I no longer worry that Christians are agents of death

Last Sunday, the lectionary invited us to ponder Luke 5:1-11. The English Standard Version supplies the passage with the heading “Jesus Calls the First Disciples.” Christian speech can seem very strange to outsiders. The first time I attended a church service, I was horrified when the congregation sang “I really want to bless you, Lord.” […]

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Luke’s pregnant fourth story of the adult Jesus

This Sunday, the lectionary invites us to ponder Luke 4:21-30. The English Standard Version puts verses 16-30 under the heading “Jesus Rejected at Nazareth.” Last week, I wrote about verses 14-21. Those verses end with Jesus receiving a positive reception – almost a standing ovation – in the synagogue in his hometown of Nazareth. People

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Jesus the anointed, the liberator who calls for a response

“Poor, captives, and blind,” are not distinct groups. They overlap. They include people born female. People who lack education, family heritage, caste, religious purity. People who suffer from poor health or are under demonic oppression or are debt slaves. People who work in occupations considered despicable. In other words, people with low social status.

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Did Mary and Luke commit sedition? A Malaysian reading.

This Sunday, the lectionary invites us to ponder Luke 1:39-55. The English Standard version supplies it with the titles “Mary Visits Elizabeth,” and “Mary’s Song of Praise: The Magnificat.” Today, I’ll explain why I think that in her song Mary did something which, in Malaysia, would amount to the criminal offence of sedition. We often

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The judge is coming and I’m here to serve subpoenas

This Sunday, the lectionary invites us to meditate on Luke 7:18-28. The English Standard version groups verses 18-35 together and supplies the title “Messengers from John the Baptist.” My title is borrowed from Fred Craddock. It graphically states what John thought was the purpose of his life. He thought his purpose was to serve subpoenas,

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