Christmas 2
Devotional
Water From the Rock
Lectionary Devotional for Cycle C
He has not dealt thus with any other nation; they do not know his ordinances. Praise the Lord!
-- Psalm 147:20
Psalm 147 is a prayer of praise that seems to oscillate between the human and the cosmic. Since the birth of Christ moves between the cosmic and the human dimension, this is an appropriate psalm to read on the second Sunday of Christmas. In earlier verses the believer is reminded that the same God who gives order to the cosmos also enters battle between the oppressed and the oppressor (vv. 4-6). It is as if all injustices are a reflection of the chaos that God addressed with a divine word in the creation and still seeks to harness on behalf of creation.
Those whom God has gathered as a witness should praise God (v. 12) because God protects you outside and inside (v. 13) and offers peace and provisions (v. 14). As was true in Genesis 1, God speaks a word to bring order out of chaos in our time as well. It is by God's command that the earth receives its peace and provisions (vv. 15-18).
This cosmic God who cares for the entire universe is the same God who has instructed Israel (and therefore us) as to the will of God. All the nations of the world depend on Israel to declare what God has revealed. Christians are aware that God revealed the divine through the Jewish people and a Jewish person (v. 20). When we pray "Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven," we accept the same responsibility as Israel in declaring to the nations what makes for peace. We, like the shepherds, hear the angels sing "on earth peace."
-- Psalm 147:20
Psalm 147 is a prayer of praise that seems to oscillate between the human and the cosmic. Since the birth of Christ moves between the cosmic and the human dimension, this is an appropriate psalm to read on the second Sunday of Christmas. In earlier verses the believer is reminded that the same God who gives order to the cosmos also enters battle between the oppressed and the oppressor (vv. 4-6). It is as if all injustices are a reflection of the chaos that God addressed with a divine word in the creation and still seeks to harness on behalf of creation.
Those whom God has gathered as a witness should praise God (v. 12) because God protects you outside and inside (v. 13) and offers peace and provisions (v. 14). As was true in Genesis 1, God speaks a word to bring order out of chaos in our time as well. It is by God's command that the earth receives its peace and provisions (vv. 15-18).
This cosmic God who cares for the entire universe is the same God who has instructed Israel (and therefore us) as to the will of God. All the nations of the world depend on Israel to declare what God has revealed. Christians are aware that God revealed the divine through the Jewish people and a Jewish person (v. 20). When we pray "Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven," we accept the same responsibility as Israel in declaring to the nations what makes for peace. We, like the shepherds, hear the angels sing "on earth peace."

