Summer break
I'm on vacation this week. You can keep up with the latest church news at my news sites, NewChurchReport.com and SmallChurchProf.com. I'll post my sermon at the end of the week. Otherwise, I'm in the garden this week!
I'm on vacation this week. You can keep up with the latest church news at my news sites, NewChurchReport.com and SmallChurchProf.com. I'll post my sermon at the end of the week. Otherwise, I'm in the garden this week!
The story of Naaman reminds us that outsiders are not our enemies. They are fellow travelers, fellow sufferers, fellow seekers, equally loved by God. And in God’s economy, they are not just recipients of grace, they are sometimes the ones who lead us to it.
Think about the mentors in your own life. Possibly they were teachers, coaches, pastors, family members, or friends who saw something in you before you saw it yourself. What did they pass on to you? What part of their spirit still lives in you today?
Elijah’s story reminds us that God meets us in the cavern of our own despair and discouragement and changes everything.
The word Trinity never appears in Scripture, and yet the whole arc of the Bible bends toward this deep wonder: God is not solitary. God is relational. God is love.