Sunday Worship & Fellowship: 10:30AM-1:30PM

Episode (Page 18)

Sermon: Love Doesn’t Want What it Doesn’t Have

So this is why I think we all benefit from marital preparation in any way, at any time.  Marriage-to work, to others, to God himself-is a sacramental bond specially blessed by God. But they can only form and transform us if we prepare and discipline ourselves to endure the ups and downs of those relationships. …

Sermon: Many-Sided Story

Today’s reading reminds us that the evil tries first to isolate us in order to defeat us.  St. Peter writes that the evil one prowls around the faithful like a lion, we are safe together, but vulnerable when isolated. As Christians, we need each other; we need to share each other’s triumphs and our trials. …

Sermon: The Last Laugh

So perhaps all peoples take themselves too seriously, too often.  This is where our faith comes in and its helpful to recall that God seems to have baked humor and laughter into his creation.  ‘Alone among the animals, man is shaken with that beautiful madness called laughter,’ said Chesterton, ‘as if he had caught sight…

Sermon: Why Easter Beats Christmas

I would like to start today’s Easter sermon with a few questions if I may. ‘How many of you sent out hundreds of Easter Cards this year?” “Has anyone attended a work or family Easter party?” “Is anyone sick of hearing endless Easter carols on the radio and endless Easter-themed television specials?” That’s what I…

Sermon: Voting Machine, Weighing Machine

‘In the short run, the market is a voting machine; but in the long run, it is a weighing machine.’ I don’t usually quote billionaire investors to begin sermons, but Warren Buffett said this, and they call him the ‘Oracle of Omaha’ for a reason. His inciteful words capture something deep about human behavior and…

Reflection: Sunday of Advent by Michael Shahnasarian

The word advent, or coming, implies a future tense, when Jesus Christ returns in power andglory to render a final judgement and an ending of all things. In the Christian sense, however,the “end” is neither a point in time nor the conclusion of a historical timeline. This is explainedto us in Revelation. The End is…

Reflection: Sunday of the Steward

We must remember these words and think of them especially now, through Lent. But the most important words in the parable come at the very beginning, when the Master asks the Steward: “What is this I hear about you? Give me an account of your stewardship!” (Lk 16:2). This is the point Jesus was making…