Text reads "Wild Lectionary, A Preacher's Environmental Resource" over loose green watercolour of a set of hills and trees

Wild Lectionary is for those who want to preach on climate justice themes. In scripture, landforms, skies, waterways, and creatures are transformed. In the world around us they are transformed as well by the advancing global climate crisis. Repeatedly we are called to attend to the wisdom of the more-than-human world. Each week a different contributor offers commentary on the lectionary readings, suggestions for preaching, and links to additional material. We hope you will use and share these resources.

Famine and the Preservation of Life: 7th Sunday after Epiphany, Year C
Mother Amanda Ruston, OSBCn Mother Amanda Ruston, OSBCn

Famine and the Preservation of Life: 7th Sunday after Epiphany, Year C

It is not always so simple to identify the presence of God in the midst of difficult circumstances, or to see signs of redemption and hope in the darker seasons or ‘famines’ of life. Certainly, these are often the reasons humans have used to ‘prove’ that God does not care, or that God simply does not exist. However, even in the darkest of circumstances, God’s presence may be found wherever there are signs of life. God’s nature is life-giving, life-preserving. God’s intervention in seemingly hopeless circumstances - even those brought about by sinful human actions, will always produce signs of life; of reconciliation; of peace.

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Becoming radically entangled with the flow of Creation: Sixth Sunday after Epiphany, year ‘C’
Wes Howard-Brook and Sue Ferguson Johnson Wes Howard-Brook and Sue Ferguson Johnson

Becoming radically entangled with the flow of Creation: Sixth Sunday after Epiphany, year ‘C’

Our texts From Jeremiah and the Psalms this week invite humans to compare their relationship with God to a streamside tree. This ancient image may well sound “new” to readers expecting a comparison to God or to a “holy person” of note. But our Israelite ancestors were not bound by the Platonic assumptions that tend to shape Western thought and action, dichotomizing what the Bible joins: heaven (sky+) and earth.

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Romanticization of the land: Fifth Sunday after the Epiphany, year 'C'
Rev. Helen Dunn Rev. Helen Dunn

Romanticization of the land: Fifth Sunday after the Epiphany, year 'C'

I once went on a canoe tour of the marine coastlines along Burrard Inlet with Takaya Tours of the Tsleil-Waututh Nation. It was pouring rain. Seth George was our guide. He told us it was the wettest day of the year! We nevertheless went out in the 35-foot traditional style ocean-going canoe. We listened as Seth shared legends, songs, and stories of his family. Afterwards, Jenn Ashton, the Indigenous Cultural Sensitivity Leader at my church emailed and asked how it went. I told her that while I enjoyed the tour very much, I was disappointed with the weather—that it hadn’t been the picture-perfect day I had hoped for. I could almost hear her smiling. She reminded me that stormy seas are what early Indigenous people would have braved—with or without waterproof rain gear! She was right. I had to revisit my romanticised view of the land.

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First Sunday After Epiphany Year C: Married to the Land
Rev. Dr. Victoria Marie Rev. Dr. Victoria Marie

First Sunday After Epiphany Year C: Married to the Land

Today’s readings speak to me of several related themes God’s love and God’s love of justice; our gifts and the gifts of others; to use our gifts in the service of the Creator; and, of our need to remember to trust and have faith. In this homily(-starter), I wish to plant seeds for reflection through giving snippets of my thought on the readings.

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We are grateful to the sponsors who make Wild Lectionary possible:

This program is made possible through a Vital Worship Grant from the Calvin Institute of Christian Worship, Grand Rapids, Michigan, with funds provided by Lilly Endowment Inc.