
Renewing Corporate Memory for our Ecological Dark Night
Proper 21(26) B
19th Sunday after Pentecost
By Jason Wood
Psalm 124
One of the things I’ve struggled the most with in singing contemporary worship songs is the almost exclusive focus on “me.” If you grew up like I did in a variety of evangelical churches, we tended to sing a lot of songs about how “I could sing of your love forever,” or how God “set me free,” or “here I am to worship.” And I really don’t mean to bash that, because there’s a lot that’s beautiful about reminding ourselves of the deeply personal and intimate love of God. The Christian faith proclaims: God does love me, and because of that I can live a transformed life. Continue reading “Wild Lectionary: Singing to Remain”
By Will O’Brien, executive director of Project H.O.M.E. in Philly and the curator of the 
By
30 years in and Ched Myers’
From William Barber’s recent comments in a Democracy Now
Another post from the front porch of Ruby Sales (September 17, 2018):
Oregon State Professor of Philosophy Kathleen Dean Moore 