Episodes

Thursday Dec 24, 2015

Sunday Dec 20, 2015
December 20, 2015: Surpassing Joy – Landon Lynch
Sunday Dec 20, 2015
Sunday Dec 20, 2015
A story about the birth of a divine king who would be a hero was nothing new. In fact, there were a lot of them. Which is precisely why Luke told the story the way he did – because he saw Jesus as a divine king who would be a hero. He would be one who would rescue and save the world. How else could you begin a story this big, this massive, without telling about the miraculous birth of Jesus? It is all here, in the infancy of Jesus, that we are set up for the rest of the story. He is the one who was to come.

Sunday Dec 20, 2015
December 20, 2015: It's a Boy – Michael Hidalgo
Sunday Dec 20, 2015
Sunday Dec 20, 2015
A story about the birth of a divine king who would be a hero was nothing new. In fact, there were a lot of them. Which is precisely why Luke told the story the way he did – because he saw Jesus as a divine king who would be a hero. He would be one who would rescue and save the world. How else could you begin a story this big, this massive, without telling about the miraculous birth of Jesus? It is all here, in the infancy of Jesus, that we are set up for the rest of the story. He is the one who was to come.

Sunday Dec 13, 2015
December 13, 2015: A Star, A King and Wise Men – Landon Lynch
Sunday Dec 13, 2015
Sunday Dec 13, 2015
Herod was the King of the Jews – a title he begged and connived from Rome itself. He, in fact, was not a Jew, but an Edomite. Everything about him suggested he was not the real king of Israel and even the wise men from the East. Why? Because when they went to Herod they assumed the king of the Jews had not been born in the house of Herod, but somewhere else.
And it was this recognition that angered and terrified Herod and would have thrilled those reading Matthew’s gospel. The star pointing to Jesus as King told Herod he was not. Because this is what Jesus – in his very existence – does. In being King he simply shows others they are not. He does not need to oppose or argue or fight them. He is simply born. Perhaps this is what Mary meant when she sang her song about toppling leaders.

Sunday Dec 13, 2015
December 13, 2015: A Star, A King and Wise Men – Jon Gettings
Sunday Dec 13, 2015
Sunday Dec 13, 2015
Herod was the King of the Jews – a title he begged and connived from Rome itself. He, in fact, was not a Jew, but an Edomite. Everything about him suggested he was not the real king of Israel and even the wise men from the East. Why? Because when they went to Herod they assumed the king of the Jews had not been born in the house of Herod, but somewhere else.
And it was this recognition that angered and terrified Herod and would have thrilled those reading Matthew’s gospel. The star pointing to Jesus as King told Herod he was not. Because this is what Jesus – in his very existence – does. In being King he simply shows others they are not. He does not need to oppose or argue or fight them. He is simply born. Perhaps this is what Mary meant when she sang her song about toppling leaders.

Sunday Dec 06, 2015
December 6, 2015: Getting Ready for the Showdown – Michael Hidalgo
Sunday Dec 06, 2015
Sunday Dec 06, 2015
On the surface, taking a census does not seem to matter much. It’s just a government counting its people, right? Not exactly. A census was directly connected to paying tribute (taxes) to the Roman Empire. And few things rubbed against Jewish sensibility like paying tribute to Caesar. The tribute paid to Caesar financed imperial domination and the income of the oppressor (this gives a small insight into why tax collectors were so reviled). If one were so inclined to not pay tribute – or encourage others to do the same – it was considered high treason.
Still, many rebelled. Judas of Gamla refused to pay tribute based on the belief that God, and God alone, was their King. When his movement was countered by Joazar (the High Priest) Joazar was overrun by the crowds. Why? Because tribute posed not just a heavy burden on the people of Israel, but a religio-political question: Who is your God and King?

Sunday Dec 06, 2015
December 6, 2015: Getting Ready for the Showdown – Scott Oppliger
Sunday Dec 06, 2015
Sunday Dec 06, 2015
On the surface, taking a census does not seem to matter much. It’s just a government counting its people, right? Not exactly. A census was directly connected to paying tribute (taxes) to the Roman Empire. And few things rubbed against Jewish sensibility like paying tribute to Caesar. The tribute paid to Caesar financed imperial domination and the income of the oppressor (this gives a small insight into why tax collectors were so reviled). If one were so inclined to not pay tribute – or encourage others to do the same – it was considered high treason.
Still, many rebelled. Judas of Gamla refused to pay tribute based on the belief that God, and God alone, was their King. When his movement was countered by Joazar (the High Priest) Joazar was overrun by the crowds. Why? Because tribute posed not just a heavy burden on the people of Israel, but a religio-political question: Who is your God and King?

Sunday Nov 29, 2015
November 29, 2015: So This is Christmas – Landon Lynch
Sunday Nov 29, 2015
Sunday Nov 29, 2015
Lights. Tinsel. Trees. Parties. Busyness. Gifts. Materialism. It must be Christmas season! Which is honestly one of the most backward things we can do, isn’t it? I mean, if we are honest we all say we know the real reason for the season, and yet we fall prey to it year after year. Perhaps we could condemn the materialism and stress that are so rampant and connected to Christmas each year or – better yet – we could explore what the birth of Jesus was really about.
The answer? Liberation. Jesus, was and is the one, who came to set us free from the very things that enslave us each year in all areas of our life. It will do us good as we head into Advent to not fool ourselves into thinking about life as categories of political, economic, religious, etc. But understand Jesus and Christmas are about the whole of life – material and spiritual. Which means when we take a good hard look at the birth of Jesus we must take a good hard look at our whole selves.

Sunday Nov 22, 2015
November 22, 2015: I Am the Vine – Landon Lynch
Sunday Nov 22, 2015
Sunday Nov 22, 2015
In the ancient world, they didn’t have supports for grape vines. Grapevines ran along the ground. Which meant the farmer had to lift up branches with small stones, rocks, or other branches, to keep the grapes from touching the ground. More than this, every year, the farmer clipped off the branches that did not bear fruit – and he pruned the branches that did. Pruning comes from the root, “to lift up.” On a surface reading it would mean God cuts off the bad stuff.
But what if it means “to lift up?” Imagine God, the gardener, walking up and down these rows. He sees a branch struggling, that is touching the ground – if grapes touch the ground, they turn sour and they are not good for anything (Isaiah uses this imagery about grapes that drag along on the ground – they turn sour and they rot). What does He do? Lift them up.
And to help the branches dragging along the ground because of the weight of their fruit, he cuts off the ones that don’t bear fruit – and lifts up those that struggle. Maybe this should be of great encouragement to us.

Sunday Nov 22, 2015
November 22, 2015: I Am the Vine – Bekah Stewart
Sunday Nov 22, 2015
Sunday Nov 22, 2015
In the ancient world, they didn’t have supports for grape vines. Grapevines ran along the ground. Which meant the farmer had to lift up branches with small stones, rocks, or other branches, to keep the grapes from touching the ground. More than this, every year, the farmer clipped off the branches that did not bear fruit – and he pruned the branches that did. Pruning comes from the root, “to lift up.” On a surface reading it would mean God cuts off the bad stuff.
But what if it means “to lift up?” Imagine God, the gardener, walking up and down these rows. He sees a branch struggling, that is touching the ground – if grapes touch the ground, they turn sour and they are not good for anything (Isaiah uses this imagery about grapes that drag along on the ground – they turn sour and they rot). What does He do? Lift them up.
And to help the branches dragging along the ground because of the weight of their fruit, he cuts off the ones that don’t bear fruit – and lifts up those that struggle. Maybe this should be of great encouragement to us.