Douglass Blvd Christian Church

an open and affirming community of faith

n open and affirming community where faith is questioned and formed, as relationships are made and upheld. 

Why Can't God Just Do Us All a Favor and Ask My Advice? (Isaiah 55:1-9)

Derek and his son, Dominic.

Derek and his son, Dominic.

No, God, throwing parties is nice—we like parties—you just have to be more selective about who you invite. If you need any help with the guest list, let us know. In fact, why not just do us all a favor and ask my advice? It’d make things so much easier.

But God’s not having it. God throws open the doors and says, 'Y’all come! And all means all.' The only requirement is that you’re hungry and thirsty. All that can exclude you is insisting that there’s some place you’d rather be.

There it is. God puts out a spread, and people stay away in droves because they want to control the menu, they want a line-item veto on the guest list. I mean, let's be honest, everybody knows you can’t just invite every knucklehead with a pulse and opposable thumbs! Lord have mercy, you start doing that and pretty soon you’re gonna have all kinds of undesirables knocking on the door wanting to be let in.


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You who were far off (Ephesians 2:11-22)

Derek and his son, Dominic

Derek and his son, Dominic

When I can finally see into the eyes of the stranger, when I can see people from close at hand, rather than from afar, I can begin to see the contours of the face of God.

Because in the face of God I see one who prefers to tear down walls, rather than maintain them, in the God who calls to us from near at hand, rather than keeping us far off.

In the face of God I can see one who is not satisfied with the gap that separates us, the distance that keeps us suspicious of and hostile toward one another—but who seeks to reconcile us, to stand among us, to bring us near enough to see one another's faces.


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What Does a Desperate World Need? (Luke 4:1-13)

Congregations are just as prone to hunger, just as prone to believe that if they’re going to survive they’re going to have to take the easy fruit, the quick bread that’s in front of them, rather than trust that God will offer a way forward.

So, congregations tend to be reactive. We’re anxious. We need to change. Just tell us who to be and we’ll bend over backwards to accommodate.

But what if God’s got bigger plans than can be pictured in our limited imaginations?

What if Jesus is counting on us to trust that God’s new age will be unveiled in us … those who seek justice, those committed to welcoming the stranger, those who sow peace in a world devouring itself from a hunger that no amount of bread, no amount of power, no amount of spectacle can satisfy?


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Since We Have Such a Hope (2 Corinthians 3:12-4:2)

Derek and his son, Dominic.

Derek and his son, Dominic.

The reign of God is first a decidedly earthbound affair. It’s not primarily about getting the rituals all correct, or about managing institutions, or about figuring out a new set of laws carved in new stone tablets to follow, but about unambiguously unglamorous things like doing justice, practicing mercy, and walking humbly with God.

It’s about feeding the hungry, visiting the prisoner, giving voice to the oppressed.

It’s about embracing the refugee, the foreigner, and those who’ve been turned away because they’re not “like us.”

It’s about unmasking the hypocrisy of power structures that allow the wealthy and powerful to keep the poor and powerless under heel.

It’s about choosing peace over violence, about doing the hard work of forgiving the enemy.


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The Perils of Going Home (Luke 4:21-30)

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Going home and opening the doors has its dangers. You never know who just might wander in and make themselves comfortable at the table.

Indeed, it may be more dangerous when the people sitting around the table look up and see who’ve let in. That can cause a big stink.

Just ask Jesus. Open the doors too wide and you might just get done to death.


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The Spirit of the Lord (Luke 4:14-21)

Derek and Dominic. 

Derek and Dominic. 

Jesus stood up in the company of a handful of the faithful and said a few words . . . words that suggest that the world is about to change. And if the poor, the captive, the blind, and the oppressed are to get a taste of 'the year of the Lord’s favor,' it will be in large part because those who claim to follow Jesus aren’t preoccupied either with being dismissed as hypocrites and dolts or only with saving their own souls; it will require those who claim to take Jesus seriously to help create the space in which the reign of God may unfold.


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Greater Things than These (John 2:1-11)

And what about us? What about those of us who claim to follow Jesus? Are we prepared to follow him into the temple, where he’s sure to start kicking over other people’s lemonade stands?

And what tables are we prepared to see Jesus overturn? What injustices are we willing to take action against? Which systemic inequities are we primed to get on our feet and march into the seat of power to seek change for? Because Jesus always seems to be heading into places it would be a lot more convenient for us to avoid.

But following Jesus requires us to ask about who needs to hear our voices? What problems should we be up to our elbows in? If we’re to be faithful, we don’t really have a choice about wandering into dark alleys after Jesus—as much as it would make our lives easier.


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The Point (Luke 3:15-17, 21-22)

So, take heart, God will not be outmaneuvered; God’s purposes will not be frustrated. God is determined to establish God’s reign, a reign in which all people finally get to live in peace, in which all people get to see the arc of the moral universe finally bent all the way toward justice, in which all people are finally embraced by a love that feels like stepping through the front door at the end of a long journey home.


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That’s Your Idea of a King? (Matthew 2:1-12)

Technical difficulties have made the audio unavailable today. But it's a good one, and worth reading.

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The way our culture views it, victory means overcoming the odds and coming out on top, where the lights shine and glory fills the air. But Jesus transforms victory; he reshapes triumph. He goes up against the kingdoms of this world; but instead of battling on Herod's violent terms, Jesus prevails by refusing to become the kind of ruler his followers misguidedly want him to be—one who needs the spotlight, who craves glory—and he holds out to become the king we all need—the one who’s willing to die for a peace and justice that can never be won through conventional means—soaked to the elbows as it is in the blood of children and the humiliation of the powerless.


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God Among the Dispensable (Luke 1:39-55)

The Magnificat is a song that speaks of reversal. Those in the front get a divine escort to the back of the line, and those in the back finally get to sit in the owner’s box. When the Messiah comes, those who’ve gotten used to warmth and comfort are going to be forced to do some serious prioritizing, just in order to get a baloney sandwich and stay out of the cold.

See, I knew this text was going to cause trouble. And that’s just the thing. I’m a fairly normal middle-class guy; I don’t deal in Molotov cocktails or hand-grenades. I’ve got two cars and a mortgage. I don’t need this.

But I read this, and I’m not so sure Mary isn’t talking about me. Frankly, it kind of scares me to read it out loud. I’ll tell you one thing: it sure doesn’t leave me humming, 'I’m dreaming of a White Christmas,' sucking on a candy cane to get the eggnog and garlic puffs off my breath.


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How Exactly Is This Good News? (Luke 3:7-18)

How do you think the poor, the outsiders, the depressed, the bereaved, and those who’ve felt abandoned by a system that values its own interests above the interests of the helpless would hear John the Baptist? What do you think they make of John the Baptist telling the children of God to think first not about themselves, not about their pocketbooks, not about their profit margins and brokerage accounts, not about their reputations in the community, but to think first about the last, the least, the lost, and the dead?

What constitutes good news may just depend on where you’re standing when you hear it.


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A college parent (and Liberty alum) responds to Jerry Falwell Jr.’s comments on Muslims and guns - Think Christian

An interesting response Jerry Falwell Jr.'s stance on students, guns, and Islam.

Falwell, who is in a position to catechize young men and women on what the Bible says about life, death, love, hate and self-defense, instead adopted a posture best described as juvenile. Instead of taking the opportunity to lead young people through an exchange of ideas, he seemed to become one of them. The louder the students cheered, the more bravado Falwell displayed.

As a Christian, I expect more from an institution committed to following the Christ of the Bible. As a parent of college students, I would demand it.

Read the full article (via Rachel Held Evans)

The Disruption of Advent (Luke 3:1-6)

El Profeta by Pablo Gargallo

El Profeta by Pablo Gargallo

The Jesus who comes to us in Advent expects the mountains of oppression to be made low, and the valleys of depression to be filled—not just in some personal interior space where we harbor envy and bitterness and hatred, but also in the public space where 92 people die everyday from gun violence, where Syrian refugees running for their lives are met with crossed arms and closed hearts, where poor people stay up at night worrying whether the healthcare that’s saving their child’s life will be taken away by a bureaucrat in some leather covered seat of power, where young African American men die at the hands of those in control just because they happen not to have been born white.


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The Days Are Surely Coming (Jeremiah 33:14-16)

We live in ordinary time, seeing only ordinary days, but days filled with terror and avarice and hatred and despair nevertheless, days that threaten to go on and on. All we can see is the way things are presently ordered. We know how power is arranged in this world. It’s amazing what you can get used to. But the days are surely coming, says the Lord. The way the world is now is not how it must be; it’s not how it will always be.

It's Advent, that time when we peer into the distance for the one who will execute justice and righteousness in the land, who will redeem God’s children from ordinary days. We steel ourselves for the call to live as just and righteous right now, in anticipation of that day.


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