Is faith something to market? Maybe, writes Teri McDowell Ott.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
"We put more energy into building and maintaining walls to mark our boundaries ... than we put into building relationships, diverse communities and just systems that remove the need for walls." — Teri McDowell Ott
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
What do we do when we encounter something that fills us with wonder – that bubbly, contradictory mix of expansiveness and finitude and interconnectednes? Rose Schrott Taylor reflects.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
The pressures of our lives can leave us withered and exhausted. But when we remember our story, we will find the wind that helps us take flight, bringing us home, writes Teri McDowell Ott.
The church exists because of Jesus Christ. All things exist because of Jesus Christ. It’s amazing, astounding and true, writes John Wurster.
A free hymn with sheet music based on Mark 1:21-28 by Scott Barton.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
We can hear the urgency in the lectionary texts for January 21, but how does that translate to us today? — Stephanie Sorge
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
“O Lord, you have searched me and known me.” This knowing can be painful and challenging. The truth often is. Yet God pursues us in love and offers us the truth as a path to healing. — Teri McDowell Ott
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation
Mark’s Gospel will continually draw us to the margins, de-centering power and privilege. It’s an invitation for us to to leave our comfort zones, writes Stephanie Sorge.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation
"How can we celebrate Christmas when there is no Christmas in Bethlehem?" writes Bruce Reyes-Chow.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
Philip Gladden looks at the connection between Christmas and Easter laid out in Luke 2 and Galatians 4.
This year, rocks have witnessed war, gun violence, oppression, and global warming. They cry out, "How long, Oh God?" Let's join them, writes Jesy Littlejohn.
Come, Lord Jesus — in the retelling of the familiar story, in the souls that gather to listen, writes Andrew Taylor-Troutman.
Come alive, O Christ in every broken place so that love fills every gap, writes Jeremy Wilhelmi.
Christian Iosso writes: "Blessed are those who have no 'home for the holidays,' without jobs or funds to buy gifts, who have outlived their friends..."
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
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