Month: April 2011

Lenten Devotional 2011
Archived

April 13: The Godfather

“I tell you the truth, anyone who will not receive the Kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it.” (Mark 10:15) These often quoted words of Jesus have a refreshing new meaning for me.  You see, I have become a godparent for the first time, not once but twice, in the past few months.  I could not be more proud and

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Lenten Devotional 2011
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April 12: A murderer, a stutterer and a sorcerer walks into a bar…

Of all the bizarre stories in the Bible, and there are many, surely the story of Moses and the Exodus must rank as High Strangeness. The twists and turns of the plot are so baffling that it seems almost impossible for the common reader to ferret out what actually is going on. And who was Moses anyway? A murderer, a stutterer and a sorcerer

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Lenten Devotional 2011
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April 11: Speak!

The theme I find in today’s readings is all about speaking.  In Exodus, Moses pleads to God:  I am slow of speech and tongue.  Send someone else. But the Lord tells him:  I will be with your mouth and what you shall speak. In Psalm 31 the David speaks to God and asks that He lead, rescue and guide him.  In Corinthians, chapter 14, Paul, who has

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Lenten Devotional 2011
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April 9: Arguing is not praying

Today’s Gospel lesson used to bother me. The disciples are unable to cure a boy possessed by an evil spirit and Jesus’ response is that only prayer could have cast it out. I felt bad for the disciples. Try as they might, they are unsuccessful at healing the boy and Jesus throws a curve ball at them by saying they didn’t have all of

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Lenten Devotional 2011
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April 8: Psyche learns the hard way

“Why art thou cast down, o my soul?” “Hope in God.” Too fast and too simple. We have to acknowledge our problems, really deal with them, and this is painful. An old tradition interprets the Song of Solomon as a love story, a romance between Christ and the soul, Christ and the Church, or both. Psyche, a 1648 poem by Joseph Beaumont, presents this

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Lenten Devotional 2011
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April 7: First things first

For what will it profit them to gain the whole world and forfeit their life. We can only gain a true meaning to life by accepting the Word that Christ has taught us. Material things, while giving a temporary pleasure, cannot give us everlasting life. Only by accepting the Word of the Lord can we actually achieve the true meaning of life. We achieve

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Lenten Devotional 2011
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April 6: “You’ll never walk alone”

I feel the readings for today point to the sad fact that it takes a lifetime of experiences for us to grasp even a faint notion of the depth and breadth of God’s divine love and forgiveness. Joseph’s brothers never seemed to connect the dots. The Psalmist lays out a basic formula for enlightenment that has challenged all succeeding generations; “The unfolding of your

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Lenten Devotional 2011
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April 5: Eating, drinking and carrying on

Many of you know that I grew up in rural Iowa. My experiences there were so different than my life now. Of course I’m older, but living in an agricultural environment is very different than living in the fast paced urban environment that I live in now. Here there are several restaurants on every block, access to mass transit that will take you anywhere

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Lenten Devotional 2011
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April 4: You have cut short the days of his youth

Recently, news reached me of the sudden death of a relatively younger man, who had been a worker at the Senior Center at the First Presbyterian Church. William had always been a cheerful and energetic person, whether he was setting up or breaking down tables and chairs, ladling food onto trays, or bringing trays to the disabled and immobile members; he was always handy

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Lenten Devotional 2011
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April 2: “Kavanah,” the direction of the heart

In reading the scriptural passages for today, I’m reminded of a Hebrew word: KAVANAH. It means intention or direction of the heart when one is engaged in prayer or sacred ritual. I think Jesus and Paul are admonishing their respective audiences to be mindful of Kavanah. Jesus seems impatient with the Pharisees for holding fast to the traditions of the elders because in doing

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