Click on the “Watch” button below the sermon that you would like to hear. If you would like to download the sermon to watch it later, click on either button and click “Watch Later”. We pray that these sermons will help us learn and grow in our faith. We invite you to worship with us on Sunday morning so you can experience the full fellowship and love of the gathered community.
We may think Jesus–or we ourselves– could “pay” for our sins, but God’s grace is not given in exchange for anything. It’s just a gift. When we see that, we ourselves may begin to overturn some moneylender’s tables.
To “take up your cross” is to be willing to suffer for love, and to enter into the world’s pain. Because we believe ourselves to be love and not just bodies, we trust God will give us life even as we pour ourselves out– because to love is truly to be alive.
Ever said, “I don’t know what got into me?” Repentance- our special focus in the season of Lent-is not getting down on yourself. It’s facing the things that “get into you” and getting free of them, so that you can be yourself.
The light with which Jesus shone in the Transfiguration, the glory of God, is not just splendor. It’s compassion. We shine with that light when we live in love for others, especially those who are hurting.
What God asks for us is to follow Jesus Christ in love and action, to be strengthened in faith again and again. There is the difference between God’s will and human mind. God is not only simply living in our own lives, speaking to us every day. God is also the transcendent God, not limited by human experiences and desires.
The power of love casts out the demons in us– our fear and self-centeredness– so that, set free, we can join in God’s work of casting out the world’s demons of evil, injustice and oppression.
When Jesus calls us, “Follow me,” it’s an invitation to discern what God is doing in our lives (or our church) and stay close to that. Jesus may call us to a new life, but he always invites us deeper into this life.
On Human Relations Sunday, we wrestle with what God is calling us to do individually and corporately. Like Samuel and Nathaniel, we must first commit our individual hearts to the work of the Kingdom before we can join the others following Jess on the Way.