Liturgical Bible Study Guide: 31st Sunday in Ordinary Time Cycle B
Gospel Last week we heard of the healing of blind Bartimaeus. Today’s reading is placed by all three synoptic gospel writers during Jesus’ days in Jerusalem after His triumphal entry 5 (Palm Sunday) and before His passion begins (Holy Thursday). The scribes were the scholars and intellectuals of Judaism. They received the title “rabbi.” His […]
Liturgical Bible Study Guide: 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time Cycle B
1st Reading – Jeremiah 31:7-9 Jeremiah was the second of the four great prophets of Israel, a contemporary of Zephaniah, Nahum & Habakkuk. He was born around the year 645 B.C., almost a century after Isaiah. He came from a priestly family in Anathoth, a town about three miles northeast of Jerusalem, in the southern […]
Liturgical Bible Study Guide: 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time Cycle B
1st Reading – Isaiah 53:10-11 As we learned before, scripture scholars have divided Isaiah up into two (or three) groups and attributed authorship of each group to different individuals (or possibly groups of individuals), although other than Isaiah, their identity remains unknown. The first century Christians, like their brother Jews, attributed all chapters of Isaiah […]
Liturgical Bible Study Guide: 28th Sunday in Ordinary Time Cycle B
1st Reading – Wisdom 7:7-11 The Book of Wisdom, written in the 1st century B.C. is known to us only in the Greek. It is generally held certain that Greek was the original language. For this reason it is not contained in the Hebrew Bible; nor is it in the Protestant Bible, having been discarded by Martin […]
Liturgical Bible Study Guide: 27th Sunday in Ordinary Time Cycle B
1st Reading – Genesis 2:18-24 Some modern scripture scholars speculate that the Pentateuch (the first 5 books of the Bible, The Law/Torah) is a collection of writings from different sources; primarily J (for Yahwehist, 9th century B.C.); E (for Elohist, 8th century B.C.); D (for Deuteronomist, 7th century B.C.); and P (for Priestly, post-exilic) and […]