Worship. Serve. Grow.

Homilies (Page 37)

Table Manners of Hope and Mercy

Luke 14:1, 7-14
George Washington, one of the founding fathers and the first president of the United States, transcribed a little book as a school exercise sometime before he was 16 years old. It is entitled Rules of Civility & Decent Behavior in Company and Conversation … The gospel today sounds a little like Washington’s rules. It reads like a lesson in table manners… but there’s something more at stake here.

Christianity is still in its infancy

Luke 13:10-17
In my reading and studying, I came across a phrase recently that really struck me: “Christianity is still in its infancy.” You might say to yourself, “what a long infancy! We’ve been around for 2,000 years.” But there’s so much more for us to be able to grow into.

Check Your Blindspot

Luke 12:13-21
When you change lanes, you’re supposed to check your blindspot. It’s an area you don’t see. It’s there, but you don’t see it. Hold that thought. […] In all my years of ministry, all the times I’ve met with folks or heard confession, there’s one thing I’ve never heard. I’ve never heard anyone confess this. I’ve never heard anyone come in and talk about this: greed.

Persistence in Prayer

Luke 11:1-13
The last few years that I was living in California, I belonged to a group of ministers who met twice a month to do Bible study as we prepared for upcoming sermons. When this passage from Luke about prayer came up in the lectionary, one of my colleagues who serves as a hospice chaplain told us about a woman he had worked with a few months ago. He said that as they talked about her faith and prayer life, she had told him that she didn’t feel like God was listening to her prayers.

The Hope of Glory

Colossians 1:15-28; Luke 10:38-42
I moved to a new home a few weeks ago […] I know that I’m settling into a new place to call home when I put up a picture frame on the wall […] and I have this icon […] It’s this beautiful picture of Jesus standing there in colorful robes at the moment of creation […]. It’s a beautiful vision of the created order in its right place, of things redeemed, reconciled, living in harmony […] I’ve been looking at other icons of sorts this past week — images in the news — and these images tempt me to say, “so much for mystic visions of a redeemed world…”

Who are we?

Luke 10:25-37
[…] Amid all the turmoil and tragedy of recent weeks and months, there’s one line that keeps getting repeated: “That is not who we are.” So today I think we might spend a few moments with the question, “if that is not who were are, then who are we? Who do we want to be?” And since the Lectionary has given us the parable of the Good Samaritan, we might as well start there.

A New Creation Is Everything

Galatians 6:7-16; Luke 10:1-11, 16-20
Spend any length of time in waiting rooms at the doctor’s office or the hairdresser and pick up the piles of magazines around you. You can easily come away with “5 new ways to find your passion in life and unlock your life’s true purpose.” Self-actualization is a multi-billion dollar industry in this country. But when I read today’s lesson from Galatians, I’m reminded that for Paul there’s only one thing that gives life real purpose, and it’s pretty much the opposite of self-actualization.

Everyday Heroes

2 Kings 2:1-2, 6-14; Luke 9:51-62
I’ve been thinking about superheroes lately. I think it helped over the last week that I got to spend some time with about 150 kids who came to our Vacation Bible School to learn about the heroes and the villains in the scriptures…