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September 29, 2025

God Who Lives in Us

Nadiyka Gerbish (Ukraine)   |   Read Lamentations 1:1-6

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Lectionary Week
September 29–October 5, 2025
Scripture Overview

Lamentations opens with a description of the plight of the people of Judah, the southern kingdom. The people have been taken into exile as part of God’s judgment for their idolatry. The psalmist struggles to sing the songs of the Lord. In fact, those who overthrew Jerusalem have forced them to sing for their amusement, so the joy is gone. The psalmist prays that one day God will repay the invaders. In Second Timothy, Paul praises God for Timothy’s faith and for the legacy of faith that comes through his family. He charges him to preach boldly and without hesitation the gospel of Christ. In the Gospel reading, Jesus challenges the disciples to show greater faith and to understand that we are all servants in God’s kingdom.

Questions and Suggestions for Reflection

• Read Lamentations 1:1-6 and 3:19-26. Where do you find hope in the midst of pain and suffering?
• Read Psalm 137. How do you remember your spiritual traditions and sacred places? How do you look for God’s work in new and challenging circumstances?
• Read 2 Timothy 1:1-14. What spiritual practices help you to “guard the good treasure entrusted to you”?
• Read Luke 17:5-10. How might a posture of cyclical servanthood to and with all creation transform or increase your faith?

Respond by posting a prayer.

Lamentations 1:1-6

1 Oh, no! She sits alone, the city that was once full of people. Once great among nations, she has become like a widow. Once a queen over provinces, she has become a slave. 2 She weeps bitterly in the night, her tears on her cheek. None of her lovers comfort her. All her friends lied to her; they have become her enemies. 3 Judah was exiled after suffering and hard service. She lives among the nations; she finds no rest. All who were chasing her caught her—right in the middle of her distress. 4 Zion’s roads are in mourning; no one comes to the festivals. All her gates are deserted. Her priests are groaning, her young women grieving. She is bitter. 5 Her adversaries have become rulers; her enemies relax. Certainly the LORD caused her grief because of her many wrong acts. Her children have gone away, captive before the enemy. 6 Daughter Zion lost all her glory. Her officials are like deer that can’t find pasture. They have gone away, frail, before the hunter.

Unless otherwise indicated, scripture quotations are from the Common English Bible. Copyright © 2011 Common English Bible. Used by permission.

Death, destruction, violence, and suffering are not something constrained to the history books for us to read by the fireplace with a mug of hot chocolate in hand, the wind howling to enhance the aesthetics of our experience. The invasion of Ukraine has brought history to my doorstep. The wars,...

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Dear Lord, help us remember that you are with us in every season of our life, every struggle, uncertainty, and sorrow; never forsaking us, even for a moment. Amen.


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