Monday lectionary email, archived here on Friday
Sometimes I find myself stuck in the Selah.
Jesus disrupts the narrative in multiple ways.
Made in the image of God, we stand in as God’s representatives in creation.
In a mainline church, the pastor tends to have limited unilateral power.
Like the characters in Acts 16, we are imprisoned to power structures.
The disciples’ wonder and confusion at Jesus’ ascension is a comfort to us.
Dominant Western cultures tend to downplay the significance of dreams. The Bible does not.
Turns out there are a lot of them.
Just when victory should be a show of power, the vulnerable lamb appears, standing as if slain.
In Revelation, Jesus is the Weird Barbie of lambs.
Christianity in India goes back to the ancient world.
The disciples can barely believe that Jesus is dead, let alone that he has been raised to life once more.
On Good Friday, Jesus turns the power of the state on its head.
Being a part of a community requires allowing others to care for us, even the parts we hope to keep hidden.
Perhaps the psalmist is referring to limestone, important to ancient civilizations for construction and also as an agricultural and dietary aid.
Dreams inhabit untamed psychological, emotional, and spiritual terrain.
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