Seventh Sunday of Easter (Year 1, NL)
25 results found.
As a pastor, it’s my job to pay attention
In the Mennonite tradition, we are all priests. But I still have a particular role to play.
Extravagant consumption
For Jesus, the inverse of scarcity isn’t abundance—it’s accumulation.
June 25, Ordinary 12A (Romans 6:1b–11)
False security is a lovely, loathsome thing.
Jesus the poet
We are invited to bring the rich resources of our senses and imaginations into the realm of faith.
by Debie Thomas
United in death? (12A; Romans 6:1b-11)
Romans 6:3 is strange. A lot of pastors have it memorized.
by Diane Roth
When a father and husband walked out, grace called him home
I preached a word of judgment. The stranger in the back row heard grace.
We should celebrate the “death day” of our baptism each year
Baptism is about dying with Christ. Why don't more churches talk about this?
N. T. Wright’s creative reconstruction of Paul and his world
Wright tells a great story. Would the apostle recognize it?
Learning costly resistance from Bonhoeffer
Cheap resistance is like cheap grace. It risks very little.
What's dead can die (Romans 6:1b-11)
It's a beautiful Sunday morning, until the pastor breaks the mood.
by Liddy Barlow
The fantasy of death
If Paul is right, we are living fantasy lives. Anytime we live as though power conquers and wealth protects, we live a fantasy. Anytime we live like death wins, we live a fantasy.
Paul tells us about a future that has already happened—yet we live not only like it hasn’t happened yet but like we don’t think it ever really will.
The hard work of holiness: Protestants and purgatory
In this life, sanctification is gradual and difficult. Why would it be different in the life to come?
Eating in ignorance
Reconciliation requires relocation. To see the effects of our food choices, we have to get close to the land.