Isaiah 63: 7-9

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  • Exegesis (Isaiah 63:7-9)

    by Richard Niell Donovan
  • Christmas 1A (2023)

    by Phil Heinze
  • Sermon Starters (Christmas 1A)(2023)

    by Scott Hoezee
    Somehow this idea of Christmas being nestled in the reality of our brutal world reminds me of the speech given by Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky to the U.S. Congress on December 21, 2022. “Ladies and gentlemen, in two days we will celebrate Christmas. Maybe candlelit. Not because it’s more romantic, no, but because there will be no electricity. Millions won’t have neither heating nor running water. All of these will be the result of Russian missile and drone attacks on our energy infrastructure. But we do not complain. We do not judge and compare whose life is easier . . . We’ll celebrate Christmas. Celebrate Christmas and, even if there is no electricity, the light of our faith in ourselves will not be put out. If Russian missiles attack us, we’ll do our best to protect ourselves. If they attack us with Iranian drones and our people will have to go to bomb shelters on Christmas Eve, Ukrainians will still sit down at the holiday table and cheer up each other. And we don’t, don’t have to know everyone’s wish, as we know that all of us, millions of Ukrainians, wish the same: Victory.”
  • Christmas 1A (2023)

    by Casey Thornburgh Sigmon

Resources from 2013 to 2021

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  • Good

    by Dan Bollerud
  • Open

    by Dan Bollerud
  • Christmas 1A (2019)

    by Jason Buckwalter
  • Christmas 1A (2017)

    by Juliana Claassens
  • Christmas 1A (2019)

    by Phil Heinze
  • Christmas 1A (2016)

    by Phil Heinze
  • Christmas 1A (2013)

    by Phil Heinze
  • Christmas 1A (2016)

    by Cary Killough
  • Christmas 1A (2013)

    by Ingrid Lilly
  • Sermon Starters (Christmas 1A)(2019)

    by Stan Mast
    The intermingling of God’s toughness and tenderness, his love and the violence that fills the Bible, challenges our faith and tempts us to shave off the rough edges of Scripture. How can a loving God be so violent? I was helped a bit with this issue when I saw the movie, “Taken,” starring Liam Neeson. It is an exceedingly violent film about an ex-CIA agent with a “special set of skills,” whose lovely but foolish teenage daughter is kidnapped by sex traffickers while she was on vacation in Europe. When the girl drops her phone on which she has been talking with her dad, the kidnapper picks it up. Neeson hears him breathing and asks him to let his daughter go. “If you do, I will forget about this and let you go. If you don’t, I will find you and kill every one of you.” The sneering kidnapper laughs and says, “Good luck.”...
  • The Charlie Browniest Podcast

    by Robb McCoy and Erik Fistler
  • Christmas 1A (2013)

    by Wesley White

Resources from the Archives

(In order to avoid losing your place on this page when viewing a different link, I would suggest that you right click on that link with your mouse and select “open in a new tabâ€. Then, when you have finished reading that link, close the tab and you will return to where you left off on this page. FWIW!)

Children's Resources

(In order to avoid losing your place on this page when viewing a different link, I would suggest that you right click on that link with your mouse and select “open in a new tabâ€. Then, when you have finished reading that link, close the tab and you will return to where you left off on this page. FWIW!)

The Classics

(In order to avoid losing your place on this page when viewing a different link, I would suggest that you right click on that link with your mouse and select “open in a new tabâ€. Then, when you have finished reading that link, close the tab and you will return to where you left off on this page. FWIW!)