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Hey all! Welcome back! What was your first thought when you read the title of the episode? If you are in the depths of winter with ice, snow, cold winds, dry air, dark overcast days – I’m depressing myself – “flip flop” may make you think of lovely summer days at the beach or strolling in the park with friends and family. Or, you might think of “flip flop” in terms of its colloquial use here in the US to describe someone who changes their position on an issue frequently and often. In spite of the negative connotation, we’re using the second image for this week’s title because each of the passages for this Sunday has a reversal. In Micah, God is bringing the beloved people to trial! Paul insists that what the Corinthians value is not as valuable as they think. And in Matthew, Jesus offers blessings for people the world would consider quite unfortunate. However, God is always turning life upside down in order to bring grace, mercy, and a restored relationship.

This week’s texts are:  

Micah 6: 1-8  [01:59]  – Micah presents a juicy legal drama in these verses. God is perplexed by the people’s behavior and forgetfulness and has decided to get their attention by suing them. The first verses show the mountains and the foundation of the earth being summoned for jury duty and the people being directed to stand and plead their case. We wondered in Nature Smart if the mountains are simply a lovely literary device or if they refer to Mounts Gerizim and Ebal, actual mountains that are part of Israel’s history. As God presents evidence of God’s own great faithfulness and mighty acts of salvation on behalf of the people, Micah asks them what they could possibly offer as compensation for their misdeeds. In Body smart, we have a suggestion to use the rising and standing to plead one’s defense and the bowing to offer a sacrifice with your people in worship. We have a question in Self Smart about the difficulty of offering oneself to God and in Math Smart, we explore how God reverses the expectation of punishment.

1 Corinthians 1:18-31 [14:25] – Paul expands his argument against the Corinthians in today’s verses. They have not only divided themselves into favored factions, but also they are chasing after values that run counter to the Good News of the cross that Paul had already proclaimed to them. It is not the first time, nor the last time that people would do such things. In Eye Smart, we look at the Vitruvian Man as a symbol of humanity’s tendency to center the world in the self. We think the reversal in this passage can be explored with some questions in People Smart. The pivot point of the reversal is the cross, and in Self Smart, we wonder what shocking item of humiliation would represent the ugliness of the cross for Paul’s audience in our day.

Matthew 5:1-12 [22:22] – God’s reversal is on full display in Jesus’ most famous sermon. What is blessed (or honored) about being poor in spirit or hungry for justice or persecuted for your faith? We have some charts to help understand this logic in Math Smart. For Music Smart, we have a few hymns and anthems using these verses, as well as a chant and choral reading. For People Smart, we have a homework project special effect, and in Self Smart, we have some questions that have a connection to Body Smart.

Links

… in Micah  

… in 1 Corinthians 1

… in Matthew

Image credit: The featured image is … wait for it… flip-flopped flip flops on a flip chart! – D2