The Goodness of God
This psalm invites us to consider the effect of sin on our relationships and on what we contribute to the world.
This psalm invites us to consider the effect of sin on our relationships and on what we contribute to the world.
This is a story that invites us to think about what our baptism, what God’s claim on us, means in our lives.
We, too, are to be bearers of good news to all people, even and especially to those we might otherwise think of as unworthy or unacceptable.
Will we use the strength and power that is within us to hurt and destroy? Or will we use it for blessing and for peace?
The promises God makes to Israel in these passages point to the intimacy between the Creator and the created.
To truly give ourselves over to Christ means that some things in our lives will be threatened – our self-dependence, our self-righteousness, or self-interest.
Paul insists that Gentiles have become ‘fellow heirs, members of the same body, and sharers in the promise in Christ Jesus through the gospel.’
"May he be like rain that falls on the mown grass, like showers that water the earth."
In this, we read a calling for all of God’s people, no matter where they are, no matter their station in life, to lift their eyes from the darkness and the chaos of the world.