A Selection of Recent Sermons at St. Paul’s
Sermon for June 6, 2021 - The Second Sunday After Pentecost, Youth Sunday, Year B, The Rev. Isaac P. Martinez
Beloved, centering the youngest members of Christ’s family will be hard work, yet as the apostle Paul writes, “Do not lose heart. Everything is for your sake, so that grace, as it extends to more and more people, may increase thanksgiving, to the glory of God.”
Sermon for May 23, 2021 - The Day of Pentecost, Year B, The Rev. Isaac P. Martinez
Our Pentecost story from Acts is a fulfillment of what Jesus promises the disciples in our reading from John’s gospel. It is when God the Holy Spirit, our Advocate and Comforter, came to our ancestors from God the Father, just as Jesus, God the Son, said she would. And today’s celebration is no different.
Sermon for May 16, 2021 - The Seventh Sunday of Easter, Year B, The Rev. Elise A. Feyerherm
I have a distinct awareness these days of having come “full circle” – perhaps you have too. Another COVID spring. A new round of graduations in less-than-ideal circumstances. Perhaps it is a condition of our existence that we are always, in the midst of every present moment, thinking back to “where were we this time last year.” But this year it has seemed especially so.
Sermon for May 9, 2021 - The Sixth Sunday of Easter, Year B, The Rev. Jeffrey W. Mello
This morning is my last Sunday with you before I leave for an extended time away. Part sabbatical and part vacation, I will leave on Thursday for three months, returning on Monday, August 16th.
Many of you have expressed your wishes to me that this time be what it is God wants it to be. That is my prayer, too. I hope I am open to what it is God has in store to show me, teach me, and feed me in the wilderness of stepping outside of the tasks and routines in which I can lose myself and that can come to define me, if I’m not careful.
Sermon for April 25, 2021 - The Fourth Sunday of Easter, Year B, The Rev. Jeffrey W. Mello
We often say we are working to do God’s work in the world, but how do we know that what we are doing is, in fact God’s work? How do we know it is not the work of our own self interests slapped with the “God’s Work” stamp of approval, like the “certified organic” label at the grocery store?
Sermon for April 18, 2021 - The Third Sunday of Easter, Year B, The Rev. Elise A. Feyerherm
My sermon this week emerged as a letter. Here’s how it goes:
Dear Simon Peter and Luke, friends and followers of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ,
I am so moved and encouraged by your love for Jesus, and by your passion for sharing the good news of the new life that has become ours in Christ. You are my brothers in Christ; without you I would not have known this good news, would not have met the Jesus whom God raised from the dead on Easter. Thank you for this.