v. 1 Who deserves credit
for the Peace of David’s later reign?
v. 2 What does the ark of
God symbolize?
v. 3 What does David have
in mind?
v. 4 What does it mean when
“the word of the LORD” comes to a person?
Why does this mostly happen at night?
vs. 5-12 What political,
theological, or other reason can you think of to justify the LORD not
permitting David to build a house for the ark?
How many organizing pastor’s are not around when a congregation builds
its first physical plant?
vs. 13-14a Of whom is the
LORD talking?
v. 20 What is the
difference between ordinary, common oil and holy oil?
v. 24 What is a horn?
v. 26 Is this a familiar
cry?
v. 28 see verse 24.
v. 29 From an historical
perspective, has God kept these promises?
v. 30 Children in the
biological, or the metaphorical sense?
v. 36 Really?
vs. 20-37 How can a
faithful Jew or Christian, read these
verses in light of the destruction of the second temple, the holocaust, etc.,
and not think the LORD has not lived up to divine promises?
v. 11 Who calls Gentiles
“the uncircumcision”? Who calls “the circumcision” by that name? Is Paul coining these phrases or quoting
others?
vs. 12-13 Why only “Christ”
in verse 12 but “Christ Jesus” in verse 13?
v. 14 How has Christ broken
down the dividing wall of hostility?
What was the dividing wall of hostility? I can not but help read this verse in light
of the walls Israel has erected between Jewish and Palestinian
neighborhoods. How has the institutional
church erected its own dividing walls?
vs. 15-16 Is there a
difference between one new humanity and one humanity being engrafted into
another?
vs. 17-18 If there is now a
new humanity, why does Paul write as if there were still two?
v. 20 Us there any
theological or rhetorical connection between the :household” in this verse and
the “house” in the First Reading?
v. 22 Note that in the NRSV
it is “a holy temple in the Lord”, not “of the Lord”. I am really beginning to think we ought to
interpret this passage through the interpretive lens of the First Reading.
v. 30 What do you think
they had done and taught? What have you
done and taught?
v. 31 The first
Leaders’ Retreat?
v. 32 was the boat the
deserted place or did they travel by boat to a deserted place? Over the past two years I have become a
sailor and regularly sail for up to five to seven hours at a time a twenty-four
foot sailboat. Although I do not (yet)
sail alone, these sails are often retreat like in nature. I do not need to sail to a deserted place. The sailboat is my deserted place.
v. 33 Sailing is often a
slow way to travel, especially in a light wind or against a wind and/or
current. It is not hard for me to
envision a group of people walking to a place faster than one could sail to it.
v. 34 What are sheep
like without a shepherd?
v. 53 Is “crossed over”
merely a geographical reference or a metaphor for something else?
v. 56 There are
marketplaces in/on farms? Is there
anything special about the fringe of a cloak?
What other Gospel story does this remind you of? Can you recall any hymn employing “fringe”
imagery? Maybe we can repeal
Obama’s healthcare reform, along with Medicare, Medicaid and private health
insurance and just issue sick people some fringe to touch.
ADDENDUM
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