In John’s Gospel, the Easter promise is both about what happens after we die, and also a promise that we can live out here and now.
In John’s Gospel, the Easter promise is both about what happens after we die, and also a promise that we can live out here and now.
The two disciples on the road to Emmaus stand for all of us: we, too, have heard the reports, but we haven’t seen the risen Lord. Thankfully, we don’t need to understand the mystery before Jesus meets us in our walk.
At Christmas, we remember that God comes to be with us. Just as we are.
What Saint Nicholas and John the Baptist have to teach us about preparing for Christmas.
Before we’re called to believe, or profess our faith, or confess our sins, God wants us simply to remember.
What the prophet Jeremiah can teach us about telling the truth.
In Jeremiah’s vision, the pottery God creates will only be as good as the quality of the clay.
It may be an old favorite, but we’re not supposed to like the story of the Good Samaritan.
The sudden transformation of others can be frightening to us. What happens when we listen to that fear, and bring it before God?
In the Spirit , God joins us in the uncontrollable parts of our lives to both comfort and transform us.