Sermons
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The fullest Yes
Joseph had a plan—a good, righteous plan—to quietly send Mary and baby Jesus away. And then God showed up.
On the fourth Sunday of Advent, we contemplate in Joseph’s story a God who keeps coming back to us until we say our fullest “Yes” to God’s call.
Seasons of doubt
If even John the Baptist has questions about Jesus, then we, too, can accept our seasons of doubt and uncertainty.
Also! The difference between joy and happiness.
Prepare the way
In the Advent season of preparation, we separate what is necessary and nourishing from what is not needed.
Photo: Archibale Isolation, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Leave the light on
In Advent, "We begin in the deepest dark, in quiet and peace, with that attention to what burns unceasingly within us. And in that quiet, we let it grow, and we grow and it grows...until on the holy night of Christmas, it's enough to light us all up and set us all on fire."
How the light gets in
There are two criminals crucified on either side of Jesus, and one of them turns to the man on the cross, with the crown of thorns, who is not a king but a loser. And he says, "Remember me when you come into your kingdom."
When all hope was lost, he still saw hope.
How did he see the kingdom of God there? Because if he could do it, we could too,
Knit together
Our ministry here and now is knit by God into the vast and eternal fabric of the Body of Christ.
“For these and all your many gifts…”
Pause and give thanks for the gifts God has placed in our hands, even just for a time.
“Only what we ought to have done.”
Forgiveness is the basic move of Christianity—”only what we ought to have done.” But basic doesn’t mean easy.
Bad stewards for the good Kingdom
The parable of the unjust steward is the fourth in a series of parables that praise “bad stewardship”—letting go of what we think we need to hang on to.
“Surely goodness and mercy.”
There are so many hymns about being lost and getting found. We sing some of them in this week's sermon on the parable of the lost sheep (Luke 15:1-10). And we reflect on how God is better at finding than we are at getting lost.
“As if he should never die.”
St. Augustine had a friend who he loved “as if he should never die.” His insight is that when we really love, we go ALL IN—we don’t calculate the cost—which, when we love what dies, will be grief.
Jesus’ invitation in today’s Gospel is that we love everyone recklessly, unreservedly, and without calculating the cost.
God created us for generosity
Think of someone who helped you, believed in you, and wanted the best for you. Think about the gifts—tangible and intangible—that you received from them.
Now I have one question. Did you repay them?
No? Maybe that's how it's supposed to be.
Things that matter more than coffee?
What, besides having my coffee just the way I like it, gives my life weight and meaning?
The one thing
Mary, Martha, and the one thing that is necessary. Also, this is the only sermon preached on July 17th 2022 anywhere in the world that doesn't mention the New Fancy Space Telescope images!
Guest appearance on The Lagniappe!
I was invited to be a special guest on The Lagniappe,* a podcast created by leaders at St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Chenango Bridge, NY. This is my very first PODCAST SPECIAL GUEST APPEARANCE and I had a great time dissing cats, trying to explain the transitional diaconate, and opining about politics in sermons.
Won’t you be my neighbor?
Sermon for the Fifth Sunday after Pentecost (July 10, 2022). On going all out in a display of foolish love.
Well, ya coming?
Sermon for the Third Sunday after Pentecost (June 26, 2022). On following Jesus when there are other things we’d rather be doing.
A power greater than ourselves…
Sermon for the Second Sunday after Pentecost, Proper 7, Year C, June 19, 2022. What would it be like to cast off every influence that is not God?