Showing posts with label Season After Pentecost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Season After Pentecost. Show all posts

Monday, January 12, 2026

Looking Ahead to January 18, 2025-- 2nd Sunday After Epiphany

 

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The Scripture Reading this week is John 1:29-51

The Sermon title is Come and See

Early Thoughts: It isn't enough to know second hand. Sometimes you need to see/experience for yourself.

There is a story in Matthew's Gospel (Matthew 11:2-6) where disciples of John come and ask Jesus if he is the one who was promised or if another was coming. In answer Jesus tells them to go back and tell John what they have seen. What have they experienced? Actions matter, seeing is more important than descriptions.

In these early verses from John's  Gospel many people are told about Jesus. They all need to go and see for themselves. John (the Baptist, not the Gospel writer) believes because he saw. John then tells others about Jesus and they go to seek him out. Then Jesus invites them to "Come and See". One of them then goes to his brother and says (I think) "you gotta come see this guy!" and another connection is made, another follower joins the crowd.

Then we have Phillip and Nathanael who again are called forth by immediate contact --even through Nathanael's initial skepticism. 

That first hand experience of the presence of God has more power than someone telling you of their own experience. This is not to say that we should not share our stories and tell others of our experiences. We need to do that but we need to do it as a way of inviting others in to seek their own experiences. Think of Andrew going to Simon/Peter after spending hours with Jesus. He invites his brother to come and see for himself. We nee to invite others to come and see what God is doing in the world today.

Seeing for ourselves is the best counter to our doubt and our skepticism. Experiencing for ourselves hits harder, sinks deeper into our psyche than relying on second-hand experiences.

This continues into John's story.  When Jesus stands before Pilate  Jesus asks "Do you ask this on your own or did others tell you about me?" (John 18:34). Do we know Jesus, know who Jesus is only because of what other say or because we have met him ourselves? Do we know about God or do we know God (or probably both)? John is also the Gospel writer who gives us the story of Thomas, the disciple who refuses to believe in the resurrection until he has his own personal encounter with the Risen Christ.

Seeing, experiencing for ourselves is important. Inviting others to "come and see" so they can see and experience for themselves is part of how we spread the Good News of faith.

What would make us offer that invitation? What would we invite others to see, to experience? Who in our story of life and faith has offered the invitation to us?
--Gord

Monday, November 3, 2025

Looking Ahead to November 9, 2025

The Scripture Readings this week are:

  • Psalm 119:33-40
  • Romans 12:17-21
  • Matthew 5:38-48

The Sermon title is Upside Down Vengeance


Early Thoughts:
 This Sunday is two days before Remembrance Day. How do we get to "Never Again" in a world that seems hardwired to repeat history. How do we get to Peace in a world so prone to violence?

By turning things upside down. By living into Jesus' upside down logic and commandments.

Jesus challenges our understanding of how to react in the face of mistreatment (real or imagined I would say). Much of the time the natural reaction is to want to strike back or at least to complain. Jesus seems to tell us to go further along the path of being mis treated.

Jesus challenges our understanding of how we respond to our enemies. Common sense says that you love your friends but have different feelings about your enemies. Jesus tells us to love them and to pray for them. [To be fair he does not say how to pray for them so there may be room for malicious compliance on that count.] Jesus points out that any fool can love their friends but the true calling is to love your enemies also.

Then there is Paul. Writing to Rome, Paul points out that payback is not the way of Christ. Years ago Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King said: "Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.". I have heard that for years without realizing how deeply rooted it is in Romans 12. Dr. King understood that to live into a new word meant changing our thinking. We move beyond payback and vengeance. We act lovingly instead. It is a hard calling. It is easier, and feels better, to at least dream of getting back at others. Though I do like the slightly twisted idea that by loving our enemies we "heap burning coals on their head". We overcome evil with good, maybe in part by shaming the other????

Psalm 119 is a very long piece of poetry -- 176 verses -- that talks about the glories of following the Law. In Jewish tradition the Law is often seen not as burden but as gift. In the same way that boundaries can help children grow healthily or "good fences make good neighbours" (as Robert Frost tells us) the Law, a set of rules about how we live together, helps keep us healthy. In a world where we lift up the importance of self and self-determination we might lose sight of this principle but we need boundaries to be healthy as individuals and as a society. In these verses we see the psalmist asking God for guidance and wisdom so we might stay inside the boundaries.

We will never get to true peace by putting down others, even if "they did it first". At no point in human history has the path of vengeance and pay back led to lasting peace. As it has been said, "eye for eye and tooth for tooth only leaves everyone blind and toothless".

Instead we lift up the upside down logic of the Reign of God. The path to peace is to love your enemy, to act lovingly toward them. The path to peace is to let God lead us in new ways. The path to peace is to stay between the lines -- even when the lines seem to lead in a strange direction.

May we continue to let God turn our worlds upside down.
--Gord

Monday, October 27, 2025

Looking Ahead to November 2, 2025


This is a first of the month Sunday so we will be celebrating Communion this week. If you are joining us via YouTube you are encouraged to have some bread and juice available so we can all eat and drink together.


Also the first Sunday of the month is a day when we at St. Paul's intentionally remember our Local Outreach Fund with designated gifts to support our neighbours.

With the beginning of November we start to prepare for the end of the Liturgical Year when we mark the Reign of Christ Sunday (Nov 23 this year). A month from now we will be into Advent and starting to prepare for Christmas. AS we lead into the Reign of Christ this year I encourage us to think of how Christ tends to turn our expectations and assumptions about the world upside down.

The Scripture Reading this week is Luke 6:20-26

The Sermon title is Upside Down Blessings

Early Thoughts: What does it mean to be blessed? Is Jesus seriously saying that the poor, the hungry, those who weep, those who are hated/reviled/excluded/defamed are the blessed ones? 

Last week I came upon a video which included a clip of Jordan Peterson responding to the version of the Beatitudes that we find in Matthew, a parallel passage to what we have here in Luke. In Matthew is where we find the familiar "Blessed are the meek" and "Blessed are the peacemakers" and Dr. Peterson was responding (in the clip which was presumably from a longer piece) to the idea that the meek and humble are blessed. Surely, he said, Jesus meant something else by meek -- his suggestion was those who had great power and strength but chose not to use it were the truly meek. The clip was spliced with a Biblical scholar who said that Peterson was clearly trying to renegotiate with what the text actually said to make it more palatable. In short, to make it fit with Peterson's assumptions about how the world should work.

But Jesus challenges our assumptions on a regular basis. Jesus is the one who tells us that the last shall be first and the our calling is to be servant-leaders. Jesus proclaims a kingdom that upends the way the world works, a kingdom where power is assigned differently, a kingdom which gives preference to those on the margins instead of those at the center.

In our world of late-stage capitalism we would think that Jesus has it all wrong in this combination of blessings and woes. Surely it is the rich, the well-fed, the praised who are truly blessed. Right?

What if we are wrong about the signs of being blessed? What if we are called to see the world with our head on the ground and our feet in the air? 

WHat does it really mean to be blessed?
--Gord

Monday, October 13, 2025

Looking Ahead to October 19, 2025


The Scripture readings this week are:

  • Psalm 133 Acts 2:42-47
  • Hebrews 10:24-25
  • Romans 12:15-18

The Sermon title is A Thankful Community


Early Thoughts:
In the end we are a communal species. Certainly  we are a communal faith. Really human life, Christian life is about how we function in community.

I may not always have believed this. There may well have been a time when, speaking out of having been consistently hurt by a specific community, I thought that the Simon and Garfunkel song I Am a Rock sounded like a good motto. Or at least that is what I told myself at the time.  It felt safer to be alone behind walls.  (On reflection I am not sure I had myself totally convinced even then.)

I still understand the impulse. Bit in the end we are a communal species and Christianity is a communal faith.

Over and over again when you ask people why they go to church some part of the answer is "the community". Together we dance and celebrate. Together we weep and lament. Together we complain about how the world is and dream about what the world could be. It may be a cliche but together we are more than the sum of our individual parts.

Our Scripture readings this week talk about the blessings of community. They also talk about the importance of being in community. They talk about the importance of  supporting each other in community.

5 years ago we were pushed to re-think how we are as a community.  How could we continue to be a community when we didn't gather in one place? We learned how to be community not only in-person but on Zoom as well. 5 years later we are still a different type of community.  Some of us gather together in a room on Sunday morning, others join us online either in real time or later that day.  We have people who have joined us for Sunday worship from other towns, even other provinces. We are a community that expands well beyond the walls of our building or even the boundaries of the city. AS time goes by the community grows and reshapes, we find new things that re important about how we are community together. Still we see the importance of community.

This week, in the middle of Thanktober, I ask you all a couple of question. Why are you thankful for the communities of which you are a part? How do our various communities make a difference in the world (both local and global)? What difference does it make to be in community --both when it is easy and when it is hard, when it feels safe and when we feel really vulnerable?
--Gord



Monday, September 22, 2025

Looking Ahead to September 28, 2025 -- Truth and Reconciliation Sunday


AS this is the Sunday before Orange Shirt Day (September 30th) we encourage everyone to wear an Orange Shirt to worship.

The Scripture Readings this week are:

  • Psalm 24:1-2
  • Jeremiah 32:6-15

The Sermon title is This Land is...Whose?

Early Thoughts: Who owns the land? Who benefits from the land? Who is denied benefits from the land?

 This  passage from Jeremiah comes just before Jerusalem is about to fall. As an act of faith and trust in the future Jeremiah is told to buy  a piece of land.  Realistically the timing makes no sense -- why buy land just before everything gets destroyed, what use is a title deed when the whole land is now in the hands of an invader? But the land is bought to remind the people that in the end the land will be theirs again. Some might see it as a claim that when push comes to shove the land will always belong to the people of Israel/Judah.

Several centuries later we can see that this claim of perpetual ownership can lead to a very difficult reality....

For most of human history land has been the basis of wealth and well-being. Only when we have control over the land can we have control over the economy, control over the people, control over our lives. The people who control the land can control how it is used, who gets to live where, and (especially in the last century in Alberta) who profits from the resources that lie under the surface.

But there is another claim in Scripture. Even in the same tradition that talks about a Promised Land and a Chosen People there is another perspective.  There is a perspective that says the earth is God's. If the earth (and all that is in it) is God's then maybe we should change how we talk about ownership and rights to use and rights to make decisions. Maybe.

This Sunday is 2 days before Canada's National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. There are lots of thins we could talk about when it comes to seeking truth about our history. There are lots of things that might go into finding reconciliation. (Personally I think we have much to learn from the Jewish teaching on repentance as laid out in this book by Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg as we do that work.) The question of the land, and the treaties that were made to help us share (or help colonizers steal depending on one's point of view) the land is a big one.

Each week in worship we have a Land/Treaty Acknowledgement, Such things are becoming increasingly common (or perhaps even an expectation) at many/most public events in Canada by now. Which is a bit surprising because it really wasn't that long ago that they were a "do we really need to do that?" thing in many minds. Why do we do that?  How does it help us along the road to truth and reconciliation, to building right-relations? Or does it even do that, is it more performative, a meaningless gesture when not backed up by action?

Whose land is this anyway? Does it belong to us, to our ancestors, to our descendants (7 generations on perhaps?) or does it properly belong to God/Creator/Great Spirit?

I have sat with people who are deeply troubled by issues of land and treaty. Sometimes they have been troubled because of a feeling that the colonial negotiators negotiated in bad faith, that it really was a land grab. Sometimes they are troubled because they feel that the Indigenous folk are asking too much or are given too much (one I can remember clearly was about the issue of mineral rights).

I, like many of you reading, have read many stories about land claims and treaty discussions. Sometimes about lands they were not actually released through treaties. Sometimes about reservation lands that were later found to be valuable and so acquired (not always fairly) from the First Nation that had them. Sometimes about who gets to profit/benefit from the minerals (thinking most recently of mining in Northern Ontario) the land holds. Sometimes about pipelines crossing those lands. So many stories, so much heated discussion. Some of them are big stories like the Oka crisis almost 35 years ago or the long saga of the Lubicon Cree here in Alberta. Some of them hardly make the news.

Whose land is this anyway? Who has the 'best' claim on it and its riches?.  Jeremiah makes us think it can be bought and that gives the best claim. Some stories of the treaty making process name that the Indigenous negotiator knew the land was not theirs to give away. Psalm 24 says that whatever rules or agreements we might make in the end all of it belongs to God. Whose is it? Who gets to control it?

As we live seeking reconciliation, as we seek a renewal of the relationships between those who were here, those who came after and those who will come in the future we need to look hard at how we share the land. Control of the land is power and wealth. I am not at all convinced the current model is working. What might be a new one?
--Gord

Monday, August 25, 2025

Looking Forward to August 31, 2025 -- Labour Day Weekend

The Scripture Readings this week are:

  • Deuteronomy 5:12-1
  •  Matthew 20:1-15

The Sermon title is Labour Justice

Early Thoughts: What does justice in the working world look like? How can we raise it up as a real way of being? Does the witness of our faith have a role in discussions about labour and justice and compensation?

FOund on Facebook

The readings this week address two facets of this multi-faceted issue. One reminds us that everyone needs time to rest, that nobody should be required to be "on" all the time. The other raises the question of what is a fair way to pay people.

Let's start with Deuteronomy. There are in fact two versions of what we like to call the 10 Commandments (the Hebrew text does not actually call them that, it is a matter of tradition). One in Exodus and another in Deuteronomy. In Exodus the commandment to keep Sabbath is based on the hymn of Creation in Genesis 1 and we are to rest on the 7th day because God also rested on the 7th day. Here in Deuteronomy we are told that we are to rest to remind ourselves that we are not slaves. In both cases the commandment is clear -- not just select people are to take a day of rest, everybody (even foreigners and slaves) is entitled to a day of rest.

It has been said that this commandment is the one people often seem proud of violating. Certainly there are some people who seem to want to brag (even if they phrase it as complaint) about how long it has been since they took a day off, or how they never use their vacation time. However I think that such complaints/bragging misses the point. It is not healthy to work all the time. It is not a sign of how important we are or how strong we are. It is a sing of an imbalance in our world.

More to the point from a justice perspective though are those people who are not able to take a day off. The ones who have to work multiple jobs just to break even and so they juggle shifts and end up with one every day -- and then there is finding time to do the rest of the labour that goes into maintaining a life (laundry, eating, childcare...). This justice question is specifically raised when we remember that one of the reasons Scripture tells us to take a day of rest (by which it means a day of rest, not just a day when you don't have to go to work so you can spend the whole day doing household labour) is that the people are no longer slaves like their forebears were. Labour justice, according to Scripture, mandates that people have a chance to rest.

Then we have the parable of the day labourers in the vineyard. To be a day labourer is to be in a very tenuous position. If you don't get work that day how will you eat? That was true in 1st Century Palestine. It is true in 21st Century Canada.

The landowner in this parable has always fascinated me. Why does he keep going out to get more workers rather than hiring more in the morning? And more importantly why does he pay everybody, the ones hired at daybreak and the ones hired just before closing, the same?

What he pays them is the going rate for a day labourer, the amount needed to live that day. This landowner is ensuring that everybody he came into contact with that day got was they needed for basic necessities. Today some would accuse him of being Marxist or communist. Or they might call him an idealistic fool. 

When Jesus tells parables he is teaching a little bit about what the Kingdom/Reign of God is like. In this case Jesus is suggesting that in the Kingdom/Reign of God everybody gets what they need, everybody's basic needs are met. At first glance it seems totally unjust. Surely justice means that the longer/harder you work the more you make. Everybody knows that right? Those people who worked all day were not treated fairly...

Maybe it depends what we mean by justice and fairness. Jesus tends to turn some of our common sense and traditional understandings on their head.

This weekend we in North America mark Labour Day, a day when traditionally we are encouraged to remember the way the Labour Union movement has changed how our economic system works. Of course in Alberta we are also marking Alberta Day since Alberta and Saskatchewan officially became provinces on September 1, 1905. As with many many other things the church has a divided history when it comes to labour unions and the changes they have called for in society. It has not always been clear where the church does (or could or should) stand.

My reading of Scripture and my grounding in the Christian tradition lead me to insist that we in the church need to take a stand on those things that increase justice in the world. That means we have to at least talk about questions around  Labour Justice. We need to talk about how we ensure everybody gets basic needs met (personally I am in favor of the idea of a Guaranteed Annual Income). As it happens this will also help us ensure that everybody has the opportunity for a day of rest each week (along with some vacation time for a longer rest and revitalization). It means we need to speak out when some parts of the workforce appear to be taken advantage of. It means we need to talk about how we define justice and fairness.

HOw do you think we as the church can speak up for a must just and fair world?
--Gord

Monday, August 18, 2025

Looking Forward to August 24, 2025 -- 11th Sunday After Pentecost

The Scripture Reading for this week is Luke 13:10-17

The Sermon title is Stand Up Straight!!

Image Source

Early Thoughts:
What bends you over? What bends your neighbour over? What keeps all of God's children from being able to stand up straight and tall in freedom and health?

I don't think this is (only) a story about someone's posture....

I mean if you read it in one way it is certainly about posture, about maybe a spinal issue, about a physical malady. But the story itself opens up different possibilities.

When we meet the woman we are told she has "a spirit that had crippled her for eighteen years. She was bent over and was quite unable to stand up straight". That sounds like more than a simple, if chronic, physical ailment. It sounds like something weighing her down. I have never had good posture (despite my father constantly telling me to stand up straight while I was growing up). Over the years I have often wondered why that is, what kept me from standing up straight to the point that my body was trained into a different shape -- was it laziness, weak muscles, or was there something else at play. This woman has something that is weighing her down, bending her over.

Then later, when Jesus confronts the people who are indignant that he has healed her (done work) on the Sabbath he puts it this way: "ought not this woman, a daughter of Abraham whom Satan bound for eighteen long years, be set free from this bondage". Obviously Jesus sees this as more than a highly troubling physical ailment. Jesus, who has come to bring freedom and liberation from bondage and oppression, sees a woman who has been bound and chooses to set her free. This is not just a story about a physical healing

So what binds you up? What bends you over? What weighs you down physically, mentally, emotionally, spiritually? (Remembering that a holistic approach to health would mean that being weighed down in one area impacts all the others). From what do you need Jesus to set you free?

Jesus, the Risen and Living Christ, continues to bring healing, liberation, and freedom to God's beloved people. Sometimes we may not even realize how badly bent over (literally or metaphorically, how strongly we have been bound until we are set free and allowed to stand up straight. Sometimes it is only after being set free that we can name what had been binding us. Sometime we get so used to being bound up and bent over that we think it is simply normal (I wonder if the woman in our story had some of that, I wonder how she saw the world differently before and after meeting Jesus that Sabbath day). Can we let Jesus set us free? Can we take the chance to stand up straight?

That is all wonderful and life-giving. It is great to remember that Jesus offers us freedom and healing. But I think there is a next step we need to take. As a part of the freedom and healing we find in Jesus we are told/encouraged/challenged to worry about the well-being of our neighbours. The Reign/Kingdom of God that Jesus announces is one where all people have what they need for life, abundant life. So when it comes to this story it is not enough to worry about what binds us up. We also have a duty to ask what binds up and bends over our neighbours. We have a duty to look critically and ask if there are choices we make that may bind up our neighbours and keep them from standing up straight.

So how can we help set our neighbours free? How can we help take away the weight that is keeping them bent over? How have we possibly contributed to that weight?

Jesus comes to help us all stand up straight. Jesus challenges us to be part of the forces that bring healing and freedom to the world. May God help up accept healing. May God help us bring freedom to our neighbours (possibly at some cost to ourselves).
--Gord

Monday, July 7, 2025

Looking Ahead to July 13, 2025 -- 5th Sunday After Pentecost, Proper 10C

The Scripture Readings for this week are:

  • Amos 7:1-17
  • Luke 10:25-37

The Sermon title is How Do You Measure?

Source

Early Thoughts: 
Are you plumb and level? Or are you maybe a little bit off-kilter? What is it that has pulled you away from being plumb or 'true'?

It happens. Even the best built building may have had perfectly level walls and floors at first but over time things settle and start to change. (Not that anyone familiar with our church building might know something about buildings shifting and changing). Sometimes the variance is minor, easily covered up. Sometimes it requires major work in a short time to keep the wall from collapsing. And sometimes it starts minor but over time becomes a major flaw.

Amos has a vision where God says that the nation of Israel (the Northern Kingdom) is going to be measured with a plumb line. Has the nation remained true or have they started to fall away (spoiler alert---the next line foretells their destruction so guess how the measuring goes). 

Just like walls can start plumb and true but time can make them start to swerve, so it is with individuals and communities. Sometimes we don't even notice how we have started to swerve, it happens slowly and gradually until suddenly we realize we have lost our way, that we don't feel anchored or stable anymore. Sometimes there is a seismic event and the foundation feels like it has been pulled out from under us and things collapse in a heap.

But what scale do we use to measure? What is the marker of being in or out of plumb?

I think there are a variety of scales used to make that measurement in the world today. And some of those scales say different things, push us to different ways of thinking, lead to very different results. Often to be true to one set of measures means we are seen as out of kilter, a little cock-eyed, or downright out-of-whack by others.

However for those of us who seek to live in The Way of Jesus there is one over-arching measurement that we are called to use. The plumb line, chalk line, level that we need to use the measure our lives is summed up in one word. Can you guess what it is?

Love. Jesus sums up his tradition, the Law and the Prophets, by calling his friends to love God with all their being and to love their neighbours as they love themselves. Love is the scale by which we measure ourselves. Love is the foundation that keeps us steady. When we fail to act lovingly we are out of plumb, we are un-level, we are no longer being true to who we are called to be.

How do we measure up? When the plumb line of love is held up to our communities where do we start to move away from the line? Is that variance because we have lost sight of the goal or is it because some other plumb line tells us to act in a way that goes against what is truly loving? Which measurement scale are we giving preference to?

Measurement and judgment are a part of life. We measure and judge each other, ourselves, our governments, our communities -- sometimes intentionally and sometimes unconsciously -- on an almost daily basis. The real question is about what scale we use, what criteria we use. God calls us to use Love as the pre-eminent scale and criterion. WE measure our lives by love.

HOw do we do?
--Gord

Edit to add:
Just after I hit publish I started thinking about how I will do Children's Time this week with a plumb bob and a chalk line as props. It occurred to me that a plumb bob only works properly if nothing catches on the string to keep it from hanging freely. Gravity will pull it straight down unless something pulls it to one side. Same thing with a chalk line. With no obstacles between two points it will make a sharp straight line but if there is an obstacle the line will shift. So maybe one of the questions we might ask is what pulls us out of the true line? What is catching our string to keep us from being level and straight?

Monday, June 30, 2025

Looking Ahead to July 6, 2025 -- 4th Sunday after Pentecost, Proper 9C

This week we will read some challenging words from Jesus as recounted in Luke 9:57-10:11

The Sermon is called Give Up What?!?

Early Thoughts:  What could you not give up? What would be too much to ask?

Jesus sometimes asks hard things. Jesus sometimes pushes us to a difficult place. Jesus pushes us to think about what is the highest priority.

SOurce

How many of us would find the requests made to bury a parent or go and say farewell to be totally reasonable? Most of us I think. But Jesus tells those people that that is not what he is calling people to.

How many of, when being sent out on a mission would think that the reasonable thing to do is plan what the bare necessities that we have to take are? Jesus tells his friends to take nothing, to be totally reliant on the kindness of strangers, to be incredibly vulnerable.

Where in this string of instructions might you choose to tap out?

IS this where Jesus continues to call us?  Does Jesus continue to call us to not do things that seem really important as we choose to follow his path? Does Jesus continue to send us out into the world vulnerable and seemingly unprepared, like lambs in the midst of wolves? (which sounds an awful lot like lambs prepared for the slaughter when I think of it).

From Agnus DAy

What if the answer is yes?

What things might we have to leave behind because they get in the way of our expectation of how the Way of Christ should/could/would look? And of course then the real question becomes the one I asked above -- what is too much to ask/what can you  or we not give up?

  • Security? 
  • Financial well-being? 
  • The comfort of the known and familiar? 
  • Assurance of success (however we define that) or even survival?

I truly believe that the church, the community of the faithful, the followers of Christ need to take these questions very seriously as we move forward. As an institution we have not become really good at risk-taking. As a group we have tended to preference the comfortable place. In more than one congregation the response to financial and human resources dwindling has been a call to do what ever is needed to ensure survival (I once had someone honest enough to say "at least until after my funeral"). But Jesus calls us to not worry about survival or even success(again however we might define that). Jesus challenges us to leave behind those things that might bring comfort and live on trust and faith.

THe way forward is to worry about being faithful and proclaiming the Good New. We don't get there by worrying about survival as a first priority. We don't get there by playing it safe. We don't get there without letting go of some things, even some things we REALLY LOVE.

Can we do that?  I'll be honest enough to say that some days it sounds terrifying to me. Then again, Jesus does not ask us to do it alone. We do it with a partner, with a community, as partners in the project. That might make it a little less scary.
--Gord

Monday, June 23, 2025

Looking Ahead to June 29, 2025 -- 3rd Sunday After Pentecost, Proper 8C

The Scripture Reading this week is Galatians 5:1-26

The Sermon title is Freedom!!

Source

Early Thoughts:
"...tell our enemies that they may take our lives, but they'll never take our freedom" It has become one of the most well-known scenes in movie lore, the Scottish rebel/hero William Wallace spurring the Scots on to battle by reminding them that the path to freedom lies in defeating the English army of Edward I. Later, as the movie draws to a close, as he is being hanged, drawn, and quartered, the last work that Wallace speaks is "freedom".

Or another image from an earlier show...
In the Star Trek (Original Series) episode The Omega Glory (which I learned this morning was one of the first episodes Gene Roddenberry wrote for the series) Kirk, Spock, and McCoy find themselves on a planet locked in a violent conflict between the Yangs and the Kohms, being held prisoner by the Kohms. Kirk uses the word freedom and one of the Yang prisoners is both surprised and offended because the stranger has used one of their sacred words -- "that is a worship word". Yes the episode goes on to glorify the US ideals and understanding of freedom and independence but that line has always stuck with me --freedom is a worship word.

In the Gospel of Luke the first public act Jesus performs after returning from his time of trial in the wilderness is to read in the synagogue. He reads from the prophet Isaiah saying:
“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
because he has anointed me
to bring good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives
and recovery of sight to the blind,
to set free those who are oppressed,
to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”
The work of Jesus is to bring freedom, to set people free. Many of the miracles we see Jesus performing, particularly the exorcisms, are about setting people free. One of my favourite healing stories in the Gospels is also found in Luke (chapter 13) where Jesus heals a woman who has been crippled, unable to stand up, for 18 years. As she is healed Jesus tells her she is set free from her ailment. A few verses later Jesus says "..ought not this woman...whom Satan bound for eighteen long years, be set free from this bondage..."

Freedom is a worship word for us too. We are set free from those things that bind us, that keep us from being who God created us to be.

How can we best use that freedom? How might we misuse that freedom?

The answer to the second question is Legion. to try to explicate all of them would take far too long. Let it suffice to say that we just need to look around the world to see the consequences of freedom misused and abused.

The first question is a bit more nuanced. And for that I turn to Paul, who seems to be reminding the Galatians (and us) that freedom doesn't mean everything is good. In his 1st Letter to the Corinthians Paul says (twice) that all things are permitted [in the freedom we have in Christ] but not all things are beneficial. For Paul the question of how we live out our freedom is essential. If we are no longer bound by the Law (in a religious sense that is) then how do we guide our behaviour? In 1st Corinthians Paul raises the ethic of those things that build up the community and the members thereof. Here in Galatians Paul phrases it in terms of the commandment to love your neighbour as you love yourself. Paul repeatedly tells us not to let ourselves be enslaved or dominated by some external yoke but here suggests that we should be enslaved to each other through the commandment to love.

This Sunday is the Sunday before both Canada Day and Independence Day with Bastille Day just a couple of weeks away. All three are national days that celebrate the coming of a new way of being, sometimes peacefully through law and sometimes through rebellion or riot. It is also 10 days after Juneteenth, as day when the news of the Emancipation Proclamation finally spread through all the Southern States at the end of the Civil War. These are days when freedom is talked about a LOT. What do we mean by freedom on those days? Is it the same as the freedom offered to us by God through Jesus Christ?

We are free. We are free to make choices. We are free to act. We are also subject to the consequences of our actions -- freedom never means that there are not consequences. We can use this freedom to build our own little empires, to do things that benefit us at the cost to our neighbours. OR we can use this freedom to build up the community, to bring hope instead of despair, to seek liberty and Good News for those at the margins, to spread love and justice around. We can use our freedom to, as Paul might put it, live by the flesh. Or we can use our freedom to live by the Spirit, to seek to have the fruit of the Spirit flow through us.

From ChatGPT

Our freedom is limited because while all things are permitted not all things are beneficial. May God help us use our freedom wisely, profitably, lovingly and justly.
--Gord

Monday, June 16, 2025

Looking Ahead to June 22, 2025 -- 2nd Sunday After Pentecost, Proper 7C

The Scripture Reading this week is 1 Kings 19:1-14.

The Sermon title is Eat, Sleep, Listen

Early Thoughts: When the world falls apart, when everyone is out to get you, when you are starting to panic what do you do?

In the pre-story to this week's reading Elijah has made some very powerful enemies. And now the queen wants to kill him (in revenge for Elijah first embarrassing and the slaughtering the prophets of Ba'al) so he is on the run.

Elijah, it seems, has lost hope. He thinks it would be just as well that God takes him from the earth right now. But God, it seems, disagrees. God reminds Elijah to take care of himself, to eat and drink (God provides the food and water)  and allows Elijah to sleep. This combination of sleep and sustenance revives Elijah and he continues on his way. Never underestimate the power of taking care of yourself in the middle of a crisis.

Elijah in the Desert

Then Elijah is ready for the next step. He is ready to talk with God about his situation and is told that God is about to appear.

First a great wind. Then and earthquake. Then Fire. Chaos and calamity abound. But God is not (at this time) in the chaos and calamity). When God comes by as promised He is found in the "sound of sheer silence". So maybe Simon & Garfunkel were right to tell us the the words of the prophets are whispered...in the sounds... of silence?

Elijah could have given up in the wilderness, could have succumbed to his panic and fear and died.

Elijah could have assumed that God was there in the chaos, in the wind or fire or earthquake. After all it would hardly be the first time in our faith story that this is how God is revealed.

But he did neither of those things. He trusted in God in the wilderness and survived the journey. He had the wisdom and discernment to know when God was truly present and then went out to meet Her. And then Elijah is honest with Them about what is happening, laying it all on the table so God can respond.

Then comes the (or another) important part. God hears Elijah's complaint  and in the verses immediately following this reading God sends Elijah back to continue the work. When we deal with the chaos and tumult of life healthily we are then able to go back out and continue the work. It is not always about escaping the chaos, it may not even usually be about escaping the chaos (sometimes it is though).

What do we do when our world falls apart? What is our response to crisis? Do we give up? Do we panic and make hasty decisions? Do we remember to take care of the basics? Do we embrace the chaos? Or do we respond with trust and wait for God to arrive so we can voice our laments, our fears, our worries? What prepares us to keep up the good fight, to make good trouble, to join in the mending of the world?

I know what I do. It leads to sleepless nights and a lot of stress -- and an overly large consumption of chocolate.. Maybe I need to find a better answer.

What about you?
--Gord

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Looking Ahead to June 15, 2025 -- Affirmaversary

 


The Scripture Readings this week are:

  • Romans 5:1-5 
  • John 16:12-15 
  •  Acts 11:1-12

The Sermon title is D.E.I. is Missio Dei

Early Thoughts: As I sit here trying to start this week I don't even know where to begin. The deluge of news from south of the 49th Parallel is so unaffirming, so uninclusive, so unwelcoming. Where is the vision of strength in diversity?


This week we mark the 2nd Anniversary of St. Paul's officially becoming and Affirming Ministry. The Affirming process is started around and really is aimed at questions around sexuality and gender but to really be a "Come As You Are" church, to really be welcoming and affirming of all we have to go farther than gender and sexuality. God has created a world with incredible diversity. God wants us to embrace that reality -- not live in our own silos where "like will to like".

Since the beginning of the current Trump Administration we have heard a lot about the 'evils' of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (D.E.I.) as a somethin that shapes policy [arguably we have heard a lot about the supposed evils of D.E.I and early things like Affirmative Action for many many years but those voices were given amplification and power since January this year]. There is a lot of rhetoric about how D.E.I. is supposedly harmful or weakens the society. Many of us find it a poor cover for racism, sexism, ableism and so on.

But there is a deeper theological issue for me. As I said above God created a world with great diversity. When we want to limit that diversity, when we want to ensure only the 'right' parts of that diversity get power and wealth and privilege are we not acting against God's dream, God's vision for the world?

At the end of May I attended the Northern Spirit Regional Council Annual Meeting. At that meeting I was re-introduced to a couple of concepts. One was the idea of Ubuntu. Ubuntu comes from the Bantu languages and translates to Humanity. As a philosophy it reminds us that we need to care each other because our individual well-being is tied to the well-being of those around us. The other was a traditional Masai greeting: "And How Are the Children?". This greeting reminds us to care for the future, to worry about the well-being of the weaker among us. It, as the article I just linked puts it, makes us check its ethical compass. The traditional response is "All the Children are Well", meaning that things are stable.

In a world where lifting up diversity is seen as a problem, a world where striving for equity is bad, a world where only those who fit in get included could we honestly answer "all the children are well"?

D.E.I. is an acronym. Dei is a word, a Latin word. It means God. More than a few of my colleagues pointed that out as the President and DOGE were maligning, attacking and dismantling D.E.I. earlier this year. In both Jewish and Christian Scripture God makes it clear that God's hope for the world is a place where we can wholehearted share the Masai greeting--both parts. The Reign of God, that thing Jesus proclaimed over and over, is (I believe) a place where Ubuntu is a guiding principle. We might refer to it with words like "love your neighbour as you love yourself" or "by this shall all others know that you are my disciples, that you love on another" or "love your enemies". It expresses the same sort of commitment to care for the well-being of everyone.

IN a world where some of these philosophies are seen as problematic, or dangerous, or misguided we have a duty. We have a duty to proclaim the importance on D.E.I even when it is unpopular. We have a duty to speak out in protection of those at the margins. We have a duty to lift up a different way of being together. God calls us to do just that. May God help us to have the courage to do just that.
--Gord

Monday, November 18, 2024

Looking Ahead to November 24, 2024 -- Reign of Christ Sunday

The Scripture Readings this week are:

  • Daniel 7:9-10, 13-14
  • Psalm 93
  • John 18:33-37

The Sermon title is King?


Early Thoughts:
What does it mean to talk of God/Jesus as our king?

I think that is a question about authority and loyalty. I also think it might push us to reconsider how we currently assign those things.

Jewish  Scripture is, at best, ambivalent on the question of whether or not kings are a good thing for society. I think it in fact leans heavily to the side that human kings "like other nations" are not a good thing for the people of Israel. The people of God do not need a king like other nations because they already have a king to whom they owe total loyalty and from whom authority flows -- that would be God. At their best the human king is seen as God's anointed/chosen (sometimes, as in Psalm 2:7, also described as Son of God) and acting as God's surrogate.

In the Apocalyptic parts of Scripture we also find this insistence that God is the proper King, source of authority and owed our loyalty. When the world is changed then God will rule over the world.

And then we have Jesus. All three of our hymns this Sunday will have us singing about Jesus, the Messiah, as Lord and King. A relatively common Christian understanding of Daniel 7:13-14 is that it is talking about Jesus, particularly the Risen Christ. This is not a Constitutional Monarchy being discussed [which makes sense since the ancient world had no concept of a Constitutional Monarchy like we find in Canada and other nations today] but a King with full authority and power.

In a world where kingship has largely taken on a totally different understanding what does it mean to proclaim God/Jesus as Lord and King? In a world where we try to flatten the distribution of power where do we place authority? In a world where we are constantly told we have to be loyal to our country, or community, or 'our people' or even our church where does the Reign of God that extends beyond all human divides come in?

This is the final Sunday of the year, a day when we explicitly name that we are part of, and waiting for, the Reign of Christ/Kingdom of God. I think that taking that seriously means thinking seriously about things we largely took for granted in the days of Christendom.

In a Christendom world there were assumptions made. It was assumed that the king (or other form of government to some degree) was still God's chosen and anointed. Part of the coronation of Charles III included an anointing with oil by an archbishop. It was therefore assumed (generally) that the King was owed your loyalty and that to rebel was not only disloyal to the realm but an affront to God. This is part of why it was such a big deal that England and France (in different centuries) executed their properly installed monarchs.

I think assumptions are dangerous. Human kings and governments are prone to error, to say the least. AS we have move to different understandings of government and have moved out of a Christendom-defined worldview I think we can start to challenge some assumptions.

I think the first assumption is about loyalty.  We hear a lot about loyalty these days and are liable to hear a lot more.  President-Elect Trump showed during his first term and has continued to show that he expects his appointees to be loyal to him personally even when their role (and even their oaths of office) are to loyal to the US Constitution.  Sort of a modern-day equivalent of l'etat c'est moi (I am the state) from the days of France's monarchy. That is an extreme example but there have always been voices in many countries calling that people prove their loyalty in some way.

Maybe the voices are wrong. Maybe the ultimate loyalty for people of Christian faith is not to any country, political party, or leader. Maybe our loyalty is meant to be given to God and God's Reign/Kingdom first and foremost. Maybe our call is to be a citizen of God's Country/Reign/Kingdom first and a Canadian (or British or French or....) 2nd. 

The loyalty question leads almost automatically push us to consider authority. What does it mean to say that God has authority over us? Maybe the authority question, in a world where we are increasingly encouraged to claim our own personal autonomy and authority, is in fact the hardest part of seeing God/Jesus as king. Who or what does have authority to guide or direct us? To influence our decisions?  To tell us where we have gone wrong? Why do we grant them that authority?

Christian Scripture and tradition have long proclaimed Jesus, the Risen Christ, as our King (king of kings and lord of lords one might sing). Pilate passes on the accusation that Jesus is a king in opposition to Caesar (and Jesus sort of evades the question -- or at least moves it into a different realm, different type of kingdom). But Scripture and tradition have also proclaimed that Jesus is a different type of king, a Servant King who is among us "as one that serves". In this world what does it mean to talk about the Kingdom or Reign of God or Christ as King? How do we show we are loyal to God's Reign? Where do we cede authority to God?

ANd what do we do when the systems of power that govern our lives act in ways incompatible with our understanding of being a loyal citizen of God's Realm?
--Gord

Monday, November 11, 2024

Looking Ahead to November 17, 2024 -- Proper 28B, 26th Sunday After Pentecost

The Scripture Readings this week are:

  • Daniel 12:1-3
  • Mark 13:1-8

The Sermon title is Is the End Near?


Early Thoughts:
This past weekend I was thinking of a quote from the movie Hope Floats (which may make a re-appearance on the first Sunday of Advent when we consider seeking hope in the midst of chaos):

Beginnings are usually scary and endings are usually sad, but it's the middle that counts. Try to remember that when you find yourself at a new beginning. Just give hope a chance to float up. And it will.

 It is my firm belief that really life is a series of endings and beginnings (with more than a few continuings thrown in for good measure). That can be both exciting and distressing. IT can lead us to explore a brave new world or it can lead us to weep and wail, to tear our clothes and mourn.

Maybe not this particular preacher

Our Scripture readings this week come from a genre of literature called apocalyptic. Apocalyptic literature often leads to discussion of the 'end times'. It is also not a part of Scripture that many United Church folks spend a lot of time talking about. Talking about the end times conjures up images of the street corner preacher with a sandwich board and a loud voice calling everyone to repent before it is too late.

However it is undeniable that talk about the end is a part of our faith story. In both the Jewish and Christian Scriptures there are predictions of what will happen when God transforms the world and what currently is will come to an end. So we really should talk about it at some point.

I see at least two things that need to be part of our discussions. First is to ask what we mean by 'near'. Scripture does not tell us how to know exactly what near might mean. The apocalyptic literature in Scripture can, and has, been used to describe almost every era of human life in the last 200 years. And given that Christianity talks about the coming of the Kingdom of God in terms of the 'now and the not yet' that is not really surprising. If God is, as I believe to be true, constantly at work transforming and changing the world the the end has come, is now, and is yet to be. So maybe near is not the best term to use unless your vision if of some cataclysmic event where everything will be changed in a flash.

The other question is based on remembering a couple of hymn lines: "In our end is our beginning..in our time eternity..in our death a resurrection", The Christian story of cross and empty tomb reminds us that endings open the door for a new beginning. I also remember that all good things come to an end, that nothing human is in fact meant to remain the same forever. Change is, as they say, the only constant. 

As God's Reign grows to full flower in the world some things must end so that the new thing God is doing can start to grow. Some things have to end so that others can begin. In a finite world, where energy and resources are limited, the only way to grow is to die.

So the end being near might be a good thing. It might be a cause for celebration as well as a cause for concern. Talking about endings may bring sadness as we prepare to say good-bye to something we hold dear. But talking about beginnings may bring hope and promise (as well as a bit of anxiety). As we celebrate the coming of the Reign of God the end is indeed near...but so is the beginning. Thanks be to God.
--Gord

Monday, November 4, 2024

Looking Ahead to November 10,2024 -- Remembrance Sunday, 25th Sunday After Pentecost, Proper27B

The Scripture Readings this week are:

  • Psalm 146
  • Isaiah 61:1-4 
  • Luke 4:16-21

The Sermon title is Peace, A Transformed World

Our reflection prompt for this week

Early Thoughts: Peace. What does that look like? How do we get there?

One of the markers of the Reign of God/God's Kingdom (or Kin-dom if you prefer) is that this will be a time of peace and harmony. Isaiah and the other prophets point to this with images like the Peaceable Kingdom in Isaiah 11 or when both Isaiah 2 and Micah 4 talk about turning swords into plowshares and spears into pruning hooks and then going on to say "nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more". In the Sermon on the Mount, as part of the Beatitudes, Jesus says that the Peacemakers will be blessed. 

The Reign of God is also a Reign of Peace. It is a transformation in how we live with our neighbour. It is a world where all has been changed. It is a time when the hearts and priorities of humanity have been transformed.

I am one of those people who believe that peace will never come from a show of strength. It does not come from the use of force to crush those who disagree. I believe that peace comes with justice (by which I mean social justice). Unless we have a just world we will never have a peaceful world.

All 3 of our Scripture readings this week echo this call and hope for justice. They share images of release and liberation, of healing, of God's special concern for those on the margins. This is the transformation the Jesus announces at the beginning of his ministry. Jesus is, in the Gospels, all about proclaiming that the Kingdom of God has come (indeed in Mark's Gospel that is precisely how he begins his public ministry). With Jesus God is at work bringing transformation to the world.

Next Monday we are invited to pause for 2 minutes at 11:00. In that pause we honour those who have been sacrificed by a world that does not yet know what peace could be. In that pause we recognize that the transformation has not yet happened, or at least has not yet been completed. Some days it seems unlikely that the transformation to a world where peace and justice are the rule and norm could ever happen. It would be easy to write it off as a utopian pipe dream.

Another CHatGPT creation

But we are called to be people of hope. We are called to remember that God is not done with the world yet, that God continues to work in, around, and through these often-flawed children that God loves. We are people of a dream, God's dream. In Scripture we see the stories of people trying to sort out how God would have them live. But we also see in Scripture a picture of what is possible. God proclaims that there WILL be a day when peace and justice are not only possible but a reality.

It will take transformed hearts and minds and souls. It will take a radical change in human priorities. It will look very different from how the world looks now. But it IS going to happen--someday.  Peace will break out. Justice will flow like a river. And we shall be living in the full-blown Reign of God.

May it be so.
--Gord


Monday, October 28, 2024

Looking Ahead to November 3, 2024 -- Proper 26B, 24th Sunday After Pentecost

All images created using ChatGPT

For the month of November we are building toward the last Sunday of the Church Year, a day when we intentionally talk about the Reign of Christ/Christ the King. I encourage us to take this month to reflect on what it means to procalim the reality of God's Kingdom in the world today.

The Scripture Readings this week are:

  • Leviticus 19:33-34
  • Ruth 1:1-10, 19-22
  • Mark 12:28-34

The Sermon title is Love the Migrant, the Refugee


Early Thoughts:
The heart of what it means to follow Jesus is to love your neighbour with a very broad definition of neighbour.

9 Years ago, in the middle of a Federal election we had the leader of a federal party talk about "old stock Canadians", a phrase which caused a fair bit of reaction and discussion. Earlier this fall the premier of Alberta talked about Albert only wanting to accept immigrants who "share our values". In the current US election there have been a LOT of comments/discussion about immigrants and how dangerous they are (most recently one candidate referred to the US as an occupied nation that he would free with the largest deportation program ever). The former British government developed a scheme whereby refugee claimants would be sent to Rwanda.

How we respond to migrants (economic migrants, people looking for a change/second chance, and refugees) has probably been an issue for human civilizations since the beginning. In countries like the US and Canada which have been built through immigration there have been long debates over who is "acceptable" as immigrants. In recent years asylum seekers/refugees in general have been largely seen with deep suspicion both in North America and Europe. [And we have to note that skin colour/country of origin has often or always played a BIG role in determining if people should be welcomed with open arms or not.]

So it is that this year as I mused on what to do with the commandment to love your neighbour as yourself my mind went to the question of those who come from away. Really it is a focusing on one aspect of the question Jesus is asked in Luke 10:29 "But wanting to vindicate himself, he asked Jesus, “And who is my neighbor?". Is the economic migrant, the refugee, the newcomer truly my neighbour? Am I really supposed to love them like I love the people I grew up around? The people who are like me? 

Pretty sure Jesus would say yes.

The stories of Scripture show us that those people were also concerned with how to treat migrants, newcomers, and those from away. And while there are parts of the story that are not friendly to those who are 'not like us' (eg. the people who returned from exile in Babylon were told to put aside the foreign wives they had acquired while in exile) there are other parts of the story that talk about caring for, acting lovingly toward, the stranger, the outsider, the migrant.

Ruth was an outsider. She married into the people of Israel because her husband's family were economic migrants to Moab and settled there, building a life.  Then she herself became a migrant when it was time for what was left of the family to return home. Poor Naomi is an economic migrant or refugee twice in the story.

Levitical law tells the people (who as the story goes were a whole refugee people fleeing one life for a better life) treat the outsider well. A big part of that argument is "for you were aliens in Egypt" . You know what it is like to be mistreated so do better when you have the chance.

Then Jesus tells us that we are to love our neighbour as we love ourselves and the. Jesus tells us to love our enemy. Jesus tell the story of the Good Samaritan to answer the question about who is my neighbour. Jesus tells us that others we will know we are his followers by our love.

THere are many concerns that go into the immigration discussion. How does population growth impact housing and public services is a big concern. We can't pretend there are not details to sort out to make it work. We also can not, as people of faith, followers of Jesus, try to limit ourselves to only accepting the 'right sort' of people. We have to care for the refugees and migrants. We have to push for them to have the same standard of living and opportunities as the rest of us.

Most importantly we can not allow ourselves to be led in to thinking they are a problem to be solved or a threat to be neutralized.

Jesus never promised that loving friend neighbour or enemy would be easy after all.
--Gord

Monday, October 21, 2024

Looking Ahead to October 27, 2024-- Proper 25B, 23rd Sunday After Pentecost

The Scripture Readings this week as we close Thanktober are:

  • Jeremiah 31:7-9
  • Psalm 126
  • Mark 10:46-52

ChatGPT's image for healing and renewal

The Sermon title is Thanks for Renewal

Early Thoughts: When have you felt healed and renewed? Is there a difference between healing and renewal? If so what do you think it is?

This week we have two passages that talk about the renewal or restoration of the nation of Israel (meaning the scriptural nation of several thousand years ago, not the modern nation-state) alongside a healing story where Jesus gives sight to Bartimaeus -- we are not told if Bartimaeus has been blind since birth or came to be blind later in life, though the last verse does suggest that he once had sight but lost it through accident or sickness.

I asked ChatGPT to add Jesus

Over and over again in Scripture God is revealed as one who bring wholeness, healing, restoration and renewal to the world. I believe God continues to do this. 

So when have you felt healed or restored or renewed? When has God brought wholeness back into your life?

Conversely, when have you felt in need of healing, renewal or restoration? When have you felt a broken-ness that you wished could be made whole again? Did the healing/restoration/renewal or return to wholeness match what you thought you wanted or needed? [Sometimes it doesn't.]

I suggest that sometimes, maybe even often, we miss the acts of God to bring healing or renewal because they seem so small. Or we think that there is some other reason, like some choice we made. Or we might even miss the healing/restoration/renewal because it was not what we expected.

A year ago this congregation was, to a degree, in a state of panic. For three consecutive years we had 5 figure deficits, with 2022 being around $30 000. We knew that this put as in danger of running out of resources but we were really unsure what the solution might be. We were sure we had to either sell the building, cut staffing time, or both. The concern was palpable. But God had already been working -- we just hadn't quite caught on yet.

Then I asked to add a sense of community

Starting in the first half of 2023 God had obviously been at work in the hearts of the members of this faith community and revenue started to improve. So much so that we finished 2023 with essentially a balanced budget, without major cuts to expenditures. There was still a bit of wondering of "was this a one-off event" but many started to feel that we had a bit more time to breathe and ask who God was calling us to be as a community of faith in the space and time. Then halfway through this year we got a surprise -- someone wanted to lease out half of our basement. All these things happened because people made choices but it is my belief that God was at work in hearts and minds and souls as those choices were made.

God brought a measure of healing and renewal into our midst. Even when some had started to lose hope God was at work.

This is one example. Many of us, in our personal lives, can think of other examples. Maybe we need to stop and look at the events again, to have our eyes opened and see with new sight, to see where God was at work. Still God has been at work in our lives, healing our hurts, renewing our world, restoring our hope, making whole that which was broken.

Thanks be to God.
--Gord

Monday, October 14, 2024

Looking Ahead to October 20, 2024 -- 22nd Sunday After Pentecost Proper 24B

The Scripture Readings this week are:

  • Psalm 92:1-4
  • Psalm 91

Did some playing with ChatGPT

The Sermon title is Thanks for Being There

Early Thoughts: When have you felt alone and isolated? What was that like? Did you feel vulnerable, unprotected, at risk?

One of the things I truly appreciate about the Psalms is that they invite me to explore, settle it, maybe even wallow in the reality of life with God. One of the other things that I appreciate about these ancient poems is that they can bring me comfort, they can remind me that God is there, they can tell me that God is looking out for me.

I could have chosen many different Psalm readings for that purpose.

Psalm 91 is, for me, a very comforting piece. Like many others I know the stomach churning that comes with feeling alone, isolated and vulnerable. Maybe that is why I have always been so drawn to the fact that A New Creed begins and ends with the affirmation that we are not alone.

This is our month of Thanktober, our Month Of Thanks, a time when I want us all to stop and reflect on why we are thankful.

More ChatGPT Playing

One of the reasons that I am thankful is that I am not alone, that it is not only my wits and strength that are going to protect me.

And that is a good thing.
--Gord