Warm-up Question

  • What is a small action you can take that makes a big difference in your, or someone else’s, life?

Give a Little Bit

People–especially young people–often want to make positive difference in their community. Whether relieving hunger or ensuring civil rights or others, people often seek positive change.

Sometimes the job is so big that the change seems unlikely, if not downright impossible. There is so much hunger and inequality that making those positive differences appears too much for us. The weight of the world, and the distance from here to the change we want for the world, can be exhausting. So, when the odds seem stacked against us, sometimes we freeze because we believe our little action won’t make any difference.

Research suggests that sometimes our smallest actions have much larger consequences. For instance, this article details how the simple actions of spending quality time with children reinforces positive relationships throughout their lives, while playing make believe increases a child’s capacity for social, emotional, and intellectual learning. In other words, this apparently innocuous actions have incredible positive impacts on a child’s life. Rather than an adult’s escape from reality, such behaviors promote a more positive experience of reality for the child and the society in which they live. Even giving just this little bit of time, energy, or creativity can change the world for the better.

Think about it this way: it’s like climbing a staircase. Just because you can’t climb an entire floor of stairs in one leap doesn’t mean you can’t make progress. Even if you can only take one step today, you’re already one step closer to the change you want to make.

Discussion Questions

  • Have you ever felt such exhaustion or despair that you also felt you had nothing left to give? What was that like for you?
  • What is one step that you could take–one thing that you could do every day–that would make a positive impact?

25th Sunday after Pentecost

(Text links are to Oremus Bible Browser. Oremus Bible Browser is not affiliated with or supported by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. You can find the calendar of readings for Year A at Lectionary Readings.)

For lectionary humor and insight, check the weekly comic Agnus Day.

Reflection on the Gospel

There’s woman in today’s Gospel who gave just a little bit. At the temple, while rich people gave massive sums of money for their tithes, this woman put in a couple of coins barely worth a penny. That can seem like an inconsequential amount, but in Jesus’s words, “this poor widow has put in more” than all the others. How is this so?

Because while this seemed like a minuscule offering, her gift represented a major effort on her part. This single cent seemed small to others because of their big bank accounts, but for her, this reflected a significant sacrifice. Rather than give in to the feeling that she had nothing to give, this widow gave what she could. In the eyes of Jesus, that was a great gift.

Discussion Questions

  • This widow took the step that she could take and Jesus honored her for that. What are the little steps that you could take?

Activity Suggestions

  • Purchase cut or potted white flowers. Add one tiny drop of food coloring to the water you use to feed the flowers. Notice how, over the coming days, the flower’s petals are now tinted that same color. Reflect on how this small addition made a significant impact.
  • Talk openly about what change you hope to see and the hurdles you face in pursuing that change. Ask others both for prayer and for suggestions of small, simple actions you could take to pursue that change.

Closing Prayer

God of the Possible, you remind us that nothing is impossible with you. We entrust our fears to you. Inspire us to act in the ways that we can. Remind us that, when nothing seems like enough, you are enough and you are making all things new. We pray this in the name of the one whose actions in life, death, and resurrection changed the world, Jesus Christ: Amen.

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