Emphasis Contributors
Fifth Sunday of Easter - B
David Kalas
In the sometimes-tiresome debate over science and scripture with respect to creation, it’s easy to become distracted. While the argument typically requires a focus on the how, we may lose sight of the what. And so, for just a moment, let me invite us to think for a moment about what God created.
If we posit that an all-powerful God would be able to make anything he wanted and in any way that he wanted it, then that suggests the revealing proposition that he specifically wanted it this way. In other words, he could have made things altogether differently. This — what is — therefore, must reveal something to us about his will.
Now we have to remove from the present equation sin and its effects, of course. But if we rewind the tape and focus on the creation account...
If we posit that an all-powerful God would be able to make anything he wanted and in any way that he wanted it, then that suggests the revealing proposition that he specifically wanted it this way. In other words, he could have made things altogether differently. This — what is — therefore, must reveal something to us about his will.
Now we have to remove from the present equation sin and its effects, of course. But if we rewind the tape and focus on the creation account...
Mark Ellingsen
Frank Ramirez
Bonnie Bates
Bill Thomas
Acts 8:26-40
As a local church pastor, I was often asked if I would baptize a child whose family were not members of the church. Some churches rebelled against this, but I remember this scripture — the hunger for understanding and inclusion of the Eunuch and Philp’s response — to teach and share and baptize in the name of our God. How could we turn anyone away from the rite of baptism?
I recall an evening when I was concluding a meeting and we heard singing in the sanctuary. I wondered if a church member was rehearsing. What we found were two girls, one twelve and one ten, sisters who had come into the church and begun singing hymns. We greeted them and they asked us if they could be baptized. We called their family, received permission, included the...
As a local church pastor, I was often asked if I would baptize a child whose family were not members of the church. Some churches rebelled against this, but I remember this scripture — the hunger for understanding and inclusion of the Eunuch and Philp’s response — to teach and share and baptize in the name of our God. How could we turn anyone away from the rite of baptism?
I recall an evening when I was concluding a meeting and we heard singing in the sanctuary. I wondered if a church member was rehearsing. What we found were two girls, one twelve and one ten, sisters who had come into the church and begun singing hymns. We greeted them and they asked us if they could be baptized. We called their family, received permission, included the...
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