A Selection of Recent Sermons at St. Paul’s
Sermon - The Rev. Dr. Paul Kolbet, December 11th, 2022
Sometimes when I hear the scriptures assigned for a given day, I wonder why of all the things we could read, we read that. Today is one of those days. My experience though, is that, whatever my first impressions may be, the scriptures always have the word we need to hear, if only we listen well enough.
Sermon - The Rev. Dr. Elise A. Feyerherm, December 4th, 2022
As a younger person I was fascinated by the famous image by the 19th century Quaker painter Edward Hicks, known as “The Peaceable Kingdom.” It depicts the scene we heard in Isaiah just a few minutes ago: “The wolf shall live with the lamb, the leopard shall lie down with the kid, the calf and the lion and the fatling together, and a little child shall lead them. The cow and the bear shall graze, their young shall lie down together; and the lion shall eat straw like the ox. The nursing child shall play over the hole of the asp, and the weaned child shall put its hand on the adder’s den” (Isaiah 11:6-8).
Sermon - The Rev. Dr. Elise A. Feyerherm, Nov. 20th, 2022
We in this nation don’t have any firsthand experience of monarchy – we may accuse some of our leaders of wanting to be king or queen, but we really do not know what it would be like to live under one. Coming to this third week of a seven-week Advent, centering our worship on Christ as Ruler of Nations – Rex Gentium – I suspect we are more than a bit at a loss as to how to understand, let alone relate to, Christ as King.
Sermon - The Rev. Dr. Paul Kolbet, November 6th, 2022
Anyone who followed Jesus around for any length of time would have learned from him that ultimately life has the final word rather than death. In fact, many of Jesus’ most repeated themes have to do with making choices where we arrange our lives around the strong currents of love and life rather than let fear and death twist and distort all that we hold dear.
Sermon - The Rev. Dr. Elise Feyerherm - October 30th, 2022
Around the feast of All Saints, it is my father who most often comes to my mind. My dad is one of my surest lifelines to the communion of saints, my link to that great cloud of witnesses, the saints, who from their labors rest. Although he died more than twenty years ago, I miss him more now than when he first died. He was older than most of my friends’ fathers, and I often felt more distant from him because of that. But now I wish I could sit down with him and talk; about the world, about the Church, about anything, really.
Sermon - The Rev. Dr. Paul Kolbet - October 23rd, 2022
Hello St. Paul’s! I’m Paul Kolbet, your Interim Rector. I’m honored to accompany you in the next chapter of the life of St. Paul’s. No matter what you may hear from others, don’t think of this time as one of merely standing by or treading water. Think of it instead as a special time of spiritual creativity and renewal that does not come around too often. With the help of Jesus, we’ll do great things together!