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. 

Using Only What You've Got (Luke 17:5-10)

And Luke doesn’t seem helpful when he says, “What? Did you think you were getting a Barcalounger and a lifetime supply of attaboys?”

But you see, in the reign of God, that’s good news. You don’t have to feel like a failure just because your life with Jesus isn’t one long unbroken string of notable successes. Just because you don’t always feel like you believe hard enough. Just because people aren’t breaking down doors to tell you what a great job you’re doing.

If you’re doing it the way Luke suggests, following Jesus may not only not feel like a reward; it may be the very thing that lands you in trouble.


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Navigating the Thin Places (Luke 17-11-19)

In a world where crosses and leper colonies exist to dispose of “human waste”—Jesus says “no.”

In the face of all the name-calling and lynching and fighting and warring, Jesus appears, takes his place on the tree, and offers up what, at first, sounds like a whispered “no”—weak and ineffectual. Just the words of a dying man on a government hit list.

But the echoes of that “no” reverberate.


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What Happens When You Realize the World You Thought You Lived in Isn't the One You Inhabit? (Luke 16-19-31)

I mean, if the rich man isn’t the hero and Lazarus isn’t a cautionary tale you tell your kids, so they’ll do their geometry homework and get into Harvard, then everything we’ve taken for granted as true about *this world gets chucked out the window.

If we’re judged more by how we treat the invisible people, the people everyone agrees it’s okay to ignore, than by whether or not we’ve checked all the boxes for morality everybody can see when we go out in public, that changes everything, doesn’t it?


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Blaming the Wrong Person (Luke 16:1-16)

But here, I would like to suggest that Jesus isn’t just talking about people with money. He’s talking about the systems of domination, exploitation, and violence that keep money in the hands of the powerful and out of the "grabby" hands of the perpetually unsatisfied poor—because they’re always complaining about how they don’t have enough to eat or find shelter.

But Jesus turns that whole way of conceiving the world on its head. He winds up celebrating Robin Hood and trashing the Sheriff of Nottingham.

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The Real Reason for Rejoicing (Luke 15:1-10)

Because they bear part of God’s heart with them, who do we care about so much that we’re willing to risk the wrath of the folks in charge just to welcome them, to have a meal with them, to call them our family?

We need to be acutely aware of the implications of this question in a world in which some of our fellow travelers have to point out to the rest of us that—given the suffering they’ve historically endured (and endure to this day)—their lives matter too.

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Don’t Bring Anything with You (Luke 14:25-33)

Part of the reason Jesus puts out this disclaimer about counting the cost is that too often people think they what they want from faith is ease-of-use, friction-free, pre-packaged, no muss—no fuss, no ironing necessary.

But Jesus knows that a few hardy souls aren’t in the market for easy; they want interesting. The kind of people Jesus is appealing to are looking for meaning, purpose, adventure.


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Playing by the Rules (Luke 14:1, 7-14)

Jesus isn’t inviting us to forget about this world and concentrate on the next. He’s inviting us to begin living as if this new realm of God’s hospitality were already present, fully realized right here, right now.

And the thing of it is, when we begin to practice this sort of countercultural hospitality, we soon come to learn that we were never in charge of the guest list or the seating chart in the first place.


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Being Set Free (Luke 13:10-17)

So the question this story raises for us is, where are we working to bring tear down the barriers put in place by the powerful (intentional or not) that serve to keep people isolated, unseen, forgotten, but not yet gone?

Who are the bent-over people whose faces we lift to finally look in their eyes?

Will we be the people God depends on to see the invisible people and remember their first names?


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You Who Were Far Off (Eph. 2:11-22)

The thing is, though, you can’t see them from far off. You have to get right up next to people in order to see them, I mean really see them. And by the grace of God and the mystery of Christ, we’ve been brought near enough, according to Paul, to see them no longer as enemies, or aliens, or foreigners, or strangers, but as human beings, as the children for whom God is creating a whole new world.

And it is the one whom I thought was my enemy, the one whom, to me, was a stranger, who is bound with me (walls torn down) to be now the dwelling place of God.


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What We Really Need Right Now (Luke 12:13-21)

But Jesus says, “God has another world in mind, one in which there’s enough for everybody, and nobody gets forgotten. Even the sparrows and the hairs on your head have value. And here’s the thing, if the ruling authorities come after you for holding out for God’s new world rather than tucking your tail between your legs and settling for the one the powerful want you to think is inevitable, don’t worry; God will stand with you in the face of their wrath. If you’re unwilling to settle for this tiny pinched world of scarcity, God will hold you up, lest you fall.”


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When Basic Justice Isn't Enough (Amos 8:1-12)

How do we ensure a world that refuses to allow the powerful to take advantage of the powerless?

We need to help make a culture in which people in power are no longer more afraid of being ashamed of being racist, misogynist, homophobic, ableist, or transphobic than being called racist, misogynist, homophobic, ableist, or transphobic.


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The Mercy of Judgment (Amos 7:7-17)

Turns out, people in power aren’t casually waiting for someone to show up and tell them that not only are they doing it wrong, they’re the source of injustice in the world. Nobody wants to hear that—especially those folks who’ve been told their whole lives what precious flowers they are, that the world is lucky to have them.

The thing is, it’s not just modern people who have a hard time with God as judge, being told the world they’ve made for themselves has failed to please God. But Lord knows, we still have court priests, false prophets whose job, whose whole reason for existing is to reassure the folks in power that God’s just fine with the selfishness and casual cruelty against the most vulnerable.


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Keeping the Upper Hand (Luke 10:1-12, 16-20)

You get a small group of people willing to live as if everyone is a neighbor, as if there’s plenty enough to go around, as if the maladies that make us ill unto despair are capable of being healed—and all of a sudden, demons bow down and Satan falls from the sky like a flash of lightning.

And the thing of it is, we’re not talking about the Avengers here. It’s just a bunch of ordinary people willing to head out into the world, carrying only their trust in Jesus and a different kind of kingdom.


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The Road to Jerusalem (Luke 9:51-62)

We who follow Jesus follow him to Jerusalem. We follow him not just so that we can sleep better at night but so that those who go to sleep at night terrified of what this world holds for them will finally find some peace, a chance to rest from the relentless notion in our culture that their lives have no value.


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The Mending Fence (Luke 8:26-39)

Photo by eberhard grossgasteiger: https://www.pexels.com/photo/grey-and-brown-brick-wall-966927/

So, here’s what I think: I think that we who would be like Jesus, we need to take the risk and cross the borders to go looking for the people Jesus himself went out in search of, and to speak the words and do the work necessary to see them free.

We need to brave the wasteland and go into the graveyards that house so many and find ways to break the chains that keep them in bondage.

We can’t afford to wait and let them come to us.


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Upon Which Altar? (Acts 17:22-31)

In a world willing to pray to any god who promises to keep us safe from people who don’t look like us, in a world where the music of our worship sounds like the ticking of a time clock, or the growl of an SUV, in a world in which we tithe our time and money to gods defined by national boundaries or party affiliations or racial designations, we have good news about a new world God is busy creating that we can’t keep to ourselves—even knowing that in proclaiming it we risk looking like the very people we privately roll our eyes at.


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Holy Disruption (Acts 2:1-21)

The power of holy disruption is present when followers of Jesus stand together to offer witness to the truth. The power of the Spirit is less to be found in the heroic individual than in the community knit together by the power of a common witness on behalf of those whom Jesus loves.


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