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...