Hope Springs Forth
Throughout the year, we have continued to celebrate the 90th anniversary of The Upper Room daily Read More
Shonda Nicole Gladden | Read Jeremiah 31:27-34
On a cold winter day, I awakened to a house that was as cold inside as it was outside. When I went to check the thermostat, it did not register any temperature. I didn’t hear the blowing of our furnace fan. I deduced that the thermostat battery needed to be...
Dear God, may I be attentive to you and your presence in all things. Write your law and your love on my heart. Amen.
We start this week by reading several of the scripture passages associated with the Canadian day of Thanksgiving. Then we turn to the lectionary readings for the nineteenth Sunday after Pentecost. At last Jeremiah is able to bring a message of restoration and hope. God promises a new covenant with the people, and they will internalize the law in their hearts so that they will keep it. The psalmist rejoices in such a reality—meditating on God’s law allows faithful walking in God’s paths. The reading from Second Timothy confirms the ongoing power of God’s law in scripture, which is given by God for our good. Luke hits on a different theme through the parable of a persistent widow, reminding us to be similarly tenacious with our prayers to God.
• Read Jeremiah 31:27-34. How have you broken your covenant with God? How has God responded?
• Read Psalm 119:97-104. The Jewish laws of the Hebrew scriptures are part of our Christian heritage. How can you delight in the law?
• Read 2 Timothy 3:14–4:5. How can you learn or teach from scriptures you do not normally read?
• Read Luke 18:1-8. Through the familiar call to pray always, the author reminds us that we are called to pray for what God wants. What is at stake when you pray for justice and mercy?
Respond by posting a prayer.