Second Sunday after the Epiphany (Year 2, NL)
20 results found.
This particular soil (Mark 4:26-34)
Seeds do not grow without soil, and soil is a factor of place.
by Brad Roth
A deeper legacy than hard work
The psalms of ascent press hard against the norms of our bootstrap culture.
Tears are a gift from God
They put us in touch with essential things that we know to be dear or wrong.
The wild kingdom (11B) (Mark 4:26-34)
When predictable things are replaced by elusive ones
Tastes of God’s kingdom at our church’s community meal
The people come, bringing something of themselves. Then they leave.
by Amy Frykholm
4 Bible storybooks that leave space for children’s imagination
In God's kingdom, sometimes less is more.
Mustard you can’t control (Mark 4:26-34)
It’s a beautiful plant. It’s also an invasive weed.
June 17, Ordinary 11B (Mark 4:26-34)
My Western side longs for more activity in this parable, but I'm trying to listen to my Eastern side.
What about the brokenhearted? (Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11; Psalm 126)
Unabated cultural frivolity rules our churches, too.
by Martha Spong
Preposterous seed stories
On first reading, the two parables in today's Gospel text seem to make less and less sense. In the first, a sower seems to leave the seed to fend for itself. In the second, a tiny mustard seed becomes a bush large enough for its branches to provide shelter for birds. (In Matthew's telling, it's a full-size tree!) When we stop to think about it, both parables are preposterous.
Ordinary #12B (Mark 4:35-41)
Like the stories that come before it, the storm at sea is a parable of reversal.
Ordinary #11B (Mark 4:26-34)
I have come to realize how mysterious a thing a seed is.
Mustard seeds
To be a follower of the one who promised that the kingdom of God is like a mustard seed is to expect a blessed in-breaking of peace.
What the Prodigal Son story doesn't mean
The Prodigal Son is often read to mean that God loves sinners, whereas the Jews thought God only loved the righteous. This makes no sense.
Sunday, July 27, 2014: Matthew 13: 31-33; 44-52
Six words of scripture always transport me to an amazing place: “The kingdom of heaven is like . . .”
Ordinary #11B (Ezekiel 17:22-24; Mark 4:26-34)
These parables are like God's joke in the form of an invasive species.
Seeds of grace
A new reformation of the seed and the corn is evolving.
Standing on the promises: Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11; Psalm 126; 1 Thessalonians 5:16-24; John 1:6-8, 19-28
Some 50 years ago, Merton warned us about what can happen when “all words have become alike.”