"Proclaim" is Dorothy Bergquist’s setting of Psalm 99. Carolyn Bergquist, soprano. Marla Lowen, pianist. Listen to this beautiful piece here or on our podcast.
Psalm 85: Loyalty Reaches Up
Psalm 40: I Waited
Psalm 33: Love us, love us, Lord!
Faith Like Nicodemus
Nicodemus first shows up in John’s Gospel in the reading that we just heard. He is a religious leader, he is a man of great respect and great influence in the community, he is a well-learned man, and he has seen what Jesus has been doing. He is intrigued, he is drawn to it, but he’s not quite sure what to make of it. He knows that God is at work in this.
Lent as a Pilgrimage
Today is the first Sunday in Lent, a season in the church calendar where we are bidden to engage in self-denial, fasting, prayer, repentance, and reading of Scripture — to prepare our minds and hearts to receive the gifts of Holy Week and Easter. One thing we don’t emphasize as much any more, but which historically has been an important part of Lenten piety, is pilgrimage, and especially pilgrimage to the Holy Land where the events of the Gospel took
place.
The Transfiguration
the event we hear about in today’s Gospel, when three of Jesus’ disciples saw him glowing white while talking with two of the most important people in the sacred story of the Hebrew people, clearly describes a different sort of transfiguration. While the Biblical account certainly describes a dramatic change in Jesus’ appearance, it was only a fleeting change, not a permanent one. There is no indication that from the point that they came down from the mountain Jesus looked any different than he ever had. No, I believe that rather than Jesus taking on a whole new look, it was how his followers saw him, their perception of him, that underwent a permanent change.