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Larry D. Powell

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The Set Face And The Turned Head -- Luke 9:51-62 -- Larry D. Powell -- Proper 8 | Ordinary Time 13 - C -- 1991
"I know you've been sworn in and I've read your complaint." So begins Judge Wapner as another case u
A Continuing Presence -- John 16:12-15 -- Larry D. Powell -- Trinity Sunday | 1st Sunday after Pentecost - C -- 1991
Clarence Macartney tells of a certain Canadian river which flows through a forbidding chasm.
Just Speak The Word -- Luke 7:1-10 -- Larry D. Powell -- Proper 4 | Ordinary Time 9 - C -- 1991
It is somewhere written down that many years ago a rider on horseback approached a group of soldiers
So Close ... But Yet So Far -- Luke 9:11-17 -- Larry D. Powell -- 1991
Several summers ago, my wife and I had occasion to be in a little community in New York state which
But God Can -- Luke 7:11-17 -- Larry D. Powell -- Proper 5 | Ordinary Time 10 - C -- 1991
She was all alone now, this widow of Nain.
Tears And Ointment -- Luke 7:36-50 -- Larry D. Powell -- Proper 6 | Ordinary Time 11 - C -- 1991
Senator William Proximire (D-Wisconsin) regularly delights the general public by awarding his now-fa
"To Be Or Not To Be" ... Is NOT The Question -- Luke 9:18-24 -- Larry D. Powell -- Proper 7 | Ordinary Time 12 - C -- 1991
"They" say that the next President of the United States is going to be a woman.
Receive The Holy Spirit -- John 20:19-23 -- Larry D. Powell -- Day of Pentecost - C -- 1991
"It is my heart-warming and world-embracing hope," said Mark Twain, "that all of us - the high, the
Are You Convinced? -- John 15:26-27; 16:4b-15 -- Larry D. Powell -- Day of Pentecost - C -- 1991
Someone has astutely observed that our culture does not handle "endings" very well.
Show Us The Father -- John 14:8-17 (25-27) -- Larry D. Powell -- Day of Pentecost - C -- 1991
A tourist stood for long periods of time upon the beach, facing away from the ocean, pressing a seas
Fleshing Out The Word -- Luke 10:1-11, 16-20 -- Larry D. Powell -- Proper 9 | Ordinary Time 14 - C -- 1991
In the summer of 1983, I participated in a ministerial exchange program sponsored by my denomination

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He who has ears to hear, let him hear. -- Luke 8:8 -- Larry D. Powell -- 1984
There is an old "preacher story" about the traveling evangelist who had a flair for the dramatic.
A THEOLOGY OF A STORM -- Larry D. Powell -- 1984
There was an elderly lady in the little hamlet where I grew up who lived just across the back yard f
IN QUEST OF A TREASURE -- Larry D. Powell -- 1984
The Spanish explorer Ponce de Leon's obsession with discovering the fountain of eternal youth led hi
IN PRAISE OF DOERS -- Larry D. Powell -- 1984
Following morning worship one Sunday, some good lady, whose name I do not know, handed me a newspape
Loving -- Larry D. Powell -- 1984
"If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging
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There was no warning. One moment, busy afternoon rush hour crowds were bustling in and out of the subway terminal. Men and women of various ages, carrying briefcases, shopping bags, backpacks and young children, brushed determinedly past one another on their way to and from countless locations. A group of tourists with floral print shirts and cameras craned their necks to take in the vaulted ceilings and marble pillars of the old 96th Street terminal as they descended into its artificially lit atmosphere.
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Psalm 111 is a carefully crafted, alphabetic acrostic. The subject of the acrostic is the praise of God, for all that God is and does. This theme is developed by 22 lines of Hebrew poetry, each one of which begins with a successive letter of the Hebrew alphabet. The content of this psalm makes it very clear that it was written by someone who wanted to give thankful testimony about God's goodness to the worshiping community.

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This bread is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world ... Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day.
-- John 6:51, 54

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John Harding had it all; his credentials were impeccable. He had a wonderful family. His wife, Sally, was one of those people everyone enjoys meeting. His eight-year-old son, Rick, was a good student, enjoyed athletics, and obeyed his parents. John himself had moved up the corporate ladder. After graduating from Arizona State University, where he played baseball well enough to be offered a professional contract, he moved to California's "Silicon Valley" and signed on with one of the many software companies with headquarters in the region.
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In three swift verses, the succession is accomplished, finally. And David sleeps with his fathers and is buried in the city of David. Our prayer for David, companion in these past weeks, is that David sleeps, at last, in peace. For in those last years, David is so advanced in years, so old, that he cannot get warm. They cover him with clothes, but he does not get warm. They bring him a young maiden to lie beside him, but he does not get warm. I imagine David shivers in the knowledge of all that his life has taught him, the hard way.

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