Proper 7
God hears the cast-out, raises the baptized into new life, and sends disciples to speak without fear, even when faithfulness costs them comfort, approval, or security.
Before You Hear the Readings
This Sunday asks us to stand where faith becomes costly. The readings do not offer an easy religion of private comfort or family harmony at any price. They place us in the wilderness with Hagar, in the pleading trust of the psalmist, in the baptismal death and resurrection of Romans, and under Jesus’ hard but tender command: do not be afraid.
The Lectionary Thread
Genesis begins with a family wound that becomes a wilderness crisis. Hagar and Ishmael are expelled from Abraham’s household with bread, water, and no visible future. Yet the God of the covenant is not confined to the chosen tent. God hears the boy, addresses Hagar by name, opens her eyes to water, and makes a promise beyond the boundaries of Sarah’s fear and Abraham’s failure. The first movement of the lectionary is therefore not toward easy moral resolution, but toward divine attention: God hears the vulnerable where they are.
Psalm 86 gives the gathered assembly the prayer that belongs to such a place: “Incline your ear, O Lord.” It is the voice of one who is poor, needy, devoted, troubled, and still trusting. The psalm does not deny distress; it teaches worshipers how to pray from within it. Its confidence rests not in human innocence or control, but in the character of God: good, forgiving, abounding in steadfast love, great, wondrous, and alone worthy of worship.
Romans then deepens the movement from rescue to transformation. Baptism is not a religious improvement program; it is participation in Christ’s death and resurrection. The baptized have been joined to a life over which death no longer has dominion. That means grace is not permission to remain enslaved to sin, fear, or the old patterns of self-preservation. In Christ, disciples are given a new identity before they are sent into costly obedience.
The Gospel gathers these threads and sharpens them. Jesus tells his disciples that the mission will bring slander, exposure, division, and the cross. Yet three times the passage sounds the pastoral command: do not be afraid. The Father who sees the sparrow also sees the disciple; the God who heard Ishmael also hears those who suffer for the truth. The way of Jesus may unsettle households and reveal hidden loyalties, but it leads through loss into life.
The Readings Broken Open
The Readings Broken Open
First Reading
Genesis 21 is one of the most painful household stories in Scripture. Isaac, the child promised to Sarah and Abraham, has survived infancy and is weaned, an occasion marked with a feast. But joy in one part of the household exposes rivalry and fear in another. Sarah sees Ishmael, Hagar’s son, and demands that Hagar and the boy be cast out so that Isaac’s inheritance will not be threatened. The story is entangled with patriarchy, slavery, jealousy, inheritance, and the frailty of the very people through whom God has promised blessing.
It is important not to make the human actors flatter or cleaner than the text makes them. Hagar is repeatedly named in relation to her enslaved status and Egyptian identity. Abraham is distressed, but he still sends her away with tragically inadequate provisions. Sarah’s protective concern for Isaac becomes an act of exclusion. The covenant family is not presented as morally uncomplicated; rather, Scripture tells the truth about how fear and privilege can injure the vulnerable even inside the household of promise.
Yet the theological center of the passage is God’s hearing and seeing. In an earlier chapter, Hagar named God as the One who sees; here God hears the voice of the boy. The angel’s command to Hagar, “Lift up the boy and hold him fast,” is both tender and generative. God opens her eyes to a well already present, and the wilderness becomes survivable. Ishmael is not erased from God’s future. He too is promised a nation, not because he displaces Isaac, but because God’s mercy exceeds the household’s boundaries.
For a parish hearing this reading, the invitation is not to excuse the casting out but to notice where God is active after human beings have failed. The God of Abraham is also the God who meets an Egyptian slave woman in the wilderness. That truth should trouble any narrow imagination of election and comfort anyone who has been pushed to the margins by another person’s fear.
Psalm
Psalm 86 is prayer from a place of need. Its posture is humble, urgent trust: “Incline your ear,” “preserve my life,” “be gracious,” “give ear,” “listen.” This is not prayer as ornament or pious decoration. It is the cry of someone who has no adequate defense except the character of God. In parish worship, the psalm gives the assembly permission to bring trouble into the liturgy without pretending that all is well.
The psalmist’s hope is rooted in who God is: good and forgiving, abounding in steadfast love, incomparable among the gods, great and wondrous. In the context of the first reading, this prayer could be placed on Hagar’s lips, or Ishmael’s, or Abraham’s in his distress. In the context of the Gospel, it becomes the disciple’s prayer when witness brings rejection and fear presses close.
This psalm also widens the horizon. “All the nations you have made shall come and bow down before you.” The God who hears one poor and needy servant is also the God whose mercy encompasses the nations. That matters on a Sunday when Genesis reminds us that God’s promise is not made smaller by human rivalry. The psalm trains the baptized to pray both personally and expansively: save me, and gather all peoples into your praise.
Epistle
Romans 6 answers a question that arises whenever grace is preached with real force: if God’s grace is so abundant, does sin matter? Paul’s answer is emphatic. Grace does not make sin harmless; grace breaks sin’s dominion. The baptized have not merely been forgiven from a distance. They have been joined to Christ in his death and resurrection, incorporated into a new reality in which the old regime no longer has the final word.
Paul’s baptismal theology is communal before it is merely individual. “All of us who were baptized” have passed through the waters into Christ’s death so that “we” might walk in newness of life. In the Anglican tradition, this resonates deeply with the Baptismal Covenant: renouncing evil, turning to Jesus Christ, continuing in the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, resisting evil, seeking and serving Christ in all persons, and striving for justice and peace. These vows are not moral heroics undertaken alone; they are the shape of life for a people already claimed by Christ.
The language of death can sound severe, but Paul is proclaiming liberation. The old self, the self enslaved to sin, fear, rivalry, domination, and self-justification, has been crucified with Christ. The baptized do not need to keep serving the masters that Christ has defeated. This does not mean disciples never struggle; it means struggle happens from within a new allegiance. Worshipers come to Word and Sacrament to be reminded, again and again, who they are: dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus.
Placed beside Genesis and Matthew, Romans shows that deliverance is more than survival. God does not merely find Hagar water or reassure fearful disciples; God creates a people capable of living differently. Baptismal life is the deep ground of courageous witness.
Gospel
Matthew 10 is part of Jesus’ missionary discourse, addressed to disciples being sent out with his authority and vulnerability. Jesus does not romanticize their calling. If the teacher is maligned, the students should not expect applause. If the master of the house is called demonic, the household should expect slander too. Discipleship is not a path around conflict; it is a way of faithfulness within it.
Yet Jesus’ hard sayings are framed by tenderness. “Do not be afraid” is not a casual reassurance. It is grounded in the Father’s intimate care: sparrows are not forgotten, the hairs of the disciples’ heads are counted, and their lives matter immeasurably to God. Jesus does not say no harm will come. He says fear is not to be their lord. The one who holds soul and body, truth and judgment, life and death, is God.
The most difficult lines concern division within households and the demand to love Jesus above father, mother, son, or daughter. These words must not be weaponized to justify cruelty, neglect, or spiritual manipulation. Jesus is not despising family love; he is refusing to let any human bond, however precious, become ultimate. In a world where family systems, social loyalties, or inherited identities can demand silence, complicity, or denial of the Gospel, Jesus calls disciples to a higher allegiance.
The good news is not that following Jesus will be painless. The good news is that the cross-shaped path leads to true life. Those who cling to life as possession, reputation, control, or safety will lose what they try to secure. Those who release life into Christ’s keeping discover life as gift. The Gospel’s severity is the severity of truth; its comfort is the Father’s unfailing knowledge and care.
Hearing It Fresh
Hearing It Fresh
If you are new to these readings, it may help to know that Scripture often tells the truth without making every character an example to imitate. Genesis does not ask us to admire the casting out of Hagar and Ishmael. Matthew does not invite us to seek conflict for its own sake. These passages are honest about fear, rejection, family pressure, and the cost of belonging to God.
Going Deeper
Going Deeper
Genesis 21 raises hard questions about election and exclusion. Isaac is the child through whom the covenant line will continue, yet Ishmael is not abandoned by God. Paul will later reflect on Isaac in relation to promise, but Genesis itself insists on a wider mercy: God hears Ishmael, preserves him, and grants him a future. The text resists any reading in which chosenness becomes permission to despise those outside one’s own line of inheritance.
Hagar’s story also sits within a broader biblical pattern in which God meets people in wilderness places. The wilderness can be judgment, testing, refuge, or revelation. For Hagar, it is the place where human provision runs out and divine seeing becomes survival. The well is not created in the moment so much as revealed; God opens her eyes. Spiritually, this suggests that grace often appears not as escape from desolation but as the gift of seeing sustenance where despair had narrowed the world.
Romans 6 has shaped Christian baptismal theology from the early centuries onward. Patristic writers often spoke of the font as both tomb and womb: the place where the old life is buried and the new creation is born. The Book of Common Prayer preserves this paschal imagination whenever baptism is linked to Christ’s death and resurrection and whenever the baptized are marked as Christ’s own forever. Paul’s concern is not merely ethical consistency, but ontological change: in Christ, believers inhabit a new lordship.
Matthew’s language about the sword has often been misunderstood. Jesus is not blessing violence; he is naming the divisive effect of truth. The “sword” is the rupture that comes when the reign of God exposes hidden allegiances. In Anglican pastoral practice, this passage calls for careful discernment. It can strengthen those pressured to betray conscience, justice, or Christ, but it must never be used to encourage contempt for family or to sanctify abusive separation. The cross Jesus commands is not needless suffering imposed by others for control; it is the costly fidelity of love, truth, and obedience to God.
For Young Listeners
For Young Listeners
Today we hear that God cares for people who are frightened, lonely, or pushed away. Hagar and her son were in the wilderness with no water, and God heard them and helped them. Jesus tells his friends not to be afraid, because God sees even tiny sparrows and knows each person with love. Following Jesus can sometimes be hard, especially when telling the truth or doing what is right is not popular. But we do not walk alone. God is near, God listens, and God helps us live with courage and kindness.
Proper 7
The baptized life is fearless truth-telling rooted not in safety, but in the death and resurrection of Christ, who counts every sparrow and calls his disciples to lose their lives in order to find them.
Before You Hear the Readings
These readings do not offer an easy Sunday of religious comfort. They bring us close to the cost of speaking God’s word, the anguish of being misunderstood, and the strange freedom of belonging to Christ more deeply than we belong to fear, reputation, family approval, or even self-preservation.
Listen for the movement from complaint to courage. Jeremiah cannot keep silent, the psalmist prays from the floodwaters, Paul reminds the baptized that they have already passed through death with Christ, and Jesus sends his disciples out with clear eyes: the truth will be resisted, but they are held in the Father’s care.
The Lectionary Thread
Jeremiah begins in the furnace of vocation. The prophet has been seized by the word of the Lord, and that word has made him vulnerable. He is mocked, watched, whispered against, and worn down. Yet silence is no refuge, because the divine word burns in his bones. Jeremiah’s faith is not serene detachment; it is a wrestled, wounded trust that still dares to sing because God delivers the needy from evildoers.
Psalm 69 gives the gathered assembly the prayer-language for that same place of extremity. The psalmist is drowning in shame, accusation, loneliness, and pain. This is not a polite religious mood; it is lament with its sleeves rolled up. It allows worshipers to bring before God the real cost of faithfulness, including anger at injustice and longing for vindication. Yet even here, praise begins to emerge: the Lord hears the needy and does not despise those in bonds.
Romans takes the theme deeper than endurance. Paul says that baptism is not a religious ornament but a death and rising. The baptized have been joined to Christ’s death so that they may walk in newness of life. This means Christian courage is not generated by moral toughness. It comes from having already been incorporated into the Paschal Mystery: Christ has died, Christ is risen, and death no longer has dominion over him.
The Gospel gathers these threads and names the cost plainly. Jesus does not promise that discipleship will be admired or domestically convenient. He promises that truth will be unveiled, that God’s care reaches even the falling sparrow, and that life is found by relinquishing the false life we clutch for security. The lectionary’s movement is therefore not from suffering to escape, but from costly witness through baptismal union into fearless trust.
The Readings Broken Open
The Readings Broken Open
First Reading
Jeremiah’s confession comes from the inner life of a prophet caught between God’s command and public hostility. His ministry takes place in the final decades of Judah before the Babylonian catastrophe, when the official story was often denial, religious reassurance, and political self-confidence. Jeremiah is compelled to announce judgment, violence, and destruction, not because he enjoys doom, but because covenant unfaithfulness has consequences.
The language is startlingly intimate and troubling: Jeremiah feels overpowered by God. This is not a tidy account of vocation as personal fulfillment. The prophet experiences his calling as costly, even unbearable. When he speaks, he is mocked; when he tries to stop speaking, the word becomes a fire shut up in his bones. The passage honors the anguish of those who are given a hard truth to bear.
Yet Jeremiah’s lament is also an act of faith. He addresses God directly, argues with God, and finally entrusts his cause to God. His cry for retribution belongs to a world where justice has not yet been made visible. Theologically, the passage reminds us that prophetic witness is not self-expression but obedience under pressure. It also warns congregations not to confuse pleasant words with faithful words.
In parish life, this reading asks whether the baptized can make room for truth that disrupts comfort. Jeremiah does not model cruelty or performative outrage; he models costly fidelity. His word burns because it is God’s word, and God’s word is ordered toward the rescue of the needy, even when it first sounds like judgment.
Psalm
Psalm 69 is a lament from the edge of drowning. Its images are bodily and immediate: deep waters, sinking mire, a parched throat, dim eyes, a broken heart. The psalm does not ask worshipers to pretend. It gives the faithful permission to pray from exhaustion, shame, and anger, trusting that God can receive speech that is raw and unfinished.
The psalmist is not only suffering privately; he is publicly reproached. Gossip, insult, estrangement from family, and false accusation create a social flood as real as any river. In the liturgy, this psalm can become the voice of those who have borne ridicule for conscience, those whose zeal has isolated them, and those who wait for God while relief seems delayed.
Its imprecatory verses, asking judgment on enemies, are hard to pray. They should not be domesticated or handed over to personal vindictiveness. Instead, they reveal what unresolved injustice sounds like when brought before God rather than enacted by our own hands. The prayer exposes the desire for wrong to be named, restrained, and answered.
By the end, lament turns toward praise, not because the pain was imaginary, but because the Lord hears the needy. The psalm trains the congregation to believe that thanksgiving can arise from within affliction. It also prepares us to hear Jesus’ words about fear, witness, and the cross as good news spoken to people already in deep water.
Epistle
In Romans 6, Paul addresses a misunderstanding of grace. If God’s grace abounds where sin abounds, should believers continue in sin so grace may have more room to operate? Paul’s answer is emphatic: absolutely not. Grace is not permission to remain enslaved; grace is liberation into a new form of life.
The heart of the passage is baptismal. To be baptized into Christ is to be joined to his death and resurrection. In the Anglican imagination, baptism is not merely a symbol of belonging or a public naming ceremony. It is sacramental participation in Christ’s passage through death into life. The font is both grave and womb: there the old dominion is renounced and new life begins.
Paul’s language is corporate as well as personal. “All of us” who were baptized have been united with Christ. The worshiping community is therefore not a gathering of self-improving individuals but a people whose deepest identity has already been relocated. Sin and death still make claims, but they no longer have rightful lordship over those who belong to the risen Christ.
This matters for the difficult Gospel. Jesus’ call to take up the cross is not a heroic demand laid on unsupported shoulders. It is addressed to those who have already died and risen with him. The Baptismal Covenant’s promises—to persevere, repent, proclaim, seek and serve Christ, and strive for justice and peace—are grounded in this prior gift: we are alive to God in Christ Jesus.
Gospel
Matthew 10 belongs to Jesus’ missionary discourse. He is sending the Twelve into a world where their witness will not always be welcomed. The passage is bracing because Jesus refuses to market discipleship as social success. If the teacher has been maligned, his students should not be surprised when they are maligned as well.
Three times Jesus says, in effect, “Do not be afraid.” This is not because nothing bad can happen. Bodies can be harmed, households can fracture, and public allegiance to Jesus can cost something real. The ground of courage is not invulnerability but divine knowledge and care. The Father sees the sparrow fall; the hairs of the disciples’ heads are counted. God’s attention is more intimate than fear’s threats.
The sayings about sword and household division are among the hardest in the Gospel. Jesus is not blessing violence or contempt for family. He is naming the painful truth that ultimate allegiance to God can expose the fault lines in our closest relationships. Even the most precious human loves become distorted when they demand the place that belongs to God alone.
The good news is hidden in the paradox: those who lose their life for Christ’s sake will find it. Jesus is not asking disciples to despise life, but to relinquish the false life built on approval, control, and fear. In Word and Sacrament, worshipers meet the One who has gone before them into rejection, death, and resurrection. The cross he commands is also the path he has already walked, and his risen life is the life he shares.
Hearing It Fresh
Hearing It Fresh
If these readings feel intense, you are hearing them honestly. The Bible is not pretending that following God always makes life smoother. Jeremiah is mocked for speaking the truth, the psalmist feels overwhelmed, Paul speaks of dying and rising in baptism, and Jesus tells his friends not to be surprised when loyalty to him creates conflict.
Notice that the repeated message is not “try harder to be brave.” It is “do not be afraid,” because God knows you, values you, and holds your life. Christian faith is not a promise that nothing painful will happen. It is the promise that even in pain, truth, baptism, and resurrection are stronger than fear.
Going Deeper
Going Deeper
Jeremiah 20 is part of what scholars often call Jeremiah’s “confessions,” passages where the prophet speaks with unusual candor about the burden of vocation. These texts complicate any romantic view of prophecy. Jeremiah’s authority does not come from emotional steadiness or institutional power; it comes from the inescapable word of the Lord. His anger and anguish do not disqualify him. They are part of the biblical witness to what it means for a finite human being to bear divine speech in a resistant world.
Psalm 69 has a deep afterlife in Christian interpretation. Several lines echo in the New Testament’s portrayal of Jesus’ passion: zeal for God’s house, hatred without cause, and vinegar given in thirst. This does not erase the psalm’s original voice of Israelite lament, but it does invite Christians to hear Christ praying in and with the suffering righteous. In the Daily Office and Sunday Eucharist, such psalms form the baptized in a spirituality capacious enough for grief, protest, repentance, and praise.
Romans 6 is central to baptismal theology. Paul’s claim is stronger than “baptism reminds us of Christ.” He speaks of union: buried with him, united with him, alive with him. This has ethical force. Because the old self has been crucified, sin is no longer inevitable lordship. Yet Paul’s imperative—“consider yourselves dead to sin and alive to God”—shows that believers must learn to inhabit what baptism has given. The sacrament establishes an identity that disciples spend a lifetime practicing.
Matthew’s language about fearing “the one who can destroy both soul and body in hell” has been interpreted in different ways, but in context it functions as a reordering of fear. Jesus contrasts limited human threats with the ultimate seriousness of God. The point is not to replace one anxiety with another, but to free disciples from the tyranny of intimidation. Holy fear—reverent accountability before God—liberates us from servile fear of public shame, coercion, and loss. The sparrow saying must be held together with the cross saying: God’s care is tender, but not sentimental; disciples are precious, and they are sent.
For Young Listeners
For Young Listeners
Today Jesus tells his friends that following him can be hard, especially when we tell the truth or choose what is right. He also tells them not to be afraid, because God sees even a tiny sparrow and cares for it. That means God sees you and knows you with great love. In baptism, we belong to Jesus, who went through death and came to new life. When we are scared, lonely, or unsure, we can remember that Jesus is with us and helps us live with courage, kindness, and trust.