Daily Devotions

New devotions are posted Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. 

To Love is What it Takes to Truly Live

everything [in] between | Commentary by: Rev. Jeff Chu

Read
Luke 10:25-37

medium.com

To love is what it takes to truly live In his last speech before being assassinated, the Rev. Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr. spoke about the story of the Good Samaritan.(3)

King had visited the Jericho Road in 1959. He saw its twists and felt its turns as it wound through the hills and sank into a valley
outside Jerusalem. Along the way were so many potential hiding places for robbers to lie in wait, ready to ambush weary travelers. “I’m going to tell you what my imagination tells me” about the priest and the Levite, he said. “It’s possible those men were afraid.” Perhaps, he suggested, they fearfully asked themselves, “If I stop to help this man, what will happen to me?’”

The Good Samaritan, King said, “reversed the question: ‘If I do not stop to help this man, what will happen to him?’” Then
he urged his listeners to imagine themselves on contemporary Jericho Roads. Could they—would they—ask that same question when they saw others struggling?

King’s speech offered a master class in wrestling with complexity. He empathized with the Levite and the priest—how utterly
human to be fearful on the Jericho Road! He also praised the Samaritan’s “dangerous unselfishness.”

Another layer to King’s complexity: Privately, he had misgivings about the story. “I of course like and respect the Good Samaritan, but I don’t want to be a Good Samaritan,” King told a friend. “I am tired of seeing people battered and bruised and bloody. . . . I want to pave the Jericho Road, add street lights to the Jericho Road, make the Jericho Road safe for passage by everybody.”(4)

(3) An annotated transcript of King’s final speech can be found here: nytimes.com/interactive/2018/04/02/
us/king-mlk-last-sermon-annotated.html
(4) Author John Hope Bryant recounts this conversation between Rev. Dr. MLK, Jr. and ambassador Andrew Young in his article, “Fixing the Jericho Road, published on HuffPost, May 25, 2011. huffpost. com/entry/fixing-the-jericho-road_b_422612

Previously…

A Very Special Star

God’s promise that Sarah and Abraham would have a family that numbered the stars in the sky started with one against-all-the-odds baby: Isaac.

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Sarah & Abraham

This is how I begin telling my favorite story to kids —it’s the story that is our text for this Sunday. I spread a dark blue silky cloth to create a story area. I sprinkle sand and rock and place a couple of trees. I bring out Joseph and Mary from a children’s wooden nativity to serve as Abraham and Sarah. Then I place a tent.

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A Trio of Promises

In our living room hangs a print of the St. John’s Bible illumination of the Sarah & Abraham story. This is my favorite story in the Bible, I think—for sure it’s my favorite story to tell to kids. I love having it in my house.

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I Promise…

When did you first learn about making promises?  I’m guessing you were probably too young to remember.  A parent offering a promise to their child can vary wildly on the spectrum of importance from small, “we can leave in five minutes, I promise!” to big, “I promise, I will love you forever!”.  All these promises, regardless of the scale, contribute to the forming of the relationships we build throughout our lives.

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