Posts

Wheat Privilege

Wheat Privilege Matthew 13:1-9, 18-23 Christian Community Presbyterian Church Bowie, Maryland July 12, 2020 How many of you have not heard this two-part gospel reading before? Raise your hands. Hmm. That’s what I expected, I don’t see any. The first part is usually called the “Parable of the Sower.” It’s one of the more familiar of Jesus’ parables. Matthew, Mark, and Luke have versions of it. It is immediately followed by the disciples asking why Jesus spoke in parables. Jesus responds and then offers an explanation of the parable, the second part of this morning’s reading. The curious thing is that this is the only parable that Jesus ever explained. In Mark’s and Luke’s telling Jesus then offered a purpose for parables:     “No one after lighting a lamp hides it under a jar, or puts it under a bed, but puts it on a lampstand, so that those who enter may see the light. For nothing is hidden that will not be disclosed, nor is anything secret that will not become kn...

Ascension Is for All Time

Ascension Is for All Time Luke 24:44-53 Christian Community Presbyterian Church Bowie, Maryland May 24, 2020 This is the seventh Sunday of Easter. It is also Sunday after the Ascension. We don’t think much about Christ’s Ascension, except when we recite the Apostles’ Creed: “he ascended into heaven and sits on the right hand of God.” Tradition tells us that the Ascension was forty days after the resurrection, which would have been last Thursday.     What’s so special about the Ascension? After all, the resurrection wins as the most important event in Jesus’ life, Christmas places second, and Pentecost shows at a distant third. We forget that the Jesus event is a package deal. We don’t get to cherry pick Jesus’ life or teachings.     Luke thought that the Ascension was important. He told the story twice: at the end the Gospel and at the beginning of the Book of the Acts, emphasizing different aspects of the story in each telling. The Ascension concludes...

It Takes a Wilderness to Declutter Your Soul

It Takes a Wilderness to Declutter Your Soul Matthew 4:1-11 Christian Community Presbyterian Church Bowie, Maryland 1 March 2020 Listen to the sermon Lent is a lot like New Year’s. Both begin the day after the night before. Mardi Gras is just a ramped-up New Year’s Eve. Instead of holding glasses of champagne and singing “Auld Lang Syne,” we eat King Cake washed down with Cajun cocktails. Both New Year’s and Lent occasion a lot of resolutions, nearly all of which quickly get broken. So, with only four Lent days behind us, has your Lenten discipline fared as well as your January get-fit resolution? Last Sunday Dick Neff talked about giving things up or taking things on for the Lenten season. Like Dick’s friend who gave up parsnips and turnips, a child at the dinner table told her mother, “These are vegetables. You don’t want me to eat something I’ve given up for Lent, do you?” Dick urged us to take up something new for Lent. I’m all for that, but taking on something new is...

Work in the Realm of God

Image
Work in the Realm of God   Luke 14:1, 7-14 Christian Community Presbyterian Church Bowie, Maryland 24 September 2017   Formal table fellowship is complicated. A lot of us have faced the perplexity of the extra forks and spoons in a formal table setting: Which one do I use with which course? (Basic rule of thumb is to use the fork or spoon on the outside first.)   I suspect, however, that few of us have dealt with the often very diplomatic problems of seating people. It is supposedly a social no-no to have an odd number of persons at the table. That is because in a formal setting people are to engage in conversation with their neighbors. Gentlemen are supposed to speak first with the lady on the right, and then during the next course to converse with the lady on the left. This continues through the meal. Did you notice the underlying seating arrangement? Male, female, male, female, etc., with the honored male guest next to the female host and the honored female gues...

God Says: I’ve Got Your Back

God Says: I’ve Got Your Back   Exodus 14:19-31   Christian Community Presbyterian Church Bowie, Maryland 7 July  2019   James Brassard is preaching a series on the Psalms. So, to tie his previous sermons with those still to come, let me start off with a familiar psalm verse: “He leads me beside still waters.” You all know where that quotation comes from, don’t you? Psalm 23.   Preachers notwithstanding, pew populating Presbyterians and other pious people get a significant portion of their theological training from hymns. Many hymns tell us that God leads. Here are some from the hymn books in the pew racks in front of you:   From the hardback Presbyterian Hymnal (1990): Savior, like a shepherd lead us, / Much we need Thy tender care. [PH 387]   Lead on, O King eternal, / The day of march has come. [PH 447]   Dance, then wherever you may be; / I am the Lord of the Dance, said He, / And I’ll lead you all, wherever you may, / And I’ll lead...