Reflections on the GOSPEL. Creation, fall, redemption, restoration /consummation /recreation. Inclusive and exclusive. Tabernacle and presence.
Loved by God.

- UBF Gospel Musings
- Chicago, IL, United States
- * It's good to suffer loss, for it draws me to the Cross where God's loss is more than what anyone ever lost. * We cannot hear what the stories of the Bible are saying until we hear them as stories about ourselves. * Let go of control. * Trust God. Thank God. Think about God. Talk to God. Talk about God.
Sunday, December 24, 2023
Day 21 Advent, 12/24/23 🔴: Jesus' Kingdom will Never End
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
Day 17 Advent (12/20/23): Fall in Love with God (Luke 1:38)
- The 1st time on 12/8/23 addressed the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Despite doctrinal differences, may Protestants and Catholics love each other in Christ.
- The 2nd time on 12/12/23 was the first time I read about our Lady of Guadalupe. God can surely choose to reveal Himself through visions and apparitions, though this has not been my own experience.
- Today, the 3rd time, focuses on Mary's submission and obedience. God's favor to her was to conceive the Son of God as a virgin (Lk 1:28-31) while betrothed to Joseph. This would cause endless shame, disgrace, misunderstanding, fear, worry, anxiety, uncertainty, and possible stoning as an adulterous woman. Yet she welcomed it as "the Lord's servant" (Lk 1:38) with overflowing joy and gratitude (Lk 1:46ff).
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Tuesday, December 19, 2023
Day 16, Advent, 12/19/23: Take Away My Disgrace (Luke 1:25)
Tuesday, December 12, 2023
Day 9 of Advent reflection, 12/12/23: Hail Mary, Full of Grace (Luke 1:28)
Tuesday, December 5, 2023
Day 3 of Advent, 12/05/23: The Mystery of the Trinity (Luke 10:21)
Wednesday, September 28, 2022
The Gospel in 5 (Double) Truths (Luke 24:44-49)
- The double event: the death and resurrection of the Messiah (Lk 24:46).
- The double proclamation: forgiveness [the gospel offer] and repentance [the gospel demand] (Lk 24:47a).
- The double scope: "to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem" (Lk 24:47b).
- The double attestation/accreditation: the OT witness (Lk 24:44, 46) the NT witness (Lk 24:48).
- The double mission. The Great Commission involved a double sending: the sending to them of the Holy Spirit (Lk 24:48) and the sending of them into the world (Lk 24:47, 49). The 2 missions go together, for the Holy Spirit is a missionary Spirit.
- proclaim repentance and forgiveness (Lk 24:47) on the basis of him who died and was raised (Lk 24:46),
- to all humankind [Gentiles and Jews] (Lk 24:47b),
- according to the Scriptures [OT, NT] (Lk 24:44, 46, 48),
- in the power of the Spirit given to us (Lk 24:49).
- Central truths--of 1st importance.
- Historical truths, not myths.
- Physical truths: 4 events are physical: death, burial, resurrection and appearances.
- Biblical truths--according to the Scriptures.
- Theological truths--events of huge significance. We deserve to die for our sins, but Christ died our death instead of us. How great is his love!
Monday, September 5, 2022
Following Jesus is Serious Business (Luke 14:25-35)
- From last Sunday's sermon (9/4/22) on Time and Money how do those closest to you shape how you use your time and money?
- Why might large crowds be travelling with Jesus (Lk 14:25)? Is Jesus telling them to hate those closest to them (Lk 14:26; Mt 10:37)?
- How might the crowd have felt about Jesus' "slap in the face" challenge? Why did he use such strong language (Lk 13:24-27; 14:16-20; Mt 10:37-39; 22:36-40)? What is Jesus affirming about Himself (Col 1:15; 2:9; Heb 1:3; Phil 2:5; Jn 1:1-3)? Did Jesus perceive them to be "fair-weather fans"? Do they know what following Jesus means?
- What does it mean to those following Jesus to "carry their cross" (Lk 14:27)?
- What do the 2 parabolic stories (Lk 14:28-32) tell us about what we should do if we are serious about following Jesus (Lk 14:33)?
- What does it mean for salt to lose its saltiness (Lk 14:34-35a)? What should we hear from Jesus (Lk 14:35b)?
Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Cultural Misconception of Luke 15
- The request: The prodigal's request is an unthinkable breach of traditional culture. (He wants his father to die.)
- His father's gift: The father reprocesses anger into grace and thereby deeply violates the code of an Oriental patriarch. (As is shown five times in the parable).
- A hurried sale: The prodigal triggers the anger of the community. (He must leave town quickly.)
- The kezaza ceremony: A threat hanging over the prodigal as he leaves town. (He must not lose the money.)
- Expensive living: Not riotous (KJ), nor loose (RSV), nor dissolute (NRSV), nor wild (NIV). (The Greek word asotos is literally a + sozo, i.e. without saving. No hints of immorality)
- Search for employment: The prodigal must find a paying job so he can repurchase the land. (The kezaza ceremony now threatens.)
- Inauthentic Repentance: He projects A self-serving plan: (Augustinian or Pelagian? Complications with the lost sheep and coin.)
- Turning point: The costly demonstration of unexpected love. (Grace not law. Love is offered before the confession.)
- A father who behaves like a mother. (The father is defined by Hosea 11, not by Middle Eastern culture.)
- Authentic Repentance: The Prodigal Revises His speech – he is not interrupted. (Like the lost sheep, he accepts to be found).
- Christology: Incarnation and atonement meet. (This happens with the shepherd, the woman and the father.)
- The meaning of the banquet (a theological trialogue):
- Father's comments: Because - He was lost and is found .. dead and is alive (divine passives)
- Young boy: .... Because, he (the Father) received him (the prodigal) with peace.
- Older son: You killed for him the fattened calf.
- Older son's anger at grace. (for some grace is not only amazing – it is also infuriating!)
- His mentality: (You get what you pay for, don't you?)
- His response: (He breaks his relationship with his father - like the prodigal, only more so.)
- Father's response: The Father once again reprocessed anger into grace. At the same time the father urges the older son dealing with the prodigal in the same way.
- Older son's final reaction: An unfinished theological symphony (participation theater).
Thursday, February 20, 2020
Who represents Who in Luke 15
Why the shepherd (Lk 15:4-7), woman (Lk 15:8-10) and father (Lk 15:11-32) in Luke 15 are symbols for God and Jesus.
Allegory reigned supreme for many centuries as a method of interpretation, and the fatted calf in the parable of the prodigal son became a symbol for Christ because the calf was killed. Through allegory, interpreters were able to locate their favorite ideas almost anywhere, and confusion and finally meaninglessness conquered. This is probably why parables ceased to be sources for Christian faith and were limited to ethics.
In reaction to the fanciful exaggerations that the allegorical method produced in past centuries, across the twentieth century there was a stream of scholarship that argued for “one point per parable.” Others allowed for several themes in a parable. The purpose was to protect interpretation from adding meanings to the text that could not have occurred to Jesus or his audience.
But if the great parable of the prodigal son has “only one point,” which shall we choose? Should the interpreter choose “the nature of the fatherhood of God,” “an understanding of sin,” “self-righteousness that rejects others,” “the nature of true repentance,” “joy in community” or “finding the lost”? All of these theological themes are undeniably present in the story and together form a whole that Kenneth Bailey calls “the theological cluster.” Each part of that cluster is in creative relationship to the other parts. The meaning of each can only be understood fully within the cluster formed by the entire parable. The content of the cluster must be controlled and limited by what Jesus’ original audience could have understood.
Simply stated, our task is to stand at the back of the audience around Jesus and listen to what he is saying to them. Only through that discipline can we discover what he is saying to any age, including our own. Authentic simplicity can be found the other side of complexity.
Reference: Jesus Through Middle Eastern Eyes by Kenneth E. Bailey.
Monday, February 17, 2020
The Woman is a Symbol for God and Jesus (Luke 15:8-10)
- Why would a story with a woman as the hero be startling, surprising, bold and daring? [In the past, Ruth, Esther, Judith, Deborah and Jael were heroes (Jud 4:4-22). But by the time of Jesus they were clearly inferior (Ben Sirach).]
- Why would Jesus tell a similar parable when the parable of the good shepherd was already told (Gen 1:27)?
- How would this parable reclaim the long-neglected female component in Psalm 23:5?
- Who likely had a major influence on Jesus' attitude toward women as he grew up (Lk 1:26-38, 48)?
- Did Jesus have women disciples (Lk 8:1-3; 10:38-39; Mt 12:48-50)? If so, did this make a difference in the content and style of his teaching (Lk 4:25-27; 5:36-39; 7:36-50; 18:1-8; 13:18-21; 20:27-36; 21:1-4; Mk 15:40-47; 16:1-8)?
- What is significant about the coin being lost in the house in contrast to the sheep being lost in the wilderness? How might this suggest two distinct types of "lostness" as in the final parable (Lk 15:11-32)?
- What is the worth of a drachma (Lk 15:8)? Does the value of the coin ever change?
- What suggests that the woman is a symbol for both God and Jesus (Lk 15:6, 9)?
Tuesday, February 11, 2020
Jesus Redefines Repentance (Luke 15:1-7)
The sheep brought back by the shepherd is a symbol of repentance.
The characteristic feature of the parables in Luke 15 is the Divine Love that goes out to seek the sinner before he repents.
- What is repentance? [As we discuss the questions consider how Jesus redefines repentance.]
- How did John the Baptist and Jesus preach repentance (Mk 1:14; Mt 3:2; 4:17; Lk 3:3; 15:1-5)?
- How did Peter preach repentance (Ac 2:38)?
- How did Paul teach salvation (Ac 16:31)?
- How do you help others to repent?
- What do you emphasize when desiring others to repent/change?
- Do you help others repent like Jesus or like the Pharisees leaders? What's the difference?
- Do you stress and smash the sinner or support and supply strength to the sinner to repent?
- Does Jesus/Do the Pharisees/Do you place the burden of repentance on the shepherd or the sheep?
7. How is this first of three parables a response/an answer to the Pharisees' murmuring (2)?
Friday, January 17, 2020
Luke 15 questions for reflection
- Why would Jesus' loving welcome and eating with tax collectors and sinners upset the Pharisees and scribes ( Lk 15:1-2)? What is "this parable" (Lk 15:3) that Jesus told them?
- What is the cost for the shepherd to leave the 99 sheep to go search for one lost sheep (Lk 15:4-6)? Who are the "99 righteous persons who do not need to repent" (Lk 15:7; Isa 53:6; Eccl 7:20; Rom 3:23a)?
- What is the cost to the woman looking for her one silver coin she lost (Lk 15:8-9)? What do we learn in these two parables about what it means to repent (Lk 15:7, 10; Ps 23:3)? [The answer is not easy or obvious.] Who does the good shepherd and the good woman represent (Lk 15:1, 2b)?
- What does the younger son's request mean in a Middle Eastern context (Lk 15:11-12a)? How would the father (and his village) normally respond? What does the father's response show about him (Lk 15:12b; cf. Gal 6:13)?
- What was the result of his "wild" /extravagant /spendthrift /wasteful living (Lk 15:13-16)? What does "he come to his senses/himself (Lk 15:16-17)? Was he genuinely repenting (Lk 15:18-19)? Who in the O.T. seemed to repent (Exo 10:16)? What was his own plan (Lk 15:19b)? Was this acceptable to the father (Jn 15:15)?
- What does the father's action upon seeing his younger son show about him (Lk 15:20; 23:34; Mt 11:29; 2 Cor 5:19a)? Why was this shameful and unexpected? How would this protect his son from the village's wrath?
- Compare the son's prepared and actual speech (Lk 15:18b-19, 21)? Why could he not make his final request (Lk 15:19b)?
- How did the father restore him to sonship (Lk 15:22-23)? Were they celebrating the son's return home (Lk 15:24)? How was the son found? Did he repent? How? [See Q3 above.]
- When the older son found out what happened (Lk 15:25-27), why was he so angry (Lk 15:28a)? What does his refusal to join the celebration mean in a Middle Eastern context (Lk 15:28a)? How was this worse than what the younger son did (Lk 15:12)? What does his insulting response (Lk 15:29-30) to the father's plea (Lk 15:28b) show about him? How was he similar to the Pharisees (Lk 15:2)?
- What does the father's plea (Lk 15:28b) and his response to his son's insult (Lk 15:31-32) show about the father? Who is this father? Did he welcome his father's plea and join the celebration? How is "this parable" (Lk 15:3) the answer to the Pharisees' muttering (2)?
Sunday, April 6, 2014
Raised: The Resurrection Changed The World
- Paradigm shattering: It shatters your strongly held assumptions.
- Scripture clarifying: It elucidates, illuminates and clarifies the Bible.
- Life altering: It changes not only your life, but the world.
- King worthy: Finally, you have a worthy king.
- The Tomb (Lk 24:1-12): The women.
- The Road (Lk 24:13-35): Two men.
- The Room (Lk 24:36-49): The disciples.
- The Mount (Lk 24:50-53): The ascension.
- The Resurrection is a Shattering Historical Event
- The Resurrection is a Key to Understanding All of Scripture
- The Resurrection Gives Us a Powerful Message for the World
- Jesus is the True King
- there
- personal
- certain
- unimaginably wonderful
"The demand for equality has two sources -- one of them is among the noblest, the other is the basest of human emotions. The noble source is the desire for fair play. But the other source is the hatred of superiority."
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Being Thankful is a Response, not a Command (Luke 17:1-19)
Truth be told, there is always SOMEONE we are upset with, or angry about, or hurt by, or disappointed with. What are the reasons? They disrespected me. They disregarded me. They gossiped about me. They slandered me. They lied about me. They did not support me. They cared only about themselves. They don't love me. They caricatured me. The reason could even be, "They are not thankful." It is almost comical to say or feel, "I am so unhappy and unthankful because that guy is so unthankful!"
According to the Bible, how can we be thankful?
Luke 17:1-19 seem to be isolated disconnected teachings of:
- Jesus teaching his disciples about sin (1-4), faith (5-6), and duty (7-10).
- Jesus' healing of 10 men with leprosy (11-19).
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Thanksgiving Is Knowing That My Good Works Do Not Count (Luke 17:7-10)
What is your posture before God? As Christians, do we have the posture of a trembling, undeserving, unworthy sinner before God, no matter how hard we have faithfully worked, served and sacrificed for our church and for others?
This is a very, very painful and bitter thought: God can never ever credit any of my good works to me.
Why is my good works not being credited to me so painful and bitter? Even if we mentally acknowledge that this is true (Eph 2:8-9), we often do not feel or act accordingly. We all get upset if we think that others do not appreciate our efforts or our faithfulness. Why is this biblical truth so hard to swallow? It is because all of life suggests otherwise: If we study hard we get good grades. If we do what our boss/leader expects, he is pleased. But it doesn't work like this with God. Why not?