Daily Devotions with the Dean

DailyDevotionsWithTheDean_Header-01.jpg

This morning’s Scriptures are: Psalm 1; Psalm 2; Psalm 3; Job 4:1; 5:1-27; Acts 9:19-31; John 6:52-59

This morning’s Canticles are: following the OT reading, Canticle 9 (“The First Song of Isaiah,” Isaiah 12:2-6, BCP, p. 86); following the Epistle reading, Canticle 19 (“The Song of the Redeemed,” Revelation 15:3-4, BCP, p. 94)

Job 3 (Saturday’s reading) had described how after seven days of sitting, Job breaks the silence. He curses the day of his birth. Covered with festering sores and ashes of grief, he asks “Why is light given to one in misery and life to the bitter in soul … Why is light given to one who cannot see the way?” (Job 3:23). Job’s loss of wealth, family, and health have opened to him an even greater fear: “Truly the thing that I fear comes upon me, and what I dread befalls me” (Job 3:25). And it is that fear that will ultimately prove his salvation: he fears he has lost his relationship with God. 

Eliphaz: shallow words from a “friend.” Job 4 & 5 give us speeches of his first friend, Eliphaz. In Job 4 (Sunday’s reading), Eliphaz claims to have had a mystical experience: “A spirit glided past my face; the hair of my head bristled” (Job 4:15). That spirit, Eliphaz claims, has revealed to him that humans are fragile and imperfect, and thus subject to divine discipline. In Job 5 (today’s reading), Eliphaz reinforces his argument by appealing to tradition—to “the holy ones” (Job 5:1)—“Surely vexation kills the fool and jealousy slays the simple” (Job 5:2). In other words, religious experience and the wisdom of the ages indicate that Job has done something to bring God’s discipline. Thus, the simple answer is to confess, and trust that God will make everything OK once again. Now, it’s not that there’s no truth in Eliphaz’s words—but we know that neither he nor Job understands how complicated the situation is. And we know that eventually Job’s protestations will prove truer than Eliphaz’s truisms. 

Barnabas: a friend indeed. By the end of the book, Job will know God in a way that is deeper and more real. Something similar has happened to Saul in the Book of Acts, for he has come to the sudden realization that the Jesus whose memory he had been trying to expunge is alive, and is “the Son of God.” Everything is different! His demonstrating to the Jews in Damascus that Jesus is truly the Messiah leads to such an uproar that the Jews there plot to kill him. Barely escaping their attempts to kill him, he travels back down to Jerusalem and finds believers there understandably untrusting and suspicious. 

Like Job, Saul is befriended. Unlike Job, Saul is befriended well. Saul’s friend is worthy of his name: “Barnabas,” which means “Son of Encouragement.” Barnabas vouches for Saul before the apostles, and the church at large responds to Saul’s ministry. Threats against his life lead the believers to whisk him off, first to Caesarea-by-the-Sea, and then to Tarsus in Cilicia, Saul’s hometown. 

Imagine if there had been no Barnabas for Saul—imagine the church without the energy, wisdom, and authoritative teaching of the formerly persecuting rabbi who has been transformed into “apostle to the nations” (Romans 11:13). Praise God for that kind of a friend. 

“Eat my flesh. Drink my blood.” There’s an earthiness to biblical faith that is off-putting to the super-spiritual and the gnostic, but irresistible to the sons and daughters of the Creator of heaven and earth, to the truly spiritual and the non-gnostic. We have to kind of “inhabit” Job as he gets to know God at a deeper level; not in spite of, but through, his pestilential sores and the tears and ashes of his grief. There, and only there, can he—and we—experience “the fellowship of the sufferings” (Philippians 3:10). And precisely for that reason, Jesus offers himself in the earthiness of his body and blood, and in our participation in his life and death when we accept his challenging offer: “eat (Greek, trōgein = “chew”) my flesh and drink my blood” (John 6:56). He is saying: with your mouth ingest the bread and wine of the Eucharist, and with your faith take your place in my sin-destroying death and my life-conferring resurrection. Amen to that!

May the Lord Christ meet you today right where the point of pain is, right where you feel the greatest loss. May he be for you Bread from Heaven and Cup of Salvation. 

Be blessed this day,

Reggie Kidd+ 

Daily Devotions with the Dean

DailyDevotionsWithTheDean_Header-01.jpg

This morning’s Scriptures are: Psalm 140; Psalm 142; Job 2:1-13; Acts 9:1-9; John 6:27-40

This morning’s Canticles are: following the OT reading, Canticle 10 (“The Second Song of Isaiah,” Isaiah 55:6-11; BCP, p. 86); following the Epistle reading, Canticle 18 (“A Song to the Lamb,” Revelation 4:11; 5:9-10, 13, BCP, p. 93)

In the first two chapters of Job, we learn some important lessons:

God is in control. Through the image of a heavenly court, we are led to understand that above the tumult here on earth, there is divine governance. The one who has identified himself as Yahweh (the Lord) is God over all. However, there are other spiritual personalities in the heavens, and they include a figure who is something like a prosecuting attorney, who takes a role that is like that of the Serpent in the Garden. His title is “The Satan” — “The Accuser” — and he is an adversary of the human race. 

Satan is not in control. One of the most important perspectives that the Book of Job communicates is that this “Satan” has only limited power. He is on a leash, and the leash is firmly in the hands of Yahweh. As determined as Satan is to do harm to humans, Yahweh turns those efforts to the benefit of humans and to the accomplishment of his own purposes. This is a perspective that flows throughout Scripture, culminating in the Book of Revelation where time and again evil happens only to the extent that “authority is granted” (e.g., Revelation 6:8; 9:3; 11:6; 16;9). 

One of the most difficult—and important—lessons of the Book of Job is that God is so good that, as Old Testament theologian Bruce Waltke puts it, He “transcends both…what people call good and bad. Within his government both have a place, all is good in that they serve his ‘plan,’ though the human creature cannot know it or understand it” (p. 942). 

A whisper of redemption. In a scene eerily reminiscent of the Garden, Job’s wife takes Satan’s side, with her denunciation “Curse God, and die!” Unlike Adam, Job resists. With his “No!” to evil, he says “Yes!” to God. Though his “Yes!” will be sorely tested, it will prove to be a true “Yes!” It will place Job on the side of God’s restorative plans for the whole human race. The evil that was first heard in the serpent’s hiss in the Garden and has been repeated here both in the heavenly courts and in Job’s home will ultimately be silenced. 

Friendship and “just being there.” Today’s passage introduces us to Job’s three friends. Throughout the rest of the book, they show themselves to be shallow, know-it-all fools. But for a week they act like true friends: they identify with Job in his pain, they share his grief, and they sit with him in silence (Job 2:12-13). If they had been better friends, they would perhaps have stayed quiet longer. Something for each of us to remember when we see a friend in pain: they need our presence rather than our platitudes. 

Hope’s reward. Clinging to hope by his fingernails, in Chapter 14 Job reaches toward a faith in final vindication: 

O that you would hide me in Sheol,    that you would conceal me until your wrath is past,    that you would appoint me a set time, and remember me! …

my transgression would be sealed up in a bag,    and you would cover over my iniquity (Job 14:13,17). 

Today’s accounts of Jesus’s appearance to Saul (in Acts) and Jesus’s self-declaration to the people as “Bread of Life” (in John) are a thrilling tandem. Saul’s zeal leads him at first to the rejection of God’s “set time” and the mystery of His “covering over of iniquity” in the unexpected death of the Messiah. But on the road to Damascus, the risen and ascended Jesus reveals himself in (literally) blinding light as the answer to the kind of hope that Job had refused to let go of. And Jesus astonishes his listeners by explaining that the bread their forebears had tasted in the exodus journey was merely a foretaste of an eternally satisfying meal that he himself both is (in Himself) … and brings (in the Eucharist). 

I pray you know, and cling with confidence to, that hope, no matter what. 

Be blessed this day,

Reggie Kidd+

Daily Devotions with the Dean

DailyDevotionsWithTheDean_Header-01.jpg

This morning’s Scriptures are: Psalm 131; Psalm 132; Psalm 133; Job 1:1-22; Acts 8:26-40; John 6:16-27

This morning’s Canticles are: following the OT reading, Canticle 8 (“The Song of Moses,” Exodus 15, BCP, p. 85); following the Epistle reading, Canticle 19 (“The Song of the Redeemed,” Revelation 15:3-4, BCP, p. 94)

Following the monastic tradition of the Western church, the Daily Office has us read Job during the months of August and September. It’s an especially timely read right now. All of us feel like much has been stripped away. Graduations. Good times and easy conversations with friends in close quarters. Progress in race relations. General economic wellbeing. Church without masks. No fear of hugging or singing. Some of us have lost our livelihoods. Relatives and friends have lost their lives, or have come scarily close. None of us knows how long this COVIDtide will last. Campuses open, only to shut down almost immediately. What’s more, heading into what promises to be a noxious electoral season, none of us knows when any level of political comity and social goodwill will return. A lot has been, and is being, lost. 

A few things to pay attention to:

Job and faith. Job is our ally when our faith gets challenged by experience. Though he is “blameless and upright, one who feared God and turned from evil” (and there’s no reason to discount that language), all the props that seem to be signs of God’s blessings get stripped. Job has to face this question: Is God enough? Or has Job’s blamelessness just been too easy? We will see him flirt with disastrous ideas. We will see him rage against God. We will see him express brutal frustration with God and with His ways. But even though God will seem to shout him down at the end, actually, in the end God will commend him. God will tell Job’s friends: “You have not spoken of me what is right, as my servant Job has.” 

During this challenging season, I pray that all that comes against you gives you a more honest and direct line of communication with God. He can handle it. 

Job and friends. Indeed, we will watch Job contending with his friends and their shallow “plug-and-play” wisdom theology that says only bad people experience bad things. And we will see that while they will have done their theology only in the third person (that is, they never pray it), Job will have the honesty to take his complaints to God. The result will be that the Lord will finally tell the friends to ask Job to pray for them: “My servant Job shall pray for you, for I will accept his prayer not to deal with you according to your folly; for you have not spoken of me what is right, as my servant Job has done” (Job 42:8).  

During this challenging season, I pray that we are attentive to the ways that others around us struggle with a meaningful faith. They need us to do what Paul describes as “speaking the truth in love” (Ephesians 4:15). When that happens, as Paul goes on to say, “we…grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ.” 

Meanwhile, our study of Job will reveal the battle within his own soul to hold on to the initial confession he makes when hardship first hits: “‘Naked I came from my mother’s womb, and naked shall I return there; the Lord gave, and the Lord has taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord.” The question is whether he—and by extension, you and I—will be able to hold on to that trust when things get worse and worse. 

Job & Isaiah’s Suffering Servant in Acts 8. Meanwhile, entertain the prospect that as an innocent sufferer, Job prefigures in some fashion the great Innocent Sufferer that Isaiah describes in his Suffering Servant song, and which Philip explains to the Ethiopian eunuch during the chariot ride on the road to Gaza. The Bible’s unique posture on suffering is that it is never ours to bear alone. Looking ahead, Job himself senses that he has an Advocate/Redeemer who will stand with him in his sufferings, and that death itself will not break the bond between them:

For I know that my Redeemer lives,    and that at the last he will stand upon the earth; 26 and after my skin has been thus destroyed,    then in my flesh I shall see God, 27 whom I shall see on my side,     and my eyes shall behold, and not another (Job 19:25-27). 

If only Job knew how that was going to come to pass—but we do! 

Job & Jesus and Food for Eternal Life. It is a hard lesson for Job—losing wealth and family and health as he does—but there is a glorious “far side” to the recognition that, as Jesus says in today’s gospel reading, there is one “food that perishes” and another “that endures for eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you.” From Genesis to Revelation, this is the great message of the Bible. And as you read Job alongside John’s telling of Jesus’s life, I pray that this food indeed nourishes you with the life which is eternal. 

Be blessed this day,

Reggie Kidd+

Daily Devotions with the Dean

DailyDevotionsWithTheDean_Header-01.jpg

This morning’s Scriptures are: Psalm 119:145-176; Judges 18:16-31; Acts 8:14-25; John 6:1-15 

This morning’s Canticles are: following the OT reading, Canticle 11 (“The Third Song of Isaiah,” Isaiah 60:1-3,11a,14c,18-19, BCP, p. 87); following the Epistle reading, Canticle 16 (“The Song of Zechariah,” Luke 1:68-79, BCP, p. 92)

Looking for a moment past today’s readings, the last three chapters of Judges (chapters 19-21) recount two of the most lamentable events in Israel’s history: the rape, murder, and dismemberment of a Levite’s concubine (Judges 19); and then the near extinction of the tribe of Benjamin, which is stopped only through the forced appropriation of “the young women of Shiloh” (Judges 20-21). Under the judges, Israel’s lack of submission to Yahweh has led to a horrible spiraling down of the treatment of women. In the beginning of the era, Deborah is a great hero. But then Jephthah sacrifices his daughter to a rash vow (11:34-40), and the book ends (though the Daily Office will not have us read) this appalling account of rape, murder, and dismemberment (Judges 19-20). The violence done to women in these last chapters of this sad book is illustrative of the death wish of a people chosen to be “married” to God: “On that day, says the Lord, you will call me “My husband” (Hosea 2:16).   

The whole book leaves us longing for a better day, and more importantly, a better Savior, who is: 

  • even more “left-handed” than Ehud—"left-handed” enough to win by being pierced rather than piercing

  • able to sing a better song than Deborah’s (see Hebrews 2:12)

  • more valiant, and more trusting than Gideon

  • given in reality, unlike Abimelech, to his Father’s kingship (proving himself thus worthy of kingship)

  • stronger than Samson—strong enough to be like us in all ways “yet without sin,” strong enough to pull down the twin pillars of sin and death. 

When we read today’s Judges passage in the light of today’s passages in John and Acts, we can rejoice that a better Savior, and a better day, have come. 

Judges 18 and John 6. Judges 18 recounts the descent of Moses’s line, as Moses’s great-grandson Jonathan chases the “bigger steeple” of (idolatrous!) service to the Danites. Acts 8 tells the sad tale of Simon the sorcerer who wants to monetize his newfound faith in Christ. 

Praise be to God, John’s gospel presents us, by contrast, with Jesus, the true King. As Israel’s true King, Jesus provides nourishment for his people, multiplying two fishes and five loaves into food enough for 5,000, with 12 baskets of leftovers. He refuses a crown on the people’s terms (John 6:15), but he will nonetheless acknowledge to Pilate (before his “coronation” on the cross) that he is indeed a King, simply “not from here” (John 18:36). 

Praise be to God, John’s gospel presents us with Jesus, the true Husband. Jesus has already done his first sign at the wedding in Cana, in anticipation of the wedding feast he will enjoy with his Bride the Church at the end of the age (Revelation 19). Now, in John 6 Jesus launches the Eucharistic Feast. He takes the loaves, gives thanks over them, and distributes them (John 6:11). Then he proceeds to explain how he is himself the Bread from Heaven (John 6:22-51), and that he will be present to his people in the eating of the bread (John 6:52-58)—provision for their ongoing journey on the way to the feast of the wedding of the Lamb. 

Judges 18 and Acts 8. The Danites (who are from Judah in the south) commit violence against their brothers and sisters in the north. Not only so, they establish a center of idolatry that will become one of the centerpieces of the religious divisions within God’s people. God intends his worship to be consolidated: first, in Shiloh with the ark of the covenant, then later in Jerusalem, with the temple. When the kingdom is divided after Solomon, Dan will become one of the northern outposts of spiritual rebellion and social rupture. 

In the Book of Acts, the division between the Southern Kingdom of Judah (centered in Jerusalem) and the Northern Kingdom of Israel (centered in Samaria) is being healed through the gospel. That is why the Holy Spirit does not fall upon the new believers in Samaria in the beginning of Acts 8, when Philip initially brings the gospel to them. The apostles in Jerusalem must send church leaders Peter and John to Samaria. Only then do the Samaritans receive the baptism of the Holy Spirit, because the Jerusalem church needs to understand that the same Spirit that dwells among them dwells among the Samaritans—they are one body, one people, one fellowship, one citizenship. 

Under King Jesus, ruling now by the power of the Holy Spirit, the gospel is being unleashed as a power that heals ancient divisions. What Paul is eventually to call “the Israel of God” is made up of Jew and Gentile, Jerusalemite and Samaritan (and, by extension, Orthodox and Catholic and Protestant). 

The takeaway here is that Christ has died for one church, not for a myriad of sects. He has died for one people with one allegiance, not for separate tribes with mixed loyalties. I pray that you and I live into the reality of our confession of “one holy catholic and apostolic church.” 

Prayer for the Church (BCP, p. 816) 

Gracious Father, we pray for your holy Catholic Church. Fill it with all truth, in all truth with all peace. Where it is corrupt, purify it; where it is in error, direct it; where in any thing it is amiss, reform it. Where it is right, strengthen it; where it is in want, provide for it; where it is divided, reunite it; for the sake of Jesus Christ your Son our Savior. Amen.

Be blessed this day, 

Reggie Kidd+


Daily Devotions with the Dean

DailyDevotionsWithTheDean_Header-01.jpg

Monday • 8/17/2020

This morning’s Scriptures are: Psalm 106:1-18; Judges 17:1-13; Acts 7:44–8:1; John 5:19-29

This morning’s Canticles are: following the OT reading, Canticle 9 (“The First Song of Isaiah,” Isaiah 12:2-6, BCP, p. 86); following the Epistle reading, Canticle 19 (“The Song of the Redeemed,” Revelation 15:3-4, BCP, p. 94)

In those days there was no king in Israel; all the people did what was right in their own eyes. — Judges 17:6; 19:25 (see also 18:1; 19:1). This verse brackets the closing stories in Judges; and the half verse (“There was no king in Israel”) serves as a twice-repeated refrain. Though granted the land of promise, Israel has refused to accept Yahweh as their king. “They have not rejected you,” Yahweh will eventually say to Samuel (the last of the judges), “but they have rejected me from being king over them” (1 Samuel 8:7). 

Today’s passage from Judges sheds light on what happens to people’s lives when Israel’s Lord is not lord of their lives: 

  • A mother is victim of embezzlement at the hand of her own son. But then the mother is herself complicit in Israel’s sin: she commits idolatry when she underwrites the casting of an idol to Yahweh. 

  • The son bears the auspicious name Micah, which means “Who is like Yahweh?” Ironically, though, in violation of God’s prohibition of graven images “like Yahweh,” he builds a personal shrine to house the idol to Yahweh, along with an ephod and teraphim for divining. Initially, he establishes one of his sons as priest, and later hires a wandering Levite instead. Essentially, he thinks he’s bought God’s favors with a lucky rabbit’s foot: “Now I know that the Lord will prosper me, because the Levite has become my priest” (Judges 17:13).  

  • This young Levite should have been living in one of the Levitical towns in Judah where he is from. But he has headed north, seeking, it appears, his fortune. “Levite-for-hire” is far from God’s requirement for him to be a guardian of the holy things of Yahweh. Instead, he has abandoned Yahweh to minister before idols. We find later that this vain and greedy Levite is Moses’s great-grandson Jonathan (Judges 18:30). His fall is emblematic of Israel’s demise into spiritual apostasy and moral decay. 

The burden of the Book of Judges is to make us yearn for a better day. 

Happily, that day has come: 

“Very truly, I tell you, anyone who hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life, and does not come under judgement, but has passed from death to life” — John 5:24. Hope for the restoration of all broken relationships lies in the mutual love and exchange of honor between Jesus Christ the Son of God and his Heavenly Father. Even death—the just verdict against all sin and the breaker of all relationships—yields to the “voice of the Son of God” (John 5:25). 

In Jesus, everything that the Book of Judges has described as broken has been restored. Jesus provides for his mother even from the Cross (John 19:25-27); and at his resurrection he commissions a woman to be “apostle to the apostles” (20:11-18). As God’s very Son, Jesus presents a true image of God: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God” (John 1:1). He is, as the hymn says, “Word of the Father, now in flesh appearing.” And rather than use his own priestly status for self-service, he “lays down his life for his friends” (John 15: 13). 

But filled with the Holy Spirit, he gazed into heaven and saw the glory of God and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. “Look,” he said, “I see the heavens opened and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God!” — Acts 7:55-56. Because the new day has come in Jesus’s life, death, and resurrection, even a story like Stephen’s martyrdom becomes a story of hope. Although the narrative of God’s redemptive love meets opposition, Stephen knows his Savior has it under control. We the readers are introduced to Saul, who is complicit in the stoning of Stephen. He will become the centerpiece of the account of the gospel’s progress in the rest of the Book of Acts. And, finally, we learn that “a severe persecution” begins against the church in Jerusalem, the force of which will start the dispatch of Christ’s witnesses from Jerusalem and Judea to Samaria (Acts 8:4-25) and to the ends of the earth (Acts 8:26-40, and most of the rest of Acts). 

Be blessed this day, 

Reggie Kidd+