Third Friday of Advent

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Scripture Reading for Today:

2 Samuel 6:12-19, Psalm 89:1-4, 19-26, Hebrews 1:5-14

2 Samuel 6:12-19

12 Then King David was told, “The Lord has blessed Obed-edom’s household and everything he has because of the Ark of God.” So David went there and brought the Ark of God from the house of Obed-edom to the City of David with a great celebration. 13 After the men who were carrying the Ark of the Lord had gone six steps, David sacrificed a bull and a fattened calf. 14 And David danced before the Lord with all his might, wearing a priestly garment. 15 So David and all the people of Israel brought up the Ark of the Lord with shouts of joy and the blowing of rams’ horns. 16 But as the Ark of the Lord entered the City of David, Michal, the daughter of Saul, looked down from her window. When she saw King David leaping and dancing before the Lord, she was filled with contempt for him. 17 They brought the Ark of the Lord and set it in its place inside the special tent David had prepared for it. And David sacrificed burnt offerings and peace offerings to the Lord. 18 When he had finished his sacrifices, David blessed the people in the name of the Lord of Heaven’s Armies. 19 Then he gave to every Israelite man and woman in the crowd a loaf of bread, a cake of dates, and a cake of raisins. Then all the people returned to their homes.

New Living Translation (NLT)

Psalm 89:1-4, 19-26

A maskil of Ethan the Ezrahite.

I will sing of the Lord’s loyal love forever. I will proclaim your faithfulness with my own mouth from one generation to the next. 2 That’s why I say, “Your loyal love is rightly built—forever! You establish your faithfulness in heaven.” 3 You said, “I made a covenant with my chosen one; I promised my servant David: 4 ‘I will establish your offspring forever; I will build up your throne from one generation to the next.’” Selah

19 Once you spoke in a vision to your faithful servants: I placed a crown on a strong man. I raised up someone specially chosen from the people. 20 I discovered my servant David. I anointed him with my holy oil. 21 My hand will sustain him— yes, my arm will strengthen him! 22 No enemy will oppress him; no wicked person will make him suffer. 23 I will crush all his foes in front of him. I will strike down all those who hate him. 24 My faithfulness and my loyal love will be with him. He will be strengthened by my name. 25 I will set his hand on the sea. I will set his strong hand on the rivers. 26 He will cry out to me: “You are my father, my God, the rock of my salvation.”

Common English Bible (CEB)

Hebrews 1:5-14

The Son Is Greater Than the Angels

5 For God never said to any angel what he said to Jesus: “You are my Son. Today I have become your Father.” God also said, “I will be his Father, and he will be my Son.” 6 And when he brought his supreme Son into the world, God said, “Let all of God’s angels worship him.” 7 Regarding the angels, he says, “He sends his angels like the winds, his servants like flames of fire.” 8 But to the Son he says, “Your throne, O God, endures forever and ever. You rule with a scepter of justice. 9 You love justice and hate evil. Therefore, O God, your God has anointed you, pouring out the oil of joy on you more than on anyone else.” 10 He also says to the Son, “In the beginning, Lord, you laid the foundation of the earth and made the heavens with your hands. 11 They will perish, but you remain forever. They will wear out like old clothing. 12 You will fold them up like a cloak and discard them like old clothing. But you are always the same; you will live forever.” 13 And God never said to any of the angels, “Sit in the place of honor at my right hand until I humble your enemies, making them a footstool under your feet.” 14 Therefore, angels are only servants—spirits sent to care for people who will inherit salvation.

New Living Translation (NLT)

For we will sing of the Lord’s loyal love forever!

by Aaron Gerrard



For the past few months, I’ve had the privilege of being a part of the New Leaf Network Design Shop, the online edition. While moving the event online had some limitations, it did allow us to have English-to-French translation provided in realtime for our Francophone participants. It was a sight to behold watching our skilled translators work so hard to keep up, and by all accounts, they did an excellent job. 

As I watched the translators in their little “Zoom windows” breaking a sweat as they powered through, every once in a while I’d hear a presenter say a word or concept in English that I knew would be a hurdle for the translators to tackle as they moved swiftly along. Anyone who speaks two languages knows that word-for-word translation can be incredibly difficult if not impossible sometimes. To that effect, there is a Latin proverb that states, “Every translator is a traitor.” Words and concepts can get lost in translation.

 
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There is perhaps no greater example of the complexity of translating a word than when it comes to the Hebrew word hesed.

Scholars have puzzled for centuries trying to translate this word into English. It occurs more than 250 times in the Hebrew Scriptures, and yet we have no English word(s) to capture its full essence. The best we can come up with in English is hollow in comparison. The Old Testament translation committee of the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible left the vote on how to translate hesed to the end of their deliberations because of the complex debate. And even then after deciding, as with many translations, the word is not always translated the same way.

Loving-kindness, faithful love, steadfast love, love, kindness, great loyalty, favour, acts of loving-kindness, loyal love: these are just some of the directions translators have gone with this word. The central obstacle with the word is that it can only be understood as describing a relationship that is fundamentally unequal between one (One) who is powerful and one who is powerless. I once had a professor refer to this vastly unequal relationship as “Gracious and generous condescension.” While no one wants condescension, when we’re in a place of total need we don’t mind receiving it. And this is the human circumstance with respect to Yahweh. We cannot demand His relationship; we can only need it. We cannot earn it; it comes because of who he is. What’s amazing is that God owes us nothing, and yet he still comes and demonstrates his hesed. And hesed is always an act — always a demonstration. And while the English word “love” is a powerful word, it’s not nearly powerful enough to do hesed justice.

In today’s readings from Psalm 89 we find hesed in a few places. The worship and thanksgiving which introduce the Psalm are centred in it.

I will sing of the Lord’s loyal love forever. I will proclaim your faithfulness with my own mouth from one generation to the next. That’s why I say, “Your loyal love is rightly built—forever! You establish your faithfulness in heaven.” (CEB)

It is that same excitement and adoration which we clearly see depicted in the story of dancing David in 2 Samuel 6. Overcome in worship to the extent that some even found it unworthy of a king’s, David’s response can only be understood in the light hesed. The unfettered, unadulterated, undeserved loving acts of God will do that to you. When we can even slightly grasp God’s loyal love, it wrecks us. It leaves us, in a very real sense, looking for words.

Which is exactly the sort of feeling I sense the author of Hebrews is wrestling with in chapter one. The God known as Yahweh is now made known in and through his son, the Christ. That same hesed which Yahweh poured out is now in and pouring out through Jesus. Not an angel, or any other lofty being or person, for that matter. No, this is the Son of God, the fully divine and fully human man from the line of David, in whom we see coming back in Psalm 89:24, “My faithfulness and my loyal love will be with him.” (CEB)

All the fullness and complexity of God’s hesed now in Jesus…what’s our response to that? How do we respond to this Son of God who is unique among all others? What can we do in light of receiving God’s hesed through Jesus? Do we take a page out of David’s book? Do a little dancing? Play some music? Pass out some food and have a party? 

Yes, I think so, actually. 

Sounds a little like Christmas. This year, in the midst of your festivities, even with all of the odd COVID-related realities, as best you can, try at least once to cut loose in worship. In fact, if there was ever a year to party and worship in the face of adversity, this might be it. So get a bit undignified. Give your soul some celebration. Raise a drink, crank some Boney M, bust a move, eat great food, and invite others to join you over Zoom. Ha! For we will sing of the Lord’s loyal love forever! 

 
 

 
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Coming soon from New Leaf Press

Aaron’s new book, Quit Pastoring Your Church: the story of a small church making Jesus their pastor is launching out into the world - get your copy as soon as it’s available!

 

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