Sermon: Alfred the Great

The podcast can be found here.


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“Live your life in such a manner that the priest won’t have to lie at your funeral.” Ever wonder what someone might write or say about your life once you are gone? If it would be something your proud of or something that would cause you to bury your head deeper than six feet down? Perhaps a more comforting way to think about it is to ask: what would you like for them to say or write? When we’ve entered the Heavenly Kingdom, I don’t know that we’ll really care what people say or think, but it would be nice to know that you would be remembered fondly. Continue reading “Sermon: Alfred the Great”

Sermon: Proper 24 RCL A – “Bad Trade”

The podcast can be found here.


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A businesswoman was driving home from a convention in New Mexico when she saw an elderly Navajo woman walking on the side of the road.

As the trip was a long and quiet one, she stopped the car and asked the Navajo woman if she would like a ride.

With a silent nod of thanks, the woman got into the car.

Resuming the journey, the businesswoman tried to make a bit of small talk with the Navajo woman, but the old lady just sat silently, looking intently at everything she saw, studying every little detail. Finally, she noticed a brown bag on the seat next to the businesswoman.

“What’s in the bag?” asked the Navajo woman.

The businesswoman looked down at the brown bag and said, “It’s a bottle of Scotch. I got it for my husband.”

The Navajo woman was silent for another moment or two. Then speaking with the quiet wisdom of an elder, she said: “Good trade…” Continue reading “Sermon: Proper 24 RCL A – “Bad Trade””

Sermon: Oxford Martyrs

The podcast can be found here.


Image: The arrest of Thomas Cranmer

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On January 28, 1547 Henry the Eighth, by the Grace of God, King of England, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith and of the Church of England and also of Ireland in Earth Supreme Head died. And when he died, all hell broke loose. Continue reading “Sermon: Oxford Martyrs”

Sermon: Proper 23 RCL A – “Invitations”

The podcast can be found here.  (I got the date wrong in the recording.  It is the sermon preached on Oct. 15.)


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We have all experienced times of forgetfulness. Take your glasses off, set them down, and a few minutes later you can’t remember where you left them.  Walk into a room and forget what you were doing.  Suddenly you can’t remember your oldest friends name. Things like that.  At other times, certain memories just seem to drop out.  For example, do you have a collection of keys, maybe in a jar or in a drawer, that you have no idea what they go to? And the frustrating bit is that you can’t throw them away, because as soon as you do, you’ll discover that it’s going to cost $150 to drill the lock on the safety deposit box.  Then there are phone numbers. I have this horrible habit of writing phone numbers down on post-it notes. Trouble is, I don’t put a name with them, so I sit staring at it trying to remember who it belongs to.  Forgetfulness is universal. It’s a bit like Neville Longbottom – in Harry Potter – getting a Remembrall from his Grams.  It’s a little glass ball that changes colors when you forget something. Neville’s changed color, but as he said, “I can’t remember what I’ve forgotten.”

Then there are times when something that happened years ago that you had completely forgotten, suddenly surfaces.  Sometimes the reason for your remembering makes sense, you smell a certain perfume and recognize it as the perfume your first girlfriend wore.  Other times the connection is not so linear: you see a commercial on TV for toilet paper and you suddenly think of the first time you were sent to the principal’s office. Continue reading “Sermon: Proper 23 RCL A – “Invitations””

Sermon: Proper 22 RCL A – “Searching for the Kingdom”

The podcast can be found here.


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Mr. Williams, a hardened businessman, was interviewing applicants for an important position in management. To find the right person for the job, he created a test; each applicant was asked the same question, “What is two and two?”

The first interview was with a journalist. The writer looked at Williams and answered, “Twenty-two.”

The second applicant to be interviewed was an engineer. He tackled the question with a compass and slide rule. Within moments, he confidently declared the answer to be “somewhere between 3.999 and 4.001.”

Mr. Williams was optimistic about the next applicant, a former lawyer. The lawyer studied the question and then confidently stated that in the case of Stallings vs. Commissioner of the Dept. of the Interior, two and two had been proven to be four. Continue reading “Sermon: Proper 22 RCL A – “Searching for the Kingdom””

Sermon: Proper 21 RCL A – “By What Authority?”

The podcast can be found here.


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Boudreaux had been transporting his his favorite mule, Matilda, to some greener pastures when a semi ran a stop sign and plowed into him. A couple months later, he sued the trucking company for all his pain an misery, but when the fancy lawyer from the trucking company got him on the stand during the trial, the lawyer asked him, “Didn’t you say at the scene of the accident ‘I’m fine’”?

Broudreaux said, “Let me told you what happened to me, I had jus loaded my favorite mule…”

The lawyer interrupted , “No. Just answer the question. When asked, didn’t you respond by saying, ‘I’m fine’”?

Boudreaux said, “I had just got Matilda into da trailer and was driving…”

The lawyer interrupted again and said, “Judge, I am trying to establish the fact that this man told the State Policeman on the scene that he was just fine. Now he decides to sue. I believe he is a fraud. Please instruct him to answer the question.”

The judge thought for a minute, then said, “I’d like hear what he’s got to say.” Continue reading “Sermon: Proper 21 RCL A – “By What Authority?””