Tyler Mayfield

13
May
Changing Your Mind For Love

Changing Your Mind For Love

Peter has changed his mind for love. For love of God and love of neighbor.
4 min read
05
May
Fourth Sunday of Easter

Fourth Sunday of Easter

Photo by Joshua Eckstein [https://unsplash.com/@dcemr_e?utm_source=ghost&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=api-credit]
2 min read
25
Apr
Third Sunday of Easter

Third Sunday of Easter

The resurrected Christ calls us out of our hate and into the Way of Love. Convert us, again and again, O God, to the Way called Love.
5 min read
21
Apr
Second Sunday of Easter

Second Sunday of Easter

This week we begin a six-week Easter Season series from the Book of Acts. We will be exploring various “Easter People” from the biblical book of Acts
2 min read
12
Apr
Easter - Love Lives Again!

Easter - Love Lives Again!

A central message of Easter: Love lives again! It cannot in fact be defeated. We may try, empires may try. We may bury it, thinking it gone. But the power of Love is stronger than our own power.
2 min read
11
Apr
Easter Triduum - Three Days

Easter Triduum - Three Days

May we follow our Christ through the events of his last earthly week with wonder and awe.
5 min read
04
Apr
Palm Sunday

Palm Sunday

The week's newsletter uses the genre of a worship service to present its content. You will encounter liturgies,
3 min read
28
Mar
Rivers in the Desert

Rivers in the Desert

This week's newsletter provides commentary on Isaiah 43, the First Reading for the Fifth Sunday in Lent; an invitation to celebrate mystery; and a blessing to our Muslim neighbors who begin their holy month of fasting this week.
3 min read
21
Mar
There was a man who had two sons

There was a man who had two sons

Calling this story (Luke 15:1-3, 11b-32) The Parable of the Prodigal Son reduces our focus to the one son. But the parable opens with the line: "There was a man who had two sons."
3 min read
14
Mar
The Tower of Siloam and Suffering

The Tower of Siloam and Suffering

Jesus mentions the death of eighteen people when the tower of Siloam fell and asks "are they greater sinners than others?" The implied answer is no. They did nothing that might cause their death.
3 min read