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Mosaic Church Rochester Podcast

Mosaic Church

Mosaic Church Rochester Podcast

A weekly Religion, Spirituality and Christianity podcast
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Mosaic Church Rochester Podcast

Mosaic Church

Mosaic Church Rochester Podcast

Episodes
Mosaic Church Rochester Podcast

Mosaic Church

Mosaic Church Rochester Podcast

A weekly Religion, Spirituality and Christianity podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
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Episodes of Mosaic Church Rochester Podcast

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Are we supposed to just exist until God makes the future happen?Details at: https://mosaicroc.org/posts/2021/05/eastertideshorts07
After Jesus ascended, why couldn’t the disciples tear their eyes away from the sky?Details at: https://mosaicroc.org/posts/2021/05/eastertideshorts06
In order to go where Jesus leads, we have to leave where we’ve been. And there’s a risk each time that afterwards, if we come back, we’ll find it’s not our home anymore.Details at: https://mosaicroc.org/posts/2021/05/eastertideshorts05
40 days of proving, teaching, and commissioning. Also wonder, joy, peace, reassurance, fellowship, care, tenderness, reconciliation, and food.Details at: https://mosaicroc.org/posts/2021/05/eastertideshorts04
How belief and doubt can coexist among people who love each other.Details at: https://mosaicroc.org/posts/2021/04/eastertideshorts03
Why did people who had known and loved Jesus fail to recognize him right away?Details at: https://mosaicroc.org/posts/2021/04/eastertideshorts02
The story of Easter morning is not the Resurrection—not yet. The story of Easter morning is the Empty Tomb.Details at: https://mosaicroc.org/posts/2021/04/eastertideshorts01
Easter Sunday. Today we celebrate the resurrection of Jesus. We ponder the ways that life—and Christ—are hidden all around us. And how we can learn to trust that life—and Christ—are present and active, even when we can’t see or touch them.
This is Palm Sunday. On the calendar, that means Holy Week has begun. But in the unfolding story of Jesus, this is the day he publicly steps into one of his great titles: Prince of Peace. We also reach our last beatitude this week--the one abou
One year ago this weekend, we held our first online service in Covidland. Today we take a look back at that year and peek ahead at our first steps out of Covidland (coming soon!). We also take a look at our next beatitude (Matthew 5:8) and turn
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.That’s something more than an interest or ambition. It’s the ache of a wanderer in the desert whose food is gone and whose canteen is dry and who knows that if t
“Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth,” says Jesus. That’s a nice sentiment, but doesn’t it fly in the face of reality? The powerful already have the earth. The impatient and opportunistic already control the land, and they don
Covid arrived in Rochester in the middle of Lent, and carried us into a wilderness of social distance and masked faces and online gatherings—not a wilderness we chose, but one we found ourselves thrust into. A few weeks later, Easter came right
Our theology and the stories we tell are full of stuff that’s both here and not quite here: eternal life, righteousness, oneness. Today we explore one of the biggest here-and-not-here mysteries: the kingdom of heaven. The kingdom is the only bl
The Beatitudes (Matthew 5:1-12) are not particularly pleasant. They appear crooked, pointing a different direction than it seems like they ought to. And they seem to call us to a life we would not otherwise choose. They are not easy to warm up
What we call politics in 21-Century America did not exist in Jesus’ day. Christians in America live in a land where citizenship is a birthright and where every citizen is guaranteed a vote and many freedoms, including a variety of ways to parti
Today, using the Parable of the Lost Sheep, we explore unity and separation, our ancient habit of taking sides, and God's unending determination of calling us—even carrying us—back together.
Today we look at a couple of “mini-parables” about lamps which reveal a world that’s infused with God’s light. It’s shining before us and around us. And if we’ll open our eyes, it will guide us, shine into us, even shine out from us. But Jesus
Unmentionables | Politics, Part 1. The Law This month, we return to our Unmentionables series—studying the parables of Jesus. This time, we’re going to look at parables that help us work through politics. And we begin today by asking “What is m
In Advent, the days between the fourth candle and the Christ candle are perhaps the hardest stretch of waiting. We’ve already waited so long—it’s tempting to jump right to the end. But that’s not how history works. In that home stretch, our ant
According Psalm 23, the Lord makes us lie down in green pastures. Also according to Psalm 23, the Lord makes us eat dinner while we’re surrounded by the people who hate us most. Mary found something like that when she traveled to her relative E
When light shines in the darkness, what once was hidden becomes visible. This can be supremely helpful and incredibly distressing. So when God sends word that that redemption is coming, that good news often brings trouble with it. The nature of
God interrupts the darkness with light. God interrupts limitation with possibility. God interrupts disgrace with favor.
As the church year comes to a close and as we hunker down for winter and a new surge of Covid, we revisit Jeremiah's instructions to the Jewish exiles. How can our church flourish, not flounder while we're held in Covidland; bless, and not negl
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