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Trust You with Our Sorrows

Several months ago in church, we sang a song with the following lyric: “We cast away our shadows, trust you with our sorrows.”

I’ve since learned the song is called “Joy” by Rend Collective. It’s quickly become a song of obsession.

Shortly after hearing this song, I read the following verse during one of my morning devotionals, “The priests did not say, ‘Where is the Lord?’” (Jeremiah 2.8, NRSV)…

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Borrowed Faith

On Tuesday mornings when I pray for my friends, I use the above image from Matthew 9 to center my prayer.

Though the passage doesn’t use the word κοινωνία (koinonia), I think the scene is the epitome of it.

Koinonia is the Greek word used to describe the relationship between God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit. It’s also the word used to describe our relationship with God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit. And therefore, it’s the word used to describe our relationship to one another.

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He Did It!

Last week, I received the following text from my best friend: “He did it! I just watched Samson roll from front to back!”

We’ve been rooting for her 6-month-old son to start rolling, and last Friday was the glorious day.

I spend most of my days with this little guy, so when I got her text, I was thrilled. I let out an excited shriek, did a little jump, and shed a tear of joy. This new skill was worthy of all celebration. Though the victory was his, I was intricately connected to it.

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τάχα

For one of my Bible classes, students are required to write their final paper on the letter to Philemon in the New Testament.

The paper asks students to trace Paul’s argument, or rather, petition, for a runaway slave named Onesimus, with a specific emphasis on several verses.  One of which is verse 15 (NRSV), “Perhaps this is the reason he was separated from you for a while, so that you might have him back forever.” The word I have students focus on is perhaps.

It’s a small word, which is used only one other time in the New Testament (Romans 5:7). It comes from the Greek word, τάχα, an adverb meaning “possibly” or “peradventure.”

However, it packs a big theological punch.

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Pruning Growth

My husband and I are landscaping novices.

In February of this year, we trimmed the tree directly in front of our house, in an attempt to eradicate a rat from our attic.

Let me rephrase that—we had a tree trimming company trim the tree directly in front of our house because our pest control company told us we needed to…

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