Children of Light

Text: Ephesians 5:8
Date: Lent IV + 3/30/14

In our Lenten discipline of the catechumenate so far we have learned that to be a Christian means to enter a spiritual battle with the devil. But we do not fight that good fight by our own powers alone but by a new birth, being born again. Being a Christian means becoming a brand new person. We discovered that baptism is the foundation of this new birth, as Jesus said, “by water and the Spirit.” Our attention to water then expanded our understanding that faith is that living water, that our new person is the creation of God the Holy Spirit. Today our focus shifts from the image of water to the image of light and darkness. As new persons of God’s re-creation and new birth, today we consider everything in life that is against God as darkness and the grace and salvation of God as our light. St. John takes the entire ninth chapter of his Gospel to tell us the story of a man born blind and how Jesus’ gift of gaining his sight allowed him to see the true darkness, the blindness of sin, and to discover the vision of saving faith, saying to Jesus the same confession that we are asking of you, “Lord, I believe.” St. Paul comments in our Epistle today, saying, “For at one time you were darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light.” Come, let us walk in the light of the Lord. Continue reading “Children of Light”

More Than Water

Text: John 4:5-26
Date: Lent III + 3/23/14

Come, let us walk in the light of the Lord. When you began the Lenten process of becoming a Christian you heard as of first importance that you would be entering a spiritual battle. We heard our Lord’s temptation by the devil in the wilderness. There you learned that you are given the same mighty weapons Jesus used in His defeat of Satan, namely, the Word of God and the Spirit of God. Continue reading “More Than Water”

Born of Water and the Spirit

Text: John 3:1-17
Date: Lent II + 3/16/14

“Come, let us walk in the light of the Lord.” That invitation of Isaiah 2:5 comes from the revelation and because of the conviction that salvation does not originate with man but with God, not from our wisdom but from God’s as it says, “‘that he may teach us his ways and that we may walk in his paths.’ For out of Zion shall go the law, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem” (Is 2:3). Continue reading “Born of Water and the Spirit”

First Things

Text: Genesis 3; Matthew 4:1-11
Date: Lent I + 3/9/14

Come, let us walk in the light of the Lord.

It’s not just a matter of getting older. Things really are worse than they used to be. Yet there seems to be nothing new under the sun. St. Paul wrote of the universal sinful nature of all human beings, saying, “since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be done,” and, “though they know God’s decree that those who practice such things deserve to die, they not only do them but give approval to those who practice them” (Romans 1:28, 32). In other words, the best way to make a sin not to be a sin anymore is to bring it out into the open. Continue reading “First Things”

Issues, Etc. Radio Ad

As an “Issues, Etc. 300” congregation we were asked to provide an ad to run on the program. Thanks to our member, Terry Herald, who “just happens to have” a professional recording studio as part of his house!

O Wondrous Type

Text: Matthew 17:1-9
Date: Transfiguration + 3/2/14

“Come, let us walk in the light of the Lord” (Isaiah 2:5). “But no! Wait a minute! That light! It’s too bright! That light is scary!” Like Isaiah cringing in the corner of the temple when he saw the Lord, so the three disciples on the holy mount fell in fear with their faces to the ground. But the title of our consideration this morning is from the old fifteenth century hymn for the Transfiguration Caelestis Formam Gloriae translated O Wondrous Type! O Vision Fair in our hymnal. Another translation is:

An image of that heavenly light,
the goal the Church keeps ay in sight….[1]

Or by John Neale:

A Type of those bright rays on high
For which the Church hopes longingly….[2]
A wondrous “type” is any earthly person or image pointing to a greater heavenly reality, “those Old Testament persons, institutions, or events that have a divinely intended function of prefiguring the eschatological age inaugurated by Christ.”[3] “No,” Jesus says to the terrified disciples, “Rise, and have no fear.” Why not? Because “when they lifted up their eyes, they saw no one but Jesus only.” Continue reading “O Wondrous Type”