SCROLL DOWN FOR JUNE 5 AND JUNE 12

Welcome to Hunger Sermon Starters!
       
The lessons for each Sunday in the church year proclaim God’s grace in Jesus Christ. Also derived from a Sunday’s texts are lessons for the Christ-inspired and Christ-like life of God’s people. The comments here will help you find hunger-related threads – sermon starters – among the themes of this day’s texts. (We're presuming you have already done your exegetical work on the texts.) God bless your proclamation (and teaching) of what is most certainly true!
 
June 5, 2011(Seventh Sunday of Easter)

During the Easter season the lessons all revolve around the Resurrection and new life! The texts celebrate the new and just things God is doing on behalf of all that God cherishes, in the creative order as well as in human society. Sometimes we place the highest emphasis on what Easter means in terms of our own eternal destinies as believers. Yet it’s also important, since we’re still living, to consider what Easter means for this earthly life and those with whom we live it in the present age.

Acts 1:6-14
Psalm 68:1-10, 32-35 (4)
1 Peter 4:12-14; 5:6-11
John 17:1-11
In this high priestly prayer, Jesus prays that his followers may all be one. This of course has a particular value to the current context of the ELCA. A question worth asking is towards what we will be unified. As has been asserted many times in these sermon starters, the aim in Jesus’ prayer is that our unity will direct others to God. How often do we unify in ways that do not point others to God? What would it look like for God’s people to be unified in their voice with and on behalf of those who are hungry? Would not that witness be a clear pointer to God?
 
The good news, as is spelled out in this week’s lesson from Acts (and underscored many times through the readings in this Easter season), is that God is working to empower us to be effective witnesses. Are we open to God’s working?
 
David Creech
Director of Hunger Education, ELCA World Hunger
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Welcome to Hunger Sermon Starters!
       
The lessons for each Sunday in the church year proclaim God’s grace in Jesus Christ. Also derived from a Sunday’s texts are lessons for the Christ-inspired and Christ-like life of God’s people. The comments here will help you find hunger-related threads – sermon starters – among the themes of this day’s texts. (We're presuming you have already done your exegetical work on the texts.) God bless your proclamation (and teaching) of what is most certainly true!
 
June 12, 2011 (Day of Pentecost)

During the Easter season the lessons all revolve around the Resurrection and new life! The texts celebrate the new and just things God is doing on behalf of all that God cherishes, in the creative order as well as in human society. Sometimes we place the highest emphasis on what Easter means in terms of our own eternal destinies as believers. Yet it’s also important, since we’re still living, to consider what Easter means for this earthly life and those with whom we live it in the present age.

Acts 2:1-21 or Numbers 11:24-30
Psalm 104:24-34, 35b (30)
1 Corinthians 12:3b-13 or Acts 2:1-21
In this passage from 1 Corinthians Paul reminds us that our gifts have been given for the common good (v. 7). At Pentecost God sent the Holy Spirit, undoing previous divisions (see the lesson from Acts). Empowered by the Holy Spirit, to what end are we using our gifts?
 
Later in the same passage, Paul tells us that we are one body. His point is to encourage unity, and to challenge the notion that one person or group may have distinct access to the Spirit. In a hunger context, we might ask how well we are doing at tending to the whole body of Christ. If one person is sick or hungry, the whole body is sick and hungry. How might we use our gifts to work for the good of Christ’s entire body?

John 20:19-23
The Gospel lesson from John 20 reminds us that just as God sent Jesus, so too Jesus sends us into the world to be his agents. As has been noted throughout this Easter season (of which Pentecost is the last day), God’s work in Christ did not only bring spiritual wholeness. In Jesus’ public ministry he also fed those who were hungry, healed those who were sick, welcomed the stranger, and so on. Jesus now commissions us to do those same things. But we are not sent out without any help. In verse 22, Jesus breathes on the disciples and gives them the Holy Spirit. It is by God’s grace and power that we can do God’s work of ministering with and to those who are poor and vulnerable.
 
David Creech
Director of Hunger Education, ELCA World Hunger