Mark 10
59 results found.
Creating a disruption (Mark 10:46-52)
There is a tearing at the social fabric when Bartimaeus cries to Jesus.
Why church marketing won’t work with Gen Z
Equity requires people with power giving some of it up. What if we applied this principle to young adult ministry?
Preaching against the rich (Mark 10:17-31)
When the world is in peril and the rich are to blame, such preaching becomes essential.
Fuller inclusion (Mark 10:2-16)
Jesus’ blessing of the children and re-centering them in the midst of the community serves as a sort of Pride parable.
Against killing children
We have become a society of people who cannot prevent our own children from being killed in their classrooms—and who do not much mind the killing of other people’s children by weapons of war.
March 24, Palm Sunday B (Mark 11:1–11)
Jesus moves in the same direction as other pilgrims but at a pace and purpose that is his own.
What we think we know about God
“Anyone who thinks he knows the orthodox consensus can always be shown to be wrong,” says David Bentley Hart.
Extravagant consumption
For Jesus, the inverse of scarcity isn’t abundance—it’s accumulation.
The sin of ableism
Erin Raffety’s ethnographic study calls churches to repentance.
Faith comes by hand
Throughout scripture, human bodies are not an obstacle to righteousness; they are its location.
That word “ransom” (Mark 10:35-45)
Like the disciples, we’ve missed the point here.
October 24, Ordinary 30B (Mark 10:46-52)
More than a miracle story, this is a story of a call.
On her deathbed, St. Clare of Assisi blessed God
Her radical final words confounded me for years.
by Wendy Murray
Youth ministry isn’t about fun
How one youth leader stopped being a chief counselor of fun and discovered something better.
by Andrew Root
Godly Play and the language of Christian faith
At the heart of each lesson is storytelling and wondering.
Sight to the blind, hearing to the unlistening (Mark 10:46-52)
The crowd's proximity to Jesus does not make them attentive to his priorities.
by Tito Madrazo
The inner circle (Mark 10:35–45)
James and John don’t want power; they want a special level of intimacy with Jesus.
Are people good? (Mark 10:17-31)
We are worthy, loved, and enough. But so is everyone else.
Jesus’ siblings (Hebrews 1:1-4, 2:5-12; Genesis 2:18-24; Psalm 8; Mark 10:2-16)
Our behavior doesn’t change the claim Jesus makes on us.