger. She would be applauded for coldly ignoring Him.
Brooke is a Samaritan. Her peers would cheer her on for making some disdainful comment directed at this pathetic looking Jewish Rabbi sitting before her.
This Jewish Rabbi is asking for her cup. She should mock Him for his lack of preparedness & mentally add it to her handy list of “Why Samaritans are superior to Jews.”
After ignoring her cultural education, she listens to this weary Traveler. Only then does she discover that this Man is the long-awaited/long-dreamed of Messiah.
She leaves her jar of water & sprints to tell others in her community the Good News. Why would she go tell the very people who had been ostracizing her & harshly judging her for years? Because her heart, once filled with regret & sorrow, was now full of forgiveness & love. She had met the Messiah & He was glorious!
Again & again, Brooke broke with social convention, led with her heart, & encountered the love of Christ. Could we do the same? Could we really break with our favored peer group & actually dare to reach across the aisle & offer civility to an opponent or, gasp, perhaps even compassion? If we hesitate in our answer, we should marvel ever the more at Brooke’s amazing capacity to love.
Perhaps today is the day we resolve to listen to ideas & to communicate views that are more insightful rather than inciteful.
Now, if you’ll excuse me, an Auburn grad is ringing the doorbell. Sigh. He won’t stop until I pay him for the pizza.
Note: The above jokes have been thoroughly vetted with my Alabama & Auburn friends & no one's self-esteem was hurt in the process. (DL)
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Scripture quotations are taken from The Common English Bible ©2011.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection
13720 Roe Avenue
Leawood, Kansas 66224, United States
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