Sunday, December 31, 2023

December 31, 2023 - The First Sunday after Christmas

Lectionary Readings

O God, who wonderfully created, and yet more wonderfully restored, the dignity of human nature: Grant that we may share the divine life of him who humbled himself to share our humanity, your Son Jesus Christ; who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

            There’s nothing quite like Christmas in the Episcopal Church. That may sound snobbish, but I truly don’t mean it that way. Episcopalians celebrate Christmas better than the rest. Many of the essential Christmas hymns are English. The tradition of Lessons & Carols that everyone copies is thoroughly Anglican. If you want to attend Christmas worship when you’re away from home visiting family, the best bet is always the local Episcopal Church.

Monday, December 25, 2023

December 25, 2023 - Christmas Day

Lectionary Readings

O God, you make us glad by the yearly festival of the birth of your only Son Jesus Christ: Grant that we, who joyfully receive him as our Redeemer, may with sure confidence behold him when he comes to be our Judge; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

            Did you get any good gifts this morning? Maybe some new clothes, Legos, or chocolates? Since we’re already thinking about what we have received, this morning let’s reflect on the gift we receive at Christmas. We heard in Hebrews, “Long ago God spoke to our ancestors in many and various ways by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son.” As the hymn puts it, “Joy to the world, the Lord is come, let earth receive her King.” What a tremendous gift we have been given in Jesus!

Sunday, December 24, 2023

December 24, 2023 - Christmas Eve

Lectionary Readings

O God of wonder, open us to the beauty, awe, and magic of this most holy night. Amen.

            “Silent night, holy night, all is calm, all is bright.” Indeed, this night glimmers unlike any other. Christmas Eve shimmers with the warmth and radiance of a love that defies all explanation, that is full of possibility, and that is making all things well. As Christina Rosetti put it in a Christmas poem, “Love came down at Christmas, love all lovely love divine, love was born at Christmas.” This night is bright with the “wonders of his love.”

December 24, 2023 - The Fourth Sunday of Advent


Lectionary Readings

O come, O come, Emmanuel. Amen.

            If you spend time on TikTok or Reddit, you’ve probably run across the term “main character syndrome.” It describes the tendency for someone to view themselves as the lead character in life. They can only see things from their own perspective, making them self-absorbed and self-centered. Those who have this main character syndrome find collaborating with others difficult. Entitlement, narcissism, superiority, and attention and validation seeking are some of the symptoms that go along with it. You’ve all run into these sorts of people – the people who intentionally take up two parking spaces at the mall; the people who are sitting in the left turn lane but decide they want to go straight, so they make everyone behind them just wait even though there is a green turn arrow; the people who expect everyone else to change their plans to accommodate their schedule. This is, obviously, not a new phenomenon – it just has a new name. What people on social media are now calling “main character syndrome,” the Church has called “sin,” for 2,000 years.

Sunday, December 17, 2023

December 17, 2023 - The Third Sunday of Advent

Lectionary Readings

O come, O come, Emmanuel. Amen.

            Help is on the way. When you’re in a difficult situation, those five words can make all the difference – help is on the way. When I was in college, I was involved in a pretty bad car accident. A vehicle crossed the center line and hit me head on. I wasn’t able to walk on my right leg for about 4 months after it was severely broken, but, luckily, I was fine. I remember not knowing what to do though – because of my leg, I couldn’t physically get out of the car. But someone came over to the car and told me “I’ve called 911, help is on the way.” The sound of those sirens was one of the most reassuring things I’ve ever heard.

Sunday, December 10, 2023

December 10, 2023 - The Second Sunday of Advent

Lectionary Readings

O come, O come, Emmanuel. Amen.

Who are our prophets? In other words, when there is a tough truth to be heard, who are we willing to listen to? As I said last Sunday, this Advent, the sermons are going to be based on the Collects for the season. Today, we heard “Merciful God, who sent your messengers the prophets to preach repentance and prepare the way for our salvation: Give us grace to heed their warnings and forsake our sins.” It’s a deep and profound prayer, but one that is utterly useless if we’re not willing to receive feedback or correction.

Sunday, December 3, 2023

December 3, 2023 - The First Sunday of Advent

Lectionary Readings

O come, O come, Emmanuel. Amen.

            What are you waiting for? A follow-up appointment with the doctor where you will, hopefully, get some good news? A college acceptance letter? An estranged family member to make an apology? Some sort of decision to be made? Christmas morning to arrive so you can open presents? A permanent peace treaty between Israel and Palestine? An end to this sermon? We’re all waiting for something.

Sunday, November 26, 2023

November 26, 2023 - Christ the King

Lectionary Readings

O Lord our Shepherd, help us to receive and live by your grace. Amen.

            Last Sunday, I preached about how we read Scripture, particularly when it’s a difficult text. A week ago, the text was the passage just before today’s – often called the Parable of the Talents. A master was going away and gave money to three of his slaves. Two doubled the money, but one buried it in the ground to make sure that his master’s money would not be at risk. When the master returned, he praised the two who gained money and called the other one a “worthless slave” and ordered him to be thrown into the outer darkness. That’s a tough parable.

Thursday, November 23, 2023

November 23, 2023 - Thanksgiving Day

Gracious God, give us grateful hearts that we might participate in your grace. Amen.

            What is the purpose of Thanksgiving? Yes, the holiday I get – it used to be a way to mark the start of the holiday season. But, as I’m sure you’ve noticed, now Halloween functions as the time when the wreaths and holiday decorations go up. And that’s fine. It’s a way to stimulate economic spending. Thanksgiving has become a holiday about a parade, a meal, and sales. But we know that this is not how it began.

Sunday, November 19, 2023

November 19, 2023 - The Twenty-Fifth Sunday after Pentecost


Lectionary Readings

Blessed Lord, who caused all holy Scriptures to be written for our learning: Grant us so to hear them, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest them, that we may embrace and ever hold fast the blessed hope of everlasting life, which you have given us in our Savior Jesus Christ; who live and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

            That Collect is one of the many gems of the Prayer Book. Written for the first Prayer Book in 1549, it both represents and forms how Anglicans have approached Scripture for centuries. As Anglicans, Scripture is at the very heart of who we are and how we pray. The vast majority of the prayers of our tradition are either quotations of or allusions to Holy Scripture. And our worship, whether it be Morning or Evening Prayer or the Sunday Eucharist is saturated with Scripture – as we typically read a passage from the Old Testament, New Testament, Gospels, and a Psalm every Sunday. While our tradition values and emphasizes tradition and reason, it is Scripture that serves as the foundation of our worship and theology, and this Collect beautifully encapsulates and expresses this.

Thursday, November 2, 2023

November 2, 2023 - All Souls

Scripture Reading 

In the name of the one who is Alpha and Omega: Jesus Christ. Amen.

            By now, you all know that I think that All Souls is one of the most sacred days we mark as Christians. We live in a world that doesn’t know what to do with grief and that avoids talking about death at all costs. Death, and the grief and fear associated with it, is something that none of us can escape. Either we confront the reality of death and find the way through it, or we shall be consumed by the dread and fear of it. This is precisely what All Souls helps us to do – to be counter-cultural in the fact that we name that death is painful and that grief does not go away with time, and to, at the same time, profess our hope in the love of God which is more enduring and everlasting than the grave.

Wednesday, November 1, 2023

November 1, 2023 - All Saints

Lectionary Readings

For all the saints who are models for us in the beloved community of God’s grace, we give thanks in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. Amen.

            In the letter of First John, we heard “what we will be has not yet been revealed. What we do know is this: when he is revealed, we will be like him.” In other words, we are becoming something; we are growing in Christ. Through Creation, God is working to bring all things to their culmination and perfection in the love of God. Until that day when the swords are beaten into ploughshares, when the lion and lamb lie down together, when all has been made well, all of Creation is moving towards that end.

Sunday, October 29, 2023

October 29, 2023 - The Twenty-Second Sunday after Pentecost

Lectionary Readings

Help us, O Lord, to love you in all things and beyond all things. Amen.

            Does anyone think that love is a bad plan? Maybe I’m out of touch with the world, but I just don’t think many people hear Jesus’ summary of the Torah, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the greatest and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets,” and then think “Yea, that’s not right, there’s got to be a better answer.”

Sunday, October 22, 2023

October 22, 2023 - The Feast of St. Luke


Thank you, gracious God, for Luke and his witness, and grant that we follow faithfully in becoming a church that looks and acts like Jesus. Amen.

            Today, we celebrate our patron, St. Luke. Why this Parish ended up with the name “Luke,” we’re not entirely sure. When we were established in 1753, that’s the name given by the Colonial Assembly, but there’s no further explanation. In the 270 years since then, we have been a part of the fabric of this community of Salisbury, a leader in mission, a refuge for those facing the storms of life, and a place where people have come and seen the love of God in Jesus Christ. For this legacy and for St. Luke, whose witness has guided and inspired our ministry, we give thanks to God and we pray for the continued guidance and grace of the Spirit.

Sunday, October 15, 2023

October 15, 2023 - The Twentieth Sunday after Pentecost


Come Holy Spirit, and root, awaken, and open us to your peace which passes all understanding. Amen.

            In his letter written from a prison cell to the Philippian church, St. Paul writes, “The Lord is near. Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.” This past Lent, the program that I offered focused on prayer and I made the claim that to be a Christian is to be someone who prays. One modern theologian has said that the primary and most important job that clergy have today is to teach people to pray. As I’ve said in several sermons this year – given changes in society and declines in church attendance, what the future of the Church looks like is uncertain. And while there is no single or simple response to this reality, the answer, most certainly, begins and ends with prayer.

Sunday, October 8, 2023

October 8, 2023 - The Nineteenth Sunday after Pentecost

Lectionary Readings

Help us, gracious Lord, to walk in the path of your love. Amen.

There was a notoriously callous businessman who said “One day, I intend to go to Mount Sinai and read the Ten Commandments, just as Moses did.” Reportedly, Mark Twain responded, “We would all much prefer that you stayed here and kept them.” And that’s the tension with these ten sayings that God gives to Moses – we hold them in high esteem, and that’s about it. You’ve all heard of the fights about putting plaques of these up in schools and courthouses – but when a child cheats on a test, rarely does the detention slip read “Breaking the 8th commandment and stealing answers” nor does a judge ever dismiss a divorce case and say “The defendant violated the 7th commandment against adultery and this case is now over.” When given the chance to put these words into practice, many fall short. And even when it comes to knowing the content of these supposedly central tenets of our faith, one survey found that Americans are more likely to be able to name the ingredients of a Big Mac than they are to list the Ten Commandments.

Sunday, October 1, 2023

October 1, 2023 - The Eighteenth Sunday after Pentecost

Help us, O Lord, to live with your cross at the center of our lives. Amen.

            If someone asked you to define who God is, what would you say? As our culture becomes more and more secular, this isn’t a hypothetical question. It’s something that we, as people of faith, ought to have considered. Who do we say that God is? Most responses to that question are rooted in a sense that God is Almighty; that God is powerful in a way that we are not. So we might say that God is unlimited whereas we are finite, or God can control or do anything while we are so limited in our abilities, or God is all-knowing and we are ignorant about most things, or that God is eternal and we are running out of time. And when people talk about what God has done, power is generally rooted in very big things such as God being the creator of all that is, or God being the one who separated the waters at the Red Sea, or God showing up with booming thunder and flaming fire on the mountaintop, or God watching over all things.

Sunday, September 24, 2023

September 24, 2023 - The Seventeenth Sunday after Pentecost

Lectionary Readings

Divine Vineyard Owner, help us to see all people, ourselves included, with the eyes of your gracious love. Amen.

            I was listening to an interview recently with a professional taster. Doesn’t that sound like a fun job – people are so interested in your tasting notes that you can make a living out of tasting things and telling people what you taste? Well, someone asked him why it is that we can taste something today and then taste the exact same thing tomorrow and it tastes different. His answer was that the food or drink hasn’t changed, rather, we have. Our mood, how hungry we are, our hydration level, what our allergies are like, when the last time we brushed our teeth was, and what else we’ve had to eat or drink that day all change the chemistry of our mouths. The taste hasn’t changed, but the taster has.

Sunday, September 17, 2023

September 17, 2023 - The Sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost


O God of our salvation, your presence makes all the difference, thank you for being with us. Amen.

            Sometimes, in order to understand a story, there is a central part of it that we can’t miss. Think about trying to understand the history of the United States without discussing the Civil War, or watching Star Wars without knowing the identity of Darth Vader, or having a healthy relationship with a spouse and not knowing what their childhood was like. Some parts of the story are so integral that, without those details, the rest of the story falls apart. Well, that’s how central the story of the Exodus that we heard this morning is when it comes to our faith.

Sunday, September 10, 2023

September 10, 2023 - The Fifteenth Sunday after Pentecost


O Lord, we thank you for giving us to one another, help us to live with one another. Amen.

            A fitness coach that I’ve worked with is a world-class coach – Dan John has worked with NFL teams, Olympians, and collegiate champions and he’s learned a lot about helping people grow. In college, he was a discus thrower, and he still works with a lot of track and field athletes and likes to tell the story of teaching a group of young athletes who were learning how to throw. He told the group that the discus throw is a simple movement: twist, step, twist, jump, and he demonstrated it. Simple. Then a young athlete tried to mimic the motion and tripped over his own legs, fell to the ground, and complained “You said this was easy.” Coach responded, “No. I said it was simple, not easy.”

Sunday, September 3, 2023

September 3, 2023 - The Fourteenth Sunday after Pentecost

Holy Spirit, set us ablaze with your love, that we might be lights to the world. Amen.

            “Earth’s crammed with heaven, and every common bush afire with God, but only they who see takes off their shoes; the rest sit round and pluck blackberries.” That is a part of a poem by Elizabeth Barret Browning, an English poet who lived in the 1800s. It’s one of my favorite lines in poetry, or prose, and you’ve probably heard me quote it before. My hope is that if you haven’t yet heard me say it enough to have it memorized, that, eventually, you will. In a nutshell, that’s what faith is all about – being alive to the fact that, indeed, every bush is afire with God. As our first reading this morning is Moses’ divine encounter at the burning bush, it is good to remember that earth is crammed with heaven.

Sunday, August 27, 2023

August 27, 2023 - The Thirteenth Sunday after Pentecost

Lectionary readings

God of all things and all times, we are so distracted and forgetful, help us to always remember that we abide in your love. Amen.

            Remember. If there’s a refrain that runs throughout Scripture that may well be it – remember. Remember that God is God and we are not. Remember the poor and orphaned. Remember the sabbath day. Remember the promises of God. Remember that I am with you always. Our problem is that we already have too many things to remember. I have lists, I have calendar notifications, and I usually have a few things in my head that I try to keep there until I can get to a piece of paper and add them to the list. And, as you know, there’s a whole sphere of our economy that exists because we know that we’re not going to remember it all – it’s called automation, where computers do the remembering for us when it comes to paying utility bills or renewing subscriptions.

Sunday, August 20, 2023

August 20, 2023 - The Twelfth Sunday after Pentecost

Lectionary Readings

Help us to be bold in our faith and to trust the wideness of your grace, O Lord. Amen.

            There’s no way around it, that passage from Matthew is a tough text. As much as I would prefer to preach on a different passage, I know that avoiding tough passages is a dereliction of duty for a preacher. We also know from the story of Jacob in Genesis that blessings often come through wrestling with God, and so I pray that this challenging interaction between Jesus and a Canaanite woman gives us all a blessing.

Sunday, August 13, 2023

August 13, 2023 - The Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost

Almighty God, be with us in our storms and help us to put our full trust in you in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.

            That was quite the storm we had on Monday night, wasn’t it? We were out at dinner after going to Open House at Overton Elementary School and could barely see our car through the rain, which was parked right in front of the restaurant. There was thunder, lightning, and violent wind. We had some big limbs down and I know some of you did as well. But can you imagine being out on a fishing boat at night in the middle of a lake and having that sort of storm pop up? It would be absolutely terrifying.

Sunday, August 6, 2023

August 6, 2023 - The Feast of the Transfiguration

Creating God, awaken us to your glory all around us ☩ in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.

Though I’ve been the priest here for nearly nine years, there are some things that you might not know about me. For example, in college, I played the cymbals in the Wake Forest Marching Band; or, I’m a certified kettlebell instructor. A few of you know this about me, and my daughters certainly know it – I hate glitter. I refer to glitter as Satan’s dandruff and think that it might be one of the worst inventions in all of human history. Glitter gets everywhere and there is no such thing as getting all of it cleaned up once one of those little bottles of chaos has been opened. People who truly know me know that I abhor glitter.

Sunday, July 30, 2023

July 30, 2023 - The Ninth Sunday after Pentecost

Lectionary Readings

O Lord of all things, in the midst of things temporal, help us to cherish and abide in the things eternal in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.

            It really is so good to be back. As I’ve told a few people this week, I love this church and I love my job. On Sunday, April 16, I said that these three months of sabbatical would be a gift, and they were. Thank you for your encouragement and support to take this sabbatical, and thank you for welcoming me back. From what I’ve heard and what I know to be true, the staff was amazing in keeping ministries going strong, the Vestry and Wardens provided solid leadership, your faithfulness and commitment to this parish continued, and Father Tom did an outstanding job. I am grateful for the sabbatical and I am grateful to be back.

Sunday, June 18, 2023

June 18, 2023 - The Third Sunday after Pentecost

Lectionary Readings

In the name of God Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.

            Do you have a favorite gift that you’ve ever received? Maybe it was a book that changed your perspective on life, perhaps something you use often in a hobby, or it could be something that has more sentimental value than it does monetary. This morning, using St. Paul’s words in Romans, I want to contemplate the greatest gift that God has given us: love. The word that the Church uses to talk about this gift is “grace.” That’s what grace means – it is a gift.

Sunday, April 16, 2023

April 16, 2023 - The Second Sunday of Easter

Lectionary readings

Risen Lord, help us to receive the life-giving and life-changing gift of your love. Amen.

            Grace – the unearned, lavish, and abundant gift of God’s love towards us. I preach about and talk about grace a lot. There are different words that we can use to describe what grace is all about: there are aspects of peace, mercy, justice, hope, and belonging that are embedded in grace. But at its core, grace is a description of God’s love. God loves us not because we are particularly loveable or deserving, but because God is love and love loves to love. And so God loves us and wants us to abide and flourish in this love. Grace is the one-word way of conveying what Christians mean by love.

Sunday, April 9, 2023

April 9, 2023 - Easter Sunday

Lectionary Readings

Risen Lord, help us to find ourselves hidden in your love. Amen.

            In the name of Jesus, welcome to each and every one of you. There’s nothing quite like an Easter morning and it fills my heart with joy to see each of you this morning. I hope and pray that your presence here is a gift to you – that you feel welcome in this place of beloved community and that you know God’s abundant love for you.

Saturday, April 8, 2023

April 8, 2023 - Easter Vigil

O God of all time and space, be with us on this most holy night in which we are surrounded by the glory, grace, and wonder of Jesus’ Resurrection. Amen.

            This is the night that rings out with the notes of the same old song of God’s glory, grace, and wonder. And when I say that it’s the “same old song,” that is not at all a bad thing. In a world in which so many things are passing away, it is good to have something that abides, and that is what this night is about.

April 8, 2023 - Holy Saturday

Lectionary Readings

Help us to wait in faith, hope, and love, O Lord. Amen.

Throughout Holy Week, the sermons have focused on the Cross. And, originally, my plan was for that series to culminate and conclude yesterday, on Good Friday. By Holy Saturday, the cross has been endured and it now stands empty, having served its purpose as our attention shifts to the tomb. But as I was preparing this sermon, I couldn’t leave the cross behind; or rather, the cross still has more to say.

Friday, April 7, 2023

April 7, 2023 - Good Friday


Gracious God, help us to follow your way of the cross which is the way of life. Amen.

            Christ our Passover has been sacrificed for us. St. Paul wrote those words in a letter to the Corinthians and we know them from our Eucharistic celebrations. On Good Friday, those words take on an even deeper resonance as we consider Jesus’ death as the lamb of God who takes away the Sin of the world. This Holy Week, the sermons have been focusing on different ways of interpreting and understanding the cross of Christ. Today, as the cross is on full display, we consider the cross through the lens of Passover.

Thursday, April 6, 2023

April 6, 2023 - Maundy Thursday

Lectionary Readings

Gracious God, help us to follow your way of the cross which is the way of life. Amen.

            My favorite type of movies are psychological thrillers. Movies like The Usual Suspects, Inception, Memento, or Interstellar all have a twist at the end that force us to go back and reinterpret everything that we had assumed about the plot of the movie. The same thing is true of the end of the Chronicles of Narnia series – the final chapter makes us reconsider the whole story. Well, the story of the God of Israel belongs in the category of psychological thriller in that sense.

Wednesday, April 5, 2023

April 5, 2023 - Holy Wednesday

Lectionary Readings

Gracious God, help us to follow your way of the cross which is the way of life. Amen.

            Perhaps you’ve heard the expression after asking for directions, “Well, you can’t get there from here.” Indeed, sometimes given our starting point, there doesn’t seem to be a way to get to our destination. For example, by car, I can’t just start driving and end up in France. Or, given my age, there’s no amount of training or practice that will ever lead to me playing tennis in the tournament at Wimbledon. We can’t always get there from here.

Tuesday, April 4, 2023

April 4, 2023 - Holy Tuesday

Lectionary Readings

Gracious God, help us to follow your way of the cross which is the way of life. Amen.

This Holy Week, we continue to consider different ways of approaching the cross, as it is something like a gem that shimmers differently depending on how the light hits it. Tonight, by focusing on the reading from First Corinthia

Monday, April 3, 2023

April 3, 2023 - Holy Monday

Gracious God, help us to follow your way of the cross which is the way of life. Amen.

            In this week we call “holy,” the sermons are focusing on different aspects of the cross, which stands both at the center and the end of this week just as it stands at the center and the end of our faith. In each of these sermons, I’ll consider a different aspect of the cross with the aim of having a deeper appreciation for its beauty, power, and glory when we stand under its shadow on Good Friday.

Sunday, April 2, 2023

April 2, 2023 - Palm Sunday

Lectionary Readings

Gracious God, help us to follow your way of the cross which is the way of life. Amen.

            Holy Week is a week for contemplation. This is a time when followers of Jesus reimmerse ourselves in the story of the salvation of the world. This week, we spend more time in prayer, more time at church, more time fasting so that we are more ready to receive the joys of Easter. If you’ve never done a full Holy Week, I invite and urge you to do as much as you can this year. We have liturgies every day this week, and, to be clear, we don’t have to. We could do just Maundy Thursday, one Good Friday liturgy, and go right to Easter Sunday.

Sunday, March 26, 2023

March 26, 2023 - The Fifth Sunday in Lent

Help us to trust that we are always alive in you, O God. Amen.

            It’s a joke, and especially this time of year it really is true in my home, that there are two certainties: death and taxes. With Holy Week coming and nine sermons between Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday, I’ve been thinking and writing a lot about death. And being married to a certified public accountant means that a lot of evenings and weekends, in addition to the work day, are all about taxes. Why Jesus had to die during tax season, I really don’t know, but it makes our household rather busy. The joke about death and taxes being the only certainties works because, the truth of the matter is, none of this belongs to us.

Sunday, March 19, 2023

March 19, 2023 - The Fourth Sunday in Lent

Lectionary Readings

In the name of God, our holy Father and blessed Mother. Amen.

            Most people enjoy a good magic show – whether it’s a slight of hand or an optical illusion, we are delighted to see the seemingly impossible. Or do you remember those posters known as “magic eye art”? At first glance, they are just visual nonsense, but if you look at it long enough, a three-dimensional shape emerges. Artistically speaking, they were pretty bad, but people bought them in droves and put them on their walls because we love the idea of seeing things on a deeper level. And there are also times when our vision limits us. Looking out the window of the plane, it really does appear as if the earth is flat. You can see up to a certain point, and then it appears to just stop. In that example, our sense of vision limits what we can truly know about reality. In today’s readings, our vision of both what we can and cannot see is called into question.

Sunday, March 5, 2023

March 5, 2023 - The Second Sunday in Lent

Lectionary Readings

Help us to hear your call to us, O Lord of love. Amen.

            I remember back when we lived in the DC area and the initial confusion I had with directions. Yes, I knew I needed to get on the beltway, but did I need to be on the inner loop or the outer loop? Or I knew I needed to get off at the Federal Triangle Metro stop, but did I need to go in the direction of Franconia-Springfield or Largo Town Center? I picked it up pretty quickly, but were a few times I went the wrong way because I got the direction reversed.

Sunday, February 26, 2023

February 26, 2023 - The First Sunday in Lent

Lectionary Readings

O Lord, help us to trust what you have said in Jesus Christ. Amen.

            Plausible deniability – even if we don’t know exactly what it means, it’s a strategy we all use. When we are guilty of something, if there is a reasonable way for us to claim that we didn’t know what we were doing was wrong or that a rule was being broken, we clutch onto that excuse, hoping it will exonerate us from all accountability. We see it happen in business – when a manager claims not to know what their employees were doing. We see it in politics – when an elected official claims they did not know that their campaign donations came from a shady character. We see it in relationships – “Oh, I didn’t know that you didn’t want me to tell anyone about that.” We see it in parenting – when one sibling hears a rule spoken by a parent but then says they didn’t realize that it also applied to them. Plausible deniability is a favorite strategy for doing whatever we want and then trying to get explain it away.

Wednesday, February 22, 2023

February 22, 2023 - Ash Wednesday

Help us, O God of grace, to remember that we are dust. Amen.

            On Ash Wednesday, the preacher generally has two topics to consider – Sin and Death. And, in general, half of the preacher’s work is to make the case for the reality of either. In a world in which religion is on the decline, a category like “Sin” just doesn’t fit into most people’s worldview. Furthermore, we’ve been taught not to shame people or talk about their imperfections, so naming the fact that we are all flawed and broken is not generally accepted in polite company. In such sermons, the task becomes defining Sin and getting us to the point of recognizing that we are bound by Sin and need help from beyond ourselves to be freed from it.

Sunday, February 19, 2023

February 19, 2023 - Quinquagesima

Lectionary Readings

Grant us to go deeper in your love, O Lord, that we might share it all the more with your world. Amen.

            Have you ever had an experience in which you saw or learned something that forever changed your experience of that thing? For me, an example is the hymn “It is well with my soul.” To be honest, I used to think it was sappy and naïve. But then I learned about the history of the hymn’s text. The author, Horatio Spafford, wrote it after his four daughters died when their ship sank crossing the ocean in 1873. He took the next ship over to Europe and when they were a few days into the journey, the captain told him that they were at the spot where the other ship had sunk. According to one of his daughters who was born after this tragedy, it was at this moment that he came up with those famous words – “When sorrows like sea billows roll, whatever my lot, thou has taught me to say, it is well with my soul.” I used to hear that hymn and roll my eyes, now it’s a mixture of teary eyes and goosebumps. Because I saw the truth behind that hymn, it was transfigured.

Sunday, February 12, 2023

February 12, 2023 - Sexagesima


Though we do not always choose your love, O Lord, we thank you for choosing us in Jesus Christ. Amen.

The story of humanity in Scripture begins with a choice. Should we eat from the forbidden tree or not? Consistently, the story of humanity is the story of us making choices for death instead of life. That’s what happened in the garden, it is what happens throughout the pages of Scripture, and it is what is happening in the pages of the newspaper. Today, we hear Moses tell the people, “I have set before you life and death, choose life.” We have choices to make –choices between being blessed by loving or being cursed by selfishness, and we often chose death.

Sunday, February 5, 2023

February 5, 2023 - Septuagesima

Lectionary Readings

Help us, O God of grace, to receive the gift of your love. Amen.

Why is it that some people have such struggles when it comes to faith while others seemingly cannot not believe? I’m sure we can all think of people that fall into both categories – some seem allergic to the idea of faith and utterly reject it and others, even if they don’t particularly want to believe in anything, do it as naturally as taking a breath. And, of course, these are not the only two options out there – it’s a continuum. Each of us is somewhere along that spectrum of belief.

Sunday, January 29, 2023

January 29, 2023 - The Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany


Lord Jesus, help us to walk humbly the way of your cross. Amen.

            What is God’s will? A simple question to ask, but a far more difficult one to answer. What is it that God wants for us, what does God expect from us, what does God intend for us? People spend their lives running either towards or from that question. I’m on the Commission on Ministry for the Diocese and one of the things we do is to discern with people who sense a call to ordination. Their stories are either about how they resisted the disruption of a call to ordination, or how their whole life has been leading them to this process.

Sunday, January 22, 2023

January 22, 2023 - The Third Sunday after the Epiphany

Help us to fear nothing but the loss of you, O Lord. Amen.

            “The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom then shall I fear? The Lord is the strength of my life; of whom then shall I be afraid?” We certainly had a lot of rich passages of Scripture read this morning, but it was that line from Psalm 27 that I have been drawn to. Whom shall we fear?

Monday, January 16, 2023

Martin Luther King Address


Good morning. Martin Luther King was a preacher, and I’m a preacher, so allow me to start with a word of prayer for the courage to speak and to listen. Gracious God, guide us to seek your Truth: come whence it may, cost what it will, lead where it might. Amen.
It is such a profound honor and privilege to have been invited to give this address this morning. Truly. I am overwhelmed that our community would invite me to this moment and doing so in the name of King is a tremendous honor. Now, I hope that the Spirit has given me some things worth saying this morning, but I can tell you that I’ve already been blessed just preparing for this address. Like most people who have studied history and rhetoric, I knew about King’s “Mountaintop” speech, I’ve studied “I Have a Dream,” I’ve been inspired by the “Drum Major Instinct,” and I’ve said that if we ever decide to add more to the New Testament, that King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail” is at the top of the list. But in preparation for this morning, I’ve spent hours and hours since Councilmember Anthony Smith so graciously called me and asked me to speak reading King’s letters, speeches, and sermons. It’s been so very good to spend that time with King this week, reading and reflecting on his words. 
The theme of this weekend – both as set by our Human Relations Council which does such good and important work in our community and by the King Center in Atlanta – is “cultivating beloved community.” So as I’ve been reading King, and reflecting, and praying about beloved community, I’ll share some of the fruits of my thinking and pray that they nourish you.
The first thing that becomes very clear when we consider Martin Luther King is that it’s not about him. As King said on the night before his martyrdom “It doesn’t matter with me now.” For King, it never mattered about him – it mattered about the One King was following, the One King drew his strength from, the One in whom King entrusted his hopes, the One who gave King his dreams, the One who makes beloved community possible. And that One is Jesus of Nazareth – a poor, brown-skinned man from an oppressed group in Roman-occupied Judea in the 1st century.
Yes, I know this is not a sermon and this event is hosted by our city government – but King made no apologies about which drum major he was following and so if we are going to rightly remember King, we cannot pretend that King is intelligible apart from his faith. We remember King as a leader – and, to be sure, he was and still is. But what made King such a good leader is that he was a follower. King was confident that God was up to something in this world, that God is shepherding us into beloved community. King is remembered as a leader because he was a faithful follower. That’s a lesson to us in a world where everyone wants to be a leader but no one is quite sure where we’re going – we need more faithful followers.
And there is nothing that King said that does not flow out of his commitment to the way of love as it was exemplified by Jesus. However, if we want to use different language about this – we can. If we prefer, we can take a cue from King when he said that the moral arc of the universe bends towards justice. So if you’d prefer, we can say that justice is what is at the center of King’s legacy; because for King, justice had a name and a face – and that is Jesus. This orientation towards justice is what undergirds beloved community.
And I bring this all up because I think King would tell us not to confuse the tip of the finger with what the finger is pointing towards. The theme of cultivating and achieving beloved community is such a good one because it keeps us going in the direction that King was going in. While it is good to lift up and celebrate King on this day, what we can’t lose sight of is that the fullness is King’s legacy is not in his speeches or marches, but rather in one of the things that becomes so very clear when reading King deeply – his legacy is about cultivating beloved community.
Cultivating is a helpful word for this – it’s an agricultural term. And as we know from gardening, the job is never finished. Yes, there’s always more work to do in terms of planting and weeding, but the cycle of seasons never ceases. King picked up the seeds of beloved community from his faith, he watered it with conversations with Jewish Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel and with Hindu ethicist Mohandas Gandhi, he sought to pull out the weeds of segregation and violence, and, to be sure, he harvested fruits of beloved community. But there are more seasons ahead of us. Our community needs more of these fruits; there is more to cultivate. And this is why we must do more than remember King, we cannot be content celebrating what he did. No, we must get our hands in the dirt and continue the work that he did of cultivating beloved community.
We throw that term around a lot – “beloved community.” But what does that even really mean? Is it about singing Kumbaya and all sharing a Coca-Cola as we teach the world to sing in perfect harmony? Of course not. But a lot of people dismiss it as such. Like belief in the God who King followed, beloved community can be seen as something quaint from a bygone era. People will tell us to look at Ukraine, to look at Congress, to look at local elections and let them know where we see beloved community. But we are here because beloved community is not some ideal, not some pipe dream, not wishful thinking.
King saw beloved community as a realistic and achievable goal. There is a phrase that King uses almost synonymously with “beloved community” and it shows us how and why it is possible. That other phrase is “non-violence.” King is very clear on this: only love has the power to lead to true and lasting transformation. If we are focused on loving, we cannot, at the same time, do violence. Only love can absorb the evil of the world without adding to it. Love is creative and redemptive. Love is our privilege and obligation. Love is about eliminating our enemies, not by defeating them, but by befriending them so that we are no longer enemies. King once wrote as if he were St. Paul writing to the American Church, “The greatest of all virtues is love. It is here that we find the true meaning of the Christian faith. Love is at bottom the meaning of the cross… Love is at bottom the heartbeat of the moral cosmos.”
We must remember that King always talked about beloved community as non-violent resistance. He was no pacifist though. He was a resistor. And I wonder sometimes if we’ve dropped the resistance side of things. If we instead just roll over and accept things as they are instead of dreaming of what they could be. Like love, non-violence is not passive. Love is not about how we feel, it is about our actions. It’s why marriage vows include things like “have and hold, honor and cherish” instead of saying “I’ll think and say nice things about you.” Just as love is about pursuing the good of the other, non-violence resistance is about actively resisting the attitudes and systems that degrade other people.
And if you’ve ever loved anybody, then you know that love is hard work. This is why people dismiss the idea of beloved community – because, in truth, they don’t think it’s too pie-in-the-sky, but because they know it is gritty and challenging. In one of his speeches, King invites us to be dissatisfied. We should not be satisfied with underfunded and under-resourced public schools. We should not be satisfied with disparities in our criminal justice, education, business, entertainment, and finance industries that fall so clearly and consistently along racial lines. We should not be satisfied with a dysfunctional government that does not work for the People. We should not be satisfied when violence is seen as the solution to any problem. We should not be satisfied with an economy that allows a few to flourish and most to flounder. We should not be satisfied with ignorance or anything less than the truth, because as Flannery O’Conner put it, “The truth does not change according to our ability to stomach it.”
Well, we live in a world that is all about being satisfied, or perhaps pacified is the better term. King was quite critical of the downsides of capitalism, and we would do well to heed his warnings, which stand in line with those of the Biblical prophets. We are so distracted by our own pet projects and our struggles with one another that we forget about the larger issues that are holding us back from beloved community. King is very clear on this – beloved community is not about defeating enemies, it is about becoming united to defeat injustice. If we are going to achieve beloved community, we have to be dissatisfied not with those who we disagree with, but dissatisfied with division and injustice.
For King, the goal of beloved community is not merely the emancipation of those suffering under the oppression of Jim Crow and its modern manifestations, but beloved community really is about the whole community. King notes that racism and prejudice come from fear and misunderstanding, and King knew that “perfect love casts out fear.” Those who benefit from and perpetuate injustice and racism, are not powerful; rather they are quite weak. They are captive to fears and their imaginations are narrowed. King’s commitment to love drove him to want liberation for them as well.
A refrain throughout his work is that we are tied together in an inescapable network of mutuality. What affects one directly affects all indirectly. Beloved community is as much about freeing those who are scared of change or unable to visualize the most excellent way of love as it is about eliminating injustice. Beloved community is not good news for some and bad news for others – no, it is good news for all. Again, good news can still be hard work. Transformation might be exactly what we need, but change can be a challenge.
The Human Relations Council’s theme centers around cultivating a beloved community mindset. So with a sense of the importance of both love and community in defining beloved community, I want to turn now to reflect on what that mindset might be that can take us there – because that mindset is what allows us to meet these challenges head-on instead of pursuing answers to the wrong questions. There is a mindset that King consistently pointed towards and sought to cultivate. It comes from the work of Martin Buber, a Jewish philosopher. Buber wrote that what causes so many issues in our world is that we end up having the wrong mindset when it comes to one another. Buber writes about this and King picks it up and applies this to beloved community – we confuse I-Thou relationships with I-It relationships. In other words, we treat people like an “it” and we treat things like people. Our loves become disordered, our priorities skewed, our communities fractures, and the result is the animosity and brokenness that we have come to accept as normal. And because, for King, humans are made in the image of God, to relate to any person as an It is a form of heresy. For those of us in the Church, we must name racism, poverty, and injustice as heresies which deny the very first chapter of the Bible and we must refute this as strongly as we do any other religious issue.
In a different context, the great bishop and civil rights champion of South Africa, Desmond Tutu, spoke about the idea of ubuntu – which can be translated as “I am because we are.” In other words, our humanity is grounded in community, not our ability to self-justify. It is the I-Thou mindset that sees the other as a gift from God, a person worthy of dignity, as a subject and not an object that allows us to cultivate beloved community. Will we prioritize this connectedness, or will we continue down the road of individualism? In one letter, King notes that we are all extremists about something. The question is what will we be an extremist for? For hate or for love? For inclusion or our comforts? For the status quo or for the inbreaking of the beloved community? 
And, particularly for those of us in predominantly and historically white churches – we must clearly denounce racism as antithetical to our faith. It has been the white church’s complicity and commitments that have, largely, created the issues of injustice and we must take responsibility for these actions. Does it matter that we weren’t here in 1619, or 1776, or 1861, or 1906, or 1964? No. I am blessed to have two wonderful daughters who mostly stay out of trouble. But if they do something that causes damage to another, is it not my responsibility to address that wrong? Of course it is. As King said, not only are we our brother’s keeper, we are our brother’s brother, and our sister’s sister. The white church and community was, undeniability, involved in the creation of the injustices we are dealing with and must see it as our sacred duty to address this in the name of the God who is love.
All of us, regardless of our age, race, gender, class, or any of those other identities that we claim in addition to being an “I” have before us the question of whether we relate to others as a “Thou” or an “It.” It’s a question of whether or not we are cultivating the dream of the beloved community or if we are adding to the nightmares of selfish individualism and division. As Bryan Stevenson has encouraged us to do, we must get proximate to one another. One of the biggest barriers we have to beloved community is our distance from one another.
I suppose it has been the work that we’ve done at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church that ended up getting me invited to speak this morning. Goodness knows, we’re not perfect and we’ve got a lot more to do – but I’m so proud of that congregation for getting proximate to difficult issues and having hard conversations. We’ve explored our history, considered our present, and added icons which reflect a blessed diversity to our historic worship space so that we can be closer to the ideals of beloved community.
And there are plenty of others who are doing this work in our community and should be seen as examples I-Thou relationship building: Actions in Faith and Justice, the Human Relations Council, Women for Community Justice, the Salisbury-Rowan NAACP, and Racial Equity Rowan. I want to briefly lift up the work of that last group – Racial Equity Rowan. I am on the Steering Committee for this group and we have been bringing Dismantling Racism workshops to our community since 2019. Our next workshop, all of which are hosted at Hood Seminary, will be on March 23-24. You can learn more at racialequityrowan.org and I would commend it to all.
Erica Chenoweth is an economist at Harvard University and has done extensive research into what it takes to really get a movement going. What she has found is that it takes 3 1/2% of a population to be actively involved for that cause or idea to be considered mainstream and successful. Just 3 1/2%. We might think about the Arab Spring, or Black Lives Matter, or what climate activists are trying to get us towards – we just need 3 1/2% of our community that is fully dedicated to cultivating beloved community for it to take off. Based on the population of Rowan County, we’re talking about a little over 5,000 people. If there’s one thing this pandemic has shown us, it’s how fast things can spread.
What will we do with King’s legacy of beloved community. Writing from prison, he critiqued the Church – noting that it used to be a thermostat in society, that it influenced morality and principals, that it provoked a crisis of conscience when that was needed, but now it is merely a thermometer that records and judges what is going on all around it. Whether you’re a part of the Church or not, it’s a question for us to wrestle with. We’re all here on a Monday morning to celebrate the legacy of King and cultivate beloved community – but will we do that as thermometers that simply tells our society that we have a problem or will we be a thermostat that turns the heat up on institutions that have failed us while at the same time lowering the temperature of our divisiveness as we strive to truly see the other as a Thou and not an It?
I’ve already mentioned that Gandhi had a significant influence on King. Whether or not King knew of this particular Gandhi quote doesn’t matter, because he would have certainly recognized the truth of Gandhi’s words: “Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.” My brothers and sisters – we have much living to do. Beloved community is within reach. Transformed I-Thou relations can happen among us. The resistance and risk of love is worth pursuing as if today is all we have. And at the same time, we must always be learning because we do not know it all; we do not, as individuals, have all the answers; we will never exhaust the depths of love. So we keep on engaging in dialogue and learning. And as we learn, we strive for beloved community like there’s no tomorrow.
I thank God for each of the Thous that I see before me and I am thankful to be a part of this community that is learning how to recognize and cultivate a more beloved community. May we who have heard the call of justice have both the passion and grace to pursue it and also may be given the courage, wisdom, and power to achieve beloved community.

Sunday, January 8, 2023

January 8, 2023 - The First Sunday after the Epiphany: Baptism of our Lord

Gracious Lord, thank you for immersing us in your love in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.

            I wonder what you remember about your Baptism? It could be that it was so long ago and you were so young that you don’t remember anything about it. I was Baptized when I was 7 months old – so I take it on trust that it actually happened. The only photo that I’ve ever seen one of my parents and godparents holding me at the front of a church that I have no recollection of. Some of you though were Baptized when you were older and do have memories to reflect on. And there are also some who have not yet been Baptized – you might reflect on the questions that you still have about Baptism. Whether you can recall your Baptism or not, the question that matters is not “what do you remember” but rather “how do you remember.”