Learning Encounter5 8
Learning Encounter5 8
Learning Encounter5 8
• Specific Objectives: At the end of the lesson, the students are expected to:
1. WORD OBJECTIVE ( Believing: Knowledge of the Word of God, doctrine or teachings of the
Catholic faith) Relate the role of prophets in terms of prefiguring Jesus Christ the Word to
present social-moral issues;
2. WORSHIP OBJECTIVE (Trusting: Affective objective or love of God expressed through faith and
worship) Appreciate the importance of the role of the prophets by being able to identify its
connection to one’s life and to the society;
3. WITNESS OBJECTIVE (Doing: Psychomotor objective or applying and living the Word of God):
Express in concrete action one’s intention to become a living prophet of God in today’s world.
3. Because of the supernatural illumination through which the divine message came to him, a
prophet was also called a “seer” (1 Kings 9:9).
5. The whole history of Israel is a history of a people turning their back on God despite God’s love
and faithfulness.
6. The prophet like Isaiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel responded to the issue of social injustices by
condemning and denouncing them and reminding the people of God’s message.
7. The prophets constantly reminded the people of God’s love, calling them back that they might
only live in His love.
8. The prophets were God’s instrument of the true liberation of the people.
9. The prophets by faith, conquered kingdoms, did what was righteous, obtained the promises ...
(Hebrews 11:33)
10. Prophetic hope: Jer 32:26-27 God makes himself the firm foundation for the hope held out to
the people by the prophets.
.
Prophetic hope
a. Grounded on the memory of God’s great saving acts in the past (Is. 51: 1-2). Thus grounded,
hope works against the rootlessness with which modern secularism plagues us all.
b. Looks essentially also to the future and to posterity. It helps us to overcome our excessive
individualism. (Is. 51:6)
c. A promise of God’s forgiveness which brings comfort and frees us from the guilt of sin (Is. 40:1-
2).
d. Sketches a new life that drives out resignation and despair (Is. 40:31).
e. Bursts out of all narrow pragmatic, utilitarian views by offering a vision of the future that only
God can create (Is. 65: 17-18).
WITNESS
1. God is speaking to us today through the Old Testament prophets as much as in the days of the Old.
2. The prophetic message is inspiring an extraordinary active ministry of the Catholic Church in the
Philippines in its thrust for justice throough a preferential option for the poor.
3. The prophetic conversion of hope in the Lord, of fidelity to the covenant with God through the
covenant with God our Savior, remains ever new and ever relevant.
5. We are called to hear God’s Word and help other people hear and listen to God’s word.
• Specific Objectives: At the end of the lesson, the students are expected to:
1. WORD OBJECTIVE ( Knowledge of the Word of God, doctrine or teachings of the Catholic
faith); To use the covenant God has made with His Chosen People as basis for critiquing
present international agreements in the economic and political arenas such as NATO,
APEC, etc., or simply national/local agreements such as the practice of too much usury
like the so called 5/6.
2. WORSHIP OBJECTIVE (Affective objective or love of God expressed through faith and
worship); To grow in holiness through prayer or meditations or creative expression of
one’s feelings in regard to pertinent issues in the world today;
3. WITNESS OBJECTIVE (Psychomotor objective or applying and living the Word of God): To be
just in dealing with others by realizing a specific promise one has made to family members or
friends.
WORD:
1. Salvation history is the story of God’s intervention to remedy; to change that situation
the human being brought to himself.
2. The salient points that are important to understand this process and also to be able to
get in touch wth God’s pattern of acting, in behalf of His Chosen People, because He
continues to behave in the same way even with us today:
2.1 Election
2.2 Desert experience
2.3 Covenant
2.4 Promised land and prosperity
2.5 Babylonian exile
1. ELECTION
1.1 The ultimate end of God’s intervention is the good of the whole humanity and creation. But
in order to do this God always uses te instrumentality of one or a collective as a means and
vehicle of His intervention.
1.2 This is connected with the idea of consecration: that God selects, sets aside someone or
some people for a task he wants done for the good of the whole
1.3 God chooses certain persons to accomplish His plan.
1.4 Moses was chosen by \God to liberate the Issraelites.who, in turn were chosen as people of
God.
1.5 Another pattern connected with election is that God’s choice does not follow the standard
of humans. While human persons judge their fellow human beings based on appearance and
other physical realities, God looks at the heart (1 Sam 16:7; 1 Thes 2:4b).
1.6 In the case of His first move, God could not have chosen worst group of people – slaves in
Egypt. They had no influence. This choice ascertained that what happened to them was done
bu somebody else, not by them.
1.7 The Chosen People of Yahweh were a mixed multitude (Exodus 12:37-38).
1.8 What is something common to all of these people is their experience of oppression.
1.9 Their being slaves, in a certain sense, was God’s standard for choosing them.
III. COVENANT
3.1 A covenant is a binding agreement between two parties. In the Old Testament, God,
because of His great love, always takes the initiate to make a covenant with His people.
3.2 God is a Father who keeps his covenant-promises. His being faithful had been shown in
these covenants:
a. Adam’s covenant of marriage with Eve (Gen 1:26-2:3) and God’s promise to be delivered
from the power of evil as symbolized by the serpent (Gen 3:15).
b. Noah and his family were kept safe from the flood and God’s promise not to wipe out
again the world with a flood (Gen. 9:8-17).
c. Abraham was promised land and descendants (Gen. 12:1-3; 22:16-18).
d. Moses and the rest of the Israelites were called to be a holy nation (Ex. 19:5-6) and were
promised the land of Canaan (Ex. 3:4-10).
e. Ex. 19:5-6 If you will obey me and keep my covenant, you will bemy own people. The
whole earth is mine, but you will be my chosen people, a people dedicated to me alone,
and you will serve me as priests.
f. The essence of this covenant is best captured by this verse: “You shall be my people,
and I will be your God” (Jer. 7:23; 11:4; 24:7; Ez. 11:20; Ho. 2:25) This implies that
Yahweh who carried the Israelites on eagles wings and brought them to himself (Ex.
19:4) henceforth will continue to be their liberator, protector and provider on
condition that they will be faithful to HIM
g. To aid them in maintaining their fidelity or faithfulness to Yahweh, the TEN
COMMANDMENTS were given (Ex. 20:1-7)
h. The TEN COMMANDMENTS or Torah would guide Israel on the way of life such that if
they do follow the laws it would slowly bring them back to where God originally
wanted them to be.
V. BABYLONIAN CAPTIVITY
5.1 Despite their military power, Israel was conquered by the Babylonians. The policy
of the Babylonian King was bring all captives to Babylon and make them slaves there.
5.2 King Jehoiachin, king of Judah, together with Ezekiel and the aristocrats of Judah
were made slaves in Babylon. King Zedekiah was made King of Judah. (2 Ch. 36: 1-23; 2
Kgs. 24:10-16; Jer. 39).
5.3 The Babylonian captivity was a traumatic experience to the Israelites. This period of
exile and captivity gave them time to reflect and these were their realizations:
a. The Israelites were special to God because of His intervention and because God, the
Creator and the Supreme Being, made a covenant with them;
b. God’s favor, presence, and protection were responsible for whatever prosperity they
have arrived at;
c. Why then this sad event of slavery and captivity in a foreign land?
5.4 Interpretation of the prophets: The Israelites did not live up to the demands of the
covenant. Through the exile and slavery, God is canceling the covenant He had made
with their forefathers.
5.5 He will make another intervention by making a new covenant.
5.6 Promise of another intervention (Ez. 36: 24ff).
5.7 Summary points:
a. Alone and unaided, man and woman cannot save or realize themselves;
b. Despite human unfaithfulness, God will always remain faithful;
c. Human’s failure and sinfulness is not greater than God’s love and goodness; it cannot
destroy God’s plans.
A.Alone and unaided, man and woman cannot save or realize themselves.
The tragic events in the life of the chosen people just highlights the main event,
that is God’s loving intervention. Why did God have to intervene It is because salvation
cannot be worked out or merited?
This is the concept of unmerited grace. After the fall, human nature is always
weak but made strong by the Spirit of God who lives in us, calling us always to
repentance and love.
God’s grace of unconditional love, the main teaching of Jesus, is also the
principal motif of God’s dealing with his chosen people.
b. Despite human unfaithfulness, God will always remain faithful.
God’s love is characterized by faithfulness despite the unfaithfulness of human
beings. The unfaithfulness of the Israelites is portrayed in the metaphor of harlotry. (Ez
16:28-29)
Israel’s being a prostitute is worse because unlike ordinary prostitute, she
“scorned payments”, “gave gifts” to her lovers and bribe them to come to her (Ez.
16:32)
c. Human’s failure and sinfulness is not greater than God’s love and goodness; it cannot
destroy God’s plans.
1. The coming of King Cyrus of Persia who allowed the return of the Israelites to
their land maybe interpreted as God’s intervention through the instrumentality of
persons.
2. Psalm 23; Ps. 100:3; Is. 40:11
3. This God does not only seek the lost but gives him life. Ez. 37:1-14. These bones
symbolize Israel who were dead in sin but became alive because of the transformative
power of God..
4. Return to Jerusalem, Restoration and Rebuilding: In their return to
Jerusalem Ezra restores Israel’s life of worship and Nehemiah led the people in the
rebuilding of the temple.
5. Israel’s experience of restoration as a holy people is an allusion to the
exchatological promise, that is, the coming of God’s kingdom in fullness – another motif
of the teachings of Jesus.
Learning Encounter 7: Jesus Christ, the WORD who reveals the Father
A. What symbol did Jesus use in revealing the image of God to us? Abba or Father
B. Three statements that form the very foundation of our Christian faith:
1. God always loves me unconditionally.
2. God always forgives and forgets.
3. God is always present with me and for me.
C. God always loves me unconditionally.
a. Why do many find the idea of God’s unconditional love hard to accept? Because they are
not sure if God can love them without conditions at all. They already feel guilty just thinking of
God and definitely unworthy of such a love.
b. Is there anything that we can do to make us worthy of God’s love? There is nothing we
have to do in order to be loved by God, because even before we do the things, we intend to do
that would make us worthy of God, we are already loved by God.
This is the message of the story “Woman caught in adultery” (John 8:3-11)
c. So if God’s love for us is unconditional, what then is the problem? The problem is in
our response: Can I let this love permeate me and change my life? Can I respond in a
way that I too love God with all my heart, with all my soul and with all my strength?
(Mt. 12:28-34)
d. God’s unconditional love is at the heart of the message of Jesus.
e. Why did Jesus relate the parables: to correct our notions about who God is and how
God loves us.
D. God always forgives and forgets.
a. God will never give us up: the constancy of his love depends on what He is and not on
what I am or on how I behave.
b. Samplings of God’s forgiveness: Joel 2:13; Is.44:22;; Is. 3:12; Jer. 31:34
c. What is the best image of this forgiving God?
d. If our past has been forgiven what will happen to the effects of our sins? The effects of
our sins are not automatically healed.
e. Why are the effects of sin not automatically healed? Because deeply ingrained habits
will not go overnight.
e. How can deeply ingrained habits be healed?
Cooperate with God’s forgiving love through discipline and sincere efforts to overcome the
craving of the past and to let myself gradually be healed.
f. What is the first step towards receiving God’s pardon and forgiveness? Honesty in admitting
our sins and faults without any excuses.
g. Is it wrong to feel resentment and hatred in our hearts after having forgiven somebody
who has hurt us? No, because God created us with a heart that takes time to heal from
hatred and resentment.
h. What it means for a Christian to forgive? Acc. to Martin Luther, what should you not
want that feeling of resentment to become? You should not allow that feeling of
resentment and hatred to become a wall between you and the person who hurt you
such that you cannot reach out to him in Christian charity, especially if he is in need of
your help.
i. God is always “Present With and For Me.”
a. Meaning of “Emmanuel?” “God-with-us.” Yahweh is a God who cares for us and who loves
to be with us.”
b. As “God with us”, what is the most appropriate word that will describe God’s relationship
with us? The word ‘compassion” found in Exodus 34: 6-7a
c. What does the word ‘compassion’ in Hebrew connote?
In Hebrew, the word used for “compassion” is “Rahamin” which is the same word used in
referring to the “womb of a woman.”
d. Based on the way a mother loves, what does compassion denotes? 1. the ability to suffer
with; 2. to be filled with empathy; 3. to be able to share the suffering and pain of others;
4. To experience their joy and happiness as if it were happening to me
. What is the true mystery of God in terms of Pain and suffering? Not that he takes away our
pain and suffering, but that he wants to share it with us.
f. What is the real good news in Jesus’ message about God? That God is with us who
shares our pain and misery.
g. This is not a guarantee that we will never have to suffer or that we are already insured
against every eventuality?
h. It just simply tells us that God will always be there, with his compassionate love, we can
always count on His presence.
Learning Encounter 8: Jesus Christ: The Word Reveals Who a Human
Being Is