We are quick to throw away the things that don't work anymore, wear out, or just simply aren't fashionable anymore. This is true of the clothing we wear, the food we allow to rot in the produce drawer, and the relationships we have with one another. When something wears out or breaks or doesn't interest us anymore - we toss it. This is especially true when something doesn't cost us much: most people treat a 'rental' differently than a home they own. We care for what costs us - we dispose quickly of what costs little. This mentality is destroying the earth, vulnerable communities, and pushing humans further into isolation and shame and crippling despair. Imagine a community that made promises, and then kept them! Imagine putting down roots, making a home, and saying, "I will fix this and repair it and make it last." The God of our ancestral faith is a Covenanting God - a God who demonstrates "homefulness" - God takes what's broken or worn out and fixes it. We call this forgiveness. Our God is a forgiving God - a Covenanting God - a God who takes brokenness and makes all things new.
Illuminated Dark/Illuminating Light: Love
Illuminated Dark/Illuminating Light: Peace
Illuminated Dark/Illuminating Light: Hope
How to be Human: Shine Like the Stars
How to Be Human: Do Not Fear Beloved
How to Be Human: Facing the Times
How to Be Human: Unnatural/Supernatural
How to Be Human: You Shall Not Pray
How to Be Human: The Writing on the Wall
How to Be Human: Inhumane
How to Be Human: The Dreamstate
How to Be Human: Forced Assimilation
How to Be Human: One Like a Son of Man
The Holy Spirit Births a New Humanity
The Holy Spirit Plunders the House
The Holy Spirit Brings Down the Mighty
The Holy Spirit Disrupts Systems
The Holy Spirit Speaks through Land and Sky
The Holy Spirit Speaks from the Margins
The Holy Spirit Thins the Veil
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Hello Heaven Podcast
Cast The Word
Let Me Be Frank | Bishop Frank Caggiano’s Podcast | Diocese of Bridgeport, CT
The Kingdom Power Fellowship Podcast
The Bible Recap
The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz)