Luke | Increase our faith!

How much faith is enough? (Listen here.)

Once upon a time, John D. Rockefeller was the richest man in the world. At the peak of his wealth, he was asked by a reporter, ‘How much money is enough?’ To this he famously replied, ‘Just a little bit more!’ If only I had a bit more money, says the rich man, then I’d relax. I’d be able to slow down and take a break. I’d spend more time with my family, explore my creativity, follow my deeper calling, be more generous, give more away. Whatever. But first, I just need that little bit more. You want something from me? I’ll get back to you in a year or three. I’ll be ready then.

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Luke | Mind the gap!

On fancy backpacks, merino briefs, and the responsibilities of the global rich. (Listen here.)

A few  years ago, my colleague Rev Nguyễn Hữu Trí took a group of young people on a trip to Vietnam. They planned to visit Christian communities aligned with factory workers, street kids and people addicted to heroin, both to build connections and to witness the gospel being embodied in these contexts. As Trí tells it, the young people turned up at the airport decked out in brand new gear purchased especially for the trip. And so off they went with their bright new backpacks, ergonomic walking shoes, high tech breathable fabrics and versatile layering options to encounter Vietnam’s poor.

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Romans | Ruth and the body of Christ

On flea bombs, sick kids, old wardrobes, the Grim Reaper – and resurrection life! (Listen here.)

Hi, I’m Alison, and I’m the daughter of a dynamo! My mother, Ruth Sampson, was a pastor of this church in the 1970’s and 80’s. She was energetic, dynamic, well remembered by many, yet she is long gone. In her absence, I’ve been asked to talk about her contributions, both at Box Hill Baptist and elsewhere in that era, and to draw out some points for your future.

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Prayer | God of both memory and forgetting

It’s Dementia Action Week. Amidst all the events, information sessions and activities, I wrote this little prayer for Manningham Uniting Church. It was distributed through their monthly magazine, which this month is focused on memory.

God of both memory and forgetting,
you remember us tenderly yet you forget our sins.
Help us do likewise.
Help us recall the good, the joyful, the just.
Help us bear our pain and loss.
Help us forget all hurt.
And when we cannot remember even ourselves,
remember us, God. Remember us.
Hold us firmly in your love.
For you have written our names in a memory book,
and claimed us as your own.

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Luke | Three invitations into joy

Maybe the lost are not always the people we assume. (Listen here.)

‘Would you like a drink?’ I asked our friend Carl. ‘No thanks,’ he said. ‘Is that an Anglo no, or a Lebanese no?’ I asked. Our friend Carl is from a Lebanese family. In Lebanon, if someone offers you a drink, it is the height of rudeness to say yes straightaway. It might be 36 degrees, you might have walked across Beirut to get there, you might be so dry your tongue is sticking to the roof of your mouth. But you graciously say no, giving your host the opportunity to demonstrate their generous hospitality by offering again, and again, and again. By the sixth time, you can finally say ‘Yes, actually, now I come to think of it, and in response to your exquisite hospitality, perhaps I could manage a small drink!’ Then your host pours you a long cool glass of something refreshing, and hovers at the ready to refill it.

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Psalms | My grandparents’ breakfast table and other stories

Another week, another family story – this time, about lifelong faith. (Listen here.)

My grandparents’ breakfast room opened off the kitchen. It had a brown sideboard, brown scratchy chairs and a brown shag pile carpet. Whenever my sister and I stayed with them, we participated in their morning ritual. First, we held hands and said grace. Then my sister and I would gobble up our breakfasts while our grandparents were still fussing around assembling theirs. Cornflakes. Sultanas. Bran. A bit of sugar. Milk. Yawn. My sister and I would sit swinging our legs, discreetly itching where the chairs scratched and waiting impatiently for our grandparents to finish eating. But even then, we couldn’t get down from the table for, after breakfast was cleared away, it was time for morning devotions.

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Luke | A rollicking romance, revisited

How following Jesus nearly tore my family apart, then brought it together again. A story from the archives with a new interpretive movement for a new context. (Listen here.)

I’d like to introduce you to a very shocking man: my father. But to understand why he is so shocking, first you need to know a bit about my mother. Like me, my mother grew up Baptist. Unlike me, however, she was raised in a fundamentalist household. Her family of origin rejected infant baptism, evolution, smoking, divorce, and many other things. Because my mum was super-smart and good at languages, and because everybody knew that no man would marry a super-smart woman, she had been groomed from an early age to be a Bible-translating missionary spinster. So away she went to university to study anthropology and linguistics: but there she met the man who became my father.

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Hosea & the cycle of violence

Not every image of God is faithful to Jesus. (Listen here.)

‘When Israel was young, I loved him … It was I who taught Ephraim to walk … I bent down to feed them,’ says God through the prophet Hosea. These beautiful words resonate deep in my body. They recall the love I had for my own little children, the hours I spent holding their upstretched arms as they tottered down the hall and learned to walk. I remember the thousands of times I bent down to feed them, wipe their chin, see eye-to-eye with them and hug them. So it’s a crying shame that I find these words nearly drowned out by a long litany of violence.

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Matthew | Love like salt

On law, exile, love and salt. (Listen here.)

Salt, light: no doubt most of you have heard a sermon or three about these before. And no doubt at least one of these sermons has talked about doing good in this world. I’m all for this interpretation: I’m a Protestant! So I’m a huge fan of running around for Jesus and doing stuff, for ‘faith without works is dead.’ (James 2:17). But I’m also aware of the risks of this approach. Too easily, saltiness becomes something we strive for rather than a description of who we already are. Too readily, we get caught up in being seen to be good people who are doing good works, and we forget the fundamentals of relationship.

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Luke | Mary and Martha, united

A religious scholar, a wounded traveller, a Samaritan and two sisters walk into a kitchen … (Listen here.)

Some years ago, I attended a church which held a meal after the service. As a bunch of mostly women heated soup and sliced bread and as I set the table, a seated-as-usual woman said smugly to me, ‘I’m such a Mary. I always sit and listen to Jesus.’ Quite frankly, I wanted to slap her.

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