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Luke 17:5-10

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Emphasis Preaching Journal

In an earlier generation, a... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C -- 2007
In an earlier generation, a church was decidedly short on funds. A gentleman came to
Alvin is a city council... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C -- 2001
Alvin is a city council member in a Rocky Mountain city.
Gary was worried. The next... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C -- 2001
Gary was worried.
The Chesapeake Bay retriever is... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C -- 2001
The Chesapeake Bay retriever is an extraordinary breed of dog.
The San Jose State University... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C -- 1998
The San Jose State University football team was not doing so well during the 1996 season.
There lived a woman in... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C -- 1998
There lived a woman in England whose house stood at the foot of two ugly hillocks, which prevented t
While serving as a chaplain... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C -- 1998
While serving as a chaplain in a Clinical Pastoral Education program, one student had done an outsta
Dave is president of a... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C -- 1998
Dave is president of a huge retail electronics corporation.
The Associated Press recently reported... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - A
The Associated Press recently reported an incident which occurred in the final round of the 1979 Hal
Ten-year-old Kamichia Riddle... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C
Ten-year-old Kamichia Riddle (Fort Worth Star-Telegram, p.
From time to time we... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C
From time to time we encounter persons who have lived through great troubles.
The children were excited when... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C
The children were excited when the old ramshackle house in the neighborhood was torn down.
Those of us who were... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C
Those of us who were mature October 4, 1957, remember how shocked the world was that the Soviets had
Suppose a group of 100... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C
Suppose a group of 100 people were given the task of moving a piece of stone weighing thirteen tons
The lead story on the... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C
The lead story on the evening news centered on the heroic act of a firefighter who rescued a young w
Only a fool would go... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C
Only a fool would go digging randomly in the desert -- unless he knew his faith was not misplaced.
The problem of how to... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C
The problem of how to have faith is common to all world religions.
The congregation leaders decided to... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C
The congregation leaders decided to have a special award to honor a member who had been particularly
Sally was writing her letter... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C
Sally was writing her letter of resignation. "I hereby resign from any and all
Ernest Hemingway's masterpiece, The... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C
Ernest Hemingway's masterpiece, The Old Man and the Sea, is a soliloquy on the tenacity of th
Allowances for children have often... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - A
Allowances for children have often been hotly debated items, usually between parents and their own c
I must make a confession... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - A
I must make a confession.
If life is a bowl... -- Luke 17:5-10 -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - A
"If life is a bowl of cherries, what am I doing in the pits?" Erma Bombeck's question was on the lip

The Immediate Word

A Lament For The City -- Luke 17:5-10, 2 Timothy 1:1-14, Lamentations 1:1-6, Psalm 137 -- Paul Bresnahan, Barbara Jurgensen, Thom M. Shuman -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C -- 2007
This week's Immediate Word concerns Jeremiah and his laments over Jerusalem (Lamentations 1:1
When God Overdoes It -- Lamentations 1:1-6; 3:19-26, Habakkuk 1:1-4; 2:1-4, Luke 17:5-10, Psalm 137 -- Roger Lovette -- Proper 22 | Ordinary Time 27 - C
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The Immediate Word

Nazish Naseem
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For October 12, 2025:

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Mark Ellingsen
Jeremiah 29:1, 4-7
Mark Ellingsen
Bill Thomas
Frank Ramirez
Jeremiah 29:1,4-7

StoryShare

John E. Sumwalt
As he entered a village, ten men with a skin disease approached him. Keeping their distance, they called out, saying, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!” (vv. 12-13)

“I wouldn’t touch that with a ten-foot pole.”

CSSPlus

John Jamison
Object: This message is a role-play story. If you have enough children, you could have them play the roles of the ten lepers. However, for the most fun, I suggest planning ahead and recruiting ten adults from your congregation to play the roles.

* * *

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott

Call to Worship:

Jesus healed ten sick people, but nine of them were only interested in themselves and their own condition. Just one was able to look beyond his own concerns and say thank you. In our worship today let us look beyond ourselves and see God.

Invitation to Confession:
Jesus, sometimes we are consumed by ourselves and fail to really care about other people.
Lord, have mercy.
Jesus, sometimes we focus so intently on ourselves that we forget to say thank you.
Christ, have mercy.

SermonStudio

James Evans
(See Easter 6, Cycle A for an alternative approach to vv. 8-20.)

Schuyler Rhodes
"The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom" (v. 10). "Perfect love casts out fear" (1 John 4:18). These two powerful statements reveal for us the inadequacies of the translation process of the English language. These two juxtaposing passages reveal only a tiny fraction of the contradictions and conflicts found within our holy Word. No wonder people have trouble reading and understanding.
Scott Suskovic
"... suffer as I do" (2 Timothy 1:12).

It was in 1965 that the Rolling Stones recorded the song, "I Can't Get No Satisfaction." Even today, over forty years later, we are still saying the same words and feeling the same emptiness of trying and trying, but getting no satisfaction. Commercials promise it with whiter teeth and fresher breath. Wall Street promises it with higher returns. Soap operas promise it with a dynamic love life. Yet those who have conquered each of those summits come up with the same cry, "I can't get no satisfaction." Can you?

Stephen M. Crotts
Have you ever had this experience? You walk into a dark room to do something, flick on the light switch, and nothing happens. I suspect a lot of our Thanksgivings are like that. Thursday late in November rolls around and suddenly it's Thanksgiving! So everybody gives thanks! But quite often the gratitude is just not there. Like the light switch, we reach for it at the appropriate time and it won't work. It's burned out.
Richard E. Gribble, CSC
Once there was a wise king who died. His son, who was young and rather brash, came to the throne and after only two months ordered a review all of his father's appointments. He called in the royal secretary, the royal treasurer, and the viceroy for interviews. He found them all to be unworthy and sent them into exile with only the shirts on their backs. Next he decided to interview the local bishop. A courier was sent to the bishop's residence with this message: "You are to report to the palace and answer the following three questions: 1) What direction does God face? 2) What am I worth?

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