Author: websexton

Lenten Devotional 2019
Archived

Monday in the Fifth Week of Lent

How interesting to look at the two readings in this time of #metoo and #timesup. In both Daniel 13 and in John 8, a woman is saved from death, even though each had been accused by high-status men. Daniel confronted the wicked judges directly…

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One of two angels by Armstrong
Events

Lenten Forums – Sunday Series: The Images that Form Us

Please join us on April 7, 2019 for the last of our lenten forums exploring the power of images (including language) to shape our self-understanding, our faith and worship, our commitment to justice, our vision of wholeness, our relationship with God and more. The theme for this week is “In God’s Image” and will be led by the Ascension clergy.

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Events

Looking Together: March 31

On Sunday, March 31, following the 11 a.m. service, we welcome guest Ascension Forum leader Carolyn Halpin-Healy, Executive Director of Arts and Minds, an organization committed to improving quality of life for people living with Alzheimer’s Disease and other dementias through engagement with art. She has been a lecturer at the Metropolitan Museum for many years, and also co-taught a class at Union Seminary

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Lenten Devotional 2019
Archived

Friday in the Fourth Week of Lent

Comparisons to other people lead nowhere good. “Ugh, Jessica is so much better at art and book displays than I am!” “Everyone else’s treats for coffee hour look professional next to my lumpy bread.” Watching people bustling to the gym, getting mad that I have been lazily blowing off yoga class.

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Lenten Devotional 2019
Archived

Thursday in the Fourth Week of Lent

In the times of bleakness, despair or desperation we may often wonder: Where, oh where, is God? We become anxious when we think Yahweh is not present. In the Exodus reading, this is what is going on with the people of Israel as they begin to query Moses’s whereabouts.

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Lenten Devotional 2019
Archived

Wednesday in the Fourth Week of Lent

I have been reading Elaine Pagels’ The Gnostic Gospels and came across Marcion (c. 140), a Christian from Asia Minor, who concluded that the unforgiving God of the Old Testament and the loving God of the New must, in fact, be two different gods. This is definitely a heresy that I can get behind.

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Lenten Devotional 2019
Archived

Monday in the Fourth Week of Lent

This account from John has two interesting elements. First, Jesus states “a prophet hath no honor in his own country.” I interpret this along the same lines of a Portuguese saying I heard a few times when I was doing business in Portugal and the Portuguese-speaking world; loosely translated, “Home grown saints don’t perform miracles.”

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Lenten Devotional 2019
Archived

Saturday in the Third Week of Lent

Hosea, commonly referred to as the “prophet of doom,” writes: “The Lord has torn us so he may heal us; struck us down so he can bind us up.” The overall message is reconciliation through repentance results in salvation. In the parable from Luke, the Pharisee prays he is righteous, sacrifices, fasts and tithes. He is proud he is not like the “immoral” tax collector. The tax collector, however…

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Lenten Devotional 2019
Archived

Friday in the Third Week of Lent

The punishments and rewards depicted in Hosea are horrifyingly “over the top” to our modern senses. But to those ancient civilizations, living among barbaric rulers, those horrors rang with familiarity. Here were God’s warnings in language they would heed. If set in a 2019 Bible, God’s admonitions might center around our concepts of psychological torture and bliss.

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Lenten Devotional 2019
Archived

Wednesday in the Third Week of Lent

So what does the law mean to us? Is it just the Ten Commandments? Some of those, like refraining from murder or theft, aren’t too hard to live by. On the other hand, today we have a bit of trouble with the one about adultery, and the prohibition against “coveting” is pretty hard to stick to in a consumer society.

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