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PWTE Daily Devotion

Now This Is Cooking!

By clicking on this SoundCloud link you can listen to today’s PWTE devotion

This kitchen belongs to the pastor’s family in Acaguaque, Honduras. There were a number of people gathered in this kitchen, all of them Honduran. There were no electrical lights, only the ambient light from outside and the glow of the wood burning stove.

Acaguaque, Honduras
Acaguaque, Honduras

I was the only English speaking person in the room, so, instead of understanding what was being said, I enjoyed the atmosphere created by this conversation.

Though I didn’t know what was being said (later I learned some of it had to do with snake meat that was cooked and hanging above the oven),  it was obvious that everyone talked and everyone laughed as a meal was being shared

Doesn’t this often happen around food?

After Ezra read the Torah to the people who had returned from exile they wept, but Nehemiah encouraged the people to rejoice, and with their rejoicing, to eat.

“And Nehemiah continued, ‘Go and celebrate with a feast of rich foods and sweet drinks, and share gifts of food with people who have nothing prepared. This is a sacred day before our Lord. Don’t be dejected and sad, for the joy of the LORD is your strength!'” Nehemiah 8:10 New Living Translation

May we, who have heard and believed the message of Jesus’ resurrection, celebrate Christ’s victory over death by eating with each other and sharing the abundance of what God has given us.

Good things happen around food.

Copyright Douglas P. Brauner

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Podcasts

PWTE Episode 003: Doomed to Repeat?

untitled (2 of 36)In this episode of the Praying With The Eyes podcast I’m joined by Ben Nickodemus as we ask the question, what lessons can we Christians learn from the early church? Edmond Burke stated, “Those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat it.” Is this true when it comes to the church? Do we understand the first and second century church and the challenges they faced? We have often heard that the early church face persecution. How did that persecution affect the early Christians and the world that surrounded them? These questions are a few that Ben and I explore as we think about the present state of the Christian community in the 21st century.

Ben Nickodemus as an adjunct professor at Concordia University, Portland, Oregon. He earned a master’s degree in early church history at the University of Washington and is entering a PhD program at Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, MO.

Blog: Where Are the People? http://goo.gl/UN5q0U

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