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A sermon on John 11: 32:44
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Sermon for Sunday, September 12th
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Beloved— especially in such times as of this— my hope and my prayers is that as the writer to the Ephesians says we might “be strong in the Lord and in the strength of [God’s] power.” In a world doubled over in pain and suffering… in a world swirling with disinformation needlessly costing people lives… in a world reeling from the costs to our children of imposing ‘normal’ onto that which is not— in our world I pray that we might “be strong in the Lord and in the strength of [God’s] power” and declare the gospel boldly. From where I stand our world is in...
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sermon on John 6:51-58
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a sermon on 2 Samuel 11:26-12:13a
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A sermon on 2 Samuel 11
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A sermon on Marck 6:30-34, 53-56.
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A sermon for Sunday, June 13th on Mark 4:26-34
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Sermon on Pentecost (May 23, 2021)
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... I cannot help but me mindful of the liturgical moment in which we find ourselves. We are in that 7th Sunday of Easter, in the time between the Ascension of our Lord into heaven and the descending of the Holy Spirit upon the apostles, upon the ministers, making the church the church and saying ‘it is time.” And so liturgically and actually we find ourselves in that liminal time of transition. We all know that life has changed, and what it has changed into being has not yet unfurled. We hear in that first chapter of Acts, in the time between Ascension and Pentecost that this the...
info_outlineIsaiah is speaking the good news that God comforts the exiled.
Comfort, comfort ye my people, speak ye peace thus saith our God…
God’s comfort for those who are exiled is the promise of return into the bosom of God. To those who are East in Babylon in the wilderness the way of the Lord is prepared and through that desert there will be a highway a smooth path back out of exile and to the city of peace, to Jerusalem. God’s comfort for those who are exiled is a reminder that though the things of this world wither and fades and we may be stripped of our worldly comforts, our Comfort is that “the word of our God will stand for ever.” Isaiah is saying to the people in exile the good tidings is that God is here and they will be restored and that the Lord God is a shepherd who feeds and guides his sheep and holds the lambs in his bosom. For the exiled, Comfort looks like a way back to the bosom of God.
Here is the thing— though we may not have always felt exile, we as Christians recognize that exile is always part of our story. Humanity lives East of Eden exiled from the garden knowing that we too will wither and fade because of our sins. And the good news is that God comforts the exiled. To those in the East, there is a Way.
The Gospeller Mark knows this and intentionally begins his Gospel invoking prophet Isaiah. John the baptist is the voice crying out in the wilderness showing us the way of repentance. We have served our term and our penalty is paid, though this time not by us. And though we may still wither and fade, the word of God which is breathed into and over us will stand forever. We have a Good Shepherd who feeds and guides his sheep and gathers us into the bosom of God. We have the good tidings of Jesus Christ, the Son of God.
… and all flesh shall see the token that the word is never broken.
I hope that more than a just a deeper knowledge of our scriptures that the Word of God might stand forever in your heart. I pray that you receive comfort and tell out good tidings