Login / Signup

Emphasis

Proper 11 | Ordinary Time 16 - A

Sandra Herrmann
Genesis 28:10-19a
What is the connection between heaven and earth? What makes Jacob think that he is the chosen one through whom the nation of Israel will come into being? Genesis is full of these questions, with story explanations for the reason things are as they are. This story, which we traditionally call "Jacob's Dream," is one of them. (Although the translation in the King James Version and carried forward out of respect for tradition is incorrectly rendered as "ladder" actually should be read as "stairway" or "ramp.")

We need to begin our reading of this event back in 25:19, where we learn that Jacob and his fraternal twin, Esau, had fought each other even in the womb. Their struggle is paralleled by their parents choosing favorites in 27:30-40, we...
R. Craig Maccreary
I suppose all of us have particular objects of our venom and disgust. Whenever said object comes up in conversation unless we are prepared for a battle royal, loss of friendship, and a potential conviction for felony assault, we find ourselves saying, "Don't get me started." When it comes to the matter at hand we better not get started because we have no idea how things might end. Here in New England you can easily make a conversation go nuclear by simply mentioning the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox in the same breath. I went to college in the South and a combination of Duke and the University of North Carolina produces similar combustible results. In the Old West it was cattlemen and sheepherders that wound up the voltage of any conversation. The principle is simply...
Wayne Brouwer
In Morris West’s novel The Clowns of God, there’s a powerful scene where a father and his daughter are having an argument. She tells him that she’s going to go to Paris to live with her boyfriend. He won’t let her. Why would she want to do something like that?

“Because I’m afraid,” she says.

“Afraid? Whatever are you afraid of?”

She says: I’m “afraid of getting married and having children and trying to make a home, while the whole world could tumble round our ears in a day.” She goes on: “You older ones don’t understand. You’ve survived a war. You’ve built things. You’ve raised families. . . . But look at the world you’ve left to us! You’ve given us everything except tomorrow.”

“Everything except tomorrow.” And tomorrow is the one...
Mark Ellingsen
The happy surprises of faith — a word we need in the midst of the despair and suspicions of others which have characterized 2020.

Genesis 28:10-19a
The First Lesson is the product of one of the four distinct oral traditions which gave rise to the first five books of the Bible. This account of Jacob’s dream of the ladder is likely the work of the 8th-century BC source designated as E, for its use of the Hebrew term Elohim to designate God. 
David Kalas
Every parent is familiar with the backseat refrains. “Are we there yet?” “How much farther is it?” “How soon will we be there?” It is standard fare on a family journey to field the continual questions that are born out of both impatience and excitement.

Children are not to be faulted for this, of course, as though it is peculiar to their age. The adults are just as impatient and excited, but they don’t have to express it aloud: they just check the odometer, the clock, and the GPS. And it may be, in fact, that the adults check more often than the children ask!

In any case, this is a natural part of being on a trip. We have a sense of our destination, and we are eager to get there. And in our eagerness, we may also feel and exhibit a certain restlessness. It is a...
Schuyler Rhodes
It has gotten very crowded out there in the last century. Oh, to look around you wouldn't see this particular overcrowding problem. That's because it is invisible to our eyes. But if you want to do any number of things that are now commonplace in our twenty-first-century world, then you are going to feel the squeeze.

The "out there" that has gotten so crowded is the "airwaves." We have found so many uses for radio frequencies that there just is not enough "bandwidth" to go around. First there was just radio and then it was television. Now there is also "high-definition television" (HDTV) that requires different and broader spectrum frequencies than traditional television signals we still have with us. A battle has raged over the past several years between "micro broadcasters...
It has gotten very crowded out there in the last century. Oh, to look around you wouldn't see this particular overcrowding problem. That's because it is invisible to our eyes. But if you want to do any number of things that are now commonplace in our 21st-century world, then you are going to feel the squeeze.

The "out there" that has gotten so crowded is the "airwaves." We have found so many uses for radio frequencies that there just is not enough "bandwidth" to go around. First there was just radio, and then it was television. Now there is also "high-definition television" that requires different and broader spectrum frequencies than the traditional television signals we still have with us. A battle has raged over the past several years between "micro broadcasters" using very...
There are certainly times when we can readily distinguish good folks from bad folks. The old western movies made it simple by dressing the good guys in white hats and the bad guys in black hats. In more modern movies you can usually tell the difference by whether the actor wears a smile or a sneer.

Some people in real life determine that Christians are the good ones and that the bad ones, the ones who cause all the trouble in the world, are those of other faiths or of no faith at all. Yet in this century we have seen Christians carry out atrocities against others. The Holocaust in Nazi Germany comes to mind. So also does the recent fighting in the former Yugoslavia where the Christians of Serbia have been committing atrocities against their Muslim neighbors in Bosnia and Kosovo...
Our texts for this Sunday continue the theme from a week ago, namely, that Christians are engaged in a struggle, but that God is with us to help us. Today the thought is carried a step further. It is in the secret, mystical, often difficult-to-describe side of the Christian experience that we learn to know the work of God. The dream of Jacob, Paul's word about the "witness of the Spirit," the parable of the seed growing in the midst of the weeds -- all are signs of the work of God in the life of believers, a work that often is not apparent from the outside.

It would be easier for us if we preached only on the Gospel Lesson for this Sunday. After all, who believes that God actually communicates through a dream? There are lessons to be learned from "Jacob's Ladder," but we...
I am certain that when I hear some people speak of the Christian life, I am hearing them say that nothing less than perfection is allowed. We are regaled with the rules; then we are reminded that if we depend on the presence of the Spirit, there will be no problem. It seems as though we are being driven into a corner from which there is no escape.

As one reads the New Testament, in the order in which it was likely written, one discovers that there is a great concern for personal behavior. There is no compromising the call to perfection, but there is also the acknowledgment that it is not likely to happen.

For instance, take another look at Matthew's Parable of the Weeds or the Parable of the Net and you will see that he is struggling to define the nature of the...

Lectionary Commentary and Sermon Illustrations

Emphasis Preaching Journal provides in-depth lectionary-based commentary on lectionary texts, plus thousands of sermon illustrations to help you create riveting sermons.

For over 45 years, Emphasis has provided subscribers with scripturally sound, lectionary-based commentaries and sermon illustrations that connect with the people in the pews.

For each week, Emphasis writers delve into the heart of the lectionary readings, providing you with several fresh, solid ideas -- based squarely on the lectionary texts -- for creating sermons that speak powerfully to your audience. They look for overall themes that hold the readings together. Then, they zero in on the themes and the specific scripture links, suggesting directions for the sermon and worship service. Since a single idea each week may not provide what you are looking for at that particular time, writers suggest several, giving you the opportunity to select the one that matches your specific needs.

Archives

Emphasis Preaching Journal gives you even greater value by putting back issues of the journal at your fingertips. This access to the archives provides you with practically limitless ideas and approaches to weekly readings.

New & Featured This Week

The Immediate Word

Dean Feldmeyer
Christopher Keating
Katy Stenta
Mary Austin
George Reed
Thomas Willadsen
For July 19, 2026:

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Prayers usually include these concerns and may follow this sequence:

The Church of Christ

Creation, human society, the Sovereign and those in authority

The local community

Those who suffer

The communion of saints


These responses may be used:


Lord, in your mercy
Hear our prayer
Lord, hear us.
Lord, graciously hear us.
Janice B. Scott
Nobody liked Jennifer. She'd come from another country to join the class and it was difficult to understand what she said. And she had such odd ideas. Rosie discovered that instead of eating cereals from her bowl at breakfast time, Jennifer drank hot chocolate from her bowl - having first dipped her toast in it!

StoryShare

Argile Smith
C. David Mckirachan
Contents
What's Up This Week
"The Land's Sacred" by Argile Smith
"What's It Worth?" by C. David McKirachan


What's Up This Week
It is our natural tendency to respond to what we see with our senses, while there is so much more to life than that. In "The Land's Sacred," we meet two men who look at something as seemingly simple as land and farming in two completely different lights. "What's It Worth?" takes us through one family's tragedy, revealing that under the pain and anguish, seeds of hope and goodness still grow.

David O. Bales
Sandra Herrmann
John E. Sumwalt
Contents
"All Earthly Fathers" by David O. Bales
"A Private Talk in the School of Christ" by Sandra Herrmann
"A Wicked Way in Me" by John Sumwalt


* * * * * * * *


All Earthly Fathers
by David O. Bales
Romans 8:12-25

SermonStudio

Elizabeth Achtemeier
Jacob is on a journey from Hebron to Haran, Abraham's original home in northern Mesopotamia. In the context, two different reasons are given for the journey. According to the Yahwist account in Genesis 27:41-45, Jacob is fleeing to save his life from the wrath of his brother Esau. In the priestly account of Genesis 27:46--28:1-5, Jacob journeys to find a wife from his own clan. Both reasons may be involved, because God's purpose works its way through all sorts of motivations.
William E. Keeney
He put before them another parable: "The kingdom of heaven may be compared to someone who sowed good seed in his field; 25but while everyone was asleep, an enemy came and sowed weeds among the wheat, and then went away. 26So when the plants came up and bore grain, then the weeds appeared as well. 27And the slaves of the householder came and said to him, 'Master, did you not sow good seed in your field?
Russell F. Anderson
BRIEF COMMENTARY ON THE LESSONS

Lesson 1: Genesis 28:10--19a (C)
Upon hearing of Esau's plan to kill Jacob after Isaac's death, Rebekah spirits Jacob back to her relatives in her native land. It is an unsettling time for Jacob, leaving home and a fugitive. Jacob stops for a night at Bethel and in his dream God reaffirms the covenant he made with Abraham and Isaac. In the dream, Jacob views a stairway to heaven, probably a ziggurat, with the angels of God ascending and descending. This establishes Beth--el (house of God) as a sanctuary until the time of Josiah.
Justin W. Tull
The flame is a part of our biblical heritage, from the burning bush, to pillars of fire, to the flaming tongues of the Spirit at Pentecost.

The flame is a part of our church tradition and biblical tradition. It symbolizes the Spirit of God that interacts with us in so many different ways. Today we take a look at Moses' experience at the burning bush. From this account we may learn many things about ourselves and about the God we worship.
Larry M. Goodpaster
Obscenity, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. With words to that effect more than two decades ago the Supreme Court of the United States of America left the decisions regarding pornography in the hands of local communities. During the intervening years states and cities have struggled with the issue, desiring to uphold the basic rights of freedom of speech and expression, and at the same time attempting to establish and maintain what is decent and acceptable to the majority. The latest entry to invade this debate and garner headlines is music.
John R. Brokhoff
"This is a perplexing parable." This is George Buttrick's first sentence in the chapter discussing the parable of the Weeds and Wheat. Indeed, it is perplexing. He could have said it again and again.

In the parable Jesus teaches that the bad weeds (evildoers) are to remain together with the wheat (God's people) until Judgment Day when God's angels will separate them, one for the fire, the other for glory. In the light of this, we ask perplexing questions.
Gary L. Carver
How to begin a sermon? It always is a preacher's dilemma as to how to introduce a sermon. I never seem to know. I do know that one has said that an introduction to a sermon should be short and concise and should introduce the main thought that the proclaimer is seeking to present. I also know that it is very much appreciated if the introduction is very close to the conclusion. But, how does one introduce a sermon?
Stephen M. Crotts
All of the Bible is inspired. But just as some parts of a turkey have more meat on them, so some parts of the Bible are meatier than others. For example, the genealogies of Leviticus versus the Sermon on the Mount.

Matthew 13 is one of the meatier portions of the scriptures. It is unique as an identifiable sermon of Christ Jesus, a series of seven, maybe eight parables that seem to be prophetic, to foretell the history of ministry ahead of time.

The parable of the wheat and the tares is the second in Jesus' sermon. Let's look at it now.
Thom M. Shuman
Call To Worship
One: We come to the One
who knows all the facts about our lives;
All: we are open books to God,
who writes on every page.
One: We approach the One
who knows what we are thinking;
All: our thoughts, our fears, our hopes
are all known by God.
One: We worship the One
who is always with us,
in front of us, behind us, around us;
All: what a wonderful God!
How blessed we are!

Prayer Of The Day
You we praise, Searching God,
Wayne H. Keller
Celebrating The Presence Of God

Invitation to the Celebration

In the Name of the Eternal Gardener, welcome to the world of wheat and weeds. Following the creation, God pronounced the world "very good," which means, "fit for the purpose for which it was intended."ÊWe rejoice in our creation. Thank you, Lord, for putting us here, where you work with us, on us, within us, and through us, to eliminate the weeds in our own lives, and in the life of your church. Yes, thank you, even though we do not always appreciate your gardening methods.

Emphasis Preaching Journal

R. Craig Maccreary
I suppose all of us have particular objects of our venom and disgust. Whenever said object comes up in conversation unless we are prepared for a battle royal, loss of friendship, and a potential conviction for felony assault, we find ourselves saying, "Don't get me started." When it comes to the matter at hand we better not get started because we have no idea how things might end. Here in New England you can easily make a conversation go nuclear by simply mentioning the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox in the same breath.
Sandra Herrmann
Genesis 28:10-19a
What is the connection between heaven and earth? What makes Jacob think that he is the chosen one through whom the nation of Israel will come into being? Genesis is full of these questions, with story explanations for the reason things are as they are. This story, which we traditionally call "Jacob's Dream," is one of them. (Although the translation in the King James Version and carried forward out of respect for tradition is incorrectly rendered as "ladder" actually should be read as "stairway" or "ramp.")

CSSPlus

Teachers or Parents: Heaven may seem somewhat esoteric and remote for the children (and for us as well), but heaven is our hope that will not disappoint us (see first lesson).

*If your church (or home) has a flower bed, have a class project of weeding it as a service to the church. Read again the parable Jesus told (where the weeds were not removed). Share how removing the weeds helps the flowers grow better.
UPCOMING WEEKS
In addition to the lectionary resources there are thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
Proper 11 (OT 16, Pent 8)
28 – Sermons
110+ – Illustrations / Stories
21 – Children's Sermons / Resources
20+ – Worship Resources
23 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Proper 12 (OT 17, Pent 9)
28 – Sermons
130+ – Illustrations / Stories
23 – Children's Sermons / Resources
19 – Worship Resources
22 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Proper 13 (OT 18, Pent 10)
29 – Sermons
120+ – Illustrations / Stories
30+ – Children's Sermons / Resources
20+ – Worship Resources
24 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Plus thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
Signup for FREE!
(No credit card needed.)
Wildcard SSL