Posts

Showing posts from January, 2025

3rd Sunday after the Epiphany

  Luke 4:14-21; 1Cor 12:12-31a This week, as we continue through the Season of Epiphany, we start to settle back into readings from the Gospel of Luke that will be with us for this whole year and despite this being the pattern we have followed for more than 50 years, they feel especially timely right now.  Because even though the Apostle Luke was almost definitely Jewish and probably had been his whole life, unlike the other Gospel writers, he likely was not from Judea or the Galilee or anywhere in the Holy Land, he spoke Greek as a first language and wrote his Gospel primarily for people living outside of Israel both Jews and Gentiles.  And so Luke, while he knows and tells many of the same stories as Matthew and Mark focuses far more on community and inclusion than his Judean counterparts.  And as the author of the Pentecost story we know so well, he is also far more interested the Holy Spirit and how it is active in the world and the lives of believers.  So L...

2rd Sunday After the Epiphany Reflection

  Jesus’ Hour, Epiphany 2 (C) – 2013 January 20, 2013 Katerina Katsarka Whitley In this charming and exhilarating story, Jesus is the protagonist but says very little – only three short sentences – yet the whole story is filled with the light of his Epiphany. The account unfolds before us as images instead of narration. A wedding celebration is taking place and, as was the custom, the wedding is part of a feast. This is obviously a well-to-do family, perhaps the leading family in Cana, a small Galilean village. The first things the writer tells us is that Jesus’ mother is present at this joyous affair. Mary must have been a good friend of the bride’s family, and since the feast is given by the bride’s father, she is an invited guest; later, the bridegroom will take the new bride away from her family and she will belong to his family from then on. So here we are presented with the picture of a wealthy family entertaining the people of the village together with some special friends s...

Baptism of Our Lord

Luke 3:1-17;21-22 So today is Baptism of our Lord, first Sunday after Epiphany which sets us up for this year’s unusually long Season after Epiphany where we learn more about who this Jesus is and we get to think about what it means to be disciples and children of God. And so we start this season each year by commemorating the Baptism of Our Lord.   It is one of the 4 special days each year where the church holds Baptisms whenever possible and when we don’t, we take time as a congregation to remember our own baptisms and to renew our baptismal vows. And this year we have especially Beautiful lessons.   I mean year C from Luke has all the best lessons anyway, but this week they are particularly great. Because today is a day about promises.   And about God telling us how much he loves us.   It begins with Isaiah, with the reading we heard today that is one of the most beautiful in the Bible.   It is a love letter from God to the people of Israel promising them...

Epiphany

1/5/2025 This week we celebrate Epiphany in the church.   Today is actually technically Epiphany Eve or Twelfth Night the last of the Twelve days of Christmas.   Tomorrow, June 6 is Epiphany but we since Epiphany only falls on a Sunday usually only once about every 7 years and we missed it last year because of the leap year, I just couldn’t resist the opportunity to celebrate this often overlooked and underappreciated holiday.   Because it wasn’t always like this.   Twelfth night and Epiphany have been important to the church for just as long as Christmas Eve and Day.   And in some times and places have far surpassed December 24 & 25th in grandeur and importance.   Until fairly recently, gifts were given not at celebrations on Christmas but for Epiphany, commemorating the gifts the Magi gave to the baby Jesus.   Yet in this day and age, it seems like the Christmas season now begins in mid to late November and ends squarely on December 25 th , wit...