Luke 17:11-19 Dear Partner in Preaching, What do you think? Is it too much to suggest to our hearers that the secret to a good life and the heart of our faith is contained in this brief passage? The key to both is tucked away in a deceptively simple observation: They’re all made well. All the men in this story, that is. They are all made well. Did you notice that? Alright, so let’s back up just a bit, slow down just a little, and see what we might notice together. At the outset of this relatively short story from Luke’s Gospel, there are ten men who are suffering from some form of skin disease. (It’s named as leprosy,...
Pentecost 19 C: Eternal Life Now
posted by DJL
Luke 16:19-31 A brief note: Pardon sharing this one again, Dear Partner. Time is/has been/will be short, and I’ve heard from a few of you that it’s hard to find earlier pieces, so I’ll repost the column of three years ago. For what it’s worth, I find this angle even more compelling three years later and back in the parish. I hope it’s helpful, and thank you for your good and faithful work! Dear Partner in Preaching, Do you ever wonder if Luke had ever heard about justification by grace? I mean, tradition tells us that he was a traveling companion of the Apostle Paul’s but, if so, it’s hard to know just how...
Pentecost 14 C: Extravagant Love
posted by DJL
Luke 15:1-10 Dear Partner in Preaching, It’s September, and your parish life, like mine, is probably full to overflowing with the start of a new program year, stewardship events, planning for the fall and winter, looking ahead to planning a budget and a mission rationale to accompany it, and more. It’s so easy to get caught up in all these important, even vital, activities of church leadership and, perhaps, to forget, or at least lose track of, the reason for all the work: to share the news that God loves us more than we can imagine. Fortunately, this week we have before us these unbelievably brief and evocative and beautiful...
Pentecost 9 C: God’s Good Pleasure
posted by DJL
Luke 12:32-40 Dear Partner in Preaching, It’s late in the week, and I’m again pressed for time, so I will offer just a few thoughts on this Sunday’s passage. First and foremost: Jesus’ words “Do not be afraid, little flock,” seem like a tall order just now. Global warming. Racial divides. Instability in governments around the globe. Trade wars and rumors of wars. Lots to fear, it would seem, made worse by the fact that there are lots of people eager to play upon our fears and lots of channels for them to do so through. And then come the commands: Sell your possessions. Give alms. Store your treasure in heaven. Be...
Pentecost 6 C: Listening to Jesus Today
posted by DJL
Luke 10:38-42 Dear Partner in Preaching, What if their names were Matt and Marty, rather than Mary and Martha? I’m talking, of course, about the two characters interacting with Jesus in this week’s Gospel reading. Because they are two women, and because they seem – at least momentarily – at odds with each other, and because Jesus appears to take a side, we have for centuries tried to read this story as about discipleship and yet somehow regularly made it about women’s roles. Women’s roles in the church, in leadership, in society, and beyond. Goodness, but the pull of this interpretation is so strong that it has escaped...
Pentecost 5 C: What the Good Samaritan Teaches us ...
posted by DJL
Luke 10:25-37 Dear Partner in Preaching, I’ll admit that this has never been my favorite parable (and that I feel no small measure of guilt about that). Maybe it’s because this is one of those passages that is so well known, so famous, everyone already thinks they know what it means and so it’s hard to find a fresh angle. Or maybe it’s the way this parable has leapt off the pages of the Bible and into popular culture – think of the laws after Princess Diana’s death or the final episode of Seinfeld referencing the same – which makes it a surprisingly complicated passage to preach. Or maybe it’s because it has...