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Proper 8 | Ordinary Time 13 - A

Wayne Brouwer
Schuyler Rhodes
Robert Maynard once told how he became a writer. The journey, he said, began when he was a young boy walking to school one morning. He came to a fresh patch of concrete in the sidewalk. Somebody had just finished troweling it smooth, and it was just waiting for him!

He bent over to write his name in the cement, when suddenly there was a hulking shadow engulfing him. Looking up in terror he saw the biggest construction mason he had ever seen in his life! The guy was holding a garbage can lid, ready to smash the first little kid who dared mess up his new sidewalk!

Maynard says he tried to run, but the guy caught him around the waist and shouted, "What do you think you're doing?! Why are you trying to spoil my work?!"

Maynard remembers babbling...
R. Craig Maccreary
Nowadays it is hard for any television viewer to avoid the reality show genre where "real people" are forced into a variety of contests against each other in order to win the grand prize. I think it would be interesting to add this approach to a group of preachers to see what would happen. Who would be kicked off the island first? Who would be cut from the team? Who does not come back to compete next week? Cutthroat competition among preachers, temptations for clergy to cheat, the heartbreak of defeat as we find out who is the biggest loser: I think there just might be an audience for this. Certainly it seems no wackier than some of the reality shows that have made it onto the broadcast schedules.

Of course, you are outraged at the idea. It seems no more...
David Kalas
The children gather on the playground for a game: perhaps kickball, or basketball, or touch football. All the eligible players line up in front of the two captains, and then the great process begins: picking teams.

Perhaps some of the kids stand quietly, even shyly, waiting, hoping to be picked. Not the eager ones, though. They do not stand quietly. They raise and wave their hands! "Hey, over here! Pick me! Pick me!"

If it's a football game, they will likely do the same thing out on the field. Eager for the quarterback to throw the ball to them, they will wave their arms and call, "Over here! I'm open! Throw it to me!"

The man or woman of God ought to have something of that eagerness: the readiness to be chosen and used by God. Raise your hand and...
David Coffin
The 2018 movieThe Command narrated the disaster of the flagship Russian nuclear Submarine “Kursk,” which sank to the bottom of the Barents Sea in 2000. The disaster and rescue operations were stymied by governmental negligence. As the 23 sailors fought for survival aboard the disabled sub, their families were desperate for answers and updates of their loved ones aboard the sunken vessel. The constant reply was that it is their duty to trust the government process without question. Essentially the Russian government wanted blind obedience by these Russian families as the disabled submarine faced obstacles and impossible odds. In the beginning, the Russian government resisted offers for help for other nations. Is faith in the community of the Russian military and navel community...
Wayne Brouwer
Fred Craddock tells of a vacation encounter in the Smoky Mountains of eastern Tennessee years ago that moved him deeply. He and his wife took supper one evening in a place called The Black Bear Inn. One side of the building was all glass, open to a magnificent mountain view. Glad to be alone, the Craddocks were a bit annoyed when an elderly man ambled over and struck up a nosy conversation: “Are you on vacation?” “Where are you from?” “What do you do?”

When he discovered that Fred taught in a seminary, the man suddenly had a preacher story to tell. “I was born back here in these mountains,” he said. “My mother was not married, and her shame fell upon me. The children at school called me horrible names. During recess I would go hide in the weeds until the bell rang,” he told...
David Coffin
How does one preach in the middle of the summer and vacation time, when God is possibly the last thing on people’s minds? Unless there is a summer weather disaster or tragic shooting incident at a populated tourist attraction, the whole topic of God, life, and death matters all seem distant if not morbid. This is still the season when the church does its mission. Matthew 28:16-20 still applies: “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations” (Greek: Ethne). This week’s texts provide opportunities to raise the question of what god we are serving in our actions. That is, what concern or reason for living really drives our lives? (Tillich, The Courage to Be, pp. 167-178).

Genesis 22:1-14
David Coffin
A single mother and her child are living with her parents. The daughter/mother has been struggling with drugs and alcoholism for some time now. She has been arrested for driving under the influence and may have her child taken away from her unless she attends Alcoholics Anonymous meetings at a local church. The grandmother has been allowing her daughter to use the family credit cards and to abuse the household in many ways as she was on drinking binges with her latest boyfriend. Now both of them are attending Alcoholics Anonymous (for the daughter) and Al-Anon Family Groups for the Mother or Grandmother. Both of these 12-step groups tell the women that they must be committed to a new way of living. They will now have to let go of their old ways and have faith in their "higher power" (whom...
Without question the story of "The Sacrifice of Isaac" is one of the most horrific in the whole Bible. Through the centuries, readers have been almost morbidly drawn to this spectacle. Painters such as Rembrandt have found here the subject for some of the most powerful and haunting images in all of Western art. The story as been analyzed by theologians, philosophers, psychologists and hosts of others, including just ordinary folk, for insight into the complexities of the relationship between the human and the divine. As much as we might want to forget that this story was even a part of our sacred tradition, we seem constantly drawn back to it like a moth drawn to the flame.
Many church folks feel the congregation and its pastor are not doing a good job if church membership has not grown at an expected rate over the past year. Certainly they have a point. On the basis of the way we evaluate effectiveness and success, the numbers ought to indicate how things are going.

Our lessons for today, especially the first lesson and the gospel account, raise another possibility. Popularity might simply mean that people attend this or that church because they like what they hear, or rather that the preaching and the teaching are fitted to what the audience wants. Giving an unpopular message, like the news that God accepts us not because we are lovable but precisely when we are not, can keep the numbers down. It's not the good old American way! Earn your own...
The readings for today are not a neat match for each other. The story in which Abraham is commanded to sacrifice his son Isaac belongs in the "test of faith" sequence. What strikes me most about the other two readings is the notion of substitution, surrogacy, or deceiving appearances.

In the case of Romans 6, the believer is given a choice of identities. Because both the new person and the old are the same body, with the same members, and the two look the same, Paul says that each must determine to whom or to what to yield the members. Not how we appear but to whom and to what we are attracted and attached: that is what is at stake here. It is possible to give one's members over to sin and evil. But the price of that is slavery: one might as well be wearing chains. And to...

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New & Featured This Week

The Immediate Word

Christopher Keating
Dean Feldmeyer
Nazish Naseem
Thomas Willadsen
Katy Stenta
Mary Austin
George Reed
For June 28, 2026:
  • After These Things by Chris Keating. Our world clamors for the efficiency of Artificial Intelligence. But trusting in technology can be a challenge, as shown in the story of Abraham’s call to sacrifice Isaac.

StoryShare

Frank Ramirez
As for the prophet who prophesies peace, when the word of that prophet comes true, then it will be known that the Lord has truly sent the prophet (Jeremiah 28:9)."

The prophet Jeremiah may have been a little skeptical when he spoke these words about a prophet who prophesies peace, for as he said earlier in the passage, the default setting for prophesy involves war, famine, and pestilence. Nevertheless, he suggests that if the words of the peace prophets come true then the Lord has truly sent them.
Argile Smith
Craig Kelly
Contents
What's Up This Week
"The Borrowed Book" by Argile Smith
"The Tie" by Craig Kelly


What's Up This Week

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Frank was against the plan from start. He hated the kids from the Baptist Sunday School, mostly because there were more of them and they always seemed to have such a good time. The Church of England Sunday School was OK, although Frank found it boring at times. But at least there were some other boys there, enough to form a reasonably good five-aside football team.

SermonStudio

Stan Purdum
There are some recent studies on racism that offer important information about our thinking processes for all of us no matter to what race we belong. These studies challenge the older idea that racial prejudice is something we are born with -- something inherent in our makeup. They show that even when we have a negative gut reaction to someone based on race, we can override that reaction with our rational thought processes.1
Leonard W. Mann
Abraham was an experienced listener. Perhaps once or twice he had listened too well. In the matter of Sarah's servant woman, he listened to his wife on at least two occasions when his listening created some really serious problems. But let's leave that detail right there, and go on to things of greater importance.
Wayne H. Keller
If we took this chapter seriously, we would probably wish that Matthew had never written it. Or, if he did write it, he should have eliminated the first 39 verses, and included only the last three. When we examine it carefully, or not so carefully, we discover that it turns our usual thinking about discipleship upside down.

I
Justin W. Tull
Our narrative begins with Jacob's sending his family across the Jabbok stream while staying behind to spend the night alone. Tomorrow he must face his brother, Esau, whom he has not seen since he escaped after stealing Esau's blessing and having fleeced him out of his birthright. Jacob does not know how his brother will receive him… but several possibilities have occurred to him -- none of them positive.

It should come as no surprise that Jacob got little sleep that night. Who could sleep well, knowing that one must stand in front of an angry brother and beg for forgiveness?
Larry M. Goodpaster
A misguided bird gets loose in the sanctuary and every eye in the congregation drifts toward the ceiling. Never mind that the choir is continuing to sing the anthem they have been working on for weeks just for this special occasion. The lost bird has totally interrupted the proceedings and besides, most would have to admit, its flight was much more entertaining. "I was so afraid that bird was going to land on your head -- but I'm sure the choir understands," is the comment heard from a number of people at the close of the service.
Gary L. Carver
Belmont Abbey College in North Carolina sits on property that was once a large southern plantation. The land was given to the Roman Catholic Church and they built an abbey and college on the property. The monks found a huge granite stone on that property upon which men, women, and children stood centuries ago and were sold as slaves. The monks took the stone and hollowed out a hole in the top and carried it into the abbey's chapel, where to this day it serves as a baptismal font. The engraving on it reads: "Upon this rock men were once sold into slavery.
Stephen M. Crotts
Did you hear about the farm boy who always wondered what would happen if he twisted the tail on the mule? One day he tried it. And now they say about him, he's not as pretty as he used to be, but he's a whole lot wiser.

When I was a young man, I wondered what my life would be like if I became a pastor in answer to God's call. Now, thirty years later, I'm not as pretty as I used to be, but I am a lot wiser.
William G. Carter
Earlier this week somebody asked what the sermon was about. I said, "I'm preaching about slavery." That was a good way to stop a conversation.
Thom M. Shuman
Call To Worship
One: With joy and celebration,
God welcomes us to this place.
All: How good it is to gather in God's house!
One: With joy and celebration,
we welcome one another.
All: We greet each other by name;
we are equal in God's kingdom.
One: We open our hearts, to welcome God's love;
we open our arms, to welcome God's people.
All: Here, every single one of God's children is welcome.

Prayer Of The Day
You have invited us
to this place,
Accepting God,
Amy C. Schifrin
Martha Shonkwiler
Greeting Of Peace
P: From every land and nation,
every city and home,
C: whoever welcomes you welcomes me,
and whoever welcomes me welcomes the one who sent me.
P: From every family,
rich and poor, small and large,
C: whoever welcomes you welcomes me,
and whoever welcomes me welcomes the one who sent me.
P: From the barrios and the colonias,
from the neighborhoods of affluence,
C: whoever welcomes you welcomes me,
and whoever welcomes me welcomes the one who sent me.

Emphasis Preaching Journal

David Kalas
The children gather on the playground for a game: perhaps kickball, or basketball, or touch football. All the eligible players line up in front of the two captains, and then the great process begins: picking teams.

Perhaps some of the kids stand quietly, even shyly, waiting, hoping to be picked. Not the eager ones, though. They do not stand quietly. They raise and wave their hands! "Hey, over here! Pick me! Pick me!"
R. Craig Maccreary
Nowadays it is hard for any television viewer to avoid the reality show genre where "real people" are forced into a variety of contests against each other in order to win the grand prize. I think it would be interesting to add this approach to a group of preachers to see what would happen. Who would be kicked off the island first? Who would be cut from the team? Who does not come back to compete next week?
Wayne Brouwer
Schuyler Rhodes
Robert Maynard once told how he became a writer. The journey, he said, began when he was a young boy walking to school one morning. He came to a fresh patch of concrete in the sidewalk. Somebody had just finished troweling it smooth, and it was just waiting for him!

He bent over to write his name in the cement, when suddenly there was a hulking shadow engulfing him. Looking up in terror he saw the biggest construction mason he had ever seen in his life! The guy was holding a garbage can lid, ready to smash the first little kid who dared mess up his new sidewalk!

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Parents and Teachers: This morning's lesson is about rewards. Focus your attention on how young children can feel that they make a contribution to their church. In this way, they may feel that their contribution is rewarding to all members.
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