Tuesday, May 31, 2011

May 30 through July 3 Readings

Here is a month of readings. Over the course of the next several weeks we will be reading a goodly portion of wisdom literature from the Old Testament -- Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Song of Solomon as well the prophet Isaiah. We will also be working our way through several of Paul's letters.

The wisdom literature is self-explanatory, more or less. Its goal is to observe life, learn from it, and frame what has been learned into a saying instructive for future generations. For example, Prov. 22:3 reads: "The clever see danger and hide; but the simple go on, and suffer for it." Most wisdom literature has a parental tone to it. If we listen carefully, we can hear it as sound advice from a father or mother.

When reading the prophets it is good to know if the prophet is writing before, during, or after the Babylonian exile, 587 BCE. Prophecies before the exile contain words of warning. Israel should change her ways to avoid exile, which will come as punishment for faithlessness. Prophecies during the exile contain words of comfort. Israel, though chastened, is still God's chosen and will not be abandoned. Prophecies after the exile contain words of hope and promise. Israel has atoned for her sins and will be restored to her land.

Isa 1-39 is pre-exilic. Isa 40-55 is exilic. Isa 56-66 is post-exilic.

When reading Paul it is helpful to use a study Bible. You will want to know something about the situation that has prompted Paul's letter. What happened that warranted correspondence from the apostle?

Keep up your reading and study. Peace.

May 30: Prov 22-24; 2Cor 8
May 31: Prov 25-26; 2Cor 9
Jun 1: Prov 27-29; 2Cor 10
Jun 2: Prov 30-31; 2Cor 11:1-15
Jun 3: Ecc 1-3; 2Cor 11:16-33
Jun 4: Ecc 4-6; 2Cor 12
Jun 5: Ecc 7-9; 2Cor 13
Jun 6: Ecc 10-12; Gal 1
Jun 7: Song 1-3; Gal 2
Jun 8: Song 4-5; Gal 3
Jun 9: Song 6-8; Gal 4
Jun 10: Is 1-2; Gal 5
Jun 11: Is 3-4; Gal 6
Jun 12: Is 5-6; Eph 1
Jun 13: Is 7-8; Eph 2
Jun 14: Is 9-10; Eph 3
Jun 15: Is 11-13; Eph 4
Jun 16: Is 14-16; Eph 5:1-16
Jun 17: Is 17-19; Eph 5:17-33
Jun 18: Is 20-22; Eph 6
Jun 19: Is 23-25; Phil 1
Jun 20: Is 26-27; Phil 2
Jun 21: Is 28-29; Phil 3
Jun 22: Is 30-31; Phil 4
Jun 23: Is 32-33; Col 1
Jun 24: Is 34-36; Col 2
Jun 25: Is 37-38; Col 3
Jun 26: Is 39-40; Col 4
Jun 27: Is 41-42; 1Thess 1
Jun 28: Is 43-44; 1Thess 2
Jun 29: Is 45-46; 1Thess 3
Jun 30: Is 47-49; 1Thess 4
Jul 1: Is 50-52; 1Thess 5
Jul 2: Is 53-55; 2Thess 1
Jul 3: Is 56-58; 2Thess 2

Monday, May 23, 2011

Week of May 23 Readings

May 23: Prov 3-5; 2Cor 1
May 24: Prov 6-7; 2Cor 2
May 25: Prov 8-9; 2Cor 3
May 26: Prov 10-12; 2Cor 4
May 27: Prov 13-15; 2Cor 5
May 28: Prov 16-18; 2Cor 6
May 29: Prov 19-21; 2Cor 7

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Week of May 16 Readings

May 16: Ps 135-136; 1Cor 12
May 17: Ps 137-139; 1Cor 13
May 18: Ps 140-142; 1Cor 14:1-20
May 19: Ps 143-145; 1Cor 14:21-40
May 20: Ps 146-147; 1Cor 15:1-28
May 21: Ps 148-150; 1Cor 15:29-58
May 22: Prov 1-2; 1Cor 16

Monday, May 9, 2011

Week of May 9 Readings

May 9: Ps 119:1-88; 1Cor 7:20-40
May 10: Ps 119:89-176; 1Cor 8
May 11: Ps 120-122; 1Cor 9
May 12: Ps 123-125; 1Cor 10:1-18
May 13: Ps 126-128; 1Cor 10:19-33
May 14: Ps 129-131; 1Cor 11:1-16
May 15: Ps 132-134; 1Cor 11:17-34

Monday, May 2, 2011

Week of May 2 Readings

We begin Paul's Corinthian correspondence this week. According to Luke's account in Acts [Acts 18], Paul founded the church and spent more than a year in Corinth nurturing the Christian community. Paul continued on his missionary journey, making his way to Ephesus just across the Aegean Sea. From Ephesus, Paul wrote to the Corinthians in response to news he received as to how the community was faring.

The Corinthian congregation looked like Corinth itself, indeed the Greco-Roman world. There were a few very wealthy people, a lot of poor people, and no middle class to speak of. The Gentile Christians far outnumbered the Jewish Christians.

It is not surprising that most of Paul's letter address fractiousness in the Corinthian church. Paul also addresses the Corinthians' individualization or privatization of their faith.

The letter is an excellent example of the genre of deliberative rhetoric. The author, Paul, is attempting to persuade his audience, the Corinthians, to change their behavior and their thinking. Paul longs for the Corinthians to live their faith more fully and wholesomely.

May 2: Ps 100-102; 1Cor 1
May 3: Ps 103-104; 1Cor 2
May 4: Ps 105-106; 1Cor 3
May 5: Ps 107-109; 1Cor 4
May 6: Ps 110-112; 1Cor 5
May 7: Ps 113-115; 1Cor 6
May 8: Ps 116-118; 1Cor 7:1-19