Posts by Bob Rhodes (Page 12)

Notes on “Risking Temptation”

This is the sixth week of the season of Lent and Palm/Passion Sunday. We conclude our Worship series guided by Amy-Jill Levine’s Entering the Passion of Jesus: A Beginner’s Guide to Holy Week. The Scripture passage this Sunday is John 18:1-11. As we near our Easter celebration, we might be tempted to want over to skip over the bad stuff and jump straight to the celebration and the eggs and the fun! And we would be wrong to do this.…

Notes on “Risking the Loss of Friends”

This week we continue our series on Holy Week as we look at Chapter 5 of Amy-Jill Levine’s book Entering Christ’s Passion: Holy Week for Beginners, “Risking the Loss of Friends.” The Scripture passage this week is from Luke 22:14-27. As we continue through Holy Week and near Easter, we arrive at a profoundly moving gathering of Jesus with his disciples. Gathering for the Passover celebration, Jesus does something extraordinary. Told differently in the Gospels (read Matthew 26, Mark 14,…

Notes on “Risking Rejection”

This week we continue our series on Holy Week as we look at Chapter 4 of Amy-Jill Levine’s book Entering Christ’s Passion: Holy Week for Beginners, “Risking Rejection.” The Scripture passage this week is from John 12:1-8 (see below), which is the story of a woman anointing Jesus’ feet. This story can be found in different forms in Mark 14:3-9, Matthew 26:6-13, and Luke 7:36-50. We may recall this story of a woman in its various forms. Perhaps we think…

Notes on “Risking Reputation”

This is the first week of the season of Lent, and the first week of our new Worship series guided by Amy-Jill Levine’s Entering the Passion of Jesus: A Beginner’s Guide to Holy Week. Each Sunday we will journey through Jesus’ final week in Jerusalem culminating in the cross and then resurrection Sunday! This week begins with the first day of Holy Week, which brings the familiar scripture of Palm Sunday. If you are one who loves the traditions of…

Notes on “Revelation & Apocalypse”

In this sixth and penultimate week of our sermon series on how we read our Bibles, we continue our exploration of our sacred texts. The final book in the New Testament was not necessarily the final book written, but was placed there because of its focus. Revelation (please note that it’s singular, not plural) is a letter written describing a vision or dream that is author experienced. Attributed to an author named John, scholars are not unified in naming which…

Notes on “Gospels & Acts”

In the fifth week of our sermon series on how we read our Bibles, we continue our exploration of the sacred texts with the core writings that help Christians claim their unique identity of faith: the Gospels and Acts. These five books share the “good news” of Jesus Christ with the world, telling age-old stories of miracles and teachings, criticisms, prophesies, tragedies and death. These stories tell us in compelling and imaginative ways who Jesus is, why Jesus matters, and…

Notes on “Letters & Epistles”

In the fourth week of our sermon series on how we read our Bibles, we are jumping into the New Testament with the letters and epistles from Paul and other authors. The reason we are starting the New Testament here instead of with the Gospels is that many of these letters actually pre-date the Gospels in terms of their authorship. You can find resources on reading and studying the Bible here. I’m not very good at writing letters. If I’m…

Notes on “History & Law”

This week we continue our new sermon series on how we read our Bibles. If you missed it last week, we published a list of resources to plan a regular time of reading the Bible. Find it here. This week we move beyond the creation stories and into the story of Moses as the leader of the Exodus and the bringer of the Law. These narratives are told in the first five books of the Hebrew Bible, sometimes known as…

Notes on “Epiphany & Creation”

This past Sunday’s worship began our new sermon series on how we read our Bibles. Because of the holiday, this Sermon Note is more of a follow-up to the Worship experience. We also published a list of resources to plan a regular time of reading the Bible. Find it here. In beginning this series, we first discussed the primary—and opposing—ways that people generally seem to read sacred text. Those who would identify as Fundamentalist or Conservative Evangelical generally affirm a…

Notes on “Confusion & Wonder”

This week’s worship from our advent series gets into the good stuff! This week we really get into the familiar and exciting parts of the story! It’s almost Christmas and there’s just a little more online shopping to finish up!! To be honest, I really want to be that excited and have almost nothing left to do. But if you’ve worked in a church or a church office, you know that the last week or so before Christmas Eve is…

Notes on “Desperation & Hope”

This week’s text jumps a bit from previous texts in this series. We started with Paul’s letters to the Thessalonians and Ephesians and then moved to Mark for two weeks. This week we jump to the Gospel of John with a text that seems to almost duplicate last week’s from Mark. Why would those who established the Lectionary do this? I don’t have an answer to this. In comparing the Markan description of John the Baptist with that of John,…

Notes on “Watching & Waiting”

I’ve never been one for waiting. Of course if there’s good news coming, I want it right away!! And even if there’s something less-than-ideal on the horizon, I’d rather know and deal with it head-on than wait in that sense of horrible anticipation. Once again in our Extended Advent, our scripture is about end-times. It is interesting that our lectionary authors included such thematically-connected texts in these weeks before celebrating angels and shepherds and new life. Even so, these eschatological…