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Emphasis

Proper 6 | Ordinary Time 11 - A

Wayne Brouwer
Psychiatrist, Viktor Frankl, often wrote about the meaninglessness of his patients' lives. He was able to sympathize with them in a powerful way, since he spent part of World War II in a concentration camp. He remembered the dark weeks of 1944 vividly: the numbness of the gray days, the cold sameness of every dreary morning.

Suddenly, like a bolt of bright colors, came the stunning whisper that the Allies had landed at Normandy. The push was on. The Germans were running. The tide of the war had turned. "By Christmas we'll be released!" they told each other.
A few years back, the religious media was filled with reports of "holy laughter." Some charismatic churches saw what proponents called a new manifestation of the Holy Spirit, as their members were seized by fits of uncontrollable laughing. Advocates insisted that this was an indication that God was doing a new thing among believers. Critics countered that this new thing was a manifestation of the wrong sort of spirit, and brought about by New Age doctrine and mind control techniques. Outsiders looked at the whole controversy as yet another dumb thing fundamentalists do.

Whatever it was, it was nothing knew. "God has brought laughter for me; everyone who hears will laugh with me," said Sarah (Genesis 21:6). Laughter is a gift from God, and comes naturally when there is...
Mark Ellingsen
All the lessons proclaim collectively God’s promise on which he always delivers. But the texts also remind us what our response looks like.

Genesis 18:1-15 (21:1-7)
In the First Lesson from the Bible’s book of origins (the reason why we name it Genesis), the product of four distinct oral strands, we read the story of the Lord’s visit to Abraham and Sarah. Given the account’s use of Yahweh as designation for God it is likely that this account is the product of the J strand, the oldest of the four oral traditions.
Sandra Herrmann
Here is the good news: God loves us. God loves us in spite of everything we have done to push God away. God loves us when we’re throwing a tantrum, being mean to our brothers and sisters, shouting at the top of our lungs. God loves us even when God is angry at our behavior. God is good to us when we are doing things we know are wrong. God loves us so much, even in the midst of our sins, that God took on our humanity and set us free from our enslavement to putting ourselves as the center of the creation, demanding that we get everything we want, right this minute.
Frank Ramirez
Our lives are filled with a combination of physical, emotional, and spiritual landmarks. Some landmarks are recognizable and guide us on to the next step. Other landmarks are only recognizable in retrospect.

This week’s scripture passages include spiritual landmarks for three individuals engaged in either a literal or spiritual journey -- Abraham, Paul, and Jesus. Because of who they are, their landmarks are important benchmarks for our journeys as well.

Abraham’s landmark is the oak at Mamre, where a seminal event occurred -- a meeting with the divine. But perhaps the real landmark is the opportunity for hospitality. Hospitality is the portal through which all that was promised by God begins to be fulfilled.

The apostle Paul might have been writing a...
The events of September 11, 2001, still have folks acting in disturbing ways. Where once we were oblivious to the foreigner among us, we now look at these same persons with suspicion and fear. Xenophobia, once thought to be a relic of the 1920s and 1930s, is making a comeback. We are in danger of replacing the global village with tribal fortresses, basing membership in the tribe not on national loyalties, but on national origin.

Other-ness is becoming a threat to be guarded against rather than a difference to be celebrated. In all of this where is the church? Where are the voices of those who worship the One who has broken down the dividing walls of hostility? Why do we no longer hear the children sing, "Red and yellow, black, brown, white; all are precious in God's sight"? Why...
In our society, full as it is of rugged individualists, we tend to highlight the superstars of any field rather than give credit to the team or to the community. Indeed, Robert Bellah's well-known book of 1985, Habits of the Heart, indicates that as Americans we are so possessed with the language of individualism (self-awareness, self-analysis, self-determination, and so on) that we scarcely own a vocabulary that focuses our attention on commitment to community.

Our first lesson, on the other hand, focuses on the role God gives to the community of Israel encamped at the foot of Mount Sinai. Our Gospel tells of Jesus' commissioning of the twelve apostles, not as individuals (even though they are named) but as the new community called the church. The privilege and the...
Lewis Carroll's Alice bragged that she could believe in impossibles; why, she could believe in six impossible things before breakfast. Her profession did not make her a candidate to be a heroine of faith, but it might have made her worthy to be mentioned in the presence of this Sunday's readings.

The strange world of the Bible often calls us to suspend disbelief; to be upset by realities that differ from our own; to be knocked off balance by stories of miracle healings. But our practice at such suspension sometimes gets pushed very far. Not so much in the wonder stories like the stilling of tempests. We are hit hardest when it comes to the demands made on people to produce faith and hope and respect for the promises of God.

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New & Featured This Week

The Immediate Word

Mary Austin
Christopher Keating
Katy Stenta
Dean Feldmeyer
Nazish Naseem
George Reed
Thomas Willadsen
For June 14, 2026:

StoryShare

David O. Bales
John Fitzgerald
Contents
"Most Improved" by David O. Bales
"Echoing Sheep" by David O. Bales
"Having Compassion" by John Fitzgerald

Most Improved
Genesis 18:1-15 (21:1-7)
By David O. Bales

In the teachers’ lounge at South Middle School the morning gossip and general world critique turned to Darrell Schmeling. “Old prune face,” one called him.

A teacher getting a soda from the refrigerator turned and said, “I saw him smile once, but I think he was getting paid.”
John E. Sumwalt And Jo Perry-sumwalt
Contents
What's Up This Week
A Story to Live By: "She Had Compassion"
Shining Moments: "I Gave You to God" by Andrew Oren
Sermon Starter: "Like Having a Baby" by John Sumwalt
Scrap Pile: "Preaching without a Manuscript" by R. Karl Watkins
"How Do You Preach?" by John Sumwalt


What's Up This Week

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:
When Jesus saw the people he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless. Is he calling you today to become a shepherd for his sheep?

Invitation to Confession:
Jesus, I wonder why you don't call me to work for you?
Lord, have mercy.
Jesus, I'm happy to work for you as long as I don't have to change anything in my life.
Christ, have mercy.
Jesus, help me to tune into your voice so that I may hear your call, and then to respond.
Lord, have mercy.

SermonStudio

David E. Leininger
Interesting collection of workers Jesus chose to accompany him -- the twelve. Not a genius among 'em. Common folks: a few fishermen, farmers, even a tax collector. They were not even particularly religious. What they were was willing to be used to further the work of a man they admired, even loved, despite the fact that he was a man they misunderstood. Eventually, they came to realize (even as a few others did) that "this truly was the Son of God." And with the training they had received combined with the commitment they came to develop, those folks turned the world upside down.
Constance Berg
I grew up in a predominately Catholic town, and I have three friends who are priests. I admire their adherence to the vows they took at their ordination: a vow of obedience, a vow of celibacy, and a vow of poverty. Each took their vows quite seriously at their ordination and still do to this day.

Steven E. Albertin
The phone rings in the middle of the night. There is only one reason why someone would call you at this time of the night, and it can't be good. The deadpan voice of the police officer tells you the horrible news rather matter-of-factly. Your imagination runs wild. You were not there, but you can hear the tires screeching, the metal smashing, the glass breaking, and the sirens whining. It was not supposed to end this way. She had so much of life yet to live.
Mark Ellingsen
Jesus' ministry and mission was shifting into high gear. Matthew reports that Jesus had gone about all the cities and villages teaching in their synagogues. But he had not just been preaching the gospel of the kingdom (Matthew 9:35a). It seems that Jesus had compassion on the crowd because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd (Matthew 9:36). Matthew reports that Jesus cured every disease and sickness he encountered (Matthew 9:35b).
Wayne H. Keller
Unlike many businesses today engaged in the process of "downsizing," it was time for Jesus to "upsize." Too much happening, too many demands, too many needs, too much illness, too many people sapping Jesus' strength. So, he called the twelve. Did he have any idea what he was doing? What a pathetic band of characters, at least by society's standards. In a choose-up-sides baseball game, the captain probably would have picked them last. They looked and acted like the "Charlie Browns" of the first century.
Larry M. Goodpaster
The young woman squirmed uncomfortably in the cushioned chair to which she had been directed by the receptionist. Not only was she nervous about the impending job interview, but the shuttle service which had provided transportation from the airport to this office building had been the worst of her life. The others who had been on the van seemed as upset as she was -- and just as captive. Now, because of the traffic, and because that driver had not known which building was hers, she was late for her appointment.
Thom M. Shuman
Call To Worship
One: On an ordinary Sunday,
we come to worship God.
All: We come, trusting God will speak to us;
we come, hoping God will surprise us.
One: On this day, like every other day,
we seek to follow Jesus.
All: We follow, believing Jesus will be with us;
we follow, hoping Jesus will work through us.
One: On this day,
we lift our souls to God's Spirit;
All: we open our hearts, that the Spirit may fill us;
we open our hands that we might be a gift to others.
Amy C. Schifrin
Martha Shonkwiler
Confession And Absolution
P: In the name of the Father, and of the Son, + and of the Holy Spirit.
C: Amen.

P: Merciful God, your will for us is to know the abundance of life, yet this world's suffering continues.
C: We have no answers, and we confess to you the failure of our self-reliance and the anger that is born of our despair. Speak to our questions. Speak to our confusion. Speak to our tears.

Silence for reflection

Emphasis Preaching Journal

A few years back, the religious media was filled with reports of "holy laughter." Some charismatic churches saw what proponents called a new manifestation of the Holy Spirit, as their members were seized by fits of uncontrollable laughing. Advocates insisted that this was an indication that God was doing a new thing among believers. Critics countered that this new thing was a manifestation of the wrong sort of spirit, and brought about by New Age doctrine and mind control techniques. Outsiders looked at the whole controversy as yet another dumb thing fundamentalists do.
Wayne Brouwer
Psychiatrist, Viktor Frankl, often wrote about the meaninglessness of his patients' lives. He was able to sympathize with them in a powerful way, since he spent part of World War II in a concentration camp. He remembered the dark weeks of 1944 vividly: the numbness of the gray days, the cold sameness of every dreary morning.

Suddenly, like a bolt of bright colors, came the stunning whisper that the Allies had landed at Normandy. The push was on. The Germans were running. The tide of the war had turned. "By Christmas we'll be released!" they told each other.

CSSPlus

Good morning, boys and girls. Today we are going to have a real treat. I found out the other day that our friend, Mike, is taking guitar lessons. So I asked Mike if he wouldn't mind playing for us.

Mike, how do you like playing the guitar? (let him answer) How long have you been taking lessons? (let him answer) How often do you practice? (let him answer) That is very good. I bet some day you will be a great musician. Would you play your favorite song for us? (ask him to play something that he knows very well)
Good morning, boys and girls. How many of your parents read a newspaper? (Let them answer.) Do some of you look at the newspaper? Do you read the comics or other sections? (Let them answer.) Some of you aren't old enough to read yet, but some day you'll start reading. One thing you will read will be a newspaper like this one. (Show the paper.) What does a newspaper have in it that is so important to people? (Let them answer.) It has stories in it. We call these stories "news." Some of the news is good news. Some of the news is bad news.
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