Jan 23, 2009

PERICOPE HELPS

In the Lutheran Church we follow (at least my church) the Revised Common Lectionary 3 year cycle of readings on Sunday. This includes an OT, Psalm (in the gradual spot), NT Epistle, and Gospel reading. There is usually a point of contact between the readings that help define the theme or motif. I appreciate the thought that went into setting up this lectionary and it benefits both the preacher and the congregation in multiple ways. Here are a couple of advantages I see by utilizing the lectionary:
  • It forces the preacher to deal with "the whole counsel of God's Word" rather than just preaching from "hobby horse" texts. Some preachers are great w/ the epistles and hate narrative passages and vice versa.

  • When preached well it helps both preacher and parishioner see the entire drama of Scripture. If exegeted in a canonical/Biblical Theological way the preacher can connect the OT and NT together using parrallelism, promise/fullfillment, type/shadow, Messianic motifs, etc. I see this aspect as an advantage over the normal expositional preaching through an entire book verse by verse.

  • The readings/sermon when coupled with complimentary hymns and prayers can bolster the Church calendar so that the Trinitarian life with emphasis on the Life, Death, Resurrection and Ascension of Christ taking center stage is re-enacted year in and year out. Even if a church doesn't have the greatest preacher the lectionary and liturgy get the Gospel clearly out.


To this end, I recommend a very helpful site called Pericope.org which features notes on the seaons, the readings, and offers a ton of recommendations on hymn selection to compliment it all. Additionally, there are helpful expository notes on the lectionary from Pastor Buls.

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