A Selection of Recent Sermons at St. Paul’s
Sermon - The Rev. Dr. Paul Kolbet, July 21st, 2024
The key thing in the Bible is that, over and over again, the good news is that life is about oh so much more than the success or failure of our plans. Life is about being caught up into the free gift that is God’s grace to us, a grace that is more than we can ask for or imagine. When the fate of your good, well-intentioned plans, for yourself and the world is in the balance, it is possible to be pretty near despair and full of fear all the while missing out nearly entirely on the great and beautiful thing that God is doing in and with your life apart from your plans. King David never built that Temple for God. He never got it done. Whatever God’s opinion of David was, it never depended on whether or not David built a temple in Jerusalem. To live with joy, David needed to get on board with God’s plan not his plan.
Sermon - The Rev. Dr. Paul Kolbet, May 19th, 2024, on the Feast of Pentecost, one day after the election of the 17th Bishop of the Diocese of Massachusetts
Yesterday, leaders from all over our diocese gathered at Trinity Church in Boston to elect our next bishop. We all knew it was a momentous decision that would affect the lives of many people for years to come. The decision weighed heavily upon us. We had to choose between five candidates. When the results of the first vote came in, the results were evenly divided between the five candidates. Each one of them had support. After that vote, many of us cancelled any plans we had scheduled for later in the day because it became clear that we were going to be there a good while. We had this voting app on each of our phones and we spent our time looking at those impersonal, cold, metallic surfaces as much as at the human faces around us….
Sermon - The Rev. Dr. Paul Kolbet, April 21st, 2024
Most of our Scripture readings only come around every three years. There are other things in the Bible that never show up in our Sunday morning readings. And then there a few passages that come around every single year because our tradition has found that they contain something we benefit from by reminding ourselves of what they contain with greater frequency. Jesus the good shepherd is one of those things. We are told of this four weeks after Easter every year.
The language of shepherds is one of the ways the Bible talks about who our leaders are….
Sermon - The Rev. Dr. Paul Kolbet, April 7th, 2024
When Thomas was told of Christ’s resurrection by his friends, he said, “Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands, and put my hand in his side, I will not believe.” Some judge the Episcopal Church for being too open to doubters and inquirers, much like they judge Thomas for his supposed lack of faith. They are not wrong that we are a thinking questioning community. They are not wrong that we assume that each of our members is on their own path of thinking and believing, of adding understanding to faith, or adding faith to understanding. We know that life-events can unsettle either your faith our mental understanding no matter how settled you may consider either of those thing….
Sermon - The Rev. Dr. Paul Kolbet, March 31st, 2024 (Easter Sunday)
Very early this morning, with a hearty committed group of St. Paul’s parishioners and others who happened to join us, I greeted the sunrise with a hearty, “Alleluia, Christ is Risen!” The birds were singing all around. As the sun become brighter and brighter, I had to squint and then eventually turn away because the sun simply became too much for me, and I thought, “I’m not sure my heart is as open to the joy of it all as it should be.” My heart too has to squint because it has become accustomed to brooding about the world, its recent problems, and altogether too much death. In the words of the Gospel of Luke, I have become too accustomed to seeking the living among the dead. It does not take long at all for most of us to feel like we know how the world works. It turns out that it is fairly easy in life to think you know what it possible and what is impossible, what tends to happen and what can never happen. I have had five year olds say to my, “Oh, I know all about that.” Yet life is full of surprises because on the whole none of us are as good at predicting the future as we think we are….
Sermon - The Rev. Dr. Elise Feyerherm, March 17th, 2024
According to ancient tradition, Psalm 51 is a psalm of David, repenting of his sins after committing adultery with Bathsheba and having her husband Uriah killed on the frontlines of battle. As such, it is a reminder that even those chosen by God, even those who love God, are in need of repentance. In this interpretation, it reveals David’s deep sorrow at having done wrong, and his desire to turn from sin toward the forgiveness of God and amendment of life.