Communion with Christ—and others (John 17:20-26)
“Being in Jesus” is John’s theological language to describe a state of communion essential for our faith.
“Being in Jesus” is John’s theological language to describe a state of communion essential for our faith.
I've long identified with Mary's fire. Now I want to learn from Elizabeth.
Sometimes the terror we know is more tolerable than the peace we can’t imagine.
Kate Ott looks at the moral implications of digital language.
This seems to be par for the course.
The psalmist calls for something that is hard for us to imagine.
“If we don’t understand the Judaism of Jesus’ time, how can we understand him and his message?”
In Torah, the stranger appears as a guest to be welcomed, not a problem to be solved.
What does justice look like?
He asked, and I said, that’s easy.
A bronze statue of a woman
In robes, blindfolded,
Holding up scales. Precisely,
He said, you can almost hear
The correct little clicks of those
Weights in the balance. Now,
He said, what does mercy look like?
That one stumped me.
To know any truth about God, we must be drawn into the life of the Trinity. But how?