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The Helpless God
John 1:1-14
We will only be able to worship this tiny, fragile baby Jesus, when we dwell in his presence with those who are vulnerable.
Reframing Refrains
Luke 2:1-20
Christ is brave enough, strong enough, powerful enough to stand the smell of this world, the ugly reality we know, the darkness all around us, and invite it into his eternal light.
More Than a Mug
Philippians 4:4-9
Paul’s words are a rebuke of over-personalizing and over-individualizing faith. Instead, Paul might be telling us that if we ever want to find the peace of God, we have to do it with one another — Our liberation in God is bound up in one another’s.
Storytellers and Scribes
Job 19:23-27a
Before any social or material change to his circumstances, and before anything concretely changes in his life, Job’s redemption comes in the form of an authentic articulation of his inner life.
A Common Remembrance
Deuteronomy 24:17-18 and Jeremiah 2:4-13
The Hebrew people are commanded to communally remember the traumas of their ancestors, not for the sake of white-knuckled self-determination, but for the sake of their communal wholeness.
Carrying, Bearing, Planting
Galatians 6:1-16
Paul writes to the church of Galatia about the obsession to be right and its close bedfellow: the obsession to gain power over others. But Christ’s crucifixion gives us a very different set of rules and affections, ones which will surely lead us to plant seeds for tomorrow.
A Dinghy Church
Acts 2:1-21
The Spirit pours out flames upon each of us, not for the sake of growing our finances, or for the sake of larger membership, but for the sake of our neighbors. We’re not a cargo freighter at sea; we’re a dinghy on a lake, and when we open our sail, can easily catch the wind of the Spirit.
A Bifocal Faith
Revelation 21:10, 22-22:5
The church has never, ever, ever been called to tune out. It has been called to be tuned-in, with a heart and set of eyeglasses that give it a different lens: a bifocal faith.
Shoulders, Knees, and Toes
1 Corinthians 12:12-33a
Like our own physical bodies, we don’t get to choose when our muscles work, or our vision remains, or our mental health reaches equilibrium. We don’t get to choose if we’re weak or not, and despite that inconvenience, it is a gift, because that is where the presence and hope of Christ enters into our lives.