Skip to content

Life on God’s Terms, Part 2: Looking Like Jesus

  In Part 1 of this series, we discussed the parable of the wedding feast (Luke 14:7-14) and how, when we come into the banquet hall, we choose to be there on the King’s terms or we don’t belong—even though we’ve received an invitation. If we’re not there in the hall according to the king’s…

Continue reading →

Life on God’s Terms, Part 1: King of Kings

I want to share one of my favorite stories about the life of the Episcopal Church, a church that has traditionally welcomed, as the Prayer Book says, “all sorts and conditions,” regardless of age, race, economic status or education. If you’re in the neighborhood and you live near an Episcopal church, you are welcome. To…

Continue reading →

Spectator or Believer?

John shares a story from Matthew 28:1-10 in his Gospel about two women who come to pay their last respects to Jesus.  What a surprise they found at the tomb: an angel who gave them three profound gifts: an encouraging word (“Do not be afraid”), a critical truth (“he has been raised, as he said”)…

Continue reading →

A Holy Invitation

Holy Week is invasive. It’s meant to be. It’s meant to take away all our defenses against our God, who comes to us in ways that we, because we are his disciples, cannot resist. But that’s what we see in the Gospel of John. I feel it in me as I prepare for Holy Week.…

Continue reading →

God’s Commitment to Our Death

Every year, on Ash Wednesday, in a way that feels both fresh and familiar, I remember again that the receiving of the ashes is always described in the liturgy not as a sign of our fasting, but as a mark of our mortal nature. The ashes are given to us to remind us of the…

Continue reading →

The Three C’s: David of Wales

Who was David of Wales, and what can we learn from his life? Let’s examine the 3 C’s that characterize his person and works. Confidence in God We know him as “Saint David,” whom we honor each year on his Feast Day (Mar. 1). But he actually never wanted the public eye. Of royal birth,…

Continue reading →

Beneath the Cross of Jesus

It feels an appropriate time to republish my blog “Beneath the Cross of Jesus” as we approach Ash Wednesday.  I encourage you to consider what living beneath the cross of Jesus means in your own walk with Christ especially during this reflective season of Lent.  God’s blessings, +GOB You may or may not be familiar with…

Continue reading →

The Truth About Baptism

The Feast of the Presentation commemorates the time when Mary and Joseph came to present Jesus in the temple (Luke 2:25-35). Of course, it’s a special celebration in the church year, but it also has some remarkable parallels to our practice of baptism. Let’s examine them now. An Act of Dedication: Bringing a child into…

Continue reading →

3 Radical Ideas from Mary’s Song

As we prepare for the birth of Christ, I think it fitting to share a blog post which I published at this time last year reflecting on Jesus’s mother Mary and her song of praise, the Magnificat.  Mary’s words remain radical even today.  Christmas blessings to you, +GOB I’ve heard the Magnificat, the Song of…

Continue reading →

Be Your Brother’s Mentor

“Thank God I don’t have to go to church anymore.” It might surprise you, but that’s what I told myself when I went away to college. Yet through the rather sly intervention of a dear woman who (although I didn’t know it at the time) had been praying fervently for me, I went off on…

Continue reading →

Scroll To Top