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5th SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST

The season of Pentecost tells about the Spirit’s past and continued work in people and communities. This week’s overarching theme could well be the Spirit’s able and available assistance to help people carry out their mission. In the first lesson, David unites divided tribal groups and claims a city for his administration through the help of the Spirit. Paul finds the good grace to carry on in ministry despite the setbacks of "thorns" in his life, while Mark insists that resistance to faith or unfaith can nullify God’s willingness to work in people’s lives.

2 Samuel 5:1-5; 9-10-A King and A Kingdom

Saul is now out of the picture-killed in battle on the mountains of Gilboa-and the newly formed monarchy experiences a vacuum of leadership. At Hebron the southern tribes invite David to be their leader. However, to the north David’s leadership is slower in coming. But when Ishbaal-the king-in-exile-is assassinated in the north, David is able to create a unified kingdom and to enjoy a long reign. So we have a new king, but no place from which the king is to rule. The lectionary committee has skirted around that intriguing part of the story that falls between verses 5-9. Taken together, the reader is informed of king and kingdom and the beginning of a new and long-lived dynasty.

2 Corinthians 12:2-10-Grace Among Thorns

Now near the end of a very emotional and autobiographical letter, Paul closes with self-reflection. Presumably talking about himself, Paul recalls a vision that he has had-almost sounds like an out-of-body experience. Subsequent to the vision, he also describes a "thorn in the flesh" that was given to keep him from getting a big head over such paradisiacal a vision. Whether the thorns came in the form of physical illness, poor eyes, or persecution the text is silent, but whatever plagues him, when he cries out for removal of the thorns, the Lord speaks a word to Paul and a word that has since comforted sufferers up to our present day: "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness" (verse 9).

Mark 6:1-13-Faith in the Face of Un-faith

What an interesting counterpoint story that follows last week’s gospel lesson. We go from a striking and unique story of faith-the raising of a 12-year old girl from death (Mk. 5:22-24; 35-43)-to an equally astounding story of un-faith (Mk. 6:1-13). Seeds of the Sower continue to fall into a variety of fragile human soils, some yielding overwhelming harvests, some never breaking ground. Such is the case with this lesson: asphalt-hard ground-the old neighborhood. In spite of ineffective ministry at Nazareth, Jesus sends his Twelve to neighboring village-two by two-with the same authority as he has wielded with power to exorcise, heal, and proclaim the Kingdom of God.