1 Corinthians 12
28 results found.
A church politics of nondomination
Liberal Anglicans and Methodists often face a tension between LGBTQ inclusion and anti-colonialism. But we don’t have to choose.
Settling into the joy of vocation
My life must be lived as a response to something beyond myself and my material needs.
Settling into the joy of vocation
My life must be lived as a response to something beyond myself and my material needs.
January 23, Epiphany 3 (Nehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10; Psalm 19; 1 Corinthians 12:12-31a; Luke 4:14-21)
The word of God is living and active; it meets us where we are.
Thinking better about autism
Grant Macaskill’s reflection on neurodiversity becomes a stimulus to renewal of faith.
by Samuel Wells
Thinking better about autism
Grant Macaskill’s reflection on neurodiversity becomes a stimulus to renewal of faith.
by Samuel Wells
Varieties of unexpected gifts (Pentecost A; 1 Corinthians 12:3b-13)
We might add to Paul's list gifts for offering comfort, or explaining new guidelines, or displaying ease with technology.
by Martha Spong
Seeing disability through a lens of wonder
Brian Brock’s book is both academic and deeply personal.
by Aaron Klink
January 20, Epiphany 2C (1 Corinthians 12:1-11; John 2:1-11)
Miracles can be hard work.
Body shaming tears apart the body of Christ
The thin cannot say to the fat, "I have no need of you."
Body shaming tears apart the body of Christ
The thin cannot say to the fat, "I have no need of you."
The grace of real and virtual presence
Theologian Deanna Thompson used to criticize the pervasive technological creep overtaking our lives. Then she was diagnosed with cancer.
by Alan Van Wyk
Gifts for excellence
For several years, I directed the Center for Pastoral Excellence at Christian Theological Seminary in Indianapolis. The center hosts five initiatives that together address and support the long arc of ministry through a variety of resources and research projects. Its name--the Center for Pastoral Excellence--has been somewhat controversial.
Spiritual alone?
We've been hearing for a while now about the "spiritual but not religious." There are all kinds of reasons why people might rather be spiritual than religious.
One is that the church has turned people off with its own mistakes.
By Joyce Shin
January 24, Third Sunday after the Epiphany: 1 Corinthians 12:12-31; Luke 4:14-21
In this week’s Gospel reading, many people praise Jesus’ teaching—until he claims that he is the fulfillment of the scripture he reads. It is difficult for American Christians to grasp how shocking Jesus’ announcement is to a first-century synagogue.
January 17, Second Sunday after Epiphany: 1 Corinthians 12:1-11
From Paul’s letter, we can infer that the Corinthians tended toward the same bias from which many of us suffer: the belief that there is little collective wisdom in the church.
by Joyce Shin
January 17, Second Sunday after Epiphany: 1 Corinthians 12:1-11
From Paul’s letter, we can infer that the Corinthians tended toward the same bias from which many of us suffer: the belief that there is little collective wisdom in the church.
by Joyce Shin
Paul and the common good
Sometimes when I set out to preach from the Revised Common Lectionary I feel like calling someone from the Consultation on Common Texts to get the scoop on why the group settled on a particular set of pericopes. This week, Isaiah’s marriage metaphor and Jesus’ miraculous transformation of water into wedding wine are an obvious match. The rationale for including 1 Corinthians 12:1-11’s discussion of spiritual gifts is less clear.
Where do you pray
Prayer is not something we do first and foremost on our own. We pray with other Christians.
by Rodney Clapp