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What would it look like to rebuild cities and plant new gardens. The imagery is at work in the Isaiah text for the third Sunday in the Season of Advent. Jerusalem lay desolate and in ruins. How would it be made new again? Often we think of rebuilding and planting as it materially relates to cities and to gardens. But, what about the condition and shape of human lives in need of rebuilding and planting? How are people any less materially represented when stories about of neglect, abuse, tragedy, and disease?

This week’s edition of Thoughts from the Edge stem from Toni sharing her experiences working with orphaned girls and boys in Guatemala. Is it possible to think of the work with those brokenhearted, bound, and captive as the very work of Jesus? If so, then last week at Snow Hill, we heard the same words uttered by Jesus in Luke 4, quoting Isaiah 61, and also heard, “Today these words are being fulfilled in your hearing.”

What do you think? This may well be what gets at the heart of Scot McKnight’s book, The King Jesus Gospel and represents an understanding of N.T. Wright’s Simply Jesus wrapped in the package of a life that affirms what Scot McKnight has written, Junia Is Not Alone.

I enjoy photography. Some photos come out to my liking. Others not so much. On those occasions when the subject appears blurred, I know that my focus was poor, I moved as I clicked the shutter button,[more]
How do you respond to generosity? What about when someone demonstrates generous trust in you? The Gospel text for Sunday seems to create an interesting tension between generosity and fear. And, there [more]
Who do you listen to? Just when you get the idea the scribes and Pharisees cannot possibly offer any spiritual guidance for those who would listen Jesus tells the crowd and his disciples to "do what t[more]
How would Paul compel two women to get along when it is recorded that he and John Mark had a falling out that extended to he and Barnabas? Time softens? Maybe. This week's RCL texts are mashed up in t[more]

Audio from the Edge

Podcasts on the texts from the Revised Common Lectionary, reflections on recently read books, and other “thoughts from the edge.”Continue Reading

Aftermath of God – Thoughts from the Edge

One common thread running through at least three of the texts for this week involve the “aftermath of God.” That is, to borrow from Peter Rollins, life after an intense encounter with God. All encounters are intense. We may miss them when we domesticate God into our image. But, when, like Isaiah, we are overcomeContinue Reading

No Contradiction – Thoughts from the Edge

I recently finished Todd Mangum and Mark Sweenam’s new book, The Scofield Bible: Its History and Impact on the Evangelical Church. One of the traits of Scofield’s notes presented itself in working through the relationship between Law and Grace. I will offer a review of this book in more detail but found this an interestingContinue Reading

Liberation – Thoughts from the Edge

Haiti suffers under the devastation of a recent earthquake. The country reels from a series of recent natural disasters – tropical storms and hurricanes. Reports indicate the utter collapse of Haiti’s infrastructure, even as precarious as it was prior to the tragedy. Is. 62 may well be timely. A people forsaken and desolate are inContinue Reading

Gathered – Thoughts from the Edge

Sometimes tasks seem insurmountable. In our day it seems there are constant reminders of the social divisions that mark our current milieu. Considering the upcoming selected texts from the RCL left me wondering about the task of gathering a people from all over the world to enjoy life with God. Surely the divisions are tooContinue Reading

Body of Obedience – Thoughts from the Edge

Scot McKnight considers the meaning of Jesus life, death, and resurrection to transcend a “single” theory. Instead, using the illustration of a full set of clubs, Scot contends we need to view the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus from the breadth of understanding found in the history of the church. You may read moreContinue Reading