Look for any podcast host, guest or anyone

Listen

Description

Guest preacher Jonathan “Pastah J” Brooks unpacks Jeremiah 29 for us, drawing on lessons gleaned from living and pastoring in the same Chicago neighborhood of Englewood that he grew up in. [Jeremiah 29:4-7]




Our confession was “Morning Poem,” by Mary Oliver, who passed away this week.


Every morning

the world

is created.

Under the orange


sticks of the sun

the heaped

ashes of the night

turn into leaves again


and fasten themselves to the high branches —

and the ponds appear

like black cloth

on which are painted islands


of summer lilies.

If it is your nature

to be happy

you will swim away along the soft trails


for hours, your imagination

alighting everywhere.

And if your spirit

carries within it


the thorn

that is heavier than lead —

if it’s all you can do

to keep on trudging —


there is still

somewhere deep within you

a beast shouting that the earth

is exactly what it wanted —


each pond with its blazing lilies

is a prayer heard and answered

lavishly,

every morning,


whether or not

you have ever dared to be happy,

whether or not

you have ever dared to pray.