I just registered for my final semester of classes. In six months I'll be done with seminary. That was quick! Here's what the final semester is looking like:
Survey of Reformation History (my last remaining requirement)
Marriage and Family in the Christian Community
Dialogical/Imaginative Prayer in the Ignatian Tradition
Job, Literature, and Modernity
Word and Act: Sacraments, Funerals and Weddings
I am most looking forward to the Job class since it hits so many of my interests: the Book of Job, the problem of suffering, comparative literature, and the modern world. The fact that it's being taught by the world's foremost Job scholar, who literally wrote the book on Job (the second book of his two-part commentary on Job is awaiting publication), adds to the allure. Also, the class is being co-taught with a comparative literature professor from the university. Lastly we're going to watch the Coen Brothers' A Serious Man, which is based on Job, and allegedly the Coen Brothers will be invited to campus to talk about the film. Now that would make for a good ending.
This sermon was delivered at Yale Divinity School in 2020 for the class Sacred Moments in African-American Preaching. I begin with a simple observation. Of the four canonical gospels, Matthew is the only one that ends with the words of Jesus. Mark, Luke, and John all end in the narrator’s voice, but Matthew closes with the words of Jesus. Mark ends at the tomb, with the women fleeing in terror and amazement. Luke ends with the disciples in Jerusalem, praising at the temple. John ends on the shore of the Sea of Tiberias, with a dialogue between Jesus and Peter. And here Matthew ends with the disciples in Galilee, meeting Jesus at the mountain where he had directed them. Matthew gives Jesus the last word. But before we get to those last words, there are three other words in this passage that I call to our attention because I find them astonishing. Let me read verse 17 once more. “When they saw him, they worshiped him; but some do...
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