Showing posts with label Peace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peace. Show all posts

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Two Sermons: "Peace With Others" and "It Doesn't Have to Be Like This"


Aaaand we’re caught up! I would promise not to get behind again in the future, but I think we all know better. Below we have the last sermon (a communion sermon) in our short series on peace, followed by a sermon setting us up for next week’s worship service.

“Peace With Others”
Reading: 1 Peter 1:3-15, 4:7-19
Click here to view a manuscript of this sermon (.pdf).
Click here to download a recording of this sermon.
Preached on August 26, 2012 at PLWC.

“It Doesn’t Have to Be Like This”
Reading: Deuteronomy 30:11-20; 2 Timothy 1:6-14
Click here to view a manuscript of this sermon (.pdf).
Click here to download a recording of this sermon.
Preached on September 2, 2012 at PLWC.

Friday, August 31, 2012

Three Sermons: "Scriptural Christianity," "Peace Within," and "Peace With God"

Almost caught up! Hopefully next week we'll be back up to where we should be, and hopefully I'll be able to keep my rear in gear after that.

"Scriptural Christianity"
Reading: Micah 6:1-16; Galatians 5:1, 13-25
Click here to view a manuscript of this sermon (.pdf).
Click here to download a recording of this sermon.
Preached on August 5, 2012 at PLWC.


"Peace Within"
Reading: Isaiah 2:2-5; John 14:15-31
Click here to view a manuscript of this sermon (.pdf).
Click here to download a recording of this sermon.
Preached on August 12, 2012 at PLWC.


"Peace With God"
Reading: Exodus 33:7-11, 34:29-35; John 14:1-14
Click here to view a manuscript of this sermon (.pdf).
Click here to download a recording of this sermon.
Preached on August 19, 2012 at PLWC.

Friday, February 10, 2012

In support of religious liberty


At this very moment, the religious liberties of thousands of American Christians are being trampled by the government.

Note that I said, “are being trampled,” not “are threatened.” It’s not something that might happen a year from now, it’s something that has gone on for decades, if not centuries, with hardly anyone caring to notice.

One of the current issues making the rounds of media outlets is that the Obama administration is threatening to force Catholics to pay for contraceptives, and that this is of course a grave threat to Catholics’ religious consciences, and that this will then threaten the entire notion of religious liberty for all Christians. What has gone unnoticed through all of this, and indeed for the last forty years, is that the religious consciences of those who object to war are trampled every time they pay their taxes. They are faced with a choice every bit as difficult as a Catholic hospital being directed to pay for contraceptives: either they pay their taxes with the knowledge that some of their money will support war and its related industries, or they must choose to break the law by withholding some or all of their taxes.

I say that this has gone unnoticed for the last forty years when in fact it has been much longer, but every Congress since 1972 has been presented with, and refused, an alternative. It’s called a Peace Tax Fund, currently before Congress as H.R. 1191 (though it has been languishing in a Congressional committee since last March), and it does just what it says on the tin: it’s a fund for those who wish to pay their taxes but want them used for peaceful purposes (the text of the bill specifies what that means).

Christians of all stripes have rallied around the Catholic cause of religious liberty; let’s see how many will follow the logical implications of their claims and likewise rally around their pacifist brothers and sisters in Christ.

More information and a link to contact your representatives can be found at peacetaxfund.org.

Friday, April 29, 2011

When the Chips are Down

Following is a quote from Alan Stuart-Smyth, who was serving as a UN peacekeeper in the Congo when he interrupted two men in the middle of perpetrating truly horrific atrocities. The men went for their weapons, and so he shot them both.
"I had turned 19 only two days previous, and still suffered from the native upbringing of a good Christian family. I lost a lot of that upbringing at Okonda. There was no honor here, no virtue. The standards of behavior taught in the homes, churches, and schools of America had no place in battle. They were mythical concepts good only for the raising of children, to be cast aside forever from this moment on. No, I didn't feel guilt, shame, or remorse at killing my fellow man — I felt pride!"
—Alan Stuart-Smyth, "Congo Horror," quoted by David Grossman in On Killing, p.222

There's a lot in his account worth discussing, but one of the things that grips me is that the gospel (at least as it had been taught to him) had nothing relevant to say about the realities of war, atrocity, and killing. He abandoned what religion had been given to him because it was simply inadequate. What bothers me is that I suspect he was perfectly justified in doing so.

The gospel I hear preached (and struggle to balance in my own preaching) is usually a gospel of conservative middle class values and struggles focused on the existential (Shackled by a heavy burden? Jesus can help!), the practical (Got kids who won't come to church? Here are ten Proverbs that will help!), American-conservative-civil-religionist values (Homosexuals/liberals/illegals got you down? Here are three Bible verses that show how they're going to hell!), or surface compassion (Feel bad about your materialistic lifestyle? Send some money to Africa and feel better!). But do we have anything worth saying to Alan Stuart-Smyth?

At best, the gospel I hear preached is powerful enough to heal a broken marriage, set a person free from an addiction, and send some money to a third-world country to build a well. Powerful stuff, yes. But most of us — including most preachers, I fear — simply do not have a theology that can handle issues of atrocity and war with anything other than bumper-sticker platitudes that only end up insulting everyone concerned.

The reality is that the gospel of Jesus Christ does have an answer to Alan Stuart-Smyth. Most of us have just never heard it.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Choose Your Weapon

Reading: Luke 19:28-44

No sermon for March 21; our District Superintendent was visiting that week and preached the service.  Last Sunday was Palm Sunday, so of course that was our focus.  The main contrast in this sermon is between the palm branch and the sword, so I preached the sermon using a palm branch (of course) and a toy reproduction of a Nazgul's sword from the Lord of the Rings.  It was a fun one to preach.

Click here to view a manuscript of this sermon.

Preached on March 28, 2010 at PLWC.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Tearing Down Walls and Building Up Houses

Reading: 2 Samuel 7:1-14a; Matthew 27:50-51; Ephesians 2:11-22

Carey and I have been on vacation, thus explaining the lack of a sermon last week. This week, however, we moved on from 2 Corinthians and began reading Ephesians. I suspect I could spend several weeks at least preaching from this passage from Ephesians 2; Paul really likes to pack his words with theology.

Click here to view a manuscript of this sermon.

Preached on July 19, 2009 at PLWC.