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This Month Archive
St. Mark's Lutheran Church

 

  2011

 Sermons



Dez 28 - Sorrow, Hope, and Fulfillment

Dez 25 - Et incarnatus est

Dez 24 - Extreme Humility

Dez 24 - Becoming Simple Gifts

Dez 18 - Annunciation

Dez 11 - Rejoice! Good News!

Dez 7 - Separated

Dez 5 - Greetings!

Dez 4 - Heralds!

Nov 27 - Look back, look ahead, look around

Nov 20 - Accountable?

Nov 13 - Encouragement of the Future Present

Nov 11 - Key Words for Veterans' Day

Nov 6 - To Pray without Ceasing

Okt 30 - The Spirit's Work Continues

Okt 23 - Holy Is and Holy Does

Okt 9 - Welcome to the Banquet

Okt 2 - Judgments Final and Otherwise

Sep 25 - Invitation to the Dance

Sep 18 - What kind of Life?

Sep 11 - Forgiven Living

Sep 4 - Debt-free

Aug 28 - Did Jesus say "Pick up your sox." or "Be who you truly are."?

Aug 21 - The Community of Storytellers

Aug 15 - Baptized into Hope

Aug 11 - Sacrifice

Aug 7 - Called and Sent through Water

Aug 5 - In Spite of Sorrow

Jul 31 - Extravagant Abundance

Jul 24 - Kingdom, Crisis, Opportunity

Jul 17 - It's God's Harvest

Jul 10 - Unexpected Results

Jul 3 - A Burden

Jun 26 - True Hospitality

Jun 19 - Gather in awe; go with resolve and joy

Jun 12 - Church Disrupted

Jun 11 - An Argument with God

Jun 10 - Abide with us, Lord

Jun 5 - Silent Action, Active Silence

Mai 29 - Hollow or Full?

Mai 22 - Stoned because of a Sermon

Mai 15 - Life Abundant

Mai 14 - And Jacob Was Blessed

Mai 13 - Fresh Every Morning

Mai 12 - Of First Importance

Mai 8 - Emmaus keeps happening!

Mai 1 - So Great a Treasure

Apr 24 - Easter Earthquake

Apr 23 - Storytellers

Apr 22 - Completed

Apr 22 - The Tomb, Jonah, and Jesus

Apr 21 - Anamnesis – Remembrance

Apr 17 - What Kind of King?

Apr 10 - Can these bones live?

Apr 3 - Nit-pickers, Wound-Lickers, Goodness-Sakers, and Arm-Wavers

Mrz 27 - Inside, Outside, Upside-down

Mrz 20 - More Contrasts

Mrz 13 - Contrasts

Mrz 9 - Stop...and Turn

Mrz 7 - We're So Blessed

Mrz 6 - The Fellowship of Fear

Feb 20 - Holy and Perfect

Feb 13 - Blessed, for what?

Feb 12 - Barriers Broken

Feb 6 - Salt and Light

Jan 30 - The Future Present

Jan 23 - Come and See, Go and Do

Jan 16 - Come and See

Jan 13 - Time

Jan 9 - Servant of the Most High

Jan 5 - Rise, Shine

Jan 2 - The World's No and God's Yes

Jan 2 - Word and words

2012 Sermons          
2010 Sermons

Fresh Every Morning

Helen Hurley Funeral - May 13, 2011

The Rev. Kenneth R. Elkin

 

Here are two portions to that Lesson we heard just a moment ago..

The first one is the listing of all of the tings which have gone wrong, and how painfully sad the writer is.

The second portion of the Lesson is very different.

It is an acknowledgment of the continuing gifts of God.

If we were to assign colors to each section, I suppose that the first section might be a dull grey like the weather today, and the second section might be a sunny yellow.

 

Our lives are in effect a whole rainbow of colors: our moods, our experiences, our relationships, and our duties go through all sorts of changes across the years.

The problem comes when we get stuck in one particularly grey spot and can no longer see any other color or light at all.

It will be a continuing task for family and friends to make sure that does not happen with Lois.

She has looked out for her sister for quite a long time, and these last weeks have been especially difficult.

In addition she needs to offer assistance to her husband who continues in poor health.

It would be very easy for her to see only grey.

Listen to the second part of the Lesson again: The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; it is fresh every morning.

 

That is tremendously good news!

The sentence begins steadfast love of the Lord,

the One who has made us,

            has done so out of love.

 

And it is not once and done with him.

He keeps at it.

He loves us day after day, year after year.

Even when we don't ask for it;

            even when we don't deserve it,

            even when we cannot earn it!

 

Light, life, and all of creation...

            family, companions, opportunities....

We open our eyes in the morning, and there it all is for us!

Thanks be to the Lord for all of those  things,

even when we forget that it is the Lord who gives them,

even when we don't acknowledge it,

even when we don't say thank you.

What a wonder!

 

And these things are new every morning.

That is, the gifts of God are useable and adaptable in every sort of situation.

What a wonder!

Great is the faithfulness of God.

Helen may not have been anxious to acknowledge the gifts of God,

but in God's faithfulness, the Lord continued to give her a variety of things,

especially the love and care and companionship of her sister when other things went awry.

 

The writer of lamentations recognizes the mess of his life, and contrasts it  with the gifts of God,

and concludes that the greyness of his everyday life is still overwhelmed by the sunny reality of God's presence with him.

The Lord is my portion, says my soul, and therefore I will hope in Him.

 

And that is a reminder of Good News to us.

For God makes a promise when we are baptized, a promise that he will be faithful to us, and he will pursue us even when we try to run away from him or ignore him.

Somehow, he intends to keep hold of us,

 to mold us into being different persons than we would otherwise be,

and to bind us together into his new community.

What a wonder, that God intends it, and fulfills it!

 

So, from this day forward, what should we do?

1. Receive good things from God.

2. Offer thanks for them

3. Use them well, in ways that will honor God the giver and aid our neighbor,

in ways that bind together individuals into families and communities.

 

Even though it is a sad reason that brought folks together this week,

what a wonderful opportunity for adults and grandchildren to laugh and cry together,

to grow together, to eat together,

to comfort and encourage each other.

These are the things that will strengthen all of us for the next part of living.

 

It is sad when anyone gets stuck in grey.

But the best news is that the greyness does not win;

God gets the last word.

Christ is risen: He is risen indeed!

Lamentations says:  ...therefore I will hope in him., and that is enough!

Amen.

Please note: The preceding sermon is provided as a resource for the thought, prayer, and meditation of the members and friends of St. Mark's. It is the residue of a verbal event, and thus it does not have academic footnotes and other details that would be expected in a written document. The writer gladly acknowledges the prior thought and work of many Christians before him.