In the face of monumental devastation and suffering, God speaks a word, and the word becomes flesh.
In the face of monumental devastation and suffering, God speaks a word, and the word becomes flesh.
Lent calls us to faithfulness to God and we need to assess the direction of our journey, our call to ministry and also to meet our own demons.
Love names, creation, joyful service and gifts for the common good can be signs of the nature and culture of God.
What is the legacy you will leave? Live into life and love the way you want it to be, because whatever you choose will live on after you.
In the face of tragedy, we naturally cry out “Why?” Jesus meets us in the suffering and helps us find the path of life.
Our longing for God is met in the Holy Spirit who opens heaven to us and makes all things new.
As God’s people, we celebrate life in the face of death, because we know that the victory of life has been secured.
Jesus gives us an abundance of all that we need, and when we learn to trust that, we are set free from rivalry and possessiveness and enabled to share generously.
God’s self-giving is to all of humanity, all of the time, and we are called to lift our eyes beyond our immediate concerns and stand in solidarity with the faithful who have gone before us.
Honestly owning the rage that sometimes consumes us is an important part of maintaining our resistance to all that stands in the way of a Jesus-shaped life.
When we approach God’s way of life and the Sabbath not as punishment, but as gift, the experience becomes a chance to rest from work and from striving; and to allow space for God through contemplation and re-creation and play.
Advent is preparing us for the coming of the Lord, that already and not-yet event for which people have lived and worked and prayed for millennia.
God’s refining work is done not through judgement and punishment, but through the transforming power of love.
A sermon on Psalm 23
God’s promised protection can only be understood through the story of Jesus’ death and resurrection.
Though the experience of grief often feels like an absence of God, it is a deep experience of the heart of God, and is symbolised as such in the brokenness of the Eucharist.
The image of Jesus as the good shepherd can speak of tough life-on-the-line love, not just cuddling lambs.
The unfailing love of God is with us, even in the tragedy, confusion, and anguished questions and doubts.
In God’s coming reign, things we find impossible to reconcile will be reconciled.
There is a fundamental culture clash between those who put their trust in God and those who pursue wealth, comfort and celebrity.