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Mostrando entradas de agosto, 2022
  Proper 17 Lucas 14:1, 7-14 Rev. Neli Miranda   Honor and shame … two pivotal values that ruled Jewish society in the first century.   An honorable person was distinguished for belonging to a recognized family, for holding a high position for being wise, for having good health, abundant offspring and material possessions, all of which were continually exhibited in many ways. Honor meant esteem, respect, and reputation among the community. Shame , on the other way, meant humiliation and loss of standing, and in Jesus’ time most of the population lived on the side of shame: the poor, the sick, the despised like the prostitutes and tax collectors, and those considered criminals; in general, all those who did not belong to the elite. To gain honor and avoid falling into shame ruled people’s behavior. It was a strong incentive that marked people’s daily actions to step over others to maintain their own status. An important way to maintain or increase self-honor was to build relat
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  Hay un gran universo sustentado por la presencia física de una madre. !Ay de quienes perdemos esa presencia! Largo camino nos espera para aprender a sostener nuestro propio universo y encontrar alivio en la presencia intangible de nuestra madre.   !mamita linda!
  Proper 19, August 21, 2022 Lucas 13:10-17 Rev. Neli Miranda   “She was bent over and was quite unable to stand up straight …” (13,11).   What tremendous weight this woman was carrying!       Luke tells us that this woman had a spirit that had crippled her for eighteen years. How should we read this spirit that had crippled her so terribly?   A bone disease that had gone untreated?   Physical and emotional weight due to heavy, tireless housework? Social and religious obligations?     Despite her condition, she attended the synagogue on the Sabbath day, surely with great difficulty.   What had moved this woman to come to the synagogue despite her limited and strained mobility?   Perhaps she was a woman of great faith, a woman devoted to worshiping with her community. Maybe she hoped to find relief and liberation by participating in the Sabbath celebration.   Deuteronomy tells us that a t the heart of the Sabbath celebration resided a sense of liberation, joy and rest ,
  Tenth Sunday After Pentecost. August 14, 2022 Lucas 12:49-56 Rev. Neli Miranda   Fire, division, hypocrites. . .! What harsh words we hear in today’s gospel! These words must be understood within the context of the intense moment Jesus lives on his way to Jerusalem.   Time is running out, the opposition grows, the cross is approaching, and many people still fail to understand his message. . . From the beginning of his ministry in Galilee, Jesus faced the opposition and rejection of the Jewish leadership; however, he continued his proclamation and set his mind on Jerusalem. Going to Jerusalem was a crucial decision in Jesus’ life; it meant the proclamation of the Kingdom of God among the religious and political center of Jewish life. Jesus knew it was a journey without return. In previous chapters in Luke, he had announced to his disciples, “ The Son of Man [He himself] must undergo great suffering and be rejected by the elders, chief priests, and scribes and be killed . .
Proper 14. August 7, 2022. Luke 12:32-40 Rev. Neli ML     "Take care! Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; for one's life does not consist in the abundance of possessions"  (12,15). This is the exhortation from last week’s sermon that still reverberates in our ears and hearts this day. Last Sunday we heard about a rich fool who thought of accumulating wealth for himself without knowing that that night he would die despite his many possessions. In teaching about this desire for accumulation, Jesus said, “. . .life does not consist in the abundance of possession.” Today, Jesus continues teaching us about possessions… but, before engaging in today’s gospel, I would like to take you back to the preceding verses in which Jesus exhorts us to not worry or be anxious about material needs.   Jesus assures us that God, like a good father, knows our needs and provides us with them. Jesus tells us, “. . . do not keep striving for what you are to eat and what you