Authors /
William H. Lamar IV
William H. Lamar IV is pastor of the Metropoliitan African Methodist Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C.
Don’t let God’s word bypass you (Luke 3:1-6)
John is set ablaze. What about all the other characters in the Gospels?
Let the apocalyptic be what it is (Luke 21:25–36)
Trust your hearers. Trust the Spirit.
December 9, Advent 2C (Luke 3:1-6)
John the Baptist’s proclamation for a world of Tiberiuses and Trumps
December 2, Advent 1C (Luke 21:25-36)
What will it take to break through our numbness?
The sensory life
We see. We taste. We touch. We smell. We hear. To be human is to move through time and space guided by our senses. Reading this passage from Luke, I think about the sensory onslaught that defines my existence.
Ordinary 23C (Luke 14:25-33)
In this week’s Gospel text, the piercing hyperbole about family and discipleship normally receives top billing homiletically. However, I am newly struck by Jesus’ words regarding building a tower.
Ordinary 22C (Luke 14:1, 7-14)
Jesus offers his unsolicited advice fully aware of the jousting for prominence that occurs in our social spaces. He sees our mad dash to the front row so that we can be seen by the chief executive officer, the potential major donor, or the bishop.
Chasing Jesus: Ephesians 3:14-21; John 6:1-21
We employ human terms to communicate who God is to one another. But God uses not only words, pictures and images, but Jesus, the Word become flesh and dwelling among us. We look for ways to express who God is, and here God is among us in Jesus Christ, feeding, forgiving, healing and reconciling.
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We were aliens: Ephesians 2:11-22; Mark 6:30-34, 53-56
If the Ephesians forget who they were, they will presume God owes them something.