Fourth Sunday in Lent (Year 3, NL)
17 results found.
Another kind of gate (Luke 16:19-31)
The rich man’s approach to Lazarus could have been different.
by Audrey West
September 25, Ordinary 26C (Luke 16:19–31)
God keeps sending the message that there’s a better way.
by Audrey West
In the Qur’an, God is a great debater
The Qur’an is not a description of God. It’s a call to conversion.
What Meghan and Harry can and can’t escape
At the heart of life is the mess of being stuck with other people.
September 29, Ordinary 26C (Luke 16:19–31; Amos 6:1a, 4–7)
Conversion narratives raise a question: Why does it take so much to get there?
The New Testament in the strange words of David Bentley Hart
Greek and English do not work the same way. So what does it mean to create a literal translation?
September 25, 26th Sunday in Ordinary Time: 1 Timothy 6:6-19; Luke 16:19-31
Luke's story of the rich man and Lazarus is full of vivid details. Which makes you cringe the most?
Warm and warmer: One degree can be a big difference
In Oslo, the freeze-thaw cycle of a warm winter made my bike commute unpleasant. Elsewhere, it's a matter of survival.
What the Prodigal Son story doesn't mean
The Prodigal Son is often read to mean that God loves sinners, whereas the Jews thought God only loved the righteous. This makes no sense.
Open up
"Ephphatha!" Jesus cries in Mark 7. "Open up!" In that passage the command is specifically about hearing and speech. But the image seems emblematic of the gospel in many ways.
Eye of the needle: 1 Timothy 6:6-19; Luke 16:19-31
Next to the window in my study, where I can’t but see it every day, there’s a framed cartoon from an old edition of the National Lampoon. It’s a spoof of a Medici rose window from the cathedral in Florence, and depicts a laughing camel leaping with ease through the eye of a needle. The superscription reads: “a recurring motif in works commissioned by the wealthier patrons of Renaissance religious art,” while the Latin inscription on the window itself is “Dives Vincet,”or “Wealth Wins!”