Pentecost at Epiphany, Sherburne

Pentecost at Epiphany, Sherburne

So, first off I would like to thank the good folks here at Epiphany for inviting members of St. Andrew's, St. Matthew's, and Emmanuel to worship with you. It is very generous, opening up your doors to us. And don't think we don't appreciate the fact that you have guarded our northern flank for years against those Madison County heathens! We rest easier just knowing you are on guard.

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Louise Goes to Church

Louise Goes to Church

Back when I was in St. James in Knoxville, the church was located in the Northern part of downtown near a bunch of homeless service agencies. This church had these really high ceilings, white-washed walls, two stories of stained glass windows, and marble floors perfect for soaring hymns to echo off of. It was a beautiful space, no two ways about it, but it was also a little bit intimidating. And the folks who came on Sunday were upper crust folks from law offices, the university, doctors...you know...pretty rich. Dressed to the nines on Sunday. Exchanging business cards. But really nice, caring people who lived out a life of Jesus as much as they could possibly do.

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Burning Away the Shame

Burning Away the Shame

I couldn't have been more than six years old. My mom and dad and I had gone camping with some friends. We had just arrived at the campsite where we would be spending the next week, and the men were pitching the tent. And my mom and her girlfriend had started the fire going. It had been a long drive for me and my buddies and we were eager to get out of the car and go explore down at the lake.

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Riding on Life's Lazy Susan

Riding on Life's Lazy Susan

So, there is a restaurant in Chattanooga called Bea's. It's been there since about forever, at least before I was born. It serves true Southern food. Barbecue pork, green beans, pinto beans, creamed potatoes, chow chow, yeast rolls, some kind of cobbler, pitchers of obscenely sweet tea, and the crown jewel – the most amazing fried chicken in the world.

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Rest in Peace, Joan Axtell

Rest in Peace, Joan Axtell

So, I have to admit that this has been a harder sermon to write than I had thought. This is the Sunday we dedicate the chapel and some other things to the honor and memory of Joan Axtell, and I thought I'd just stand up here and tell stories of Joan. But then that began to seem more like a funeral service, and I kept hearing her voice in my brain, saying, “You already did that once. Why keep doing it over and over?” I pushed back some on that, and I felt her give that exasperated look of hers, and I hear, “Well, whatever you do, keep it short. We have work to do.”

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Ballad of Little Jimmy

Ballad of Little Jimmy

I normally don't openly steal sermons from myself, but given what's been going on in the church lately with clergy scandals and declining numbers and changing life patterns – and given what's going on it our civic life, with such intolerance, injustice, and wickedness, I wanted to take this opportunity to say to you here and now why I think we are so desperately needed. . . now more than ever. Some of you may have heard this sermon before, but I think it stands up to time. Fr. Brooks even named it. It's called, “The Ballad of Little Jimmy.” And it goes like this:

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Be Doers of the Word

Be Doers of the Word

So, when I first started out as a seminarian, I did some time at St. Timothy's, on Signal Mountain, Tennessee, outside of Chattanooga. Now in Chattanooga, wealth and elevation tend to go hand in hand, and living on top of the mountain meant that, more likely or not, you got there through hard work, money, and success. St. Timothy's was a suburban church of well-to-do movers and shakers, and let's just say, that I had a fair share of skepticism as to what these people were all about. They were sure to be snobs, turning their noses up and all of the valley folk.

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Start Making Sense

Start Making Sense

Way back in our first semester of seminary, Brooks and I were getting ready for our Old Testament class. We plopped down in our seats in the back row. He opened his Trapper Keeper and searched his bag for a pen when a friend of ours, Quinn, ambled up and started reading over his shoulder.


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Get Up and Eat!

Get Up and Eat!

So, when I was a little kid, I remember taking trips to Florida with my mom and grandparents. We would load up in the Chevrolet, trunk packed to the brim, with a red and white chest cooler always packed for easy access. And off we'd go, down new fangled I-75, roaring down the shining highway, all the way to Treasure Island for a week of sun, sand, and shuffleboard.

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Feeding Five-Hundred

Feeding Five-Hundred

So, when we hear stories like the one in John’s Gospel today, it is easy to believe miracles like this don’t happen any more. I mean, I watch folks working at the food pantry each week, and people are still coming. Emmanuel Church has remodeled some of its space to put in more cooler space to try to get folks the fresh produce that they so desperately need. And whenever I'm in Byrne Dairy or Tops, it's not all that unusual to see somebody shoplifting food. I'm sure some of it is just plain old thievery, but I'm willing to bet that some of it is desperate hunger. So it's hard to imagine a miracle like the feeding of the 5,000.

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