Sermons from 2023

Sermons from 2023

Charlie Brown Christmas

Christmas Eve 2023           There is a reason we celebrate Christmas at the end of December, when the weather is cold, the days short, the nights long and dark. There is a reason we celebrate Christmas at the darkest, coldest time of the year.          Our ancestors in the faith knew why. They knew something about night, and about darkness. They who lived in a world lit only by fire, knew that their world, at least at this time of…
Who are you?

who are you?

3 Advent – December 17, 2023John 1:6-8, 19-28 Our gospel for today tells us more about who John was NOT rather than about who he was: he wasn’t the light; he wasn’t the Messiah; he wasn’t Elijah; he wasn’t the prophet.”  Who, then, was he?  Well, he was a witness and he was a voice – a voice telling people to prepare for someone else, someone whose sandal thong John was unworthy to untie. He was a voice of one…

Awareness of God?

2 Advent – December 10, 2023Mark 1:1-8          John the Baptist is best known as the forerunner of Jesus, the one who calls on people to prepare the way of the Lord’s coming. He is the messenger, the voice of one crying out in the wilderness. Forerunners are often unseen figures and unsung heroes. And their back stories are unknown. The details of their lives are underimagined or undervalued. They garner minimal attention, because they are forerunners—those who plow the…
When was it that we saw you?

Darkness and Light

1 Advent – December 3, 2023Mark 13:24-27          Happy New Year. Happy Advent. It is the beginning of the new church calendar year and isn’t it interesting that the new church year is roughly one month before the secular new year? There is a lot that rides on the turning from December 31 to January 1 — new resolutions, new starts, new beginnings. I suspect there is less consideration given to this move from the season of Pentecost to Advent.…

Risk

22 Pentecost – November 19, 2023Matthew 25:14-30          Our gospel reading this morning is often called the Parable of the Talents. The parable is about a wealthy man who goes away on a long journey. Before he departs, he distributes his property to three servants. It is a great deal of money. The first two servants put their money to work and double it. The third servant takes a different approach with his money, his one talent. He digs a…

The Life of a Dragonfly

24 Pentecost, Proper 27 – November 12, 2023 Matthew 25:1-13          This parable reminds me of dragonflies. I know that sounds odd, but are you aware of the life of a dragonfly? It may surprise you to know that dragonflies spend most of their lives underwater. Before they are born as the adult dragonflies we know and recognize, they spend anywhere from two months to five years and even more developing as larvae in the water. Only after this lengthy…

Saints Living Today?

All Saints’ Sunday – November 5, 2023 Matthew 5:1-12          Today we are celebrating All Saints’ Sunday.  All Saints Day is actually part of what we call a Triduum.  Triduum meaning a three-day observance.  We have All Hallows Eve (otherwise known as Halloween), All Saints Day, followed by All Souls Day.  This year that was Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday – October 31, November 1 and November 2.  It is Hallowtide, but we usually condense it to a Sunday observance. But…

Shakers

22 Pentecost, Proper 25 – October 29, 2023 Matthew 22:34-46          The United Society of Believers in Christ’s Second Appearing was a large group of English Quakers that would come to be called Shakers. They were called Shakers because of their distinctive movement during worship. And the Shakers are also known for their style of furniture. The minimalist style of Shaker furniture is governed by the guiding principles of honesty, utility, and simplicity. Every item was designed to work well…

We Belong to God

21 Pentecost, Proper 24 – October 22, 2023 Matthew 22:15-22          So this morning, we are hearing about some of the Pharisees and Herodians plotting to entrap Jesus. They first use flattery and then ask him a question designed to make him look bad. The Pharisees of Jesus’s day saw the tribute tax as a heretical and antinationalist capitulation to a pagan emperor, while the Herodi­ans viewed refusing to pay the tax as sedition.  Jesus understands that answering either way…

Robed in Love

20 Pentecost, Proper 23 – October 15, 2023 Matthew 22:1-14          So, this morning we hear another uncomfortable parable from Jesus. And I needed to remind myself that parables were designed to make us uncomfortable. If we read them and find ourselves unprovoked, then we aren’t really seeing them.  Jesus was no teller of cozy bedtime stories; his parables are designed to show us things we don’t really want to see. And this week’s parable of a wedding banquet gone…

Sorry Monsters

18 Pentecost, Proper 21 – October 1, 2023 Matthew 21:23-32          Let me start by giving you some context for our story this morning: Jesus has just spent the weekend entering Jerusalem on a stolen donkey, receiving the adoration of the crowds, cursing a fig tree, and slinging a whip around the temple to cleanse it of corruption.  In other words, he has just spent the weekend making holy trouble, and the religious establishment is furious with him.  They can’t…
What motivates you?

That’s Not Fair!

17 Pentecost, Proper 20 – September 24, 2023 Matthew 20:1-16          Be honest. When you heard our gospel reading just now, did your heart leap for joy? Were you excited when you heard that the workers who’d toiled and slaved all day long in the hot sun were going to get the same day’s wages as those who’d worked only one hour? Probably not, huh? This is not a favorite parable. It goes against one of our most cherished values,…