I seem to have missed this one when it came out last year. But I am glad I happened upon it now. In this collection of Scriptural Reflections Brueggemann pushes us to use Scripture (particularly Hebrew Scripture in this case) as a tool to reflect on where God is and how God is leading us in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic.
It strikes me that many of these reflections would have wisdom in the midst of other crises as well.
There are parts or this little book that I will need to reread. The reflection on Psalm 77 and the move from self to God I should probably read annually. In fact I am tempted to read it as a sermon some Sunday (or at least preach sermon that is heavily informed by what Brueggemann has to say).
The last couple of reflections on the new thing God is doing and the process of birthing a new world are what we need to hear over and over again as we live in this world where God has created and is Creating and is constantly re-creating. There is a big push in the province where I live to declare the crisis over so we can get back to the way things were before. As a species and as communities we can be very good at avoiding the new thing that is being created and birthed in our midst. We want to avoid the labour pains and loss that come with the birth. Whether it is driven by the pandemic, or by climate change, or by work for racial/sexual/gender equality, or by economic justice concerns (and some of those may interlink) the world is groaning, the pains are beginning. We may be able to ignore or avoid them for a while longer, but the newness is coming eventually.
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