The Rev. George Adamik reflects on the story of the Garden of Eden and the Parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector (Luke 18:9-14).
The Rev. George Adamik reflects on the story of the Garden of Eden and the Parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector (Luke 18:9-14).
The Rev. Javier Almendárez-Bautista reflects on failure, persistence, and prayer (Luke 18:1-8): “Blessed are those who try and who stumble and who pick themselves up. Blessed are those who pick themselves back up and dust off their knees and get back in the ring. Blessed are you who know the misery and disappointment of failure — you, the wonderful, beautiful, grace-filled losers who bear witness to life and joy on the other side.”
The Rev. George Adamik discusses Luke 17:11-19 (Jesus heals ten men with leprosy), St. Paul’s mission, and giving.
The Rev. Javier Almendárez-Bautista reflects on Psalm 137, anger, and the precarious edge between hatred and apathy: “Rather than standing aloof, withdrawn from the realities we face day in and day out, God leans in, takes on human flesh, and lives among us. God took on the flesh of a poor man from a backwater town in Galilee in what we now know as the Middle East, a man familiar with the grief within anger and the pain of loss.”
The Rev. George Adamik reflects on Luke 16:19-31 (the rich man and Lazarus), his recent visit to Nantucket, and a surprising encounter with a well-known icon. You can read more about Fr. George’s visit to Nantucket in St. Paul’s October newsletter.
The Rt. Rev. Sam Rodman (XII Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina) visits St. Paul’s and discusses the difficult parable in Luke 16:1-13 (Parable of the Unjust Steward).
Luke 15:1-10
I’ve been paying close attention to graffiti lately. One did catch my eye, … a small heart etched on the wall, and a message within that heart, “You are tolerated,” it read….
The Rev. George Adamik reflects on Jesus’s challenging call to followers in Luke 14:25-33.
The Rev. George Adamik reflects on the history of Labor Day and today’s gospel (Luke 14:1, 7-14).
The Rev. Javier Almendárez-Bautista reflects on Jesus’s message about how the sabbath guides our relationship with God and the work we do (Luke 13:10-17): “The sabbath was made for humankind, not humankind for sabbath. The root of the command is to create the space for relationship with God and our neighbors; the nature of God’s work among us is to free us for meaningful rest and for meaningful work.”