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Twelfth Sunday after Pentecost

August 31, 2025 on YouTube

Invited and inviting—that is the nature of the church. By God’s grace in holy baptism, we have a place at Christ’s banquet table. When, by the power of that same Spirit, humility and mutual love continue among us, the church can be more inviting still.

Readings

Proverbs 25:6-7a
Do not put yourself forward

Psalm 112
The righteous are merciful and full of compassion. (Psalm 112:4)

Hebrews 13:1-8, 15-16
God is with us: let acts of mutual love continue

Luke 14:1, 7-14
An image of God’s reign: invite the poor, crippled to your banquet

Music

Prelude:
Gathering Song:

Kyrie/Canticle of Praise: Setting 4
Hymn of the Day:
Communion: Setting 4
Sending Song:
Postlude:


Radical Love Triumphs

For most of human history, wisdom was largely part of an oral tradition. From one generation to the next, wisdom was passed down. These days, it sometimes seems that technology has replaced that tradition of shared wisdom. Rather than ask a trusted elder, the temptation is to pull out a smartphone and do a quick Internet search. Next thing you know, there it is, wisdom at your fingertips—maybe. Could it be that something is lost in the process? We can find facts online, but virtues like humility, respect for elders, hospitality, servanthood, and peacemaking do not seem to translate as easily in the electronic age. In the gospel reading, Jesus takes the time to pass on some ancient yet prudent wisdom from the proverbs of Solomon to a crowd of social climbers who obviously were not familiar with such prudence or wisdom.

More significantly, Jesus lifts up the mysteriously gracious and life-transforming values of the kingdom of God. Jesus lifts up the humility required to take the lowest seat at the table, never hoping to be invited to a place of greater honor or status. Jesus invites his followers to practice the hospitality that offers a banquet of the finest foods for people who cannot repay. Jesus invites his followers to embody the kind of radical-yet-relational love of Jesus himself. This radical love is taught by both individuals and congregations. Communities of faith, by their practices of generosity and compassion, embody the love of Jesus in their communities.

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