Unraveled Week 4
2 Samuel 3:7; 21:1-14 Rizpah Mourns her Sons
Threads from last week
Reflecting on the comments from last week and our discussion last night at the face to face study time, I'm thinking about notions of control and release. At our meeting last night, we spoke briefly to what the plagues and Pharaoh's hard heart say about our control of the environment and its resources and how that is actually leading to less control in terms of climate change, disasters, etc. Might there be a way that unraveling is actually liberating?
Secondly, I would note that these stories seem to be raising for us challenging notions of who God is. Is God a tough bully? A loving, grieving mother as we'll see today? A somewhat blunt, unfeeling visitor like the one that appeared to Sarah? All of these things? How do we make peace with these conflicting versions of God? A great thing for us to wrestle with!
This Week
Click here
for the Bible text
Questions
As with last week, if you wish to leave a comment, you can answer these in any way you wish.
1. What surprises you about this story?
2. As you look at the artwork above and read the artist's statement on page 11 in your journal, what stands out to you? Note, in this case the full image is not in the journal. It is shown above.
3. What is unraveling in this story? What emotions come up for you in reading it and imagining the scene?
4.How does the grief of others make us feel? Why might that be the case?
6. Are there times when you have found God in grief? Either your own grieving or the grieving of others?
Further Reading
Alfred, Lord Tennyson wrote a poem entitled "Rizpah" that grapples with our Protestant notions of propriety, grief and salvation. The voice is not meant to be the Biblical Rizpah, but a more modern grieving mother. Click here
to read.
Next Week
For next Wednesday, we'll be looking at “Peter Sinks in the Water" Matthew 14:22-33. This one might be more familiar to us than some of the others, which means the challenge is discovering something new.






