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The Quiet Center
Luke 20:27-38
Father Mark begins with the Gospel passage where the Sadducees test Jesus with a question about resurrection, trying to trap him in a logical puzzle about marriage in the afterlife. Jesus, however, redirects them to a deeper understanding—resurrected life is not a continuation of earthly patterns but a transformation into divine life. He teaches that those who are “children of the resurrection” are alive in God now, not bound by human institutions like marriage or death. God is not the God of the dead but of the living, and this eternal aliveness is available to us in every moment we dwell in divine presence.
From there, Father Mark turns inward, comparing the Sadducees’ obsession with external arguments to his own distractions—represented by his dog Serena’s tendency to run off, drawn by fleeting scents and sounds. Just as Serena forgets the safety and love waiting at home, we too chase after the noise of the world: news cycles, social media, busyness, and even well-intentioned activities that fill our days but leave little room for stillness. Like the Sadducees, we risk mistaking motion for meaning, activity for aliveness. True life, he reminds us, comes from being rooted in our spiritual home—our center in God.
In closing, Father Mark urges a daily practice of returning to that center. The resurrected life Jesus speaks of isn’t reserved for the afterlife—it’s a way of living now, grounded in silence, prayer, and the awareness of God’s presence. He invites his congregation to find “the quiet center” amid life’s chaos, to live from the soul rather than the surface, and to cultivate practices that nourish this deeper self. Resurrection, then, is not a distant promise but a present reality for those who live awake to God’s love within.
Scripture quotations are from New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
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The Quiet Center
Luke 20:27-38
Father Mark begins with the Gospel passage where the Sadducees test Jesus with a question about resurrection, trying to trap him in a logical puzzle about marriage in the afterlife. Jesus, however, redirects them to a deeper understanding—resurrected life is not a continuation of earthly patterns but a transformation into divine life. He teaches that those who are “children of the resurrection” are alive in God now, not bound by human institutions like marriage or death. God is not the God of the dead but of the living, and this eternal aliveness is available to us in every moment we dwell in divine presence.
From there, Father Mark turns inward, comparing the Sadducees’ obsession with external arguments to his own distractions—represented by his dog Serena’s tendency to run off, drawn by fleeting scents and sounds. Just as Serena forgets the safety and love waiting at home, we too chase after the noise of the world: news cycles, social media, busyness, and even well-intentioned activities that fill our days but leave little room for stillness. Like the Sadducees, we risk mistaking motion for meaning, activity for aliveness. True life, he reminds us, comes from being rooted in our spiritual home—our center in God.
In closing, Father Mark urges a daily practice of returning to that center. The resurrected life Jesus speaks of isn’t reserved for the afterlife—it’s a way of living now, grounded in silence, prayer, and the awareness of God’s presence. He invites his congregation to find “the quiet center” amid life’s chaos, to live from the soul rather than the surface, and to cultivate practices that nourish this deeper self. Resurrection, then, is not a distant promise but a present reality for those who live awake to God’s love within.
Scripture quotations are from New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.

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