This photograph shows the ruins of the Roman theater at Sebaste, rebuilt by Herod the Great on the site of ancient Samaria in the late first century BCE and renamed for Augustus. Archaeological evidence suggests it dates to the early Roman Imperial period and hosted dramatic performances, civic gatherings, and public ceremonies. These theaters shaped... Continue Reading →
From Manger to Skull
BiblePlaces.com. (n.d.). Stone feeding trough (manger), typical of first-century Judea We prefer our saviors at a distance. Close enough to help, far enough not to expose. Scripture offers no such Messiah. It gives us one who comes near and stays. There is no Golgotha if there is no Bethlehem. The cross does not appear suddenly... Continue Reading →
Philemon 1-25, From Slave to Brother
Papyrus 87 (๐87), Philemon 13โ15. P. Col. theol. 12, Kรถln, Institut fรผr Altertumskunde. CSNTM. Paul writes from prison with an impossible request. He is sending back a runaway slave named Onesimus to his master Philemon, asking him to receive Onesimus not as property but as a brother. Under Roman law, Philemon had absolute authority over... Continue Reading →
Caricature and the Image
Noli Me Tangere, by Fra Angelico (c. 1440โ1441) I think that most of us know the small ache of being misunderstood. Not seen. Reduced to a role that does not quite fit. We carry it from a workplace where we feel invisible, from a home where words land harder than they should, from rooms where... Continue Reading →
2 Samuel 7.1-17, The House God Builds
David sits in his palace of cedar, finally at rest. The wars are won. The kingdom is secure. God has given him peace from every enemy. In that stillness, David looks around and feels the weight of disproportion. โI dwell in a house of cedar, but the ark of God dwells in a tent.โ It... Continue Reading →