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The third covenant in this year’s Lenten readings is the central one of Israel’s history: the gift of the law to those God freed from slavery. The commandments begin with the statement that because God alone has freed us from the powers that oppressed us, we are to let nothing else claim first place in our lives. When Jesus throws the merchants out of the temple, he is defending the worship of God alone and rejecting the ways commerce and profit-making can become our gods. This is a text about a Holy Dismantling of that which was corrupt, unjust, and appalling. In the Older Testament, The Ten Commandments are essential to our baptismal call: centered first in God’s liberating love, we strive to live out justice and mercy in our communities and the world.
Scripture Readings: Exodus 20:1-17; Psalm 19; John 2:13-22
By Rev. Dr. Jules Erickson, guest theologians, Pastor Wes Kimball, Pastor Rebecca Thurman4.3
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The third covenant in this year’s Lenten readings is the central one of Israel’s history: the gift of the law to those God freed from slavery. The commandments begin with the statement that because God alone has freed us from the powers that oppressed us, we are to let nothing else claim first place in our lives. When Jesus throws the merchants out of the temple, he is defending the worship of God alone and rejecting the ways commerce and profit-making can become our gods. This is a text about a Holy Dismantling of that which was corrupt, unjust, and appalling. In the Older Testament, The Ten Commandments are essential to our baptismal call: centered first in God’s liberating love, we strive to live out justice and mercy in our communities and the world.
Scripture Readings: Exodus 20:1-17; Psalm 19; John 2:13-22