As the liturgical year winds down the Gospels for the next four weeks address our deepest fears and offer our most profound hope Today Jesus speaks of God as a God of the living who promises that the ones who will rise will be God rsquo s children Next week the readings speak of the persecutions
The Word
Hope for the Upwardly Mobile
In his wonderful novel Handling Sin Michael Malone portrays Raleigh Whittier Hayes a rather proper lawyer in a small Southern town whose life begins to fall apart when his eccentric father a defrocked Episcopal priest flees from a hospital bed with a young prostitute Hayes did believe in God
Trial by Prayer
Today rsquo s Gospel concludes a diptych on prayer begun last Sunday in the familiar Lukan pattern that juxtaposes a story in which a woman is a central character with another that has a male protagonist It also provides a bridge to next Sunday when another tax collector is praised The beginning o
Beacons of Hope
This year a special poignancy attends our annual celebration of the communion of the saints as we recall the saints triumphant and mourn loved ones who have died Wave after wave of images of death destruction and seemingly unending rituals of funerals and memorial services wash over our conscious
The Widow’s Might
Afriend once told me a story of a conversation with a rabbi who said that the New Testament was not a holy book In sympathy with the rabbi my friend said that he could understand how the rabbi was offended by the more anti-Jewish sections of Matthew or by Paul rsquo s view that Christ was the end
Hope Amid the Ruins
Karl Barth one of the great theologians of the past century urged people to read the Bible with a copy of the daily newspaper at their side He realized that the Bible could challenge the way we view human life I write these lines three days after the horrendous catastrophe that has washed over s
Strange Working Conditions
Destruction and violence are before me there is strife and clamorous discord rdquo how sadly current ldquo When you have done all you have been commanded say lsquo We are unprofitable servants we have done what we were obliged to do rsquo rdquo Habakkuk rsquo s cry and Jesus rsquo wor
Time for a Vision Check
II was thinking about these readings while half-heartedly watching one of the morning television news shows There was a segment on the rising number of spas for dogs where with compatible companions they could get a complete makeover mdash haircut shampoo pedicure mdash topped off by a dose of
Balancing the Books
As the bright light of summer yields to the soft hues of autumn while students settle into school and parish activities move into high gear Christians often ponder over vacation expenses tuition bills and the impending cost of new projects Life in Christ seems to be taken over by calculator and
Look in Lost and Found
The parables of Luke 15 often called ldquo The Gospel within the Gospel rdquo epitomize Luke rsquo s message of forgiveness and repentance These motifs appear more frequently in Luke than in any other Gospel Zechariah heralds the coming of the Lord who will bring forgiveness of sin 1 77 an
