After Easter

This is an edited version of a homily delivered at Midtown Christian Community, April 25, 2009. O God, whose blessed Son made himself known to his disciples in the breaking of bread: Open the eyes of our faith, that we may behold him in all his redeeming work; who lives and reigns with you, in […]

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God Is Not In Control, Pt. 4

Genesis 3 is an account of the human rebellion that plunged creation into chaos. And it portrays God as a genuine participant in unfolding events. In Genesis 2, God placed the humans in the garden as his “image,” commissioning them to spread God’s order of flourishing beyond the borders of the garden. They were to […]

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Jars

I remember exploring my grandparents’ basement when I was a child. There were hundreds of dusty old honey jars and milk jars, filled with nails, screws, washers, nuts and bolts. Everything was saved; nothing was disposable. It was as if they hadn’t thrown away anything for decades. My grandparents were immigrants, my grandmother a refugee, […]

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A Christian Response To Catastrophe

In Mark 13, Jesus teaches his disciples about the calamities and catastrophes that will characterize life in the present age. He gives them practical counsel for dealing with disaster, and this passage provides us with wisdom for responding to a pandemic. First, some context. In Mark 11:1-11, Jesus entered the Jerusalem temple, examined it, and […]

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Giving Up The Quest For Control

In a previous post, I wrote about the evangelical quest for control and how that shapes both evangelicalism as a culture and evangelicals as individuals. What might it look like to give up control? How does Scripture indicate the kinds of lives we should lead as individuals and as corporate cultures—as churches? One place to […]

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An Education In Sorrow

My education began a few decades ago. I have three healthy and happy children who are grown, but my hands held five babies that did not live. During pregnancies about which I had no illusions, I was told that everything would work out, that I could trust the Lord, and that God was in control. […]

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God Is Not In Control, Pt. 3

I claimed that “God is in control” is a problematic expression and that it is not a faithful representation of how Scripture portrays God as sovereign king over his world (Part 1 & Part 2). I hope to draw this out by considering a range of biblical texts, and I begin here with Genesis 1-2. […]

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Evangelicals & The Quest For Control

Many of my reflections lately have a common thread. They stem from a larger project of trying to understand why my inherited evangelical culture sees the world as it does, behaves as it does, fosters the sort of lives that it does, and thinks about God as it does. I have come to see that […]

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A Mighty Fortress & A Fearful World

Martin Luther’s hymn, “A Mighty Fortress is Our God,” has been running through my head the last few years. It comes to mind when I ponder discussions of politics, and I’ve thought of it when reflecting on God in the midst of this pandemic. The hymn celebrates God as “a mighty fortress,” “a bulwark never […]

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Palm Sunday

I delivered this homily at Midtown Christian Community for Palm Sunday, 2008. Almighty and everliving God, in your tender love for the human race you sent your Son our Savior Jesus Christ to take upon him our nature, and to suffer death upon the cross, giving us the example of his great humility: Mercifully grant […]

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