27 November 2014
Collects
Prayers
developed from the daily readings
Thursday 27
November 2014
Morning
Prayer
Psalm 68: 1 – 20
A psalm of praise to a practical God, our God. We are
provided with the practical necessities homes, care for orphans and widows,
water, food, crops, protection, peace and God’s presence –
relationship.
Malachi 2: 1 – 16
In Malachi’s oracle God is angry with the priests and
wants them to lay this command on their hearts. God’s covenant with Levi was
life and well-being. In return Levi gave reverence, awe, instructed truly,
walked in integrity and uprightness and turned from iniquity. The current
priests are doing the opposite. Malachi challenges the priests that there is
only one God, the creator, and so why are the priests being faithless to one
another, the covenant and the ancestors? Judah has been faithless and joined
itself to a subsidiary god of a foreign God – it is like a divorce. The Lord is
a witness that the priests committed to God in their youth. They made a
covenant and walked with God. God wants godly offspring not the product of
consorting with other gods. God is wearied by the words of the priests who
promote evil and make out that God delights in their actions.
Mark 2: 18 – 3: 6
Jesus is asked to explain why his disciples do not
fast. He explains that people at a wedding feast don’t fast while the
bridegroom is with them. He explains using cloth and wineskins that the old
ways are right for the old ways and there are now new ways. Trying to put old
and new together causes rifts and bursts.
Jesus is also questioned about why his disciples
plucked grain while walking through a field on the Sabbath. Jesus reminds the
questioners that even King David allowed his soldiers to eat sanctified food –
only for priests, because they were hungry. Equally, God made the Sabbath for
people, not people for the Sabbath – it is permissible to meet people’s needs.
Jesus enters the synagogue on the Sabbath. He sees a
man with a withered hand. Jesus asks, “Is it lawful to do good or harm on the Sabbath,
to save life or to kill?” (v.4). The hearers remain silent. Jesus, angry that
their hearts are so hard, heals the man’s hand. The Pharisees go immediately
and conspire with the Herodians to destroy Jesus.
Collect for
Morning Prayer
Garden Reflected Mandurah WA 2014 L Osburn |
Thursday 27
November 2014
Evening
Prayer
Psalms 68: (21 – 23) 24 – 35
This section of the psalm moves first to the fierce
protection God provides for his people and then to a procession and celebration
of God and the people of Israel, united in Jerusalem at the temple.
Wisdom 11: 15 – 12: 2
The size and power of God is huge. The world is like a
drop of morning dew. Yet God loves all things creates and preserves all things.
God is merciful and forgives people’s sins so that they may repent. God’s
spirit is in all things. And little by little, those who trespass are reminded
and warned by God so that they may be free and trust in God.
Revelation
12: 7 - 18
War
breaks out in heaven. Michael and angels fight the dragon and its angels. The
dragon (Satan the deceiver, the accuser) is defeated and falls to earth. The
voice proclaims the coming of the Kingdom of God and the authority of the
Messiah. God’s people have conquered by the blood of the Lamb, their testimony
and by not clinging to life even in the face of death. The heavens are to
rejoice but earth will have woe, for Satan is full of wrath and knows that time
is up.
The
dragon pursues the woman but wings and the earth itself protect her. The dragon
takes a stand by the sea.
Collect for
Evening Prayer
Desert Lizard The Head of the Bight SA 2014 L Osburn |
Holy and almighty God you
provide fierce protection and gentle compassionate care. You warn and scare and
you softly forgive. Remind us that everything there is, seen and unseen is
created by you and you love it. Remind us that the earth is on our side and
part of your protection so that we value our planet. Help us stand firm in your
love so that at the end we are counted among those who conquer through Jesus
Christ our Lord and Saviour. Amen.
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