Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Week 43. Walking with Dr. Luke...

Last week, we read through the entire book of Luke in 8 days. Reading it this way helped me pay attention to things I had never noticed before.  Since we believe that Luke was a physician, I made a little note “Dr. Luke” every time he mentioned medical details…and there were lots of them.  And I look forward to reading Acts since Luke wrote that book, too. 
I like to imagine that since Luke was not one of the 12 disciples, he must have interviewed lots of people to get his facts.  Luke was Greek, not Jewish, so he found some of their rituals especially interesting.  I imagine that he must have talked to Jesus’ mother Mary, to record all the details about her pregnancy, and the conversations and things that are recorded in the first 2 chapters of Luke.  How else would he know that she “treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart”…(chapter 2)  and that she and Joseph “marveled at “ what Simeon and Anna said about Jesus when he was being presented in the temple after his birth in Chapter 2…and about Jesus getting “lost” when he was a boy?    
People walked A LOT back then, of course.  Mary and Joseph walked to Jerusalem every year for the Festival of Passover.  I “googled” this, and I think it takes about a week to walk from Nazareth to Jerusalem.  So this annual trip must have been a highlight of their year, like a vacation.    Can you imagine how it must have felt to “loose” your 12 year old boy for several days?  I think Mary must have told Luke about it.  It certainly would have been something that stood out in her memory. 


Since Luke was a physician, he recorded lots of healings.  Can you imagine what it would be like to be crippled for many years, with an atrophied body, rejected because you were “unclean” according to the Jewish rules, and be suddenly healed by Jesus?  It would change your life forever.  It always surprises me when I read that Jesus told some of the people he healed not to tell anybody about it yet.  Wow, how could they NOT tell EVERYBODY?  And all your friends and family would know immediately, just by seeing you.  Jesus’ power was just too strong to keep quiet about it. 

“…and the people tried to touch him, because power was coming from him and healing them all…”(Luke 6:19)

Keep reading, with imagination! 

Saturday, October 17, 2015

Week 41 and 42. Walking with Jesus in the New Testament. (I am combining 2 weeks here.)

In the last 2 weeks, we have finished reading Matthew and Mark.  For me, it was interesting because I have read them both many times, but this time I heard and read things I had never noticed before.  

   I use a yellow highlighter and mark things that “speak” to me and use a pencil to circle and ask questions.  All the parables are fascinating.  Sometimes we understand the “meaning” right away, but other times it seems like there are still questions.  “What did he mean?”  One thing I noticed in Matthew is that Jesus talked a lot about the future…”The end of the age”.  It is interesting to hear him speak about future judgment.  We don’t like to talk about that much today, but it’s there.  And he knew the scriptures from what we now call the Old Testament because he had grown up hearing them and of course, he understood them.   He talked a lot about the kingdom of heaven.  Some of it is still mystery, but we can somehow understand much of it when we listen with our hearts with the help of the Holy Spirit.  
“I will open my mouth in parables.
I will utter things hidden since
the creation of the world.”
Matthew 13:35.  Psalm 78:2
The healings are interesting to read about.  Jesus had so much power that sometimes people just touched the edge of his clothes and they were healed.  Wow.  (Matthew  14:36.)
When we read Mark, did you notice how much it paralleled so much what we had just read in Matthew?  Many of the same stories, told almost exactly.  Matthew and Mark were written many years after these things had happened.  It would be like American World War 2 veterans writing down things that happened to them during their time in Europe.   The same, but different.  

Remember that Matthew was one of the 12 disciples.  But Mark “John Mark”was not one of the 12.  He was a contemporary of Paul.  Wasn’t the INSIGHT on page 1144 in our Bible on Oct 15 interesting?  Look at it again.  Mark was not one of the 12 disciples, but perhaps he hung out with them and he had personally known Jesus. 

I like to think about what it would have been like to have lived during that time when Jesus was on earth…   One thing I pondered this week was the story about the “Last Supper”.  (page 1145, Mark 14:12 – 17)  I imagine that this nice Jewish family owned a large house.  Maybe they had added a big room upstairs (like a bonus room) so they could use it during the Jewish festivals throughout the year. 

  They made it large enough so that all their family could come in for the holidays.  Maybe they rented it out sometimes for other friends and neighbors to use for special occasions.  It was a room they enjoyed a lot, and they had made lots of good memories up there, sitting around the big tables, lingering over happy mealtimes. They had prepared it that week for the big annual event: Passover.  It had been cleaned, ritually cleansed, so it was “Kosher”, and they had already set up the extra tables and chairs.  They had gathered the food for the Passover meal and had pressed the good tablecloths. They had cut the herbs and flowers and had set up the candles and lamps for evening lighting.   The little kitchen was full downstairs and meal preparations were at full swing when these 2 guys showed up and asked if they could use it.  I can imagine myself opening the door to that request.  I would probably put my hands on my hips and say “Are you serious? “ I’ve got all these people coming in for the weekend…Sorry, but the room is already set up for our family and our guests”...  But then, maybe this Jewish family had been going out to see and hear Jesus for the past few months.  Maybe God had already impressed on them that they were going to be part of something special.  Maybe they had not told anybody about it, but just told the kids not to come home this year because they had made some other plans.  And maybe they had prepared the room upstairs for guests, but were not sure who they would be.  They just somehow knew that they needed to be prepared for what would happen.    They must have had some doubts about it.  Then the knock at the door.  And there they were.  Somehow they were not surprised.  They took the guys upstairs and showed them the room that was already clean and ready.  And they enjoyed having the 2 men around that day as they helped them prepare for the big meal...  Roasting the lamb.  Baking the bread.  That night, I wonder if the family helped serve the meal to the guests.  I wonder if they were invited to join them upstairs.  Or, maybe they ate their lamb and herbs downstairs in the little cramped kitchen and listened to the men laughing and talking upstairs.  And at the end of the meal, they could hear them sing together. Then they heard the footsteps and muffled voices as the group left, down the steps, and disappeared into the night.  The next day, I wonder how they felt as they cleaned up the room, washed the tablecloths, put away the folding tables and chairs till next time.  Were they pleased and honored?  Or a little resentful of the disruption?  In the next couple days, they would learn about the arrest and trial and crucifixion.   The whole neighborhood was upset.  Some of the neighbors said “Good riddance. Now things will get back to normal around here.” Some said “they killed the Son of God.  What will happen to us now.”   Some said “That was not the way we thought it would happen.  Now there is no hope for us.  Nothing will change. Our future is bleak.”   
I wonder if the Jewish family with the big bonus room just kept quiet for a few days about who had eaten upstairs on Passover night.  I wonder if they were a little afraid that they might be in trouble.  But I imagine that after the resurrection and the weeks of excitement that followed, they were so happy that they had allowed Jesus and his inner circle to be their secret guests upstairs the night before all the bad things happened.  I think if I had been the owner of the room that I would have folded those tablecloths and put them away in a safe drawer as a very special reminder of my special honored guests.  And I would take them out from time to time to look at the wine stains that were still there.   And be glad that I had been willing to say yes. 


Let your imagination loose as you read the New Testament.  Try to feel the sun and gritty breeze. 

 Smell the smells.  Taste the olive oil and bread.   Feel the little rocks in your sandals.  Listen.   Ponder.  
keep walking...
Audrey 

Sunday, October 4, 2015

Week 40. The New Testament...and we begin...

I was happy to start reading the New Testament this week.  Finally!
If you are just joining me reading through the Bible, I want to tell you that it is hard to get started because it is a new habit.  There are no hard rules.  You can read first thing in the morning, at lunchtime, at night instead of a TV show, or at bedtime.  Or what ever works for you.  Just do it.
Here is what works for me:
I read first thing in the morning (with a cup of coffee). This time works best for me.  I often wake up before the alarm, and often my first thought is anticipation of what I will hear and read.  So I think that after 278 days of this, it is becoming a good habit!
 I turn to that day's reading, read the "Overview", then I turn on my phone APP and listen to the scripture of the day as I read along. I use the free "Bible "App on my phone to listen.   (When you open this app, it is called "YouVersion." " The Listeners Bible")
The icon looks like a little Bible, like this:

and you click READ, select the book and chapter, and select a version.  I listen to the NIV because I can read along in the Daily Walk Bible.  BUT, I also find it very interesting to listen again later to the same scriptures in the MESSAGE version because it is so contemporary and refreshing.  I sometimes listen while I am getting dressed for the day, or sometimes I listen in the car.
 I find that LISTENING to the Bible helps me pay attention and hear things in a new way.

(Just tap the arrow to turn it on and tap it again to pause or stop.  The next day, you just resume where you stopped. )

 I like to make notes in the Bible, so I use a yellow highlighter when something shimmers or "speaks" to me.  I think of these as hidden treasures.  I use a pencil to circle or underline or make little notes or comments or ask questions.   Yes, my Bible is getting all marked up!

After reading the scripture of the day, I read the "My Daily Walk" and the "Insight."
Then I pray about what I have read.

What I have already found pretty cool this week as the New Testament has just begun in Matthew, is that we are now ALREADY beginning to read some of the fulfillment of some of the Old Testament scriptures that we read back in the Winter and Spring and Summer.    It has been interesting to read the Bible all at one time like this, instead of just picking scriptures here and there out of sequence.  I am getting the BIG PICTURE and getting a better sense of how everything fit into history.  And how LONG it took.  And that God is not in a hurry.  It's not over yet.

IF YOU GET BEHIND, every 7 days there is a day of " REFLECTION & WORSHIP" so you can use that day to get caught up.  If you get behind, just turn on your Bible app and listen as you go about your day.  You will find it pretty easy to catch up that way.


"Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest"  
Matthew 11:28


I am praying for each one of you every morning.  (about 6:30 - 7:00 AM, if you are wondering)
thanks for doing this with me.
May God bless us richly and fill us with understanding.
...and keep on reading!
Audrey