I can tell you hundreds of examples of people who I had never seen before show up at church wanting God to fix some problem. Then, after it is all done, they leave again. Some because the problem is solved so they can return to life as it was while others leave in anger because God did not answer their prayers.
Read MoreWe live out our lives in the tension between sin and salvation.
Read MoreWhen we do we often find ourselves lost and, like the Jews in Jerusalem asking, “What should we do?” For we, too, have crucified Jesus by our selfish desires. We have done and continue to do so because, in our journey, we do not always recognize Jesus just like the disciples on their way to Emmaus.
Read MoreIf your words fail you you can still proclaim Jesus by your deeds. We note that in our short account by John. Jesus gives the disciples peace three times. It is one of our tasks to take up that emphasis and promote peace in our world.
Read MoreOne of my university professors often talked about a tension between freedom from something and freedom for something. Through Jesus' life, death, and resurrection we have both. We are free from the bondage of sin and death. Yet we often place the reward of this freedom in the world to come. Jesus did not come to us just to give us a promised future in God’s kingdom. While that will be glorious. Jesus came to us here and now, into our broken messed-up lives.
Read MoreWe are just like the disciples. We see Jesus and wish to stay awake. We wish to proclaim God’s truth but are afraid of how others will receive it. We run from the cross afraid to pick it up for the burden it may bring. I could go on. You get the point.
Read MoreTheir attempt to solve their own problems on their own without God ended in disaster. Now, after messing up their lives, they were questioning who they were. They were even questioning God. You know people like that who wander away from God chasing after green pastures. Then, when disaster strikes, blame God for it. Their lives are like the dry bones in the valley.
Read MoreWhat our story says is that God chooses differently than the world. That which the world sees as most important may not be what God chooses.
Read MoreThis woman, who had suffered much losing five husbands, was welcomed by Jesus into the kingdom of God. He did not change her or make her act in a different way, he just made her acceptable to God as she was.
Read MoreWhile Paul uses the story of Abram and Sarai to talk about faith – they were willing to leave home based on a promise. He does gloss over parts of it to make his point. That point is the promise that God has given to us through Jesus. The promise of faith. Faith is knowing that God will not abandon God’s people.
Read MoreGod did not sit Adam and Eve down in the garden and tell them what not to do. The story is much greater than that; God gave them the garden, permission to take care of it, and a command (“do not eat…”) to protect them. To view any of this in a negative light is to miss the beauty and majesty of God. Could you have imagined God putting us down in a desert, giving us nothing to do, and leaving us to our own devices?
Read MoreWhile our world may not be as violent and ruthless as Paul's, we see the same symptoms of a world that is full of selfish individuals who only look out for themselves. No need to follow traffic laws. No need to worry that my actions cause harm to others – they have the same chance as I do! We are just like the Corinthians. And like the Corinthians we need to hear Paul admonish us.
Read MoreWhile the world calls us to individualism and, in the end, selfishness, God calls us into community. While the world tells you that the most important person in the world is you, God tells us that it is the poor, hungry, imprisoned, and refugee, and God calls us to share our gifts with them. While others claim that their community is only those people who look and think like them, God calls us into the community that knows no boundaries.
Read MoreWith horrible news every day of violence and death, surrounded by people in a hurry, and confronted by anger that seems to come out of nowhere, we often forget our call to love others and instead, succumb to our own dark feelings. I am not saying that we should not get angry. Jesus did. It is what we do with our anger (and other emotions) that matters. Instead of reacting as the world, we are called to react as Jesus did, with love.
Read MoreWhile it would be nice to receive all the knowledge we need to live our lives at one time through some secret initiation rite, we know that’s impossible. We have learned, and are still learning, how to live our lives in the world today through experience. What we need instead of specific knowledge is a guide that will help us make decisions in our pilgrimage through life.
Read More…we often struggle to show the world that we fit in. And it knows it. Just turn on the television and watch a few ads if you dare.
Read MoreIf not the Television it is social media or peer pressure from others that keeps calling you. While we do need things of the world, we should remember that they do not make us who we are.
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