Two weeks ago, we saw how Jesus tried to reign in his disciples’ apocalyptic ideas, warning them that wars, famines, and disasters will always be with us and so not to be taken in by them and the false prophets they always inspire. But today’s Gospel reading takes a rather different tack with similar ideas … Continue reading Signs of the Times, Redux: An Advent Reflection on Luke 21.25-36
Today marks the end of this series on the Sermon on the Mount. It seems fitting since tomorrow also marks the end of the Western Christian calendar. And what better time to conclude our reflections on Jesus’ teachings revealing the ways of the Kingdom of God than these final days before Advent, which is all … Continue reading Faith Is In the Living
As the Sermon on the Mount nears its end, Jesus returns to an idea that was prominent in the teaching of John the Baptist: that the true judge of what is good, true, beautiful, and holy in the world, is the impact it has on the world around it. Since it bears repeating, truth is … Continue reading The Tree and Its Fruit
It’s often rightly said that the Gospel is neither ‘liberal’ nor ‘conservative’, but as something not of this world, represents a fundamental challenge to any and every human belief system. The Gospel simply refuses to accept our stereotypes or the often bizarre coalitions that comprise our political parties. We have a great example of this … Continue reading The Narrow Gate
Today, as we continue to look at the aphorisms toward the end of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, we come to what is arguably, his most famous teaching, the Golden Rule. In English we know it as something like, “In everything do to others as you would have them do to you; for this is … Continue reading The Golden Rule