For the record, it’s hard to scan a hillside of 99 sheep and realize one is missing. Kudos to the keen-eyed shepherd. What about our flock? I look out at the congregation each week and think about those who have not returned. And I worry about other people who are lost, unknown to us, who have not yet heard the good news of God’s grace for them. The parable of the guy who lost his sheep asks us pretty directly, what are we going to do to go find them? How will we search out the lost?
Read MoreGod is at the wheel, gathering all those beloved lumps of clay that have been twisted and turned by a world bent toward selfishness. Like the new life God knit in the depths of the earth, God is again forming vessels of grace and wonder, ready to fill them with love to pour out into the world. Our work is to step away from all those hands that would form us otherwise, promising security, power, and affection that are not theirs to give.
Read MoreIn one short parable Jesus has laid out the view from the very end, and the mechanics of salvation. These are among the greatest gifts in the Christian message. They invite us to live our lives free from the fear of not measuring up. They invite us to live our lives already trusting in our goodness and our salvation.
Read MoreJust as newborn children are loved immediately and do not have to earn or grow into their place in a family, we come into the world already whom God intends and needs us to be. We need no other preparation to begin our work as Christ’s hands and feet because, as God tells Jeremiah, “you shall go to all to whom I send you, and you shall speak whatever I command you. Do not be afraid of them, for I am with you to deliver you.”
Read MoreWhen the task force on the state of the church concluded its report at General Convention, deputies jumped to their feet and gave their work a standing ovation. We heard an urgent call to get on with being a changing church in a changing world.
Read MoreWhether one approaches a 12th century altar in France, or one from 1941 in Little Rock, Arkansas, or even a makeshift one outside during a pandemic or in a wild church service in Allsopp Park, at each one the invisible becomes visible in the breaking of the bread.
Read MoreIt’s the 8th century BCE, the nation of Israel has divided into two kingdoms, Exile is on the horizon, and the people continue to behave badly. They show a lack of faith in God, and they consistently reject the lifestyle God invites them into. God laments this state of affairs deeply. But nothing can change God’s passionate love for Israel. Through Hosea, God proclaims, I’m going to keep you.
Read MoreAll relationships, if they are to thrive, find their way to a pattern of regular conversation. It is no different with God. Prayer, the communication that crosses the divide of human and divine life was for Jesus a conversation of ongoing relationship. And we see this in how Luke describes him. Jesus is regularly engaged in specific times and practices of prayer. But now, almost halfway through Luke’s Gospel, Jesus’ students have noticed and they want some specifics. What he gives in reply is a form of prayer that, though simple, contains all the elements necessary for a life of ongoing conversation with God.
Read MoreJesus never enters a home unless invited. He never heals unless asked. When he encounters a blind man calling out on a roadside, he doesn’t immediately heal his vision. Instead, he says, “what do you want me to do for you?” In that question he acknowledges the autonomy and personhood of the one in front of him. If we want to follow Mary in following Jesus, if we want to offer our help to those we encounter in need, then we must learn to hear and listen. We have to take the time to be develop relationships with particular people who have names and stories and gifts to offer.
Read MoreAmos will not back down. He is determined to reiterate that the people are chosen not for privilege but for purpose. But because they continue to rest in their privilege and ignore the needs of others in their community, a reckoning is on its way. Salvation, Amos practically screams, is not a result of privilege. It is not even a side effect or accessory. Being chosen is not an easy or comfortable journey.
Read MoreIf almost anyone in this story had decided to stick to their principles, to weigh potential lives lost against Naaman’s, or simply to follow the rules of land, Naaman would not have been healed. So why didn’t they? How exactly is God at work in the lives of these people? Why is this story told this way in Holy Scripture?
Read Morepreaching is like being on the cooking show “Chopped." You look at your ingredient basket and have to figure out what to make. Here’s what’s in the basket this week: an epic heat wave, more gun violence and this time at an Episcopal Church, Juneteenth, the January 6 hearings, a pandemic that just keeps going, Father’s Day, and of course, the main ingredient this morning, the Gerasene demoniac. And the clock starts now.
Read MoreThe Trinity may seem a strange concept, and it is. It may seem mysterious and hard to grasp, that’s for certain. But in the Trinity we can see the beauty of a God who desires our place at the table and is willing to enter even our suffering to bring us there.
Read MoreLet’s dream about a world in which gun violence is eliminated and loneliness is overcome. Let’s dream about a world in which poverty is eradicated and all kinds of shackles broken. Let’s dream about a world in which racism is dismantled and our ecosystems are restored to their Garen of Eden glory. Let’s dream about a world in which people hear in their own language the good news that they are included in God’s saving grace. Or, in the words of the prophet Joel, that all who call on the name of the Lord shall be saved.
Read MoreIt is interesting that no one mentions everlasting life in this story. The jailer does not ask for bodily healing. No one has died and must be resurrected. When the jailer asks, what must I do to be saved?, I think perhaps he means saved from the emotional and spiritual agony he is experiencing; saved from the weight of the world on his shoulders. The jailer can see that while he may be free from incarceration, it is Paul and Silas who are truly free.
Read MoreWith the disciples tonight we pause and we pray. In the midst of the storm, we pray for hope, for courage, for one another’s needs, and for healing for all those in the midst of trauma. In this sacred pause, we add a prayer of thanksgiving for the one who ascended in order to fill all in all. And tonight we wait, not just to rest in the storm, but in expectation of big things yet to come from God. We wait on the Spirit to come soon, and send us out.
Read MoreWe have different ways we talk about trees. Go camping in a National Forest and we might remark about of the beautiful trees around us. Get a logging contract for that same forest and we’d talk about the timber. Biblical Greek is no different. Dendron is the word for tree, the kind you might see camping, but the word xulon—that meant timber or lumber. And strangely it is xulon that is the word used in Revelation for the tree beside the river. What we read as “the tree of life” could more literally be translated as “the timber of life.” Not quite the same ring to it, but it is an accurate rendering.
Read MoreWarhol’s Last Supper of da Vinci’s painting covered in bright colorful stripes hangs in my office to remind me of something essential about Christ Church. Like the image, we are a mash up of the historical and the contemporary, of tradition and modern engagement. We are anchored in ancient liturgy, music, and prayer, in sacred texts and the stories of Christ. And we are engaged in the search for meaning and ministry in a very modern world.
Read MoreWhat we see today in the Book of Acts is nothing less than the risen Jesus in the form of a fisherman turned disciple, turned deserter, turned apostle. If you need some assurance that this is what the author is trying to get across, look at the people’s reaction to the healing. Luke tells us that after seeing it, they believed, but believed not in Peter, but in the Lord. They were, as we would say in our baptismal covenant, finding in all persons the Christ whom we seek.
Read MoreOn the road to Damascus, in that long war torn land of Syria, Saul had an encounter with disruption of a different kind—an encounter that changed his identity and name. Instead of bringing change into the world through violence, he was changed by the one who had taken the violence of the world onto himself. Paul met Jesus and through the disruption of his life he found what he was looking for—a life of reconciliation with God and neighbor that can only come through a letting go. Paul found healing disruption, not by bringing a resistant world into order through violence, but by joining Jesus on the cross. It was through way of the cross, Paul found, that resurrection and the healing he’d so long sought could finally be realized.
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