The Sin of Haiti

A Sermon for the Third Sunday of Lent Exodus 3:1-15; Psalm 63:1-8; I Corinthians 10:1-13; Luke 13:1-9 I don’t suppose it was really a surprise when, on January 12th, the day that a 7.0 earthquake devastated the island nation of Haiti, televangelist Pat Robertson issued a statement that suggested the earthquake was a result of a deal that Haitians had made some 200 years ago with the devil.  This indeed was not a surprise for those of us who keep track of such pronouncements by people like Pat Robertson or the late Jerry Falwell.  They issued a joint statement after Hurricane … Continue reading The Sin of Haiti

Walking with Jesus through the shadows of Lent

A sermon for the First Sunday of Lent, Year C Luke 4:1-13 Welcome to Lent, people of God!  My how the mood has changed!  Last Sunday we heard about Jesus, transfigured on the mountain in bright and shining glory, but this Sunday we hear of Jesus, hungry, alone and being tempted by the Devil.  A newcomer to the community who came last week may wonder if they stumbled into the wrong building this morning.   It’s often the punchline of jokes, some I make myself, how we Episcopalians are among the more affluent faith communities, and we do not deny … Continue reading Walking with Jesus through the shadows of Lent

On with the dance!

Trinity Sunday, Year B – Isaiah 6:1-8; Psalm 29; Romans 8:12-17; John 3:1-17 A week ago today as you celebrated the Feast of Pentecost here at Christ Church, I was worshiping in the home church of my parents in Pennsylvania.  The pastor of their church, not an Episcopal church mind you, had a children’s sermon to discuss the day – Pentecost – the day that the Holy Spirit came into a room full of Jesus’ disciples, a visitation that was marked with powerful and mysterious acts.   The pastor asked the children assembled on the chancel steps what Pentecost meant. … Continue reading On with the dance!

Of serpents and crosses

Lent 4B – Numbers 21:4-9; John 3:14-21 Some Sundays when I sit down to prepare a sermon, I read the appointed passages and sigh, finding little or no inspiration.  I know that means I will be spending longer with those passages, waiting for that moment of divine inspiration.  But then there are weeks like this one, where all of the passages seem to speak to me, in very familiar words and with familiar images.  It is weeks like these that I must wrestle with limiting myself to a good Episcopal homily and not a deadly, hour-long sermon.   What captured … Continue reading Of serpents and crosses

Light and Darkness

Last Epiphany B – 2 Kings 2:1-14; Psalm 50; 2 Corinthians 4:3-6; Mark 9:2-9 Have you ever been in a place of absolute darkness?  I remember as a high school student in Kentucky visiting Mammoth Cave, the longest known cave system in the world.  Even on the quick, two-hour tour, the tour guide would gather the tour group into one of the large chambers and douse all the lights.  The darkness is intense.  Often the tour guides would warn us amateur spelunkers not to try to touch our face because in the darkness with no light to help serve as … Continue reading Light and Darkness

Through the Same Waters

Epiphany 1B – Genesis 1:1-5; Acts 19:1-7; Mark 1:4-11   John the baptizer appeared in the wilderness.   When we hear these words, nothing may strike us as odd or unexpected.  But have you ever had one of those moments when you hear something in a familiar passage of Scripture, but it seems like you are really hearing it for the first time.  Either you just had never noticed the way something was phrased, or a concept suddenly leaps out at you from the pages of Scripture.  Sometimes we refer to this as an “aha moment” or in more nuanced … Continue reading Through the Same Waters

A Death in Blacksburg

A Sermon for the 22nd Sunday after Pentecost/Proper 23A Matthew 22:1-14 There was a death in Blacksburg this week that wasn’t in the paper and didn’t make the news as far as I can tell.  Teddy died.  Some of you will ask, “Who is Teddy?”  Others of you will immediately know the name and know who I’m speaking of.  Still others of you will remember when I preached an entire sermon about Teddy some five years ago now. You see, Teddy was a homeless man who spent most of his days on the streets of Blacksburg.  He was the large … Continue reading A Death in Blacksburg

Joseph’s Grief Observed

A Sermon for the Fourteenth Sunday after Pentecost Genesis 45:1-15 “I will be with you.”  God’s promise to Jacob had not gone unfulfilled.  God had indeed been with Jacob, and now God was with Jacob’s offspring – in this case, Joseph.  But what was going through Joseph’s mind during the encounter in our reading from Genesis this morning. Standing before him are his 10 brothers who betrayed him.  Because of their jealousy, they had faked Joseph’s death and sold him off into slavery, causing their father, Jacob, untold grief, not to mention the years of suffering Joseph endured.  And now, … Continue reading Joseph’s Grief Observed

Israel’s Limp

A sermon for the eleventh Sunday after Pentecost — Genesis 32:22-31 A first-grade Sunday School teacher seated her students in a circle, and asked them what they wanted to be when they grew up.  One by one, each child announced, "I want to be a doctor, like my father," or "I want to be a pilot, like my mother."   All the students in the circle had shared their dreams, when the time came for the most shy and timid boy in the class to speak.  He said, "When I grow up, I'm going to be a lion tamer in … Continue reading Israel’s Limp

Jacob’s Turning Point

A sermon for the ninth Sunday after Pentecost — Genesis 28:10-19a; Psalm 139 Over the past few weeks we have been hearing some of the great stories of our faith, and not just our faith, but that of Jews and Muslims as well.  Often called the stories of the Patriarchs, we certainly haven’t neglected the Matriarchs involved either.  This morning we have heard another quite familiar story from the Hebrew Scriptures, one immortalized in song and imagination – the story of Jacob’s ladder.  Now, the lectionary, or the schedule of scripture lessons we read from week to week, keeps moving … Continue reading Jacob’s Turning Point