Audios of sermons and worship available on 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.
Tuesday, April 12, 2022
Sermon video - Christian Identity: Cross Shaped Lives
Monday, April 11, 2022
Sermon - Christian Identity: Cross Shaped Lives
Luke 19:28-40;
Philippians 2:5-11
Christian
Identity: Cross Shaped Lives
James Sledge April
10, 2022, Passion/Palm Sunday
What might it mean to have the same mind that was in Christ Jesus when we are talking about Palm Sunday? What do you think was on Jesus’ mind as he paraded into Jerusalem with his disciples shouting, “Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord! Peace in heaven, and glory in the highest heaven!"
Jesus had to be thinking very different thoughts than those of his disciples. Jesus had been clear for a long time about the fate that awaited him in Jerusalem. But he also knew that his disciples had never really understood what he had told them, and at that moment they were still hoping for a conquering Messiah, a new king to ride in and take over the throne of David. But Jesus knew that his throne was a cross.
The Pharisees don’t understand any better than the disciples, but they do want the disciples to be quiet. These Pharisees seem to think that Jesus would agree with them, would object to what the disciples were shouting. Perhaps they think it sacrilegious to speak of Jesus this way or perhaps that are simply worried about how dangerous this would sound if the Romans heard of it.
But Jesus insists that the shouts of “Blessed is the king,” must be made. Jesus is the king arriving for his coronation. That must be announced, even if the disciples don’t understand the odd sort of king that Jesus is.
It is easy to join in the disciples’ confusion. When I was a child, Palm Sunday was a day of unbridled celebration. We would wave palms and shout Hosannas with nary of thought about a cross. Oh, we knew about the cross, but it was little more than an unfortunate detour on the way to the glory of Easter. We rushed from Palm Sunday parade to Easter parade with only a quick glimpse of the cross.
Wednesday, April 6, 2022
Sermon video - Christian Identity: New Priorities
Audios of sermons and videos available on the FCPC website.
Tuesday, April 5, 2022
Sermon - Christian Identity: New Priorities
Philippians 3:4b-14
Christian Identity: New Priorities
James Sledge April
3, 2022
A
little over 20 years ago, Nicholas Cage was in a somewhat corny, somewhat trite
movie called The Family Man. For
those who never saw it, Cage stars as a young man who has become a highly
successful businessman and financier. He is an incredible deal maker who has a
salary to prove it. He lives in a luxury high rise apartment, drives a Ferrari,
wears the finest of clothes, and has beautiful women at his beck and call. As
far as he is concerned, he is living the ideal life. But then everything
changes.Ruins at Philippi
He wakes up one morning to find himself a New Jersey suburban husband and father, living in a little three-bedroom house, and working as the assistant manager in a tire store. At first, he thinks it’s some sort of terrible dream, a nightmare. But as time wears on and the reality of his new existence sinks in, he begins to feel as if he’s died and gone to hell. He finds a bottle of scotch in his desk at the tire store and says to whomever’s life it is that he now finds himself living, “You must have really needed this.” He is sure that no one would choose such a life for himself, and he sets out to work his way back to being a player in the financial life of New York City.
The movie is nothing but predictable so you can probably guess what happens as the movie unfolds. He gradually begins to fall in love with his wife, a woman whom he had once given up in order to be a Wall Street player. And he comes to love his children, to love playing with them and caring for them. He even comes to love his middle-class existence, including hanging out with neighborhood buddies and bowling in the local bowling league. It’s a far cry from the life he had lived.
But just as he has begun truly to appreciate this new life, he wakes up back in his luxury apartment in the city, a gorgeous woman knocking on the door. He has all his fine clothes and his fancy Italian sports car again. All those things that he valued so much, all those things he had worked so hard to achieve were his again, but all he could think about was that mundane, middle-class life he had briefly experienced.
He makes a desperate attempt to get back his suburban New Jersey life. He locates that woman he had not married. He jeopardizes a huge deal his company is working on when he rushes to the airport to intercept her before she leaves for an extended overseas stay. He makes a fool of himself trying to get her to delay her departure, and the movie ends with him talking to her in the airport bar, trying to find something he’d once been sure he didn’t want.
This old movie came to mind as I thought about Paul’s letter to the church at Philippi. Paul speaks of having lived two different lives himself, and like the Nicholas Cage character, he was certain that the first life was the one he wanted. He had all the things that he thought mattered. He was from the right ethnic group, from the right family, and had been to the right schools. He belonged to the right political party and had attended the right church. He had been certain that all of this was the right way to go, and so he was zealous about how he lived his life. He pursued it with a single-minded devotion born of the certainty that his life was just as it should be. He could not imagine any other sort of life.
Monday, March 28, 2022
Sermon - Christian Identity: Realizing We're Lost
Luke 15:1-3, 11-32
Christian
Identity: Realizing We’re Lost
James Sledge March
27, 2022
Recently I spotted an article from the
Religion News Service on The Washington Post website with a headline
drawn from the piece that read, “If there is anything remotely ‘helpful’ about
the Ukraine conversation, it is simply this: It has resurrected the concept of
evil.”[1]Forgiving
Father,
Frank Wesley, 1923-2002
I only skimmed what turned out to be a blog post, but I had a pretty good idea where the author was going. The notion of evil, along with its close cousin, sin, fell out of fashion some time ago. For many, things once labeled as evil can be explained in terms of inadequate education and opportunity or perhaps mental illness. And much termed evil could be eliminated if all its causes were dealt with.
I’m all for addressing inequities in education and opportunity, and everyone should have access to mental health services, but I’m not so sure that evil is simply a problem to be solved if enough resources are brought to bear. Russia’s vile war against Ukraine cannot be blamed on one man’s mental illness or lack of adequate education and understanding. The actions of Putin and a whole host of Russian political and military leaders speak to a more fundamental, existential problem with the human creature, the problem of human sinfulness.
I had a pastoral care professor in seminary who like to define sin as distortion. All of us have a tendency to misperceive ourselves, others, and the world around us and so to act in ways that are not in our own best interests, those of others, or of the world we live in. This tendency is remarkably resilient and resistant to the cures we devise for it, and so we are prone to mess up in ways minor and ways spectacular. We are prone, in ways large and small, to live in a manner that is counter the image of God that lies buried within each of us.
Monday, March 21, 2022
Sermon video - Christian Identity: Trusting the Gift
Audios of sermons and worship available on the FCPC website.
Sermon - Christian Identity: Trusting the Gift
Isaiah 55:1-9
Christian
Identity: Trusting the Gift
James
Sledge March 20, 2022
Still Life with Bottle,
Carafe, Bread, and Wine,
When I was twelve years old, my family
moved out to “the country.” It was old family land that had once been a farm.
It had not been farmed in decades, but when we moved out there we were able to
put up a fence so we could have horses. And we didn’t just have horses. We also
had a pair of donkeys named Angelo and Annabelle.
Claude Monet, c. 1862/1863, National Gallery of Art
How it was that we acquired those donkeys probably qualifies as one of those “It seemed like a good idea at the time,” moments. Somehow my father had found out about an elderly woman who had seven or eight of them. I think she was moving into a retirement home, and so she was trying to find good homes for her pets. We took two.
We tried to ride them a few times, with very limited success. They either just sat there, or they threw you off. And so they were little more than novelties or conversation pieces. They weren’t really good for anything. However, they could bray so loudly that you could hear them for miles. And they were quite good at escaping.
Our horses would occasionally get out, but they would normally just eat the grass on the other side of the fence. The donkeys, on the other hand, would go on excursions. I bet I’m one of the few kids who got pulled out of school to go home to help catch donkeys who were trotting down the road and startling drivers.
Monday, March 14, 2022
Sermon - Christian Identity: Urgent Questions
Philippians
3:17-4:1
Christian
Identity: Urgent Questions
James Sledge March
13, 2022
The Apostle Paul Rembrandt, 1633 |
I ask because I don’t know that I see very much evidence that people’s lives are driven by questions of what they are doing for others. Think about it. What are the most persistent and urgent questions in your life? For a young person they might be, “Where am I going to college,” or “What am I going to do with my life?” For others they might be about money. “Can I cover expenses until the next paycheck?” “Do I have enough in my 401k?” “What did the stock market do today?”
For some the most persistent question might be about raising children. For others about getting that new position at work. Some people might be focused on finding a life partner. I have questions about what I’ll do when I retire, whether we saved enough, and what sort of world my grandchildren will grow up in. I sometimes think about what I should be doing for others, but I’m pretty sure that’s not my very top, my most persistent and urgent question.
I started thinking about such questions when I was ruminating over today’s scripture passage and thinking about the theme of Christian identity that I’m exploring in my sermons as we work our way toward Holy Week and Easter. What sort of questions need to be near the top of your list if you’re going to have a legitimate, authentic Christian identity?
In the part of his letter to the congregation in Philippi that we heard, Paul contrasts two very different identities. One lives as an enemy of the cross of Christ, and the other has its citizenship in heaven. One’s god is their belly, a reference to a life driven by every want and desire, and the other lives in way that imitate the Apostle Paul.
Perhaps it would be helpful to say a little something about this first identity that has upset Paul to the point of tears. These people are Christians, but they seem to have misunderstood or misconstrued Paul’s basic proclamation.
Monday, March 7, 2022
Sermon video - Christian Identity: Being Truly Human
Audios of sermons and worship available on the FCPC website.
Sermon - Christian Identity: Being Truly Human
Luke 4:1-13
Christian
Identity: Being Truly Human
James Sledge March
6, 2022
I think I was in ninth grade when the
musical, Jesus Christ Superstar, burst onto the scene. It was a huge cultural
phenomenon, with some of its songs becoming pop hits. I had the two-album
soundtrack and played it frequently. At the time, there was a certain
subversive quality to the musical that appealed to a young teenager.Briton Rivière, 1840-1920. Temptation in the Wilderness,
from Art in
the Christian Tradition,
a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library
One song that especially appealed to me was a catchy, comic number sung by King Herod when Jesus, freshly arrested, is brought to him for trial. The sarcastic lyrics Herod sings to an unresponsive Jesus include a verse that goes,
So, you are the Christ, you're the great
Jesus Christ
Prove to me that you're divine - change my
water into wine
That's all you need do, and I'll know it's
all true
C'mon, king of the Jews!
Another verse issues a different challenge to Jesus.
So,
you are the Christ, you're the great Jesus Christ
Prove to me that you're no fool - walk
across my swimming pool
If you do that for me, then I'll let you
go free
C'mon, king of the Jews!
I share these lyrics because there was a time when I saw today’s gospel reading as a similar situation. A smug, sarcastic devil, complete with horns and pitchfork, issues challenges to Jesus. “Come on, Jesus. Do a trick for me, and then I’ll believe you really are the Son of God.”
I suppose that my image of the devil became a bit more sophisticated as I grew older, but it was not until I entered seminary that I realized the devil never asks Jesus to prove who he is. His challenges are nothing like those of Herod in Jesus Christ Superstar. The devil in this story knows full well exactly who Jesus is. His challenges don’t ask Jesus to prove anything. Rather they force Jesus to wrestle with just what it means for him to be Son of God.
Monday, February 28, 2022
Sermon: In the Presence of God
In the Presence of
God
Luke 9:28-43a
James Sledge February 27, 2022 – Transfiguration Sunday
Cara B.
Hochhalter, Transfiguration,
from Art in the Christian Tradition,
aproject of the
Vanderbilt Divinity Library
I hope I haven’t told you this story
before, but when I was in seminary, I was part of a group that spent three
weeks in the Holy Land and Greece. During the trip, we visited the site
traditionally held to be Mt. Sinai, where Moses received the 10 Commandments.
There’s no real proof that it is actually the same place, but pilgrims have
been coming to the site since the time of Emperor Constantine in the fourth
century.
Standard procedure for tourists and pilgrims is to arise very early in the morning, around 4:30 or so, in order to reach the summit while it is still dark. The idea is to witness sunrise from atop Mt. Sinai. Our group gathered at the base of mountain where we climbed on camels, accompanied by the requisite jokes about the Camel-lot. Following a dark ride where you could only barely make out the steep drop-off just beyond the narrow path, we dismounted and walked the remaining 30 minutes or so to the top.
We all found spots where we had an unobstructed view towards the east. As the predawn glow began to light up the horizon, you got a sense of what a stark, severe landscape it was. Other mountains jutted up all around, rocky peaks with little or no vegetation.
Everyone got their cameras ready as the pink horizon grew brighter. Little was said as the sun slowly emerged from behind one of those other peaks. In the desert haze, it was an orange-pink ball that was well up into the sky before becoming bright enough that it bothered your eyes to look directly at it.
Before I took this trip, I had talked with classmates who’d gone in previous years. I’d seen photographs of the sun rising over those same peaks and had heard people talk about what a moving experience it was, and I was ready for an experience of my own. I did get some pretty decent pictures, but I must confess that I was a little disappointed in the moving experience department.
Don’t get me wrong. It was a gorgeous and fantastic vista. I’m very glad I went and would recommend it to anyone, but I was disappointed that I didn’t feel something. I was truly hoping for some sort of religious experience, as, no doubt, were many others who were there with me. Instead I got some nice pictures, a story to tell, and beautiful view of that part of the Sinai Peninsula.
Some of those in my group did experience what I had hoped to. I don’t know why they did and I didn’t. After all they saw the same scene that I saw. Still, they experienced something. There was no explaining it. It’s not as if they could have told me where or how to look at the sunrise in order to sense what they did. It was something beyond explanations, something that must be experienced to really appreciate.
Tuesday, February 22, 2022
Sermon: Embracing Resurrection
1 Corinthians
15:35-57
Embracing
Resurrection
James Sledge February
20, 2022
Portion of the
frescos
When I began thinking about a sermon for
today, I discovered that I have never preached on this passage from 1
Corinthians during my twenty-six plus years as a pastor. I’m sure there are
other passages that share this distinction, but this passage does discuss
something rather critical to Christian faith: resurrection.
in the Visoki Dečani Monastery,
Kosovo, ca. 1335
Come to think of it, I’m not sure if I’ve ever preached a sermon on resurrection at all. Oh, I’ve preached Easter sermons that proclaim, “He is risen!” I’ve preached sermons where resurrection is assumed or is lurking around in the background, but I don’t think I’ve ever preached a sermon where resurrection itself was the focus.
For that matter, I’m not sure that I’ve ever heard a sermon that was about resurrection, that talked about what it is and what it means. It seems that we in the church often operate as though everyone already knows what resurrection means and what it is, yet in my experience that is far from the truth.
The Bible itself may contribute to this problem. All four gospels are quite emphatic about the fact of resurrection, but none of them describe it or tell us how it happened. They don’t explain how the risen Jesus is different from the pre-Easter Jesus, although they do indicate that he is different.
So how do you understand resurrection? What do you mean when you say the words of the Apostles’ Creed, “I believe in… the resurrection of the body”? If someone who knew nothing about Christianity asked you to explain resurrection to them, what would you say?
Monday, February 7, 2022
Sermon: Joining the Parade
Luke 5:1-11
Joining the Parade
James Sledge February
6, 2022
Draft of Fishes, Peter Koenig,
born 1947, a project of the
Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN
I suspect that many of you have a picture
in your mind of Jesus calling his first disciples. I know that I do. In my
picture Jesus begins to teach, to proclaim God’s coming kingdom right after he
is baptized and then tempted in the wilderness. As he travels along the
shoreline of the Sea of Galilee, he encounters a few fishermen. “Follow me, and
I will make you fish for people,” Jesus says. And they drop everything and go after
him.
from Art in the Christian Tradition,
In this picture there is simply something about Jesus and his invitation that draws these fishermen from their old life to a new one. It is incredibly dramatic. One minute they are making a living by fishing. The next minute, a stranger speaks to them and they are forever changed. And I think this picture has had a significant impact on the idea of evangelism as a dramatic event where one meets Jesus for the first time and is changed forever.
My picture of Jesus calling his first disciples comes straight out of Matthew and Mark’s gospels. But today we heard a very different story from Luke. Over the years Christians have often tried to harmonize these stories, but I think that misses the point. The gospel writers were often less concerned with telling precise history than they were with making a point. Luke writes for a different audience and paints a very different picture than Matthew and Mark, one that may actually have more contact with some of our lives.
To see Luke’s picture, we need to step back a bit and glimpse the entire canvas. As with Mark and Matthew, Jesus has been baptized and tempted in the wilderness. But then he has begun his ministry, taught in his home synagogue at Nazareth, come to the region of Galilee and healed a man with an unclean spirit. Then Jesus has visited Simon Peter’s house, cured his mother-in-law of a high fever, and then cured throngs of sick who were brought to him there.
In Luke’s picture, Simon already knows Jesus, has already met him prior to finishing a long night’s work with nothing to show for it. But then Jesus asks to borrow his boat. Surely Simon is tired and wanted to say, “No.” But after all, Jesus had cured his mother-in-law.
Luke seems uninterested in what Jesus taught the crowds who gather on the shore. He skips over that, moving quickly to where Jesus tells Simon to put out into deep water. Once again, Simon would rather not, but he obeys this remarkable rabbi. In an instant there are more fish than anyone has ever seen before. Suddenly, Simon is frightened of Jesus and wants to be far away from him. Simon has met Jesus before and knows about his ministry, but all of a sudden Simon senses that he is in the terrifying presence of God. Simon, a rough, uneducated, hard living, hard swearing, dirty and sweaty fisherman, finds himself where ritually purified priests fear to tread, and all he wants to do is escape. “Go away from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man!”
____________________________________________________________________
Monday, January 31, 2022
Sermon: Scandalous Grace
Luke 4:13-30
Scandalous Grace
James Sledge January
30, 2022
In
the fall of my last year at seminary, I preached during Sunday worship at my
home church. It was a strange experience. It is odd to stand up and preach to
people with whom you used to share the pews. It’s a little unsettling to have
your pastor serving as a worship leader, reading a scripture lesson, praying
the prayers, and so on.
I still have vivid memories of that day. I sort of fumbled through the children’s message. I remember catching glimpses of familiar faces, trying to gauge from their expressions whether they thought I was making sense or not. I also remember the kind comments after it was all over, people telling me how much they enjoyed my sermon, and especially a compliment from my pastor.
Of course they had to say such things. After all the session of that church had voted to recommend me as a candidate for ministry, one requirement for becoming a Presbyterian pastor. People had told me how wonderful it was that I was going to seminary. The church had even contributed several thousand dollars to help pay for tuition. They certainly weren’t going to let on that it had all been for nothing.
Besides that, many churches take pride in being able to claim pastors from out of their membership. Congregations that have produced a number of pastors sometimes display their names and pictures like merit badges. They’re a kind of validation, a symbol that a church must be doing something right. Pastors at such churches enjoy the validation as well.
It’s not just churches that like to take come credit for the success of their own. Families and towns like to brag about those who’ve made it big, whether making it big means the first one to graduate college or becoming a movie star. Families and hometowns usually expect a little windfall, a little secondhand prominence, when their own are big successes. No one appreciates a hometown boy who goes off, makes it big, then forgets where he came from.
My mother was from a small town in the Florida panhandle, the part that is in central time zone beneath Alabama. She told me that they had one famous product, a pop singer of the 60s and 70s named Bobby Goldsboro, whose family ran the local florist shop. But when Goldsboro became famous, he told people that he was from Alabama. That really burned my mom, as I imagine it did lots of other folk from Marianna, Florida.
In our scripture for today, Jesus makes a visit back to his hometown. A version of this visit is told in all three synoptic gospels, Matthew, Mark, and Luke, but Luke’s telling is quite different. Matthew and Mark place the visit well into Jesus’ career as teacher, preacher, and miracle worker, but Luke puts it at the very beginning. In Luke, Jesus looks a little like a politician who has just burst onto the national scene, and who returns to her hometown to announce she is going to run for president.
Monday, January 24, 2022
Sermon video: On Hierarchies and Bodies
Audios of sermons and worship available on the FCPC website.
Sermon: On Hierarchies and Bodies
1 Corinthians 12: 12-31a
On Hierarchies and
Bodies
James Sledge January
23, 2022
The Apostle Paul, Rembrandt van Rijn,
I recently read an article on the growing
pay gap between CEOs and the typical worker. It said that CEO compensation has
grown 1,322% since 1978, while typical worker compensation has risen just 18%. The
CEOs at the top 350 companies in America make, on average, 351 times more than
the typical worker.[1]
Put another way, the average wage earner would need to work for 351 years to
make what those CEOs make in a single year.
ca. 1657, National Gallery of Art
Such numbers sound absurd, but they are simply extreme examples of how things work in our world. In companies, in non-profits, in government, in churches, some are valued more than others and their compensation reflects that. To varying degrees, all these organizations have something of a hierarchical structure where those at the top matter more than those at the bottom. Those at the bottom may do much of the actual work, but they are often thought of as replaceable and not terribly valuable. Recently, shortages in workers have challenged such ideas, but I dare say that the CEO-worker pay gap is not likely to change a great deal anytime soon.
Hierarchies, with those at the top valued much more than those at the bottom, are hardly new, and they certainly weren’t invented by American business. In New Testament times, society was envisioned as a hierarchy. At the top was the emperor and from him a structure flowed whose base grew wider as the importance grew less. At the very bottom were poor peasants without whom the system wouldn’t work but who received little benefit from this essential role in their society.
When the apostle Paul applies the metaphor of the body to the church, he is borrowing an image that was typically used to justify the hierarchical structure of Greco-Roman society. The reasoning went that those at the bottom should be grateful for the leadership and protection given to them by those at the top, their natural superiors. They should be happy and content to serve those at the top, the head of the body.
But Paul takes this body metaphor and turns it upside down while giving it a radically egalitarian spin. No part of the body can claim superiority over another. Each is essential in its own way. What is more, those who would seem to be of less value are treated with greater respect. Says Paul, But God has so arranged the body, giving the greater honor to the inferior member, that there may be no dissension within the body, but the members may have the same care for one another.
Monday, January 10, 2022
Sermon video: Beloved Children
Audios and videos of sermons and worship available on the FCPC website.
Sermon: Beloved Children
Luke 3:15-22
Beloved Children
James Sledge January
9, 2022
Baptism of Jesus, Lorenzo Scott, 1987 from Art in the Christian Tradition,
It’s John the Baptist again. We heard from
him before Christmas, yelling for people to repent, to bear fruit worthy of
repentance, to stop thinking that their religious affiliation or heritage would
somehow suffice. And his voice echoes again post-Christmas. He’s still yelling
about how something big is upon us, and we’d better get ready.
a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library
As we catch the last echoes of John’s voice, we hear warnings of impending judgment. One is coming who will baptize with the Holy Spirit and with fire. Or perhaps John says the one coming would baptize with a holy wind and with fire. It’s not possible to say with absolute certainty because the word Luke writes can mean either wind or spirit. But for Luke, wind and fire both go with the Holy Spirit as he makes clear when he tells the story of the disciples receiving the Spirit at Pentecost.
Wind and fire, the Holy Spirit, the wheat separated from the chaff; the images are more than a little disturbing. The Messiah is coming, a new age is dawning, and new day when the Spirit will be poured out, when a divine wind will turn things upside down. “Get ready!” says John.
Then the echoes die away, and John is gone. His warning still reverberates, but he is no longer there. That’s quite literally the case in Luke’s gospel. Luke pushes John off the stage so that Jesus can stand there. John has prepared the way for the one who is more powerful. Now that one is here and John steps aside. Luke goes so far as to report John’s arrest before he mentions Jesus’ baptism.
And so as the echoes of John’s voice fade away, we move to the baptism of Jesus. Well, not really. Luke tells us nothing of the baptism itself. With John safely offstage, Luke places Jesus there, but it is after he has been baptized. There is no river Jordan; there is no water; there is no John. There is simply Jesus praying. Whether other people are still there, Luke does not say. And then the heaven is opened, a sign of what John had been saying. A new day is indeed dawning. The last days are arriving. Judgment is drawing near. The Holy Spirit physically and tangibly, in a form that looks like a dove, comes down onto Jesus. And God says to Jesus. “You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.”
Wednesday, January 5, 2022
Sermon: Becoming Children
John 1:1-18
Becoming Children
James Sledge January
2, 2022
The Presbyterian Book of Order is the butt of a lot of jokes, and not without some
cause. It the rather cumbersome and unwieldy book of rules that governs our
denomination, and there is almost nothing that happens in churches or the
larger denomination that isn’t addressed somewhere in this book.
But along with a plethora of rules and regulations, there are some beautiful theological statements about our faith and our understanding of what it means to follow Jesus. In its opening chapter, the Book of Order has a section entitled, “The Great Ends of the Church.” It lists six primary purposes for which the Church exists. The first speaks of proclaiming the gospel for the salvation of humanity, and the second is this: “the shelter, nurture, and spiritual fellowship of the children of God.”
I always discuss the Great Ends of the Church whenever I do training for newly elected elders and deacons. And I don’t think there has ever been a time when at least one person didn’t look surprised to hear that “children of God” does not refer to all humanity. It is speaking of those who are part of the Church, not the Presbyterian Church or any other particular church, but members of the Christian faith.
People are startled to hear this more exclusive meaning because we are used to thinking of children of God as a synonym for humans. Somewhere along the way we have developed the idea that we are children of God naturally by birth.
Tuesday, December 28, 2021
Monday, December 20, 2021
Sermon video: Saying "Yes" to the Impossible
Audios and videos of sermons and worship available on the FCPC website.
Sermon: Saying "Yes" to the Impossible
Luke 1:26-55
Saying “Yes” to
the Impossible
James Sledge December
19, 2021 – Advent 4
The Annunciation
12th century Russian icon
There is
a scene in Lewis Carroll’s Through the
Looking Glass where Alice is speaking with the white queen. Alice has just
learned that the queen lives backwards, remembering things before they happen.
In the course of this conversation Alice becomes a bit bewildered and begins to
cry. During the queen’s efforts to cheer her up, she asks Alice how old she is.
“I'm seven and a half, exactly.”
“You needn't say "exactly",” the Queen remarked. “I can believe it without that. Now I'll give you something to believe. I'm just one hundred and one, five months and a day.”
“I can't believe that!” said Alice.
“Can't you?” the Queen said in a pitying tone. “Try again: draw a long breath, and shut your eyes.”
Alice laughed. “There's no use trying,” she said. “One can't believe impossible things.”
“I daresay you haven't had much practice,” said the Queen. “When I was your age, I always did it for half-an-hour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.”
Christians should surely know about believing impossible things. After all we speak casually of Jesus turning water into wine, and we say that he died and rose again on the third day. And of course there is that line in “The Apostles’ Creed” that says Jesus “was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the virgin Mary.”
Monday, December 13, 2021
Sermon: Getting Ready
Luke 3:7-18
Getting Ready
James Sledge December
12, 2021, Advent 3
JESUS MAFA. John the Baptist Preaching in the Desert,
We’re nearly to the middle of December, so
I suspect that most of you are well into your preparations for Christmas.
Perhaps you’re completely done by now. So what does getting ready for Christmas
look like at your house?
a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library
We’ve had our tree up for a couple of weeks now, and it even has a few presents under it. We also put lights on the shrubbery in front of our house. That’s a lot of work, and so they’ve only been up for a week or so. At our house, Shawn has to do a certain amount of baking in preparation for Christmas. It just isn’t the holidays without fudge and other goodies.
There are lots of different ways to get ready for Christmas. For some, a daily Advent devotional helps mark the time on the way to Christmas. For others, it just isn’t the season if there isn’t Christmas music playing. And then there are those for whom the season doesn’t truly begin until they see the movie, It’s a Wonderful Life or watch Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.
I know there are people for whom Christmas is just another day, but for many, Christmas is one of the most special times of the year, and that requires a certain amount of preparation. Without it, Christmas wouldn’t be Christmas. I know that many of us felt like something was missing last year when we couldn’t gather for our traditional Christmas Eve services.
Our scripture reading this morning is about getting ready, about preparing. John is the one who has come to prepare the way of the Lord, and this preparation is connected to repentance. John offers a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins, and lots of people come out into the wilderness to see him.
Tuesday, December 7, 2021
Sermon video for Advent 2: Cynicism and Hope
Audios and videos of sermons and worship available on the FCPC website.
Sermon video for Advent 1: Rhythms and Patterns
Audios and videos of sermons and worship available on the FCPC website.
Sermon for Advent 2: Cynicism and Hope
Luke 1:5-25
Cynicism and Hope
James Sledge December
5, 2021, Advent 2
The problem of racism may well be the most
persistent and intractable one in American history. It has proved to be
remarkably resilient and adaptive. Many hoped that the Civil Rights movement of
the 1950s and 60s would deal a death blow to racism. But while many forms of
discrimination were outlawed, racism remained woven into our culture. The
killings of Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, Michael Brown, Breonna Taylor, George
Floyd, and more have revealed over and over again how Black lives have less
value in our society than do white lives.
Black Lives Matter began as a hashtag in response to George Zimmerman’s acquittal for killing Trayvon Martin, took shape as a movement following Michael Brown and Eric Garner’s killings, and emerged as a powerful force in the wake of George Floyd’s murder.
Estimates are that somewhere between 15 and 26 million Americans took part in Black Lives Matter protests in 2020, making it one of the largest movements in American history. There seemed to be tremendous momentum for addressing systemic racism in our criminal justice system and society at large. Our own congregation repeatedly held Saturday, Silent Witness demonstrations supporting reforms. Elders offering the prayers of the people during Sunday worship repeatedly appealed to God to assist us in this work.
But more recently, fears over crime have blunted calls for police reform. Parents have objected loudly to diversity efforts in local school systems. Critical Race Theory has become a rallying cry for those who fear a hard look at the impact of racism in this country. And even though confession and repentance are bedrock parts of Christian faith, there is a large contingent of conservative Christians whose objections to racial diversity efforts are seen as articles of their faith. And while the recent Ahmaud Arbery verdict might seem to be a ray of hope, the sad fact is that without that video, there would never have even been a trial.
It is all more than a little disheartening. And if it is disheartening to me, I can only imagine how it must feel for Black leaders who have been on the forefront of racial justice efforts for decades. They must be beyond tired. Will the day ever come?