Posts by Lea Booth
Notes on “Why Is the Bible Like That?”
This week we continue our “Questions That Matter” series with a query from Joey, age 8: “How many people wrote the Bible? And why are some stories repeated?” This is a profound question of critical analysis! I sat in classrooms in seminary with graduate students who had never thought to ask questions like this about the Bible. It’s also not that easy to answer, unless we say, “Well, we don’t exactly know!”. What we know today as “The Bible” has gone…
Notes on “Our Daily Bread”
When I was in Boot Camp at MCRD Parris Island, there was a food hoarding problem (in retrospect, I imagine this is a perennial thing). Recruits would squirrel away peanut butter packets or granola bars or apples–really, anything we could get our hands on–because even though we were ostensibly eating 2200 calories a day, we were always hungry. Maybe even more than this, though, when someone else (whom you barely know) is in control of your every moment, it can…
Notes on “Hallowed Be Thy Name”
This week begins our series on the Lord’s Prayer, also called the “Our Father” or the “Prayer of Jesus”. I began reading Bishop Will Willimon’s book on this prayer this week in preparation for this sermon, and one remark he makes struck me early on: “A Christian is none other than someone who has learned to pray the Lord’s prayer.” While Willimon argues that we should memorize the prayer so as to have access to it when we don’t know…
Notes on “Risking Challenge”
This week we continue our series on Holy Week as we look at Chapter 3 of Amy-Jill Levine’s book Entering Christ’s Passion: Holy Week for Beginners, “Risking Challenge.” The Scripture passage this week is from Mark 12:28-34 (see below), and Levine’s book also references Matthew 22:15-22 and Mark 12:41-44. As we center on this third week of Lent, we land on Tuesday of Holy Week with Jesus remaining in Jerusalem. The Gospel of Mark (from which we read this week)…
Notes on “Risking Righteous Anger”
This week we continue our series on Holy Week as we look at Chapter 2 of Amy-Jill Levine’s book Entering Christ’s Passion: Holy Week for Beginners, “Risking Righteous Anger”. The Scripture passage this week is from Mark 11:15-19, the story of the cleansing of the Temple. This story is having a bit of a revival right now among Christians of my generation (and others!). Those of us who grew up in or around Christian traditions where the main goal of…
Notes on “Practical Theology”
This is the final week of our sermon series “Reading the Bible Again for the First Time,” in which we have explored ways to read the Bible more deeply, with a mind to history, context, genre, and literary analysis. You can find resources on reading and studying the Bible here. This week, we shift from how to read into how to live as we dive into the theme of practical theology. In week one, on “Epiphany & Creation,” Pastor Bob…
Notes on “Prophets & Wisdom”
In the third week of our sermon series on how we read our Bibles, we are taking a look at the prophets and Wisdom Literature in the Hebrew Bible (often called the Old Testament). In the past couple of weeks, we have dived into “Epiphany & Creation” and “History & Law,” and invited our community to try reading the Bible in intentional and perhaps new ways. You can find resources on reading and studying the Bible here. The prophets, from…
Alternative Christmas Fair Cards
Give your loved one a card with details of their alternative Christmas gift by downloading one of the cards above and printing it at home. Click the link, select a location to save the file on your computer, and print the card at home! The first file is a Word document, and the second is a PDF.
Notes on “Bushwhacking”
A couple of weeks ago, I got to teach some of our Scouts about land navigation or orienteering–things like how to use a compass and read a map, and use those tools to find one’s way across terrain. Another assistant scoutmaster set up a course for the girls to navigate down in Marian Bear Memorial Park, and she and I taught some basics and sent the girls (and their parents) to find their way. As we set up the course,…
Notes on “Uncertainty & Preparedness”
I have never been pregnant, but my husband and I are in the final weeks of becoming certified resource (foster) parents, and find ourselves preparing our home for children in much the same way we would if I were having a biological child. Part of the difference for us–aside from not taking Lamaze classes–is that the child or children coming to our home could be any age between birth and five years old. With that knowledge, we are preparing for…