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As Christians we are seeking, sowing, loving and serving all people.

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indianheightsmethodistchurch

Seeking, Sowing, Loving & Serving all People 🌿
We are on a mission to worship God, follow Jesus joyfully & build community.

Jesus enters the Temple and overturns the tables o Jesus enters the Temple and overturns the tables of the money changers, crying out, “My house shall be called a house of prayer—but you are making it a den of robbers.”

Many of us hear that phrase and imagine the Temple as a place where wrongdoing was actively happening. But biblical scholar Dr. Amy-Jill Levine reminds us that a den is not where robbers rob people. A den is where they go afterward. It is the place where they feel safe, protected, sheltered from consequences. A den is a hideout.

Which makes Jesus’ words even more unsettling.

He is not simply accusing people of wrongdoing in the Temple. He is accusing the religious system of becoming a safe place for people who do harm.

The Temple had become a refuge for exploitation, injustice, and power disguised as piety. The very place meant to draw people closer to God had become a place where harm could hide behind sacred language.

Jesus overturns the tables because the system has become comfortable with what God cannot accept. Holy Week invites us to ask a question that is not easy for the church to hear:

Have our sanctuaries ever become dens? Places where racism hides behind tradition. Places where economic injustice is ignored in the name of stability. Places where exclusion is defended as doctrine.
Places where those who harm others are protected while the wounded are asked to stay quiet.

When institutions prioritize reputation over accountability, silence over truth, or comfort over justice, they risk becoming exactly what Jesus condemned—a den.

Jesus overturns tables not to destroy the Temple, but to reclaim it. To make space again for prayer, healing, and the presence of God among the marginalized.

The gospel tells us that immediately after this moment, the people on the margins come to him in the Temple—and he heals them.

When the den is dismantled, healing can begin.

Holy Week reminds us that faithful discipleship sometimes means asking hard questions about the spaces we love. Not to tear them down, but to ensure they are truly places where justice, mercy, and belonging can flourish.

May our churches never be dens.

Rev. Andy Oliver
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Join us on March 8 as ahaynes827 continues her Len Join us on March 8 as ahaynes827 continues her Lenten sermon series on Resist. This week's focus is Resist: Idols.

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Begin your Lenten journey with us at our Ash Wedne Begin your Lenten journey with us at our Ash Wednesday Service, tomorrow (2/18) at 7:00 pm. ALL are welcome.

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