Fifth Sunday after the Epiphany (Year 4, NL)
28 results found.
The Samaritan woman vs. our assumptions (John 4:5-42)
She doesn’t even have a name. Surely she is a questionable character if she has no name.
March 12, Lent 3A (Exodus 17:1-7; Psalm 95; John 4:5-42)
Water dominated the imaginations of our ancestors in faith, whose stories often called for either a canteen or galoshes.
Hope for the climate (Acts 16:9-15; Psalm 67; Revelation 21:10, 22-22:5; John 5:1-9)
Given the environmental future we’re facing, we would do well to address it with resurrection hope.
May 22, Easter 6C (John 5:1-9)
Abundance is not always God’s modus operandi.
A barbershop births a church of drug users, ex-cons, and homeless folks
Others have given up on them, but not God.
A prophetic ministry of relationship
Jesus in conversation with three women in the Gospels
May 26, Easter 6C (John 5:1-9)
Like a girl jumping double dutch, Jesus has perfect timing.
Living water isn’t just a metaphor
On the cross, Jesus needed actual water. No one gave him any.
Women of the Bible say #MeToo
Read Tamar or Dinah's story with your church. Listen together for their cries.
Reading the Bible as a feminist
From creation to Mary Magdalene, Barbara E. Reid offers convincing alternatives to sexist interpretations of scripture.
by Julie Morris
Ordinary water, ordinary food (John 4:5-42)
How do we wrap our minds around hunger?
Christ and the Woman of Samaria at the Well, by Guercino
The mystery of marriage: Secrets of joined lives
No one from the outside can fully grasp the inner workings of any marriage. Even those inside sometimes find themselves lonely and strangers.
Sunday, March 23, 2014: John 4:5-42
Jesus chooses a circumstance of division, then instigates community.
The Long Walk to Freedom, edited by Devon W. Carbado and Donald Weise
The runaway slave narratives compiled by Devon Carbado and Donald Weise are as moving as any story by Suzanne Collins or J.R.R. Tolkien.
reviewed by Edward J. Blum
Journey of light: LA’s Our Lady of the Angels
When you pray at LA's cathedral, you are part of humanity past, future and in the inglorious, unromanticized present.