First Sunday in Lent (Year 1, NL)
21 results found.
September 10, Ordinary 23A (Matthew 18:15–20)
The only place in the Gospels where Jesus says anything about the church is Matthew 18—and not insignificantly, he brings it up in terms of conflict management.
A glimpse of how heaven sees worship
On World Communion Day, I sat in the balcony. The view was stunning.
Getting forgiveness (Matthew 18:15-20)
Christ’s love binds up our broken hearts and broken ways.
by Amy Ziettlow
September 17, Ordinary 24A (Matthew 18:21–35)
The failure to forgive disrupts, distorts, and degrades community.
by Chris Dorsey
September 10, Ordinary 23A (Matt. 18:15–20)
At a #decolonizeLutheranism forum, I thought of Matthew 18.
by Amy Ziettlow
Two or three at the gym
New communities spring up at coffeehouses, on Habitat for Humanity worksites, or at 5k races. What makes any of them a church?
Sunday, September 14, 2014: Romans 14:1-12; Matthew 18:21-35
Church folks will not always agree—nor should we.
by Joann H. Lee
Theology and misconduct: The case of John Howard Yoder
Yoder defined violence in terms of violating someone's dignity. This sounds ready made as a description of his own abusive behavior.
by David Cramer, Jenny Howell, Paul Martens, and Jonathan Tran
After injustice
We are instructed to love our enemies—not necessarily to forgive them.
Sunday, September 4, 2011: Ezekiel 33:7-11; Matthew 18:15-20
If the watchman doesn't "sound the trumpet" and dissuade the wicked from their ways, the Lord promises to hold the watchman accountable.
A careful read: Matthew 18:15-20
These six verses of Matthew do not mean that if two or three people agree on something, then they can ignore others and do whatever they want.
The real prodigal: 2 Corinthians 5:16-21; Luke 15:1-3, 11b-32
"A man had two sons . . .” was a common way to begin a parable, especially one comparing good and bad sons. Matthew uses it to contrast one son, who promises to work in the vineyard but never shows up, with another, who at first adamantly refuses to go to the vineyard but later repents and goes (21:28-32). Which one did the will of his father, asks Jesus? Not the one who talked a good game, but the one who actually followed through with obedient actions.
New math: Matthew 18:21-35
Matthew's story is terrible news. It is also the truth that will make us free.
Unforgiven: Matthew 18:15-20; Romans 13:8-14
Jesus knew forgiveness would always need special emphasis.