About Meg Jenista

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Rev. Meg Jenista Kuykendall lives in Philadelphia, PA and is an ordained minister in the Reformed tradition. She earned her M.Div at Calvin Theological Seminary (2008) and her ThM, also at CTS (2019).  She spent 15 years pastoring churches in Kalamazoo, MI, and Washington DC.  Currently, Meg is studying for her PhD in public theology at Fuller Theological Seminary, with a particular focus on the intersection of political discipleship and pulpit ministry. She balances out her PhD research by reading Sandra Boynton and Mo Willems books with her young son, cooking with her husband, and exploring their new home of Philadelphia.

Haggai 2:1-9

Commentary

Proper 27C

Names and Dates Haggai is a short book, wedged between Zephaniah and Zechariah, toward the end of the 12 books of the Minor Prophets.  With just three chapters, you might say that Haggai is more minor than most! Using the dating scattered through the book like a modern-day time stamp, we learn that Haggai only…

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Isaiah 1:10-18

Commentary

Proper 26C

Commentary: As Worship Sourcebook: While the point Isaiah is making is that Israel’s worship is unacceptable to God because it does not match their behavior toward the most vulnerable in society, this text is also — kind of accidentally — a primer on the central aspects of worship among the faithful in Jerusalem. We can…

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Jeremiah 14:7-10, 19-22

Commentary

Proper 25C

Dialoguing with God This text—not just the parts chosen by our Lectionary editors but the whole chapter—offers a beautiful example of God and God’s people in relationship, dialoguing and talking out their differences. In this case (and, to be honest, most cases), their difference of opinion shows up over sin, over human failure to keep…

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Jeremiah 31:27-34

Commentary

Proper 24C

New Covenant For Christian readers, this Lectionary selection emerges out of Hebrew Scripture as though with giant flashing arrows and neon signs lighting up the name: “JESUS!” Here he is and here is the goal of his ministry laid out neatly before us. This notion of a “new covenant” is laid out and explained in…

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Jeremiah 29:1, 4-7

Commentary

Proper 23C

Pen Pal Jeremiah is a compendium of literary genres, as we have already seen a whiplash of sorts from a kind of poetic prophecy to narrative and now to letter.  Those of us who read Hebrew Scripture along with the New Testament may not notice how strange it is to find an epistle embedded in…

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Habakkuk 1:1-4, 2:1-4

Commentary

Proper 22C

So then, What is a Covenant-Keeping God to Do? Elizabeth Achtemeier, in her Interpretation commentary on the book of Habakkuk insists that, while the backdrop of this prophetic book is the disobedience and injustice of God’s people and their subsequent punishment at the hands of an invading Babylonian army, that is not the primary focus…

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Jeremiah 32:1-15

Commentary

Proper 21C

“A Little Book of Consolation” For those who have been tracking in Jeremiah with me through this season of Lectionary readings, be warned! This week’s lectionary text switches from poetry to narrative and left me quite disoriented.  How can both the apocalyptic lament and the story of a land purchase both be Jeremiah? Let me…

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Jeremiah 8:18-9:1

Commentary

Proper 20C

Illustration: The Emperor’s New Clothes is a wonderful parable for explaining the prophet’s task.  The prophet is not the only person who knows or notices what is true.  The prophet is the one who foregoes pretense and is unafraid to say the quiet part out loud. In the classic children’s story, it is a young…

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Jeremiah 4:11-12, 22-28

Commentary

Proper 19C

The Politics of Babylon Jeremiah is coming at God’s people with every attempt he can think of in hopes of stirring them out of complacency.  The emotional appeals run the gamut: grief, anger, provocation, reasoning, coaxing. He sees the people jockeying for power, attempting alliances with this super-power and then another.  He observes their systemic…

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Jeremiah 18:1-11

Commentary

Proper 18C

Illustration: One of the most delightful challenges of pastoring is attempting answer kids’ questions about God.  They are unfiltered and haven’t yet learned the church rules dictating what one can wonder, ask or assert about who God is and how God works in the world.  (Maybe this is what Jesus intended when he wished that…

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