Sermon

Sermon: Maundy Thursday, 2016

Sermon: Maundy Thursday, 2016

About nine months ago, someone in our community sat in my office, and we talked about life.  This was not an unusual situation.…  I spend a lot of time talking with you who are part of the Grace community about life, about illness and death, about unemployment and vocation, about school and relationships, about questions you have about God and the world.  So, when I sat with this particular person in my office to discuss life, it was not unusual.  What was unusual was that, after talking about her own life, this person turned to me and asked me questions about me and about my life, the kind of questions I would normally ask other people, questions that revealed she really had been listening to me.

Sermon: March 20, 2016

Sermon: March 20, 2016

These days, we can’t get away from politics.  

I don’t own a TV, but even I can’t get away from the political ads and political news...Facebook and other social media, NPR, the front page of the paper.  Everywhere, we hear about Donald Trump and Ted Cruz and John Kasich, Hilary Clinton and Bernie Sanders.  Everywhere, we hear about issues like health care and foreign policy, education and climate change.  Everywhere, we hear about political math, the changing demographics of voters, and superdelegates.  These days, we can’t get away from politics so much so that even today’s gospel is political…but in a way far removed from—and I do apologize if I offend—the absolute ridiculousness of current US politics.

Sermon: March 6, 2016

Sermon: March 6, 2016

In Luke chapter 15, Jesus shares a series of lost and found parables.  Sheep are lost and found.  Coins are lost and found.  Sons are lost and found.  Jesus shares these parables because 1) tax collectors and sinners gathered around him and 2) the scribes and Pharisees were grumbling.  What they were grumbling amongst themselves was: This fellow welcomes sinners and eats with them.