The late Rev. Peter Gomes, chaplain to Harvard University’s Memorial Chapel, once preached that Christians are “resurrection people.” In making that claim, he sought to contend that resurrection is more than an individual experience of faith. Instead, resurrection is a reality belonging to an entire people, to all those who...

God of seedtime and harvest, of life’s routines and resurrection, be with us in our coming and going, in our reaping and sowing. Endow us once more with the courage to walk in our identity as resurrection people, as those who are both familiar with the jagged edges of history, and captivated by the claims of a once-crucified, now-glorified Christ. Amen.


2 Comments
Log In to leave a comment
Lectionary Week
February 17–23, 2025
Scripture Overview

The passage from Genesis and the psalm challenge us to resist the understandable yet self-destructive road of fretting and choosing revenge in our relationships. They also comfort us with the assurance that once-wounded relationships can be healed and stitched back together. The New Testament passages, interpreted together, call us to consider two topics in relation to one another: the nature and feel of the Resurrection and the identity of our enemies. Both passages suggest that embodiment matters, that our earthen vessels are neither opponents nor enemies of spiritual development. Nor are they automatic allies in spiritual growth. Instead, our embodied lives are always potential vistas for experiencing resurrection, for self-identifying our bodies as blessed, not cursed; beloved, not burdensome, through the presence of the lynched yet living Christ.

Questions and Suggestions for Reflection

• Read Genesis 45:3-11, 15. What does repair and reconciliation look like in your current family context?
• Read Psalm 37:1-11, 39-40. What kind of faith practices—and what kind of God—could help you and your loved ones to pivot from fretting to trusting and relying on the Divine?
• Read 1 Corinthians 15:35-38, 42-50. Where do you envision resurrection occurring? What difference might it make to consider where and when resurrection happens among human beings?
• Read Luke 6:27-38. How might you love the “enemy” with renewed determination—including those portions of yourself that you may have been socialized to curse and despise?

Respond by posting a prayer.