This litany is inspired by the account of Christ casting out unclean spirits in the Gospel lectionary passage for the week: Mark 1:21-28.
God we know that you have given us power
And authority
To deal with unclean spirits decisively.
Hallelujah.
We know that you have given us freedom
To be our truest selves,
To face our shadow side,
To live in victory.
Help us to deal with unclean spirits, as we encounter them:
Racism
Prejudice
Patriarchy
Inequality
Hatred
Addiction
Violence.
Whether the unclean spirits reside in others
Or in our own selves,
We become aware,
We exercise power in love.
We commit ourselves to being people who walk in the footsteps of Christ
Who tell the truth,
Who create peace,
Who rout out injustice.
Help us to know Christ so well
And reflect your image so clearly
That the world is different and better
When we have passed through it.
Amen
An Interfaith Litany for the United States (January 2018)
God* we ask for help and intervention in this moment.
Give us ears to hear, eyes to see, and hands to work for good.
Hear now our requests for aid and wisdom.
Lord*, hear our prayer.
For the sick and infirm
We pray to the Lord*.
For the homeless and hungry
We pray to the Lord.
For the poor and destitute
We pray to the Lord.
For the children of low-income families without health insurance
We pray to the Lord.
For the Dreamers, brought to the US as children and now facing possible deportation
We pray to the Lord.
For those affected by the ongoing epidemic of gun violence
We pray to the Lord.
For those unjustly imprisoned
We pray to the Lord.
For all who experience societal injustice
We pray to the Lord.
For Republicans in congress
We pray to the Lord.
For Democrats in congress
We pray to the Lord.
For Donald Trump
We pray to the Lord.
For Mike Pence
We pray to the Lord.
For justices, judges, and members of the judicial system
We pray to the Lord.
For people employed by government agencies
We pray to the Lord.
For those facing danger in the military
We pray to the Lord.
For those working for justice and aid organizations
We pray to the Lord.
For those working for law enforcement and security agencies
We pray to the Lord.
For Robert Mueller and his team
We pray to the Lord.
For journalists working to disseminate truth
We pray to the Lord.
For those who are speaking truth to power
We pray to the Lord.
That all these people, ourselves included, might have the eyes of their hearts enlightened
We pray to the Lord.
Give us compassion, oh God
To see beyond our own safety and comfort,
To work to heal and help the people of our land,
And find unity in our shared humanity.
May truth and justice win the day
And love and mercy win the hearts of all.
Amen
*I intend for this prayer to be ecumenical and interfaith. Please feel free to substitute whatever address for God (Spirit, Universe, Allah, etc) is your preference.
Epiphany, Year B (Week 3): Litany for New Creation
This litany contains references to selections from the Lectionary texts for January 21, 2018 (Year B).
God, even now, in ways we can hardly comprehend
The old is passing away.
Your voice, the voice of Christ, speaks to us:
“The time is fulfilled
the kingdom of God has come near;
turn from evil, and believe in the good news." (1)
All around the world there is turmoil
There is suffering, hunger, and war.
Here in our midst there is upheaval:
In our government, society, and streets.
But we see the subtle ways in which you work:
New creation steadily appearing.
Help us, oh God, to pay attention
To the nearness of your Kingdom,
To the rhythms of your working,
To the newness of life around us,
To the opportunities in our midst,
To the mystery of Christ within us.
For the present form of this world is passing away. (2)
New Creation has already taken hold
And is working and growing behind the scenes,
Beyond the screen of what our eyes can see.
Trust in God at all times, O people;
Pour out your heart before God;
God is a refuge for us.
Power and steadfast love belong to God. (3)
Amen
Mark 1:15
1Corinthians 7:31
Psalm 62:8,12
Epiphany, Year B (Week 2): Litany for Being Seen
The account of the calling of Nathanael in John 1 (Lectionary for Second Sunday in Epiphany) has fascinated me for many years. I’ve never been able to definitively puzzle it out. But the narrative of it draws me in. I can imagine how Nathanael might have felt, waiting, hoping for something; perhaps all his life. Perhaps events in his life made him cynical. Perhaps he chose to watch from the edges, partially hidden. Perhaps he thought he’d never been seen, and had given up hope of being seen. Perhaps he’d lost so much he thought he’d never be found. It seems like he and Jesus have a secret exchange here, buried in the dialogue. And whatever it is, it seems to be what he needs, because we can feel Nathanael’s heart open and his guard drop, simply from knowing that Jesus has seen him. It occurs to me that this is part of what Epiphany means: we get in on the secret that God sees us as intimately as Christ saw Nathanael.
God, we are all hoping you’ll come looking for us,
Though our hearts might be hard --
Or maybe we have been running and hiding for a long time...
We want you to see us.
We want the Creator to pay attention to us
We want to be seen.
We want Someone, Something powerful to take an interest in us.
We want to be known.
Our deepest longing,
Our secret hope,
Our shadowy leaning,
Our mundane pain,
Our hidden dream,
Our forgotten spark:
These are things we long for a savior to save
For a flame to kindle.
You saw us all along:
Quietly observing
Keenly attending
Actively loving.
No matter what fig tree we hide beneath (1),
You see us.
No matter what bravado or sentiment we hide behind (2),
You see through.
We can rely on you to know the truth of us.
We can trust your mercy.
And, when we finally become aware of your merciful regard
We have seen the truth of you.
So, with gratitude and awe
We reflect your love.
Amen
1) John 1:48
2) John 1:46
Epiphany, Year B (Week 1): Litany for Baptism
This week’s Lectionary, following the Feast of the Epiphany, celebrates the Baptism of the Lord. The passages cover the baptism of Christ by John the Baptist in the Gospel of Mark, and the account of the apostles’ in Ephesus receiving baptism in the spirit in the book of Acts.
God, you bless us in all kinds of ways.
The sacraments you offer us are blessed.
You are always teaching us who we are
By your gifts, presence, and words to us.
For the baptism with water, a symbol of our new life,
We give thanks.
For baptism of your spirit, the gift of your presence in and among us,
We give thanks.
We accept these gifts as a sign of your love and regard
As a sign of you being with us.
As symbols of your promises to us:
You cleanse, fill, and renew us.
With living water
We are washed and filled.
With holy spirit
We are washed and filled.
You come to us with the beauty and gentleness of a dove:
We are your children, in whom you are pleased. (1)
And you come to us with the intensity of a fire:
We are your servants, to do your work in the world.
Fill us anew each day
With water and fire.
Teach us to walk as New Creation,
New creatures, children of God:
Buried with Christ in death
Raised to newness of life. (2)
Amen
1) Mark 1:10,11
2) Romans 6:4
Epiphany, Year B: Litany for the Wise
Epiphany is celebrated on January 6, after the twelve days of the Christmas feast. This litany incorporates references from the Matthew 2 and Isaiah 60 passages in the Lectionary for the feast of the Epiphany. I've also included some additional references.
God, we know that one way wisdom begins
Is in curiosity.
We know that the way to finding
Is by seeking.
Many people throughout history have been renowned for their wisdom
And remembered for their insight;
People who sought and studied
People who waited and looked.
And just as the Magi were guided by the heavens to the infant Christ,
So all who search for Christ will find him. (1)
Just as the ancient prophets and saints sought the wisdom of God
So all who search for wisdom will find her. (2)
Just as Christ has taught us about wisdom:
Ask and it will be given,
Seek and we shall find,
Knock and the door will be opened. (3)
Awaken in our hearts, O God
A desire for wisdom.
Awaken in our hearts, O God
A hunger for consciousness.
Awaken in our hearts, O God
A yearning for your kingdom.
Help us to keep our priorities straight:
To seek first your kingdom,
To trust that you have provided. (4)
And we will say to our people:
“Arise, shine; for your light has come,
and the glory of the LORD has risen upon you.
Nations shall come to your light,
and rulers to the brightness of your dawn. (5)
Amen
1) Matthew 2:1-2
2) Proverbs 1:20-24
3) Matthew 7:7, Luke 11:9
4) Matthew 6:33,34
5) Isaiah 60: 1&3
Litany for a New Year
God, in the past year
We have been tested and tried.
We have been given joys and pains in their measure
Laughter and sadness in their measure.
And now we look forward into a new year,
A new leg of our journey,
Knowing that not everything will be easy
Joy and pain, laughter and sadness will meet us in turn.
Help us to live this year with intention
With compassion
With attention
With assertiveness
With kindness toward all (including ourselves)
With purpose
With calm
With gratitude.
And whatever storms we must navigate
Whatever roads we must travel
Be present with us.
Speak to us of your mercy;
Speak to us of your love,
That we may in turn speak mercy and love into being
In this world
And in this year.
Amen
Christmas Year B: Litany for Light in Darkness
This litany contains references from the Lectionary selections for the First Sunday after Christmas Day, Year B, plus an additional reference from Christ's words in John 8.
God, we celebrate the season of Christmas
When darkness outweighs light,
When the year is steeped in dimness,
When day is overshadowed by night.
Even so, our eyes have seen your salvation (1)
Which you’ve prepared for us all --
From oldest to youngest,
Biggest to smallest,
Richest to poorest,
Healthiest to sickest,
Smartest to simplest,
Greatest to least --
The light of revelation
Has come for us all. (2)
Our inner thoughts will be no longer secret (3)
What is hidden will be revealed in its beam.
Our vindication shines out like the dawn,
Our salvation like a burning torch. (4)
All the earth
Is turning toward the light.
The light which came down from heaven
Is the Christ.
The light of the world has come
That we may never walk in darkness. (5)
Amen
1) Luke 2:30
2) Luke 2:31
3) Luke 2:35
4) Isaiah 62:1
5) John 8:12
Advent Year B: Week 3: Litany for Deep Joy
God, all kinds of feelings pass through us in this life:
From happiness to sorrow and everything in between.
We can look around and see all kinds of reasons not to feel joyful
Until we learn:
Joy is not felt
Joy is found.
We straighten our spines,
Posturing ourselves toward joy;
Needing constant rediscovery
Until it becomes our nature.
Joy in pain
Joy in transformation
Joy in journeying
Joy in growth
Joy in parting
Joy in waiting
This is the joy that wells up from us:
The intentional song
The thoughtful gift
The word of comfort
The broken thing mended
The belly filled.
This is the joy given to us:
To love and be loved
To sacrifice and be blessed
To be lost and found.
Joyful, Joyful!
Rejoice, Rejoice!
Amen
Advent Year B: Week 2: Litany for Deep Peace
God, we are longing for a silent night --
For a reprieve
From noise and anxiety and hurry;
For a moment
Of space and time, empty yet full.
Gift us the gift of quiet.
This is the Peace:
Of baby’s breath
Of feathered wing
Of rustling leaf
Of sphere’s turn
Of light beam.
The heavenly peace in which we long to rest
To sweetly sleep
In safety and freedom
In certainty and repose.
We can smell the peace
Coming on the wind.
We can feel the peace
Arriving with the morning.
We can taste the peace
In the bread and cup.
We look in your direction, God
The Place from which peace comes;
For you are its Author and the home of its Prince,
And in your peace we dwell.
Amen
Advent Year B: Week 1: Litany for Deep Hope
God: as the light of day fades in the evening
We hope for the sunrise.
As leaves journey toward earth mulch
We hope for good soil.
As the winter deepens around us, hollowing to slumber
We hope for springtime.
As all around us sleep the sleep of the wrecked
We hope for healing.
We wait in wakefulness
Eyes open,
In readiness and expectation
For you to come;
For you to call us on a journey --
We wait awake.
On the dawn
Goodness comes.
With green shoots
Goodness comes.
From earliest darkness
Goodness comes.
From darkest soil
Goodness comes...
The Goodness that is dung and straw and lamb and shepherd and angel
Our God-With-Us;
The Goodness that is fresh babe -
Our Holy One;
The Goodness that is Messiah
Our humble king.
Year after year, winter after winter,
For Goodness we wait.
Amen
Litany for Sheep
Artist Jen Buckley makes beautiful sheep art. Find it here.
This Sunday is Reign of Christ Sunday, also known as the Feast of Christ the King. It is the last Sunday of the liturgical year and the last of Ordinary Time. Next week we will begin a new church year, which opens with the Advent season.
This week’s Lectionary passages talk a lot about the metaphor of God as Shepherd (Ezekiel 34), and of Christ as the King who separates the sheep from the goats in Matthew 25. In the Matthew 25 passage, Jesus gives the trademark activities of those who will inherit his commonwealth:
“I was hungry and you gave me food,
I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink,
I was a stranger and you welcomed me,
I was naked and you gave me clothing,
I was sick and you took care of me,
I was in prison and you visited me.”
God, we thank you for revealing yourself to us in the Person of Christ
Before him, we were confused about your nature.
We thought you might be ruthless, unquenchably angry
We thought we had to get on your good side.
But Christ cleared up our confusion, and showed us:
That all your sides are good;
That the good news is good for all;
That we can trust in your justice, and in your mercy.
We thought you were a tyrant king
But you are really a Good Shepherd. (1)
You care for us.
We are your sheep.
You instruct us in your ways:
The way of mercy,
The way of generosity,
The way of compassion,
The way of friendship,
The way of peace. (2)
And so, Good Shepherd, lead us
Toward green pastures
Alongside still waters
Lead us, and restore our souls. (3)
And may we offer the same goodness to others:
To feed the hungry
To welcome the stranger
To clothe the naked
To care for the sick
To befriend the prisoner. (2)
Then everyone will know that we are your people
The sheep of your pasture (4);
That you are our ruler
And your law is love. (5)
Amen
1) Ezekiel 34:11
2) Matthew 25: 35, 36
3) Psalm 23
4) Psalm 100:3
5) Matthew 22:40, Galatians 5:14, Romans 13:10
Litany for Deborahs
This week’s Lectionary reading includes an excerpt from Judges 4, in which we meet Deborah the judge, who leads her people to victory and freedom from oppression. This one is for the Prophets, the Preachers, the Unconventional Leaders, the Unexpected Authorities; the ones not subsidized by major organizations, who are doing their work despite difficulty, and caring for difficult people; the ones who are re-imagining the world.
God, these times are sifting wheat from chaff; separating sheep from goats; and differentiating true leaders from corrupt imposters.
The foundations of society rumble beneath our feet.
We lift to you those who can envision a future of justice and peace,
And will humbly lead in its direction.
For those who judge justly in these times
We pray to the Lord.
For those who keep faith alive when everyone else is locked in fear
We pray to the Lord.
For those who hold the hands of their people and stay with them as they fight
We pray to the Lord.
For those who know the enemy is already vanquished
We pray to the Lord.
For those who remain calm and steadfast in danger
We pray to the Lord.
For those who move boldly forward while other leaders linger in the past
We pray to the Lord.
For those whose leadership has come at great cost
We pray to the Lord.
For those who have had to defy convention to live out their calling
We pray to the Lord.
For those whom society disqualifies, but have risen up anyway
We pray to the Lord.
For those to whom resources come scantily or not at all, and must rely upon the hand of God
We pray to the Lord.
For those whose authority is constantly questioned and tested
We pray to the Lord.
For those who have known abuse and subjugation, and the depth of our need for justice
We pray to the Lord.
For those working day after day, quietly and without fanfare
We pray to the Lord.
For those whom the margins tried to edge out
We pray to the Lord.
For those who choose not to cast stones, but shine lights
We pray to the Lord.
For those who are imagining and embodying New Creation
We pray to the Lord.
May the Spirit of God be present with the prophets of our time.
May they have the Mind of Christ.
Amen
Litany for Dark Days
The prophet Amos says the “Day of the Lord is darkness, not light, and gloom with no brightness in it.” This week's Lectionary reading includes that passage from Amos 5, as well as others referenced in this prayer.
God, we are weary, weary.
The days are dark.
All day long we contend with evildoers.
We wake to discover more death.
We know that when the days seem dark
We must persevere;
That discipleship is costly,
And the risks of faith are great.
We may be outcast.*
We may be silenced.
We may be slandered.
We may be killed unmercifully. *
But we know that, despite the shame and chaos of the hour,
You are still our help and deliverer (1).
Help us, as we go along, to keep our lamps filled and trimmed (2)
That we may wait with hope
In a circle of light -
Awake and ready for action (3).
We are poor and needy,
Yet still in your care (1).
These are days of darkness and change,
The Day of the Lord, unfolding; (4)
So. Let justice roll down like waters,
And righteousness like an everflowing stream (5).
Amen
1)Psalm 70:5
2)Matthew 25:4-7
3)Matthew 25:13
4)Amos 5:20
5)Amos 5:24
*as the pastor and prophet Jonathan Martin was last week cast out of Liberty University for speaking against the actions of its administration and calling for a prayer vigil
*as were the 26 people (plus 20 more injured) mowed down with an assault rifle as they gathered for worship this past Sunday. And the 58 (plus 489 wounded) the month prior in Las Vegas.
Litany for Hatred
This week's Lectionary...
You shall not render an unjust judgment;
you shall not be partial to the poor or defer to the great:
with justice you shall judge your neighbor.
You shall not go around as a slanderer among your people,
and you shall not profit by the blood of your neighbor:
I am the LORD.
You shall not hate in your heart anyone of your kin;
you shall reprove your neighbor, or you will incur guilt yourself.
You shall not take vengeance or bear a grudge against any of your people,
but you shall love your neighbor as yourself:
I am the LORD. (Leviticus 19:15-18)
"Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?" He said to him, "'You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.' This is the greatest and first commandment. And a second is like it: 'You shall love your neighbor as yourself.' (Matthew 22:36-39)
God, we acknowledge that, at some point in our lives, we all harbor hatred in our hearts.
Forgive us, oh God.
We all, at some point, render unjust judgements on others.
Forgive us, oh God.
Instead of loving our enemies, we have hated them.
Forgive us, oh God.
Instead of welcoming the stranger, we have shunned them.
Forgive us, oh God.
Instead of listening to the voices of those who are different from us, we have silenced them.
Forgive us, oh God.
We have sat silently by while others gave way to hatred.
We have hated and been hated.
We have forgotten that all humanity is our kin.
We have not loved our neighbor as ourselves.
We have hated those who’ve hurt us
Those with whom we disagree politically or theologically
Those whose color, ethnicity, appearance, gender or orientation is different from ours.
Those whose sins are different from ours.
Those whose customs are different from ours.
Those whom we perceive as dangerous.
Scour our hearts free of hatred
Fill us full of love instead -
Lovingkindness from your heart.
Let no injustice remain among us.
Rescue us from the walls that divide us,
And bring us back to Holy Communion.
Amen
Litany for Opening Up to God
This prayer is taken from this week's Lectionary selections (Proper 24, Year A): Exodus 33, Isaiah 45 and Matthew 22.
God, your goodness is always parading past us.
We have only to look out for it. (1)
You are always being gracious to us.
We have only to realize it.
You are always being merciful to us.
We have only to internalize it.
You cover us with your hands and show us your glory - as much as we can handle,
If we only attune ourselves to you.
We don’t direct the flow of your grace and mercy.
You do.
We don’t decide who gets what.
You do.
You show no deference to anyone
You do not regard people with partiality. (2)
Though we don’t know you,
You call us by name. (3)
Though we don’t know you,
There’s no one else but you. (4)
We set our minds toward knowing you.
We open the spaces of our hearts to you.
We set our bodies in stillness, that we might hear from you.
We open our spirits to meeting with you.
You are always gracious to appear,
Surprising us with your beauty.
Amen
1) Exodus 33:19
2) Matthew 22:16
3) Isaiah 45:4
4) Isaiah 45:5
Litany for Laws
"Moses and the Ten Commandments" by Barbara Goshu via
The Lectionary readings for this week (Proper 22, Year A) include the account of the giving of the Ten Commandments in Exodus, Paul's account of his view of his own righteousness in Philippians, and a parable given by Christ as a warning to some self-righteous Pharisee's. Laws and law-abiders.
God, we have all kinds of reasons to feel smug:
We follow the laws;
We donate to charitable organizations;
We pay our taxes;
We go to church on Sundays;
We don’t cheat, steal, or murder.
We have a lot of self-righteousness,
And only a little humility.
See: we’ve forgotten that behind the letter of the law
There is the spirit;
That behind the commandments,
There is “Love God. Love Neighbor.”
We can follow every law
And obey every commandment
And it won’t change our hearts
Or fill us with your spirit.
Don’t let us do all this work to maintain appearances
And never have our hearts opened.
We need to go beyond the law, to the inner person,
And be renewed in our inmost being.
We need our laws to be reflections of our loves:
For you, God, and for our neighbors.
What we need is deep, heart-and-soul healing;
We need the presence of Christ in us.
Straighten us out, God.
We need your help.
Amen
Litany for Las Vegas
I was awake at 4 am, reading the grim news from Las Vegas. Grabbed my phone to check the time, and there was the headline. Why did I wake up? Did some part of me know that the worst mass shooting in US History had just occurred? I don't know, but I know we're all connected and when one part hurts the other parts feel it. If you want to keep praying, you can pray Litany for a Terrorized City, Litany for Gun Violence , and Litany for Grief also.
God, we are at a loss.
The violence that has happened
And continues to happen
Does not compute.
How many of our citizens must die
Before things change?
How many of our children must we lose
Before justice is done?
How many lives and bodies must be broken
Before we are saved from ourselves?
We know that sometimes your justice
Looks like letting us reap what we sow.
We know that sometimes your love
Looks like allowing us to make choices.
We know that sometimes your wisdom,
Looks like giving us dominion.
We made a mess
With weapons and war
With grudges and judgment
With violence and bad choices
We give dominion back to you
Asking for your mercy.
We give our hearts and souls back to you
Asking for your help.
We give our mess back to you,
Asking you to save us.
Forgive us, Oh God,
And care for those we've lost.
Amen
Litany for Kneeling
God, here we are:
Skin-cloaked souls
Fragile and vulnerable
Wrapped up in our humanity.
We see from a human perspective,
We judge by limited input.
But you’ve always seen from Love’s vantage point,
High above our vision.
Somewhere along the way
We forgot our true home
Our citizenship in your kingdom (1)
Our first love (2)
Our debt of belonging
Our deepest allegiance...
To Christ
Who knelt to pray
Who emptied himself
Who endured torture
Who lay down in a grave
At the hands of Injustice.
Let those who kneel
Kneel reverently.
Let those who kneel
Kneel passionately.
Let those who kneel
Know to whom they bend.
Help us to see more and better.
Help us to respond to all with Love that listens.
Nations may boast of their tanks, flags, and bombs
But we boast in the name of the Lord and the Christ (3):
The Lord who opposes the proud (4),
The Lord who works justice for the oppressed (5).
We pledge allegiance to Christ and his Kingdom.
We kneel before Christ and his mercy.
Amen
1) Philippians 3:20
2) Revelations 2:4
3) Psalm 20:7, Galatians 6:14
4) 1 Peter 5:5, Proverbs 3:34
5) Psalm 103:6
Litany for Scarcity
The Israelites Gathering Manna, by Ercole de' Roberti via
As I contemplated this week’s Lectionary readings, I noticed the themes of scarcity and provision. In the Exodus 16, the Israelites are sure they are going to starve, complaining about their empty bellies, and God rains down meat and bread from heaven. In the passage from Jonah, Jonah grumbles because he doesn’t like God’s idea of retribution, which is that God gives mercy. He also grumbles because God grows a miraculous bush to shade him, and it only lasts a day. In the Matthew passage, some farm workers agree to work for a daily wage, then are angry when others receive the same wage despite working fewer hours.
I can identify with that feeling of desperate craving and need; or with that frustration when I feel that fairness hasn’t been dealt; or that someone else has received more than me. Someone else has perhaps worked less and received greater notoriety. That jealousy. That feeling that I had a good thing and it was taken away and I want it back and now I want to die (Jonah says this in 4:9 - he is angry enough about the bush to die).
If we’re being honest, God’s generosity often makes us mad. God gives to people we don’t think deserve it. God is merciful toward those we believe should be punished. God is way nicer than we think God should be. We want God to adopt our ideas of fairness and equality. Because we think there isn’t enough to go around. We think the goodness of God is a limited commodity.
God, we admit that we spend a lot of time resisting your generosity,
Especially when it’s toward other people and we feel left out.
We bemoan the loss of things we did nothing to create (1).
We cry over the end of comforts (2).
We concern ourselves with equal distribution and retribution.
We complain about fair and unfair.
Who are we to decide the fate of a worker or a nation (3)?
Who are we to tell you what justice is?
When the sun shines on both the evil and the good
Is that fair?
When the rain falls on the just and the unjust (4),
Is that just?
When a worker who works an hour is paid the same as one who works ten (5),
Is that righteous?
When a wicked nation is saved from ruin by the mercy of God (6)
Is that goodness?
This abundance,
This generosity,
This nonjudgmental giving,
These endless means,
Are things we can’t wrap our minds around.
We are conditioned for scarcity.
It is a great lie
We’ve all believed it.
The world says: give equally
You say: give generously.
The world says: give just enough
You say: give as if goodness will never run out.
Because it won’t:
Your goodness will never run out.
Help us to live as if love and mercy and provision are unlimited.
Help us to live in the abundance of God.
Amen
(1) Jonah 4:10
(2) Jonah 4:8
(3) Matthew 20:16, Jonah 4:11
(4) Matthew 5:45
(5) Matthew 20:12
(6) Jonah 3:10
