Great is Thy Faithfulness

Lamentations 3:23-33

A Sermon for the Sixth Sunday of Pentecost

“The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases, his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is thy faithfulness. ‘The Lord is my portion,’ says my soul, ‘therefore I will hope in him’” (Lamentations 3:22-24).

We think of prayer as “asking,” but prayer is also about “praising.” We are familiar with the hymn “Great is thy Faithfulness,” which has been around for about a hundred years. People are often surprised to find out that this hymn is based on these verses I just read from the third chapter of Lamentations.

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Suddenly there was a storm

Mark 4:35-41

A Sermon for the Fifth Sunday of Pentecost

One again, we are asking: What is the problem? Without a problem you have no need for an answer. This Sunday we come to a very particular kind of problem, that is, nature. Of course, all the events in our lives have to do with nature, but here we have this unusual event, and that event is in the fourth chapter of Mark.

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The seed grows automatically

Mark 4:26-34

A sermon for the Fourth Sunday after Pentecost

It’s early summer and the crops in the fields are growing. But if a dry heat comes, the crops can all burn out. Insects and hail can also wreak havoc. Farmers better buy crop insurance. Who know what the market will be? It’s a guessing game. You could just as well go to Vegas, but then you’d lose the fun of farming.

Once again, we ask: What is the problem? If there’s no problem or no question, then there’s no great need of a solution or answer. We have seen in this Season of Pentecost that we have a serious problem.

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The best laid plans of mice and men

Mark 3:20-35

A Sermon for the Third Sunday after Pentecost

As we live, things go wrong. They seem to go wrong no matter what. Today the Scripture lessons indicate something about the problem of original sin. What is that about? Well, things go wrong, and no matter what we do, bad things happen. It’s inevitable. You drive along, and a bird doesn’t fly fast enough in front of you, and you hit it. We’d like not to hit it, but we do.
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Holiness is beyond us

A Sermon for the Season of Pentecost

Mark 2:23-3:6

A teacher once said: “All thinking in Christianity is summed up in the problem of the relationship between the Old and New Testaments.” A lot of the problems are there. But that teacher may not be steering us rightly because it doesn’t matter where you begin – you can begin at the beginning or begin at the end – all of it is tied together, and it is one.

What then should be our starting point? You start with what the problem is. And the problem is sin and death. We are caught in an inevitable run through sin to death, and the question is: How can we get out of it? What can be done?

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