Have you
ever wondered what Jesus was praying about when he was praying alone? It’s an important truth of our faith that
Jesus truly was praying, not just play-acting or talking to himself. The Son can truly pray to the Father, because
while both are fully God, our God is one God in three persons. The “spirit of petition” that the prophet
Zechariah promised would be poured out on all people truly dwelled with Jesus,
and flowed from him to us, enlivening us to pray just as he prayed. But what
was he praying? I’d always written off
my curiosity about these moments as something to get past, maybe as a prompt
for me to pray for greater humility (not everything is mine to know), but
praying with and studying this passage from Luke’s gospel over the past week it
occurred to me that while the text doesn’t quite come out and tell us, it lets
us make more than a guess as to at least part of what Jesus might have been
praying about: Jesus prayed that Peter might know who he is.
Sunday, June 19, 2016
Jesus prays that we might know him – Luke 9:18-24, Zech 12:10-13:1
Sunday, Ordinary Time, Yr C, Wk 12; Basilica of the Sacred Heart (Notre Dame)
Friday, June 17, 2016
Upcoming conference presentation
If you liking reading things here, and you happen to be in or around San Antonio in November, you might also enjoy hearing me speak in a more academic conference. Program book link (search on my last name; I don't know how to link to the results of a search).
Healthcare and Disability in the Ancient World
11/19/2016 1:00 PM
“A death like his:” Saul’s privation and restoration of sight as formation for the Christian super-prophet in Acts 9
(abstract below the cut)
Healthcare and Disability in the Ancient World
11/19/2016 1:00 PM
“A death like his:” Saul’s privation and restoration of sight as formation for the Christian super-prophet in Acts 9
(abstract below the cut)
Sunday, June 12, 2016
God frees us for extravagant love – Luke 7:36-50, 2 Sam 12:7-13, Gal 2:16-21
Ordinary Time C, Wk 11; Basilica of the Sacred Heart (Notre Dame)
We grow
up learning how to make deals. We know
that if we eat all of our Brussel sprouts, we might get ice cream, if we share
we might get more toys, or (somewhat paradoxically) if we tidy our rooms, we
might not get sent to them so soon.
Deals certainly have their place, but I hope they stay in their
place. A lot of us here are students
and/or teachers, many of you here for summer school. The fast pace of summer instruction can lead
to the temptation to reduce education to a series of deals: the teacher agrees
to impart certain information, the student agrees to regurgitate it, the teacher
agrees to give a grade based on how accurately that regurgitation occurs. Deals have their place, but I hope we’re all
open to something more than that happening in our classrooms: something more
relational, more transformative, more loving.
And I certainly hope we’re open to that in our walk with God.
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