These blogs are the true and unedited me. They are spiritual, religiously liturgical, honest, and transparent. This is me.
Friday, November 28, 2025
A Review of the Book "Helter Skelter" by Vincent Bugliosi
Thursday, November 27, 2025
A Review of the Book "The Next Person You Meet in Heaven" by Mitch Albom
A Review of the Book "Fatty Legs" by Christy Jordan-Fenton & Margaret-Olemaun Pokiak-Fenton
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
A Year-Long Exploration of the Sermon on the Mount: Week 44
Chapter 44 –
Judging Others
“Do
not judge, so that you may not be judged. For the judgment you give will be the
judgment you get, and the measure you give will be the measure you get. Why do
you see the speck in your neighbor’s eye but do not notice the log in your own
eye? Or how can you say to your neighbor, ‘Let me take the speck out of your
eye,’ while the log is in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the log out
of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your
neighbor’s eye.” Matthew (7:1-5)
I
enjoyed Anthony de Mello’s contribution to this chapter. De Mello talks about the
possibility that when we judge others, we are actually judging something about ourselves.
He states, “Every time you find yourself irritated or angry with someone, the
one to look at is not that person but yourself.” (282) De Mello reflects that
perhaps the irritation we see in others is something that we find irritating about
ourselves, therefore we project that irritation back to the other person.
No
matter what, it is not our place to judge. People make their own choices in
life and who are we to judge what they do. That isn’t to say that you shouldn’t
call someone out when they are being harmful or hurtful to another person, or
if they are breaking the law, or are about to find themselves in danger. Not
judging does not mean not confronting sin.
However,
the speck and the log in our eye that Jesus talks about certainly comes into
play if we deem ourselves better than another for whatever reason. A better
person. A better parent. A better Christian. It is not our place to determine what
is “better”. Only God will be our ultimate judge. In the meantime, our job is
to live in the best way we can, love as much as we can, and do all that we can
to take care of our neighbours.
In these verses, Jesus is calling us to worry more about removing the plank from our own eye than from the eye of others. As they say on airplanes, put your own mask own before trying to help others.
Sunday, November 23, 2025
A Year-Long Exploration of the Sermon on the Mount: Week 43
Chapter 43 – God’s
Kingdom First
“But
seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will
be given to you as well. So do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will
bring worries of its own. Today’s trouble is enough for today.” Matthew (6:33-34)
Jesus
wasn’t a king, nor did he want to be. Jesus was sent to us to teach us how to
love. He didn’t ask for worshipers and wasn’t looking to start a new religion. He
wasn’t asking anyone to call him “your majesty” or to fall to their knees
before him. Wealth and fame meant nothing to him. I mean c’mon! The guy rode to
his death on the back of a donkey! No luxurious horse or carriage to be seen.
At
no time did Jesus claim to be a king. He was certainly a leader, a great
leader, but he was not a king. In fact, he reflected that question back at
Pilate in Luke’s chapter 23 verse 3: “Then Pilate asked him, ‘Are you the king
of the Jews?’ He answered, ‘You say so.’”
Jesus
was mockingly labelled as the King of the Jews and ridiculed by the crowds, the
soldiers, and even the criminals hanging from their own crosses next to Jesus. Everyone
mocked him, asking why as King and Messiah, he didn’t save himself. The crowds
were furious because they believed that if Jesus wouldn’t save himself how on
earth could he save the people of Jerusalem?
But
Jesus does not come down off his cross to prove his supposedly kingly status.
Instead, he remains on that instrument of torture and humiliation as a
representative of all who suffer unjustly. And he does not promise a better
tomorrow but instead offers to redeem us today.
Jesus was not sent to rule the people of Israel and all the earth. Jesus was sent to be a teacher…a mentor…a leader…to show us how to love ourselves and how to love one another in order to find peace. Peace and reconciliation for all of creation are signs of the kingdom of God in Jesus. Whether it will reside above the clouds, beyond the stars, in our hearts or, most likely, in a dimension well beyond our current comprehension: Christ’s kingdom will come. Jesus will reign in love and peace and serenity: King of Kings, Lord of Lords. That’s the kind of king we have. The question now becomes – what kind of subjects will we be?
Friday, November 21, 2025
A Year-Long Exploration of the Sermon on the Mount: Week 42
Chapter 42 –
Beyond Worry
‘“Therefore
I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or what you will
drink, or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food and
the body more than clothing? Look at the birds of the air: they neither sow nor
reap nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you
not of more value than they? And which of you by worrying can add a single hour
to your span of life? And why do you worry about clothing? Consider the lilies
of the field, how they grow; they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, even
Solomon in all his glory was not clothed like one of these. But if God so
clothes the grass of the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown
into the oven, will he not much more clothe you—you of little faith? Therefore
do not worry, saying, ‘What will we eat?’ or ‘What will we drink?’ or ‘What
will we wear?’ For it is the gentiles who seek all these things, and indeed
your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things.’ (Matthew 6:25-32)
Do
not worry. This is the message from Jesus in this bit of his sermon on the
mount. Do not worry. Not exactly the easiest statement. It is in our human
nature to worry – about food, clothing, money, other people, etc. We humans worry
about everything! What Jesus wants us to do is lay our worries at God’s feet. Hand
our worries over to God and let God do the worrying. Easy as pie, right? Ha!
It's
not easy, but it can be done. Through prayer, we can lay out our worries and
ask God to walk with us, to help us carry the burden so that some of the weight
can be lifted. We can pray to God to help us find someone willing to share the
burden with us. We can talk it out with our family and/or our friends. We can
release our worries to our therapist or our psychiatrist. There are many ways
that we can use to relieve ourselves of the worry that we have in our hearts.
And sometimes, we need to realize that there are worries that we can’t do anything about. We can only control what we can control. Anything else is out of our hands. It’s of these things that Jesus calls out to us, “Do not worry.” Knowing the difference between what is and is not in our control will mean the difference between crumbling under the worry and working our way through it.
The King’s Subjects: A Sermon for Christ the King Sunday
May only truth be
spoken and may only truth be heard. Amen.
I
had to double check the calendar to make sure that we were in November and not
April. The passage from Luke’s Gospel today sure seems like something out of
the Easter season, didn’t it? Today is the last Sunday of the church year and
being Year C, the lectionary has landed this beauty of a reading in our laps.
Although it seems out of sync with the rest of the church calendar, it is an
important set of events that perhaps really does deserve a second look as we
head into the season of Advent.
Not
only is today the last Sunday of the liturgical calendar, it’s also Christ the
King Sunday. It’s a celebration of the all-embracing authority of Christ as
King and Lord of all things. Officially called "The Feast of Our Lord
Jesus Christ the King," these festivities were instituted by Pope Pius XI
in the 1920s as a way to fight the rising secularism in Europe by reminding
Christian faithful that Christ must reign in our hearts, our minds, our wills,
and our bodies. The feast is celebrated on the final Sunday of Ordinary Time,
the Sunday before Advent.
Actually,
it is quite fitting that the feast celebrating Christ's kingship is observed
right before Advent, when we liturgically wait for the promised Messiah. During
Eastertide, the Passion narrative emphasizes the trials, pain, and suffering
that Jesus endures as he makes his way to his gruesome death. The point is to
show how he suffered and died to atone for our sins and then there is the
celebration of his resurrection as he is risen from the dead to be with God for
all eternity. And I could talk about that again as it is important for us to
remember what Jesus has done for us. Instead, let’s talk about kings.
What
do we know about kings? Today, the language of kingship is outmoded and
sometimes offensive. There are good reasons for this. We don't live under
kings, so the metaphor feels irrelevant. And we're rightly repulsed at how the
reigns of kings, at times, meant a reign of terror for most subjects — massive
wealth and power attained by cruelty and exploitation, which was then passed on
by birthright to people who did nothing to deserve it.
Kings
have become almost obsolete, a way of leading that no longer holds much of our
attention, at least here in Canada and here at St Peter. But, once upon a time,
Christ was hailed as king in the midst of a people who did understand kingship,
and particularly Christ’s kingship over them. But what kind of king was Jesus?
Each
of the synoptic Gospels presents a slightly different picture of Christ as
King. In Mark, Christ is Israel's true king, but his kingship is hidden in
suffering and rejection. In Chapter 15, a centurion declares, "Truly this
man was God's Son!" but yet Christ dies on the cross under the mocking
banner "King of the Jews."
In
Matthew, Jesus is the God-authorized Son and Israel's Messiah who teaches with
heavenly authority concerning the will of God and performs miracles that give
authority to his teachings. Jesus as King in Matthew is, in the words that both
open and close his gospel, "God with us".
In
Luke, Jesus is the Son of a God who, through Jesus' ministry, grants
forgiveness of sins to the repentant and the gift of salvation through the
bestowal of the Holy Spirit. In today’s Gospel reading, three times Jesus is
mentioned as king: by the soldiers at the cross in verse 37 “If you are the
King of the Jews, save yourself!”, on the inscription nailed to the cross in
verse 38 “This is the King of the Jews”, and by the criminal asking to be remembered
when Jesus comes into his kingdom in verse 42.
But
really, Jesus wasn’t a king, nor did he want to be. Jesus was sent to us to
teach us how to love. He didn’t ask for worshipers and wasn’t looking to start
a new religion. He wasn’t asking anyone to call him “your majesty” or to fall
to their knees before him. Wealth and fame meant nothing to him. I mean c’mon!
The guy rode to his death on the back of a donkey! No luxurious horse or
carriage to be seen. At no time did Jesus claim to be a king. He was certainly
a leader, a great leader, but he was not a king. In fact, he reflected that
question back at Pilate in Luke’s chapter 23 verse 3:
“Then Pilate asked him, ‘Are you the
king of the Jews?’
He answered, ‘You say so.’”
Jesus
was mockingly labelled as the King of the Jews and ridiculed by the crowds, the
soldiers, and even the criminals hanging from their own crosses next to Jesus. Everyone
mocked him, asking why as King and Messiah, he didn’t save himself. The crowds
were furious because they believed that if Jesus wouldn’t save himself how on
earth could he save the people of Jerusalem? But Jesus does not come down off
his cross to prove his supposedly kingly status. Instead, he remains on that
instrument of torture and humiliation as a representative of all who suffer
unjustly. And he does not promise a better tomorrow but instead offers to
redeem us today.
Jesus
was not sent to rule the people of Israel and all the earth. Jesus was sent to
be a teacher…a mentor…a leader…to show us how to love ourselves and how to love
one another in order to find peace. Peace and reconciliation for all of
creation are signs of the kingdom of God in Jesus.
I
found a poem that I would like to read to you. It is by Alyce M. McKenzie.
What kind of King
is this? Who is crucified at a place called the Skull?
With a criminal on
his left and a criminal on his right?
What kind of king
is this who forgives rather than executes judgment on those who contest his
power?
What kind of king
is this? Who allows himself to be disrespected and abused without speaking a
word in his own defense?
What kind of king
is this who allows even criminals to mock him without putting them in their
place?
What kind of king
is this whose thoughts are on others rather than his own pain at the peak of
his own undeserved suffering?
How can a
crucified king bring us life?
How can a
forgiving king right the wrongs done to us and that we have done to others?
How can a peaceful
king end the wars that rage within us and around us?
How can a
compassionate king find the strength to lead us?
From
the very beginnings of all the gospels, the “the kingdom” is proclaimed
repeatedly. It is clearly more than a metaphor. It is a state of mind. It is a
destination. Whether it will reside above the clouds, beyond the stars, in our
hearts or, most likely, in a dimension well beyond our current comprehension:
Christ’s kingdom will come. Jesus will reign in love and peace and serenity:
King of Kings, Lord of Lords. That’s the kind of king we have. The question now
becomes – what kind of subjects will we be?
Can
you feel how the world has changed this year? Over the last few years? Can you
feel the tension growing, the fear? Stories of racist graffiti spray-painted on
Mosques, Synagogues, churches, and schools. Governments working to remove
access to gender-affirming care and safe spaces for the transgender community.
People being taken from their homes and places of work to be deported to their
country of origin. Shelters for the unhoused being torn down without a plan to
help the people affected.
Are
these the types of subjects the Jesus wants? I highly doubt it. Now more than
ever we need to listen to the Gospels and take to heart Jesus’ emphasis on
loving all people, not just a select few. No one person or group or ethnicity
is better than any others. We are all human. We are all God’s creation. And we
all have the right to exist, to have beliefs, to love, and to be loved. That’s
the kind of subjects we need to be. If we are calling Jesus our king and he is
the king of love and kindness, then as his subjects, we are meant to be the
givers of love and kindness, as it is through love and kindness that we will reveal
the existence of Jesus’ kingdom here on earth.
Amen.
Wednesday, November 12, 2025
I Will Not Be Afraid: A Sermon for the 23rd Sunday After Pentecost
May only truth be
spoken and may only truth be heard. Amen.
We
had something a little different in place of the psalm today, and not just
because it was a hymn, although singing it was definitely appropriate. A
canticle is a hymn or song of praise from the Bible, similar to a psalm but
specifically from texts outside of the Book of Psalms. Today’s lectionary
called for Canticle #3 which is an excerpt from the scroll of Isaiah dubbed the
Song of Thanksgiving. It goes like this:
“Surely, it is God
who saves me;
I will trust in
him and not be afraid.
For the Lord is my
stronghold and my sure defence,
and he will be my
Saviour.
Therefore you
shall draw water with rejoicing
from the springs
of salvation.
And on that day
you shall say,
Give thanks to the
Lord and call upon his name;
make his deeds
known among the peoples;
see that they
remember that his name is exalted.
Sing the praises
of the Lord, for he has done great things,
and this is known
in all the world.
Cry aloud,
inhabitants of Zion, ring out your joy,
for the great one
in the midst of you is the Holy One of Israel.”
Line
2 says: "I will trust, and will not be afraid". These words were
spoken by the prophet Isaiah to the people of Judah and Jerusalem more than
2700 years ago, when the Assyrian Empire was the dominant power, and Judah
lived in the shadow of its might. Foreign invaders, political instability, and
crises of one kind or another formed the context of Isaiah's proclamation. The
people to whom he was sent and those for whom this book was originally composed
lived in a world that was unpredictable and out of their control.
Not
much has changed, in my opinion. While the headlines are different now than
almost 3 millennia ago, the news of the day reminds us that always there are
events happening on a scale far beyond our reach and our ability to control
them. Whether the threat is widespread, such as the worldwide economic crisis,
or whether it is personal, such as illness, the loss of a job or the death of a
loved one, it is no small thing to stare the menace in the face and say,
"I will trust, and will not be afraid."
I
don’t know about you, but one thing that I tend to do when I’m afraid is sing.
The palms can be a great source for prayer and strength during times of fear.
And I absolutely love it when the psalms are sung or chanted. The reason
today’s canticle is called the Song of Thanksgiving is because Isaiah is
calling the people to sing praises of thanksgiving to the Lord.
The
first song in this passage is sung by an individual, offering thanksgiving for
deliverance by the God who is "my salvation". Although the individual
is not identified, the end of the song hearkens back to the deliverance from
Egypt, quoting Exodus 15:2: "The Lord God is my strength and my might; he
has become my salvation".
The
image is one of a great warrior, one who is strong enough to defeat even the
armies of Pharaoh in order to free the people from slavery in Egypt. To anyone
who is caught up in fear, this echo from the Exodus and all the events
attending it is a reminder that earthly powers cannot defeat the power of God.
The
second song offers a refrain of Thanksgiving to the "Holy One of
Israel", the one whose "name is exalted", and who "has done
gloriously". Isaiah calls on the people to lift their voices in praise to
God: "Give thanks...sing praises...shout aloud and sing for joy!" This
is a communal song, as if a whole choir has joined voices with the soloist who
sang in the first two verses. No longer is there a lone voice singing out
against fear, as though whistling in the dark, but rather a chorus of voices
offering praise for all that the Lord has done.
"Make
known his deeds among the nations," they will sing, and "[the Lord]
has done gloriously; let this be known in all the earth". This reminder of
past experiences with God, how the Lord has already acted for the benefit of
God's people, is a strong defense against the grip of fear. So, also, is our
association with a community of faith that witnesses to God's saving deeds. How
much easier it is to "trust and not be afraid" when a whole community
is present to join together in the refrain!
The
verse that ties these two songs together is addressed to the gathered
community: "With joy you will draw water from the wells of
salvation". In its historical setting, the verse probably refers to a
ritual activity, most notably during the Feast of Tabernacles. As it connects
the two songs, however, the verse is a reminder that God's salvation is
fundamental to life, as basic to survival as the water that falls from the sky
and springs forth from the earth. God's offer of salvation is what the Lord
"has done gloriously" to be made "known in all the earth";
it is this saving power that makes it possible for God's people to choose a
stance of trust instead of fear when the day brings situations and events
beyond their control. The "wells of salvation" suggest an abundant
supply, spilling over to soothe tongues that are parched from fright,
moistening lips so that they might sing melodies of praise to "proclaim
that [the Lord's] name is exalted".
Next
Sunday brings an end to the Christian calendar and moves us into the season of
Advent. As dark nights grow longer and our fears of what’s happening in our
lives grow stronger, we wait – like the people of Isaiah's time – for
"that day" when God's salvation will come to us in all its fullness. "Do
not be afraid," the angel will say, "I am bringing you good news of
great joy for all the people; to you is born this day in the city of David a
Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord". We are drawn toward that future,
ready to "shout aloud and sing for joy" together with the whole
people of God who will proclaim, "Great in [our] midst is the Holy One of
Israel".
Here
are my questions for you this week: Is it easier to say to a person who is
struggling with their faith, “you just have to believe” or is it easier to say,
“let’s pray”? Is it more effective to say to someone, “trust in God with all
your heart, and all your soul, and all your strength” or is it more effective
to say, “let’s sing Amazing Grace together”? We sing of the coming of the Emmanuel,
of joy to the world, of the baby tucked away in the manger, of shepherds
keeping watch by night, and angels from the realms of glory. It is in the
singing that we can come to believe the words "I will trust, and will not
be afraid".
Amen.
Friday, November 7, 2025
Resurrection Life: A Sermon for the 22nd Sunday After Pentecost
May only truth be
spoken and may only truth be heard. Amen.
The
tensions are rising in the relationship between Jesus and the religious
authorities of the day. Jesus is confronted in the Temple by the Sadducees who
ask him: If a woman was married seven times to seven husbands, who will she be
married to in the resurrection? You see, the Sadducees don’t believe in life
after death because, as far as they’re concerned, if something isn’t mentioned
in the Torah (the five books of Moses), then it doesn’t exist. The Sadducees
claim that resurrection is not found in the Torah, therefore they don’t believe
in it. In this confrontation, they wish to mock Jesus and make the belief in
resurrection appear ridiculous. But what does this have to do with marriage?
Nothing,
but here’s why the Sadducees are using this example. In the time of this
encounter, women had no rights, had no access to land, had no way of supporting
themselves. They got married so that they could be taken care of someone other
than their father. If they have a son, then that responsibility passes down to
him. According to the law of the time, if a man dies, his brother is to marry
the wife until there is a son old enough to take over. If that brother dies,
the next brother takes over, and so on. Now, I guess this family was extremely
unlucky because seven brothers died without bearing any children (or at least
male children), leaving this woman with nothing and no one. She finally dies
herself, putting us at the Sadducees question – which one of these brothers
will be the woman’s husband after death?
As
is Jesus’ way, he doesn’t answer the question directly. Instead, he teaches and
turns the argument upside down. And it certainly has mothing to do with
marriage, but everything about resurrection. What is resurrection life like? What
is life after death like? What is "eternal life"? We have all had
these questions. People 2000 years ago had them. And many people have them
today. These questions are the mystery of our faith. We will never know what’s
it’s like to die, or to be resurrected. It’s not like a person dies and then
reports back! In our limited human capacity to think about heaven and the life
to come, we tend to imagine it as simply a more glorified version of what we
already know and have experienced here in this earthly life. But Jesus is
trying to tell us that eternal life with God is beyond our imagining!
Everything will be changed. Everything will be made new.
With
this Gospel reading falling between All Saints’ Day and Remembrance Day, it is
a perfect time for us to consider what we think resurrection might be like,
what heaven might be like. Often people question whether or not they deserve to
go to heaven, or are worried that their loved one won’t make it into heaven, or
ponder who they might meet in heaven. These are questions we will never know
the answer to. Even for our loved one on their deathbed, in that last moment
before death, we don’t know what happens at that point. Does God meet them at
that last breath to give them full and eternal forgiveness and mercy?
That
is the mystery of our faith. That is the good news that we have received
through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. That Jesus died for the
forgiveness of all our sins so that we may have eternal life with God in
heaven. That is the Gospel that we are to be sharing through the actions in our
lives.
The
Sadducees’ biggest argument was that they didn’t believe in resurrection because
it never happened in the Torah. But it did! Just not how they were imagining resurrection
to be. When we keep the memories of our ancestors and live through their
teachings, we are keeping them alive! Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses….These are
all Jewish ancestors that have taught us through the millennia how to maintain
right relationship with God. When we keep the memories and teachings of our own
ancestors, we keep them alive in ourselves and through ourselves. This is
resurrection!
It's
not all about what’s going to happen to us after we die. Resurrection is about
how we continue to keep our ancestors alive by telling their stories and living
out their teachings here, today. The last line of the Gospel today is like
this, “Now he is God not of the dead but of the living, for to him all of them
are alive.” God is not just sitting around waiting for us to get to the other
side so that the real work can begin. No! God wants us to live the resurrected
life here and now, while we are still alive.
And
we are invited to begin this resurrected life where we are – in the reality of
our broken and beloved world. It is out of the blue and in surprising moments
that God meets us, surprising us with what God has had in store for us all
along…resurrection from deaths, both big and small, experienced at a variety of
points in our lives. For example, we can think back on the woman in our story. A
world of resurrection life does not contain the many deaths we inflict on one
another by treating one another as objects. Instead, a world in which a
person's belovedness is based on nothing else but that they have been hand-made
by a loving God. In God's world of resurrection life, all are beloved and
cherished because of who they are in themselves, and communities in which the
resurrected Jesus brings that world into the present, are beloved and cherished
because of who they are in themselves.
Ultimately,
life after death will look nothing like life before death. In our resurrection,
we will be redefined as a person, our relationships to one another will be
changed, and our relationship with God will be strengthened. But Jesus is
saying that we don’t have to wait until we physically die to experience
resurrection life. Jesus’ announcement of the resurrected life changes the
present world by bringing God's intended future to us right now! We can
participate in resurrection life now! This is how Jesus changes the present
world! That is the good news of Jesus' resurrection life for us now! Think of
how freeing the future resurrection life will be for that woman the Sadducees
speak of. A life in which she can simply enjoy being in the safe, unconditional
love of God.
Homiletician
Luke Powery says, “In order to experience life, resurrection, or hope, one must
go through death.” Even as the liturgical season turns back towards Advent, the
texts for this Sunday continue to teach the reality of the deaths in which we
live. So what does that mean for our community of St Peter? How can we experience
God’s resurrected life? Are there any small deaths that need to happen in order
for St Peter to be redefined in resurrection?
These
are the questions I ask you to consider as we proclaim with confidence our
faith that the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob raised Christ from death and
promises to do the same also for us. Here at the little church on the hill where
all are welcomed, where all are fed, where healing happens, where peace is made,
and where justice is pursued. Here, in this place, is where God's resurrection
reign comes into the present. So with Jesus and all those witnesses to
resurrection life and resurrection living, let us say, "Amen."
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
A Year-Long Exploration of the Sermon on the Mount: Week 41
Chapter 41 – God
or Mammon
When
thinking about the debate between God and Mammon, and whether or not money and
love should be mutually exclusive, I’m drawn to the parable of the dishonest
manager. You know, the story about the manager who skims money from the land owner,
who then finds out and has the manager fired, but before he leaves the manager
makes shady deals with all the customers? Ebenezer Scrooge comes to mind, too.
According
to Eberhard Arnold, “Mammon is the rule of money over people…. Dependence on
material affluence and financial security – that is mammon.” (p. 259) The
bottom line is that you cannot serve both God and wealth. If all we care about
is getting wealthier, our relationships grow less important. We don’t care
about the customer, just the customer’s money. That doesn’t mean there is
anything inherently wrong with being wealthy. It’s all about what you do with
that wealth. Do you hoard it or share it? Are you selfish with it or generous with
it?
We can’t love God and money, but there needs to be balance. We need to pay the rent, buy shoes and school supplies for the kids, save up for college funds, and make sure we’ll someday be able to retire without burdening those kids. There is nothing inherently wrong with money, but money should never overshadow our values or faith. There is nothing inherently wrong with having wealth, but God calls us to steward our resources faithfully, letting go of the desire to hold on to wealth and, instead, centering our lives on generosity and compassion.







