суббота, 24 мая 2014 г.
This is part of John's Last Supper narrative. More lengthy than the other versions, John attempts to
We suffer vacation rentals gulf shores al from a shortage of imagination, I think, vacation rentals gulf shores al when it comes to imagining God’s house being large enough for all. We suffer from our own culture of scarcity in the Church, spending physical and spiritual resources on ourselves when we should be making room for all.
This is part of John’s Last Supper narrative. More lengthy than the other versions, John attempts to share more of Jesus’ mind with us through his conversation with the disciples. vacation rentals gulf shores al Judas has already left to go get the authorities. Peter has been told that he will deny Christ three times. Now we have Jesus trying (once again) to explain where he’s going and why. He first describes the real estate available to everyone. Everyone is going to God’s house. Of course, Thomas has to ask, “How can we know the way?” You can always vacation rentals gulf shores al count on Thomas. Jesus responds with this well known verse: “I am the way, and the truth, and the life.”
This verse is typically read at funerals. It’s all about the afterlife. Jesus is preparing a heavenly place for everyone. Sometimes I think we’ve back-ended the afterlife into this passage. We know Jesus is going to die. We know that the apocalyptic pronouncement of “I’m coming back” should have us quaking in our boots and wondering if we’ll indeed be ready. “The Devil made me do it” really doesn’t hold up like it used to.
When we read Revelation and take Jesus’ worldly ministry seriously, I see that the Kingdom of God is here, now, with us, always lighting the way to God. It’s not some netherworld that we cannot reach without magical map making from the Messiah. Jesus is the map. His life, his very fleshy and challenging life is the way to the dwelling vacation rentals gulf shores al that we each have in God’s house, in this City of God.
House. City. Land. Kingdom. No matter what the metaphor, we know it’s a place, a recognizable place. The trouble is that our relationships with these places vacation rentals gulf shores al are often so polluted that, like Thomas, we cannot even begin to imagine that God’s dwelling might actually be a house, a city, a land, or a kingdom. And most of us cannot imagine that there’s room for everyone.
According to Juliet B. Schor’s book, Plenitude , in 1980 the average square footage of a home in the United States was 1,740 sq. ft. By 2000, that number vacation rentals gulf shores al had increased to 2,521 sq. ft. with 95% of those homes having two or more baths, 90% with air conditioning, and 19% with three car garages (p. 45). The desire for more space places impossible demands upon our natural resources, and as we recently discovered, our bank accounts. Surprisingly, Schor connects this inflation of square footage with a culture of scarcity.
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