Videos and audios of sermons and worship at the FCPC website.
Sermons and thoughts on faith on Scripture from my time at Old Presbyterian Meeting House and Falls Church Presbyterian Church, plus sermons and postings from "Pastor James," my blog while pastor at Boulevard Presbyterian in Columbus, OH.
Monday, November 28, 2022
An Interesting Family (Matthew 1:1-17)
Sermon - An Interesting Family
Matthew 1:1-17
An Interesting
Family
James Sledge November
27, 2022
Tree of Jesse from Capuchin's Bible, c. 1180
How would you answer if someone asked who
you are? What would you tell them? Perhaps you would say what you do for a
living. Very often when people meet someone for the first time they ask, “What
do you do?”
I grew up in what was then still out in “the country,” on land that had been a family farm a couple of generations earlier. There were lots of other people whose families had been in that area for generations, and if you met someone who didn’t know you, they didn’t typically ask what you did, they asked who you belonged to, who your family was.
No one ever asks me that any longer. We live in mobile society where people often don’t have deep roots in the area where they live. Who you belong to, who your people are, isn’t likely to be very helpful in telling anyone who you are. We’ll have to settle for, “What do you do?” or “Where did you go to school?” or “Where did you come from?”
In some ways, I miss that old connection to place and people. I have fond memories of sitting at the Sunday dinner table with my parents and paternal grandparents, listening to stories about my grandfather as a second grader picking up his teacher on the way to school in a little horse drawn sulky. I felt connected to something, part of something.
I think that people who didn’t grow up like I did still sometimes lament that lack of connection. The popularity of Ancestry.com and DNA tests speaks to a desire to connect with our stories, to discover something of who we are through our heritage.
Monday, November 14, 2022
Sermon: Joining the Cloud - Running the Race
Hebrews 11:39-12:2
Joining the Cloud – Running the Race
James Sledge November
13, 2022
Cloud of Witnesses Mike Moyers |
There were no lifeguards at this beach, and a large crowd gathered at the water’s edge, horrified but not knowing what to do. Someone wondered if they might be able to throw a rope out to them and pull them in, but who brings a rope with them to the beach? Besides, they were so far out.
Then someone got the idea to create their own line to those caught in the rip tide. They could form a human chain to pull the people back in. The crowd on the beach, most of them strangers to one another, began to link arms and move out toward the trapped people who were about a hundred yards from the shore. Eighty people joined together, stretching out to those children and would be rescuers who had been caught in the tide. And one by one they pulled every one of them to safety.
I think something similar is going on in the sermon that is the book of Hebrews. It speaks of a great cloud of witnesses that went before us, and over the recent weeks, you been hearing from church members about their witnesses, the ones who mentored them or guided them in some way in their faith journey. It strikes me that the witnesses who went before us, who founded this church, who introduced us to the faith, who taught us important faith lessons, form a kind of human chain that helps pull us forward on our walks of faith.
Monday, November 7, 2022
Sermon: Reflecting God's Upside-Down World
Luke 16:19-31
Reflecting
God’s Upside-Down World
James Sledge November
6, 2022
How many of you have ever given money to
your college for some sort of building campaign? I was thinking about that
topic, and I googled a map of a local school, George Mason. That map had lots
of buildings with people’s names on them, Carrow Hall, David King Hall, Fenwick
Library, Peterson Hall, and Harris Theater to name a few. There was also an
EagleBank Arena.The Rich Man and Lazarus,
woodcut by Kreg Yingst
I know very little about George Mason, but if it is like many other universities some of these buildings were named because of money or after a benefactor. I’m certain that’s the case with EagleBank Arena.
Most of us don’t have our names on buildings at universities or hospitals, and that’s also because of money, the relatively smaller amounts that most of us give. You need to be truly wealthy, big time rich to get your name on a building.
That is why we should know something is out of whack in this parable Jesus tells before he is more than a line into it. “There was a rich man who was dressed in purple and fine linen and who feasted sumptuously every day. And there was a poor man named Lazarus…” There was a rich man and a poor man named Lazarus.
That’s not how it’s supposed to work. If Daniel Snyder got into an altercation with a homeless person named John Doe, I can assure you the headlines will not read, “John Doe Roughed Up in Altercation with Rich Man!” We all know the headline will say, “Daniel Snyder Accosted by Homeless Man!”
But Jesus’ parable gets this backwards because things are completely different in the Kingdom of God. Everything is turned upside down and inside out, letting us know that the things the world values are not the things God values, and warning all of us who have bought into the world’s way of doing things.