Isaiah’s song is prophecy—not a prediction, but an admonishment laying bare societal-level instances of abuse, one that makes clear the consequences of what God will do with those who continue to refuse to address these core corruptions.
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Year C: August 10, 2025 | Proper 14
What we read in Hebrews isn’t a record of people who remained committed to their own isolated interpretations of reality despite mounting evidence against them. We see people who pledged themselves to God, who, despite repeated faults and failures, ultimately remained faithful to God’s character and desires.
Read MoreYear C: August 3, 2025: "Family Chat"
…this morning, instead of a sermon, we’re going to have a family chat, of sorts, one in which we’re all going to have to deal with the parish priest not as a religious icon or authoritative figurehead or the tacit subject of everyone’s projected concerns but as a plain old, very raw, and very human being.
Read MoreYear C: July 27, 2025 | Feast of St. James the Elder
For centuries, the Church has both approached and sought to emulate God as the Great Individual—the mightiest and most authoritative Cosmic Power. We celebrate and demand others recognize in us virtues to which we have no right, lusting after omniscience, omnipotence, and omnipresence, each of which we misinterpret…
Read MoreYear C: June 29, 2025 | Proper 8
What Paul’s asking is how it’s possible for the Galatians to have embraced God’s living Breath only to turn to bodily mutilation as a way to truly please God.
Read MoreYear C: June 8, 2025 | Day of Pentecost
The Christ Cycle didn’t just unite the Realms, canceling fear of the unknown and liberating us to walk as the citizens of the Celestial Reign that we are and have always been. Pentecost demonstrates that God has shattered every single impediment that might divide us! Jesus did not come to be the ultimate drawbridge or portcullis…
Read MoreYear C: June 1, 2025 | Easter 7
It’s like we’ve been looking at with Revelation the past few weeks. Revelation may be prophecy—memorable imagery of patterns we humans continue to repeat throughout history and across cultures—but it isn’t prognostication. John never expected that we would use his words to fortune-tell or soothsay.
Read MoreYear C: May 25, 2025 | Easter 6
…there’s a subtheme sprinkled throughout the Hebrew Bible about a point when all this reverses. At that time, “cleanness” becomes dominant and begins pushing out defilement. Wastelands become lush fields. Fresh water somehow completely desalinates the Dead Sea. Even plates and utensils purify whatever touches them.
Read MoreYear C: May 18, 2025 | Easter 5
Despite the future-leaning language, the reality John speaks of is not something we still need to wait for. The one seated on the throne doesn’t actually say, “It is done.” They say, “It has become” or “It has happened.” The word reflects childbirth.
Read MoreYear C: May 11, 2025 | Easter 4
We in the Episcopal Church don’t often run into Revelation during our Sunday Lectionary cycle, but when we do, we have a nearly impossible task in trying to understand the book. With such a legacy of confusing and conflicting explanations and expectations, it’s no wonder so many people throughout history have wanted to pull it from the Bible.
Read MoreYear C: April 20, 2025 | Easter Sunday
…to comprehend…the significance of Easter…we need to look past our modern theologies and ideas of how the world works, beyond even that of the Reformation and Medieval eras. We need to remind ourselves of a long-forgotten universe, one that ruled human imagination for nearly all of history.
Read MoreYear C: April 18, 2025 | Good Friday
Not many of us give a whole lot of thought to Barabbas. He’s sort of throw-away character—the typical literary bad guy who gets away while the hero suffers on their continuing quest. Information about him is scarce, to say the least. No other ancient sources identify him, so the Gospels are all we have…
Read MoreYear C: April 13, 2025 | Palm/Passion Sunday
As Lent draws to its conclusion in Holy Week, just as I did in Advent, I ask you to fight the urge to skip ahead. Keep your attention turned from anticipated joy and celebration and focus on the reality of what it takes to get there. Our commitment to following Jesus is not about the reward. Nor is it about attaining some sort of magical afterlife.
Read MoreYear C: March 23, 2025 | Lent 3
Luke’s Jesus generally has a strong response to what we might call social-justice situations, so it’s more than a little surprising when he, too, seems to find the horror passe. “Yeah, that happened. Do you really think you’re any better than they were? If you don’t repent, expect the same for yourselves.”
Read MoreYear C: March 16, 2025 | Lent 2
Beware those who “promote Christianity” through domination, division, and fear. No matter their lip-service, they are no servants or friends of God. They are traitors to the cross and enemies of those who would truly follow Jesus.
Read MoreYear C: March 2, 2025 | Last Sunday after the Epiphany
It’s easy to get distracted during [the Transfiguration] by turning all our attention to the divine displays surrounding Jesus. In fact, that’s what most preachers and theologians (and songs) emphasize about this text—proof of Jesus as God. But if we look past the apparent temporal disruptions and flashing lights, what we observe is a deeply human moment.
Read MoreYear C: February 23, 2025 | Epiphany 7
Year C: February 16, 2025 | Epiphany 6
…this passage is probably the most obvious contrast we have between the first and third Gospels. Where we as a modern American audience can take Matthew’s words and find ways of inserting ourselves into the text so as to sit among those “blessed,” Luke makes that a lot harder. His first beatitude is simply, “Blessed are the poor.” Not a lot of wiggle room there.
[1] See Matthew 5 for the alternate version.
Read MoreYear C: January 26, 2025 | Epiphany 3
It might be a little confusing to realize that the Gospel isn’t actually about you or me as individuals. We certainly benefit from it, but none of us is in any way the focus of the Gospel. That’s because the Gospel is about God. The Gospel is the proclamation of God’s character, an explanation of who God really is, brought down to a level that humans can understand.
Read MoreYear C: January 19, 2025 | Epiphany 2
The true purpose of Christianity has never been simply to have our sins forgiven or to someday go to heaven or to receive any other type of metaphysical reward. Our purpose, the only thing that truly gives our lives lasting meaning, is to embody, here and now, the Jesus that we read about in the New Testament.
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