New England news & perspectives

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Spring Cleaning
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Spring Cleaning

Invasion. It was what described the state of our apartment a few weeks ago. Moths were slowly overtaking our living space until we finally found the source of the problem—a bag of forgotten dates in the corner of our kitchen. Let’s just say the bag was moving.

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Why Christ’s Sacrifice Matters Even to Nonbelievers 
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Why Christ’s Sacrifice Matters Even to Nonbelievers 

The story is told of a minister who had two little children. His youngest daughter asked him one Sunday after church why he always said a prayer right before he preached. Impressed that his daughter was actually paying attention to what was going on in the service, he solemnly told her that he always prayed before the sermon to ask God to bless the sermon and make it both inspiring and encouraging to the audience. After a moment of silence, the little girl spoke up again. She said, “Daddy, why doesn’t God ever answer that prayer?”

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Jesus lived, Merry Christmas!
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Jesus lived, Merry Christmas!

Christmas is right around the corner! We as Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ as God coming, crashing into our world, in history and clothed in flesh. There is a growing objection to Christmas that goes something like this: “We don’t even know if Jesus was a real person. He may have been a myth made up by the Church.” The good news is this is a question we can answer without too much difficulty, since our faith is a historical one, rooted in God’s work within time and space.

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Light of the world
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Light of the world

I love living in New England. I love the history, the ocean, the people. But there’s one thing that I just do not like. I hate that in the winter the sun goes down so early and the days are so short. I find myself really looking forward to the Winter Solstice. It may be the shortest day, but I know from that day forward each day will get a bit longer and include a little more daylight. It’s a bit easier to face the shorter days, when I know we are one step closer to spring and sunshine.

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Christ our comforter
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Christ our comforter

Suffering and pain are all too familiar to many of us. Experiencing affliction is part and parcel of what it means to live in a fallen world. Incredibly, much of what we read by Paul in our New Testament was written under very challenging circumstances. The book of Philippians was written from prison, as was Colossians. This passage as well from 2 Corinthians indicates that Paul had faced significant hardships. He recalls in verse 8 “the affliction [he] experienced in Asia,” where he was “so utterly burdened beyond [his] strength that [he] despaired of life itself.”

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Are the Rolling Stones the key to sanctification?
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Are the Rolling Stones the key to sanctification?

God isn’t interested in full people, but hungry people. That’s a theme in Scripture. Remember when Gabriel announced Mary’s pregnancy? She responded by singing how God “has filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he has sent away empty” (Luke 1:53). Her baby then grew up to proclaim, “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied” (Matt 5:6). God is interested in the spiritually hungry, the poor in spirit, not those who are self-satisfied.

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Rediscover the feeling of Christmas
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Rediscover the feeling of Christmas

When we first moved to New England there was already snow on the ground. It was only a few weeks until Christmas and the small village in Vermont that we moved to looked like a Norman Rockwell painting. We were busy revitalizing a historic church that has considered closing just a few weeks before we arrived. During those first few weeks as Christmas approached, we did a lot of “Christmas” things we had never done before.

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The price of redemption
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

The price of redemption

In an age where we are inundated with headlines of suffering, evil, fear, and death – where there is simultaneously an ease to remaining comfortable with ignorance, distance, or avoidance – the Confessions of Saint Augustine and the signposts of the Old Testament guide Christians towards a more robust understanding of the gravity of the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. Within modern western culture, death is often dealt with behind closed doors. The sick and elderly rarely die at home, intimately cared for by their loved ones throughout the process of dying. Instead they are shipped off, making death seem less intrusive, more remote, palatable, forgettable.

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