Luke 2:1-14, (15-20)
Many decades ago, in a modest bungalow on a quiet street in a small Western North Carolina town, a baby took her first steps on Christmas Day. Or so my parents told me…
Luke 2:1-14, (15-20)
Many decades ago, in a modest bungalow on a quiet street in a small Western North Carolina town, a baby took her first steps on Christmas Day. Or so my parents told me…
Luke 2:1-14, (15-20)
This summer, Maxwell returned home with a 10-pound poodle that we were asked to foster… “No, we won’t be adopting her”… but we had not calculated on the fact that she would shortly adopt us…
Luke 2:1-14, (15-20)
We come here on Christmas Eve to hear the story of Jesus’s birth, and we do this several times tonight… But I have a different story to tell you…
Luke 1:39-45, (46-55)
This is the season for singing! It’s a season of song, and in case you haven’t heard it, the season is not Christmas […]. The season of song I’m talking about is the Advent season.
Readings: “Mark 13:35-36, Luke 3:7-18”
“Watch, because you do not know when the master of the house is coming, at evening or at midnight or at cock crow, lest he come suddenly and find you asleep. Rejoice in the Lord always…”
Luke 3:1-6
To prove that we Episcopalians are a people of signs and symbols, a question that I’ve been asked a few times this week is a very profound one regarding signs and symbols. And the question is, “What’s with the blue candles? I thought they were supposed to be purple.”
Luke 21:25-26
Where would we be without signs?
You probably don’t think about them that much, but we use them every day. Signs tell which streets are one-way, how fast you are allowed to drive, where to find a restroom or the exit. On our trip to New Jersey last week, signs told us which exits had a restaurant or gas station. Signs warn us of dangers, tell us where to find the sale, and all kinds of useful information.
Without signs, we’d be confused, unsure where we were, not know where to find the things we need, and perhaps, actually lost….
Click here for the Niebuhr Prayer.
John 18:33-37
Now does it seem a bit disconcerting to have just heard a Holy Week gospel reading in late November? We might be tempted to ask if we have somehow slipped through Christmas, but I can assure you that we have not. And what might sound even crazier is that I can honestly say to you right now, Happy New Year!…
Mark 13:1-8
I want to talk a little bit about our gospel reading today and put it in a little bit of context, a little teaching. There is a literary style, perhaps it can be called a way of writing, that was common in the scriptures, “vaticinium ex eventu.”….
I want to start with a story about the pope – the best thing you can do in an Episcopal church. And this isn’t about the present pope, ’cause the present pope is pretty cool. I mean basically it’s like the Roman Catholics got an Episcopal pope, and the Episcopal Church got a black Baptist preacher….