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pjschurchdenver

Father, if the prophet had commended you to do something difficult, would you not

have done it? ~ 2 Kings 5:13b


In today’s reading from 2 Kings, we me Naaman, a foreign commander who suffered

from leprosy. Through his wife’s Israeli servant Naaman learns of Elisha the prophet and seeks a cure for his lifelong disease. The cure Elisha eventually offers is disconcertingly simple: he instructs Naaman to wash in the Jordan seven times so as to be healed.


Rather than welcome this news, Naaman is enraged by the simplicity of Elisha’s

instructions. He was expecting a task as all encompassing and consuming as his disease. His servants point out the irony in this, saying “Father, if the prophet had commanded you to do something difficult, would you not have done it?” Naaman’s healing comes about in part because he sets aside his expectations and accepts the simplicity of Elisha’s instructions.


I think this is just the message we need for this moment in Lent. For some, Lent is a time

of profound sacrifice, fervent prayer and self examination— and this is certainly appropriate. The way of the cross is serious work, and Lent is a time of living more deeply into that. And yet we are also following the One who said “my yoke is easy and my burden is light” and whose life and witness was marked by penitence but also feasting and joy. Sometimes healing can come through the simplest paths.


Today’s readings



Do we sometimes make the journey more complicated than it needs to be?


How might embracing simplicity and trusting in God’s guidance lead us to healing and a deeper connection with the way of the cross?



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pjschurchdenver

O God, you have taught us to keep all your commandments by loving you and our

neighbor: Grant us the grace of your Holy Spirit, that we may be devoted to you with

our whole heart, and united to one another with pure affection; through Jesus Christ

our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and

ever. Amen. ~ The Book of Common Prayer, p. 230



Today’s readings




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pjschurchdenver

Quickly, bring out a robe—the best one—and put it on him; put a ring on his finger and sandals on his feet. ~ Luke 15:22b


Today’s parable is one of Jesus’ most famous: the Prodigal Son. There are many ways of reading this story, including as a story about what counts as waste and generosity. Through this lens, this is a story about a younger son who receives his full inheritance and who then wastes it on partying and prostitutes. When he is starving and penniless, he returns to his father who generously offers even more for having returned (a robe, ring, sandals for his feet) and wants to throw a big feast.


The older brother considers his father’s generosity to be its own form of squandering. “But when this son of yours came back, who has devoured your property with prostitutes, you killed the fatted calf for him!”


This brings me to a strange and troubling fact about Jesus: he is frequently the advocate for what some have called “promiscuous generosity,” that is, generosity without a lot of terms. This is the type of generosity that upsets and scandalizes his disciples. It is a generosity, they contend, offered to too many people—and all the wrong sorts.


Today’s readings




Are there times when we, like the older brother, find ourselves questioning acts of generosity toward those we deem unworthy?


Do we struggle to give without conditions?


How might this parable challenge us to expand our understanding of generosity and compassion in our lives?




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