2016
Sermons
Dez 25 - The Gift
Dez 24 - God's Love Changes Everything
Dez 18 - Lonely?
Dez 18 - Getting Ready
Dez 11 - The Desert Shall Bloom
Dez 4 - A Spirited Shoot
Nov 27 - Comin' Round the Mountain
Nov 20 - Power on parade
Nov 13 - Warnings and Love
Nov 6 - Saints Among Us
Okt 30 - Reformation in Catechesis
Okt 23 - The Pharisee and the Tax Collector
Okt 16 - The Word of God at the Center of Life
Okt 9 - Continuing Thanks
Okt 8 - The Cord of Three
Okt 2 - Tools for God’s Work
Sep 25 - Rich?
Sep 23 - With a Word and a Song
Sep 18 - To Grace How Great a Debtor
Sep 11 - See the Gifts and Use Them Well
Sep 4 - Hear a Hard Word from Jesus
Aug 28 - Who is worthy?
Aug 21 - Just a Cripple?
Aug 14 - Not an Easy life with Christ
Aug 6 - By Faith
Jul 31 - You can't take it with you
Jul 25 - Companions
Jul 24 - Our Father
Jul 18 - Hospitality
Jul 17 - Priorities
Jul 11 - Giving
Jul 10 - Giving and receiving mercy
Jul 3 - Go!
Jun 26 - With urgency!
Jun 19 - Adopted
Jun 12 - A Tale of Two Sinners
Jun 5 - The Laughter of Surprise
Mai 29 - By Whose Authority?
Mai 22 - Why are we here?
Mai 15 - The Spirit Helps Us
Mai 8 - Free or Bound?
Mai 1 - Let All the People Praise You
Apr 24 - A New Thing
Apr 17 - A Great Multitude
Apr 10 - Transformed
Apr 3 - Here and There
Mrz 27 - The Hour
Mrz 26 - Dark yet?
Mrz 25 - The Long Defeat?
Mrz 25 - Appearances
Mrz 24 - Is it I?
Mrz 20 - Bridging the Distance
Mrz 16 - Singing the Catechism: Holy Communion
Mrz 13 - What is important
Mrz 9 - Singing the Catechism: Holy Baptism
Mrz 6 - What did he say?
Mrz 2 - Singing the Catechism: The Lord's Prayer
Feb 28 - Pantocrator
Feb 24 - Singing the Catechism: the Creeds
Feb 21 - What kind of church, promise, and God?
Feb 17 - The Catechism in Song: Ten Commandments
Feb 14 - Available to All
Feb 12 - Home
Feb 10 - The Catechism in Song: Confession and Forgiveness
Feb 7 - Befuddled, and that is OK
Jan 31 - That We May Speak
Jan 24 - The Power of the Word
Jan 17 - Surprised by the Spirit
Jan 10 - Exiles
Jan 3 - The Big Picture: our Christmas—Easter faith
Read: Romans 5:1-5
Holy Trinity Festival - May 22, 2016
There is much that is packed into the few verses we read today as the Second Lesson and Gospel.
And they are not easy verses to hear, but as we open them, there is good news for us.
We need such good news, because as individuals, community, and nations we have been banged around quite a bit in these days.
The catalog of problems stretches on and on: personal illnesses and the threats of epidemics, arguments in families and communities, political wrangling, wars and rumors of wars, wrestling over environmental stewardship, refugees and genocide, and...and.
It would be easy to say “Oh, what is the use?”
Maybe we should adopt the adult equivalent of the children's chant: “Nobody likes me, everyone hates me, I'm going to eat some worms....”
Both Paul in Romans and the Gospel of John would urge us not to be so ridiculous, but instead to see ourselves and this tangled world in the context of the love of the Father for the Son in the Holy Spirit, that is, with the life of the Holy Trinity.
Paul has spent chapter 4 of his letter to the Romans explaining “justification”, that God gives us the gift of a renewed relationship with himself, in spite of our problems, in spite of the fact that we don't deserve such consideration.
So now in the subsequent chapter, Paul spins out the implications of this for our lives.
It is all about God; God from the beginning, God standing there ahead of us at the end, God with us even now.
Through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, the Father announces the beginning of his love for us, all the things that are tied up in the word “justification.” It is Good News for us.
Through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, the Father announces the outcome of his love for us, all the things that are tied up in the words “hope” and “heaven.” It is Good News for us.
Through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, the Father announces his intention to be present with us through the problems and crises of life right now, through Spirited word and Spirited sacrament and Spirited life in the body of Christ, the Church. This too is Good News for us.
God from the origin, God from the goal, God with us even now; Good News for life.
To hear this, to celebrate this, to anticipate this: these are the key reasons for us to be together today.
When there is life-arranging or re-arranging news like this, we certainly want to be together, to share this with one another, to make sure that each of us has each heard it clearly not just once but are able to apply it to every life-situation into which we stumble.
There are also things that are not reasons for being here.
We don't come for a lecture in religious philosophy or comparative religion.
To see or be seen has always been a weak reason.
“My mother made me” will only work for awhile until it dies away with a whine.
We are here for an encounter with the Word made flesh, the Triune God revealed in the person of our Lord Jesus Christ.
The gods of the Greeks were impersonal, aloof, distant, and unapproachable.
One tried to placate them with sacrifices to buy-off their irrational vindictiveness.
On a whim, they might zap you at any time.
Greek culture began with the memory of divine disaster, the irrational destruction of everything with earthquake and plundering.
Hebrew and Christian culture began with the memory of divine rescue and life made new through the Exodus and the Resurrection.
The God who meets us in the Lord Jesus is precisely God's nearness and caring, approachability, availability, and self-disclosure, from beginning to end, and every time in between.
That is what Jesus promises when he says that the Spirit will take what the Father has entrusted to him and declare it to us.
The Spirit will clue us in to the nature of God and build up in us as much as we need to know now about the outcome of this creation and its Lord.
And that is truth, Good News for us.
“I'm not religious, but I am spiritual,” some will opine.
What they are is confused.
They do have a religion, and it is all about themselves, what they think, and especially what they feel at that particular moment.
Feelings are notoriously slippery; they wander all over the place, and they are prone to slide into depression very easily, because there are so many problems in life.
What we need is that which is not dependent upon our feelings, but an encounter with truth, the truth that comes from outside of ourselves, the truth that is the Father revealed in the Son through the Spirit.
This is why we hang onto the three creeds and use one of them each week.
They keep pointing us to God as the ground and basis for our lives.
--The Apostles' Creed that reminds us of our Baptism into the Body of Christ and the first time it made a real difference in our lives.
--The Nicene Creed which makes even more explicit that the center of life is bound up in Jesus and his revealing of the love of God to us.
--The Athanasian Creed and its origin in classroom arguments and its insistence that everything that is said of God is said three times for each member of the Trinity.
They are proclamation of truth, not feelings.
But we are impatient, we'd like to know more, now.
But Paul indicates that God's answer is still “not yet.”
In 1 Corinthians 13 he reminds us that in God's good time faith will become sight and hope will become experience even as love continues forever.
Today to the Romans, Paul uses the same trio of faith, hope, and love to encourage us that although we do not have everything now, we will have enough clarity to live, to love, and to serve.
And this is good news for us.
In the climactic scene in the movie A Few Good Men, the prosecutor demands “I want the truth!”
The guilty and disdainful witness retorts, “You can't handle the truth!”
The point of things this day is that we can handle the truth.
We can hear it in the Word, receive it in the Sacraments, and experience it in the community of the church.
Thanks be to God!
It is all about God; God from the beginning, God standing there ahead of us at the end, God with us presently.
God from the origin, God from the goal, God with us even now; Good News for life.
God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. 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. |