The stories in Luke 15.1-32 are about the joy that comes with something that was lost being found. And the joy lies in the heart of the one who found it; the shepherd finding his sheep, the woman finding her home, and the father embracing his son. What was lost has been found, let’s celebrate. This points toward something that all of us should hold close: that Jesus is walking around looking everywhere, that he has a broom and is sweeping the house, he’s waiting and watching for his kids to head back home. All because he wants to celebrate.
Maybe the question these stories pose is whether we actually believe that to be true. A second question is, do we recognize we just might be lost? Because if we believe we are found, no finding is necessary and there is no party to be had.
June 17th, 2018: For and Against - Amanda Lum
June 10th, 2018: Living to the Fullest - Scott Oppliger
June 3rd, 2018: Making Love - Michael Hidalgo
May 27th, 2018: Our Words Matter - Amanda Lum
May 20th, 2018: A Letter About Violence In America - Michael Hidalgo
May 13th, 2018: Divine Grief - Jon Gettings
May 13th, 2018: Divine Grief - Nick Elio
May 6th, 2018 - Make it, Don’t Take It - Michael Hidalgo
April 29th, 2018: God Can Handle It - Amanda Lum
April 22nd, 2018: I Want the Truth - Michael Hidalgo
April 15th, 2018: Old and New - Michael Hidalgo
April 8th, 2018: I Just Can’t Get Enough - Scott Oppliger
April 1st, 2018: Metamorphosis - Michael Hidalgo
March 25th, 2018: Now You’ve Made Me Curse - Amanda Lum
March 18th, 2018: This is Rigged - Michael Hidalgo
March 11th, 2018: You Have the Right to Remain Silent - Michael Hidalgo
March 4th, 2018: One Last Kiss - Michael Hidalgo
February 25th, 2018: Here I Am, All Of Me - Amanda Lum
February 25th, 2018: Stay Woke - Dave Neuhausel
February 18th, 2018: The Last Supper - Michael Hidalgo
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Life After Ministry
Cast The Word
Let Me Be Frank | Bishop Frank Caggiano’s Podcast | Diocese of Bridgeport, CT
The Bible Recap
The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz)