Tuesday, June 19, 2012


The Nativity of St. John the Baptist—June 24, 2012
Isaiah 40:1-5
And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed,
    and all flesh shall see it together,
     for the mouth of the Lord has spoken. Vs. 5
     Today’s readings are a break in the “Sundays after Pentecost”--an opportunity to turn our attention to John the Baptist.  These verses delivered by the prophet Isaiah in announcing the end of Israel’s exile are used as well by the gospel authors to introduce John the Baptist.  Evidently these authors saw and delivered a connection between the release of Israel from her Babylonian captivity and the release of the world from its captivity to sin.
     The Baptist says of Jesus:  “He must increase but I must decrease”  (John 3:30).  In Jesus the “glory of the Lord shall be revealed…”  While in the flesh, Jesus’ glory was to be lifted up on the cross—not exactly an attractive sort of glory.  There in that humiliation and death, God hides his glory, forgives sins, and releases the world from its captivity.  There lifted up on the cross, Jesus drew all people—all flesh—to himself (Jn. 12:32) so that they could “see it together.” 
     You, accustomed to the glory of the world, can never “reason” your way to the cross where glory hides beneath its opposite.  You can’t “reason” your way to faith.  But the Holy Spirit does call you through the gospel and establish you in faith.  Your own understanding or effort cannot accomplish this.  It is the work of God.  Your work is nothing; Christ’s work is everything.  The mouth of the Lord has spoken, and spoken well through his prophet John.

Timothy J. Swenson
The Institute of Lutheran Theology
www.ilt.org

Wednesday, June 13, 2012


The Third Sunday after Pentecost—June 17, 2012
Ezekiel 17:22-24
“I am the Lord; I have spoken, and I will do it.”
This chapter of Ezekiel is like an extended parable.  The first and middle parts of the chapter concern the “eagle”—a parabolic reference to Nebuchadnezzar—who broke off the “top of the cedar”—a reference to his deposing the rightful king of Judah in Jerusalem.  Jehoiachin, the Davidic king, was exiled in Babylon while a puppet king Zedekiah was set on the throne.
     The verses of our reading today concern the Lord God’s establishing superiority over that “eagle.”  Not merely content with “breaking off,” the Lord God will “plant” it on the heights.  It will be fruitful and noble, a welcome rest for “birds of all sorts.”  Then with language that anticipates Philippians 2—“every knee shall bow… and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord…,” the Lord says, “All the trees of the field shall know that I am the Lord…”  How?  How will this knowledge of the Lord be manifested?  By these reversals:  high to low and low to high, green to dry and dry to flourishing, the authority of God’s Word is established.  The Lord speaks and it comes to be.
     The Lord has spoken regarding you.  Through the lips of your preacher, Christ says:  “I baptize you in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.”  Christ never lies but is THE truth itself.  Therefore, being baptized into his death and resurrection (Romans 6), you have new life in Christ.  Jesus Christ—the Word of God Incarnate—establishes you in the mighty reversal of death to life.

Table Talk
From the Institute of Lutheran Theology

written by:
The Reverend Timothy J. Swenson
Dean of Chapel and Student Life
Institute of Lutheran Theology
910 4th St.
Brookings, SD 57006
701-421-1108 cell
tswenson@ilt.org

Thursday, June 7, 2012


Table Talk—June 10, 2012

The Second Sunday after Pentecost
Genesis 3:8-15
“Where are you?”  vs. 9b
     The Lord God sounds ever so much like a divine parent, a father whose children have raided the cookie jar, realized their error, and have hidden themselves in guilt, fear, and shame.  “Where are you?”  the Lord God calls out in invitation.  Right away the children respond as the man makes excuses:  “I heard; I feared; I was shamed; I hid.”  The Lord God inquires like a concerned parent so as to discover the cause of such fear and shame.  From the man, the Lord God receives blame because the Lord provided the woman to be with the man.  From the woman, the Lord God receives blame because the serpent (who was a creature of the Lord God) deceived her.  Both man and woman are full of blame.
     Adam and Eve's pointing fingers of blame are inclusive: neighbor (Eve), creation (serpent), and Creator (God) are all responsible for the condition the fallen couple now suffer. The man and the woman are no longer “blameless” beings; their very character is changed.  Their relationships with Creator, creature, & neighbor once marked by trust were now marked by blame as they are held in suspicion and fear.
     Jesus Christ has borne the sin of the world; he has taken the blame.  Now you, whose relationship with the Lord God, your Father, was once marked by blame, can—as Luther writes in the Small Catechism—“believe that He is our real Father and we are His real children… [and] pray with trust and complete confidence.”   “In Jesus” is the answer to the question: “Where are you?”  The Father and the wayward children of fallen humanity are united “in Jesus.” 

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