Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany (Year 2, NL)
19 results found.
Mercy Amba Oduyoye and her Circle
The Ghanaian theologian has long insisted that the experiences of African women are the experiences of the church.
Faith comes by hand
Throughout scripture, human bodies are not an obstacle to righteousness; they are its location.
The wall my daughter can’t get past
I’ve stopped trying to climb over it or knock it down. Now I just sit there.
by Debie Thomas
Women of the Bible say #MeToo
Read Tamar or Dinah's story with your church. Listen together for their cries.
Justice for our children is next (Mark 5:21-43)
Jairus knows the weight of justice delayed as justice denied. But he keeps moving.
July 1, Ordinary 13B (Mark 5:21-43)
The woman's presence in a crowd is an act of civil disobedience.
Is the Reformation over? Yes and no.
Until Christians can all share the Lord’s Supper, the rift continues. But there is no denying how massively the ground has shifted.
A story of two leaky bodies
In Mark 5, a hemorrhaging woman meets a permeable savior.
by Julie Morris
Important vs. urgent
Not everything urgent is important. The difficulty is distinguishing between the two. In ministry, people's pressing needs seldom come before us in neat, conveniently timed packages. Instead, the minister is bombarded with legitimate requests and pleas from every side.
June 28, 13th Sunday in Ordinary Time: Mark 5:21-43
Two people in great distress do what a third, the Gerasene demoniac, has already done: they interrupt and rearrange Jesus’ day.
Sunday, January 25, 2015: 1 Corinthians 7:29-31
Paul isn’t asking us to avoid the world. But if the form of the world is passing away, the everyday is becoming a step into promise.
by Brian Bantum
Displacement and fear
As wildfires raged nearby, the lectionary readings spoke to the uncertainty and fear of being displaced.
The Jewish Annotated New Testament, edited by Amy-Jill Levine and Marc Zvi Brettler
reviewed by Jason Byassee
God of wholeness
Fred Gaiser offers a sober, accessible review of the biblical materials pertinent to our thinking about healing.
Would Jesus dispense contraceptive pills?
God is concerned with the health of women. God cares about teenagers who end up in a lifetime of poverty. Jesus healed the bleeding woman 2,000 years ago, and I think if he walked the streets today, he just might hand her a packet of pink pills.
Turning off the engines
This week's texts are great stewardship texts. Why not use them that way? We can ask for money more than once a year.
The undomesticated Savior: Mark 5:21-43
Apparently some people are determined to get rid of Jesus—and some are willing to push through any barrier to get near him.