Churchtoons, cartoons from Church

Showing posts with label bible cartoons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bible cartoons. Show all posts

Monday, January 13, 2025

Big Guy and the Baptistry


 When Jesus was baptized, God testified who Jesus was (His Son - Luke 3), and so Christian baptism provides an opportunity for the candidate to say who Jesus is and state their faith in Christ. While this is a beautiful picture of Christ's work in us, it is only the beginning. Saved by faith through grace, Christians are now called to live out the gospel in our communities by demonstrating the love and care of Jesus.

Tuesday, January 7, 2025

Jesus GPS


 The universal nature of the gospel was demonstrated when wise men came from the East to worship Jesus (Matthew 2).  While they were not part of the national, ethnic, or religious backgrounds associated with Jesus or His family, they learned of His coming and how to find Him by following the light of a star. Are you a light that demonstrates the love of Christ and draws strangers to Jesus?

Thursday, January 2, 2025

What are YOU doing?


 When Mary and Joesph find the 12-year-old Jesus in the midst of a group of religious scholars, Mary asks, why did you do this? (Luke 2) Although Jesus does obey Mary and follows her back to the family, we might consider His words in this story and ask ourselves, are we learning, teaching, and growing in a place that encourages us to become more like Jesus, or are we simply getting on with our lives?

Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Christmas of Me

This Christmas season, it might be easy to see our friends and family make the holidays all about themselves. But all of us tend to tend to rewrite Christ's story (Luke 2) in ways that support our political or social views. We may even do this without realizing it. How do your presuppositions tailor Christ's life and teachings to better support your own views on society and politics?

Friday, December 20, 2024

Helping Hand...or...NOT?


 Christians universally look to a time of absolute peace and combability (Isaiah 11). We might be tempted to wait for Jesus by abandoning the call to love our neighbor and dismantle systems of power that cause pain and suffering. However, Jesus warned us of those who do not 'wait' with their "lamps" burning bright (Matt 25). Does your waiting include good works, or do you simply say you are waiting?

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Sure, I'll repent...of what?


 John the Baptist condemned his audience for their sins and called them to repent (Luke 3). While the sins are not named, the remedy is to remember God and who He is. How had they forgotten God? Do we consider the great sin of Israel their lack of temple attendance, or do we recognize the Old Testament prophet's call through John as a need to cast off greed and provide relief to those suffering around us?

Saturday, December 7, 2024

Look at the Signs!

When Jesus announced that the great temple would be completely destroyed, his audience asked when(Luke 21)? What signs will proceed this event? Jesus answered with a list of signs, but also pointed out that they didn't need signs. After all, they could tell when it was time to pick fruit because of what they saw. Are you we so busy trying to figure out when Jesus will return that we fail to live for Him everyday?

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Turkey Time 2024


Christians use Bible verses like Rev 1:6 to act claim ownership of lands they 'conqueror' forgetting that the Christ they are trying to follow taught us not to love this world's riches more than the souls we encounter. While we might see the cracks and faults of the holiday we call Thanksgiving, we might also consider this a time to show gratitude and seek forgiveness for our sins.

Friday, November 22, 2024

Last Days or Not, What Are You Doing?


 While many readers believe that the Jesus' sermon on Mount Olivet (Mark 13) was meant to describe signs of the end times, we might consider His words as a call to live steadfastly in His teachings. As our world entrenches in hate, bitterness, greed, and inhospitality, do we continue to show faith, hope, and charity? Do we continue to love, accept, and care for those around us?

Friday, November 15, 2024

More Cookie Drama

The remarkable story of the widow who shares the last of her food with Elijah (1 Kings 17) might remind us of modern religious speakers who claim special blessings for their benefactors. Those who misuse this story to increase their own wealth miss the importance of a non-Israelite caring for God's prophet. Maybe those the Church labels as 'sinners' are teaching us how to love well and to care for the vulnerable.

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Why the tears?


"Jesus wept."(John 11) Is one of the most powerful verses in the Bible. The occasion for Jesus's weeping was a visit to the grave of His friend, Lazarus. Because Jesus had already resurrected others and seemed to know that Lazarus was also going to be resurrected, could Jesus's tears have been for those nearby who saddened by this death Who do you feel this kind of empathy toward? Who would you like to comfort?

Sunday, November 3, 2024

2024 Election and voting 'biblical values'

 


What are 'biblical values?' Are they the Law of Moses, or the Noahic Covenant, or maybe the Edenic covenant? To be honest, 'biblical values' seem to be based on cherry-picked verses that support specific agendas.  Think of the sins you believe to be so ardently wrong and must be legislatively punished. 

Then ask yourself, what does the Bible really say about those sins? Are those the sins God judged Israel for? Did the major or minor prophets spent time warning of culture wars, or did they condemn a nation that turned its back on the stranger, the poor, and the disenfranchised? 

You could also ask if your version of 'biblical values' is truly pro-life. Have the recent changes in reproductive rights (in the name of 'biblical values') increased maternal mortality rates and is it continuing to endanger women? 

Instead of cherry-picking a set of verses that support our cultural bias and labeling them 'biblical values,' maybe we should just ask ourselves 'what would Jesus do.' Maybe we should consider Matthew 25, when Jesus sends those who did not care for the 'least of these' away, while embracing those who visited the needs of the poor as if they had visited Him and provided for His earthly needs.


Friday, November 1, 2024

Help me, Jesus!

Like the crowd surrounding the blind man in Mark 10, many modern Christians seek to quiet the voices of those who, in desperation and faith, call out for help. While enjoying the miracle of the healing and of Jesus showing compassion, we might fail to ask, why did the crowd try to silence the blind man, and why did they not bring him to Jesus for healing? Who are we silencing and keeping from Jesus?


 

Thursday, October 24, 2024

Who is awesome?


 Proverbs 22 emphasizes the importance of a 'good name.' We might think of this as a person's character, or what they are known for. Many people seek fame or a legacy or give themselves impressive titles but miss the importance of being a good person or bearing a good name. Do you indulge your pride by seeking fame, or do you live out the gospel of Christ taking His good name as yours?

Friday, October 18, 2024

Who does?


 Although he was faithful to God in every way, Job suffered greatly (Job 23). Job's suffering reminds us of our inability to judge other's devotion or situation. The theme of Job, and maybe the Bible itself, is that we should be humble enough to see ourselves in those who suffer and to offer assistance and comfort. The core of Christianity is that we cannot save ourselves, we need Christ's intervention. May we be like Christ.

Saturday, October 12, 2024

Trash the people


 When confronted with the question of divorce, Jesus surprised the religious leaders by undermining their interpretation of the Law and their understanding of who God is (Mark 10). Jesus asserted that God did not allow the arbitrary removal of support for a wife through divorce. We might consider how our interpretations of God and His word affect how we care for vulnerable people.

Friday, October 4, 2024

What I miss about the good 'ol days

Like the Israelites who romanticized their time as slaves (Num 11), many Christians reminisce over a past when Christ was more influential. But were those times truly more influenced by the teachings of Christ? Was the Church really living out the gospel more fully during times of slavery, segregation, or lynching? How can we help the Church live out the teachings of Christ better today and influence society to follow?


Sunday, September 29, 2024

Pastor Says


 Political leaders love to use Romans 13 to enforce obedience and to claim God's authority as their own. We might note that not all authority is worthy of trust or obedience. In Acts 5:29 Peter refuses to obey those who have authority because their demands contradict God's commission to Peter. Rulers are meant to protect the free the afflicted, (Psalm 82), not impose their power on others.

Thursday, September 19, 2024

That's Just Your Interpretation...


 Many commentators note the hard rebuke Jesus gives to Peter when Peter insists that Jesus, as the Christ, must not die (Mark 8). Peter believed that the Messiah would be a military leader who kills His enemies, but Jesus seemed to prefer sacrifice to violence. Do your interpretations of Messiah look like Jesus or like the military leader? Do you think Jesus would rebuke you for your interpretation? 

Friday, September 13, 2024

Awesome not hearing you


 In Mark 7 Jesus heals a man's deafness and asks that no one advertise the miracle. Those who witnessed the act could not seem to help themselves and soon the miracle no longer belonged to the man, but it had been appropriated for the crowd's purpose of promoting Jesus as the Messiah. We might notice how quickly the man disappears from the story to be replaced by the crowd's agenda.

Welcome


Each of the cartoons on this site is an expression of a sermon I heard in church. As a cartoonist, my method of understanding complex theological topics is to boil them down to simple images.

These images will never do justice to the sermons from which they are derived, but hopefully, they convey at least one aspect of those sermons to you, the reader.

I hope that you gain some benefit from the cartoons and will reuse them in ways that honor Christ.