17th Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year A, RCL)
38 results found.
July 30, Ordinary 17A (Matthew 13:31–33, 44–52)
The kingdom of heaven inspires devotion, commitment, and downright unreasonableness.
Living by kinship, not consumption
When I’m tempted to click “Add to cart,” I hear creation groaning.
Thinking better about autism
Grant Macaskill’s reflection on neurodiversity becomes a stimulus to renewal of faith.
by Samuel Wells
N. T. Wright and Walter Brueggemann look to the Bible for wisdom during the pandemic
They both resist easy answers to the problem of suffering.
Songs with dangerous choruses (Psalm 105:1-11; 17A)
Sometimes we can sing in perfected harmony, but there is still something disturbing about our song.
July 26, 17A (Romans 8:26–39)
There are some matters that a well-rehearsed and repeated Bible verse won’t fix.
The conversation about faith and sex that The Bachelorette sparked
And that conversation’s inevitable limits
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.
I let the Holy Spirit see my dirty laundry
I was counting on her discretion.
A deeper, wiser story (1 Kings 3:5–12)
The left/right/center narrative helps us avoid difficult work.
July 30, Ordinary 17A (Romans 8:26–39; Matthew 13:31–33, 44–52)
We can be joined by our suffering, not just separated.
Prayer isn’t our work, it’s God’s
I mostly agree with Jeffrey Weiss about prayer. I think St. Paul would too.
A freelance wedding that didn't fit my script
The gig seemed fairly routine. Then I saw the parrots.
Brides of Christ
If the church is the bride of Christ, then Jesus is married to both Rachel and Leah—to the church he wants, and to the church he has to take.
Ordinary #11B (Mark 4:26-34)
I have come to realize how mysterious a thing a seed is.
Nothing can separate
I’ve been thinking often over the last few days and weeks about the last three verses of the magnificent eighth chapter of Paul’s letter to the church in Rome.
By Ryan Dueck