Many will be led astray. What about me?

Mark 13:1-8

A Sermon for the Twenty-Sixth Sunday after Pentecost

This thirteenth chapter of Mark is about signs of the end. Mark 13:5: “Many will come in my name and say: ‘I am he!’ And they will lead many astray.” It goes on to say that there will be famine and earthquakes and all kinds of tribulation. Finally, the end comes. What can we say to this?

To begin with, let’s look briefly at three examples of end-times thinking in our country, although this sort of thing happens many other places, too.

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Who is saved?

Hebrews 9:24-28

A Sermon for the Twenty-Fifth Sunday after Pentecost

We’re coming to the end of the church year and in these final Sundays, we ask the big questions of what it all means: What is salvation? Who is saved? Where does it all go?

Today we ask: Who is saved? Everyone? A few? Many? Perhaps the common view today is that everybody is going to be saved. Everybody goes to heaven. There is no judgment and nothing is really at stake in this world. While nobody is perfect, and everybody is good enough in some way to be saved. Death is simply transitioning from this world to the next. There is no judgment, nothing at stake.

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The Festival of All Saints

Revelation 21:1-4

A Sermon for the Season of Pentecost

We are in a festival season. Last week was the Festival of the Reformation. Today is the Festival of All Saints. In three weeks, we will celebrate Christ the King Sunday, the final Sunday of the church year.

In reflecting on this Festival of All Saints, there are three clarifications that need to be brought in front of us.
First, what does it mean to be a saint?

A church-going Lutheran asked her pastor: “How can I celebrate All Saint’s Day? I’m not a saint. I’m not a good person.”

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The Festival of the Reformation

John 8:31-36

A Sermon for Reformation Sunday

This is the Festival of the Reformation, the Sunday before October 31st, when in 1517 a monk named Martin Luther nailed 95 Theses against the sale of indulgences to the door of the church in Wittenberg, Germany. This long list of points to be debated was written in Latin and intended for discussion among his fellow scholars, but the Theses were quickly translated into German, made into cartoons and drawings, and soon everybody was talking about them.

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Truth, Reason, Freedom

Galatians 5:1, John 8:32, 36

A Sermon for a Sunday in October

Eighteen years ago, in September 2006, then Pope Benedict XVI gave a speech in Germany at the University of Regensburg. It came to be known as the Regensburg Address, or simply Regensburg.
Before we get into what he said, I want to note the honorifics he used to address the audience: “Your Eminences, Your Magnificences, Your Excellencies, Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen.”

A salutation that perks one’s ears.

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