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<P><FONT size=2 face=Arial><A
href="http://day1.org/4046-cleanliness_or_godliness">http://day1.org/4046-cleanliness_or_godliness</A></FONT>
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<DIV class=author_block><A href="http://day1.org/4044-the_rev_reggie_weaver">The
Rev. Reggie Weaver</A><BR>The Rev. Reggie Weaver is pastor of First Presbyterian
Church in Chicago, IL.
<H3>Member of:</H3><A
href="http://day1.org/presbyterian_church_usa">Presbyterian Church (USA)</A><BR>
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</DIV>
<DIV class=heading_block>
<H1>Cleanliness or Godliness</H1>
<H2>Mark 7:1-8,14-15,21-23</H2>
<H2>14th Sunday after Pentecost - Year B</H2>
<H3>September 02, 2012</H3></DIV>
<P>I've spent many summer days at my Aunt Briddie's house. Aunt Briddie is my
father's oldest sister. She and her husband, Uncle Hubbert, enjoyed
entertaining, so many summers when some of the extended family would come into
town, we would gather at their house; and among other things, we would do a lot
of eating.</P>
<P>Now, when it comes to meals, no one in my family is a real stickler for table
manners. We don't really care on which side of the plate the fork is supposed to
lay. If you want the peas, you don't really need to wait for someone to pass
them. Just get up and grab the peas, reach across the table if you have to. But
Aunt Briddie would--and still does--get irritated if someone showed up at the
table with dirty hands. If it happened to be me, she'd kinda nudge me behind the
shoulder and say, "Boy, go wash yo' hands." Being a little child, I might run
back to the bathroom and turn the water on without actually washing them and try
to come back to the table. But Aunt Briddie had a way of knowing when that
happened, so she would just say it again, "Boy, I thought I told you go wash yo'
hands." Now if you made Aunt Briddie repeat herself like that, you had a feeling
that if you didn't do what she said that time, then it was all over for you. You
weren't going to eat that day, and you might not live to eat again. So you ran
back and washed those hands.</P>
<P>We all know that there are good reasons for keeping our hands clean, with all
the germs and diseases out there--and I'm sure Aunt Briddie was concerned about
all that. But it always seemed to me that there was something more than hygiene
behind her insistence. I never knew what that was, as a child, but whatever it
was, it showed itself in these expressions she would make while we were
eating.<SPAN class=300393516-28082012>...</SPAN></P>
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