Return to "Topical Sermons"
Return to "Lectionary Sermons"


Sermons for 3rd Sunday after Epiphany
Year C
"How Great Thou Art"
Psalm 19
"Why?"
Luke 4:14-21
"A Matter of Survival"
1 Corinthians 12:12-30

"How Great Thou Art"

Psalm 19

"Oh Lord My God when I in awesome wonder consider all the worlds thy hands have made. I see the stars, I hear the rolling thunder thy power throughout the universe displayed." That is what the psalmist is talking about. He said, "The heavens are telling the glory of God; and the firmament proclaims his handiwork." Just look at the night sky. God's glory is revealed in the stars.

God is speaking, but are people listening? The psalmist recognized the root of the problem. The heavens are telling to glory of God but not in human words. The stars have no voice in the literal sense. Yet their proclamation goes out through the universe.

God didn't stop with declaring his truth through creation. God sent his prophets to put God's truth in human terms. Psalm 19 says, "The law of the Lord is perfect, reviving the soul; the testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the simple." The law that the psalm refers to here is of course the books of Moses. Through them God gives us guidance and keeps us safe.

God has spoken through creation and through the Bible, but God didn't stop there. It was not enough to put His Word in human terms. God also put his word in human form. As the hymn says, "And when I think that God his son not sparing sent him to die a I scarce can take it in. That on the cross my burden gladly bearing he bled and died to take away my sin."

God has spoken to us through creation revealing his glory. And through the Bible God has spoken to us in human terms to give us knowledge and guidance. And God even sent his sun to be the Word in human form to reveal his love and grace in a personal way. God has done all this for us; for me and you! What should we do in response?


"Why?"

Luke 4:14-21

"Why:" it was Mary and Kaitlyn's favorite word when they were small. They were constantly saying it. "Daddy, why do daddies make little girls go to bed at bed time?" "Daddy, why does it thunder?" Often times attempts to answer these questions simply lead to more questions. "Daddy, why are green beans green?" "Because then they wouldn't be green beans." "Why would they not be green beans?" "Because they would be blue or something. "Why would they be blue?" And so on...

I look at our lesson from Luke today and I ask, "why?" And I want you to ask "Why" with me. So I am going to ask you to do something with me today. When I cue you I want the whole congregation to say "Why?"

I have asked a lot of questions, Let me venture at some answers. Why did Jesus return to Galilee to preach in the synagogues? Because he cared. He cared more about the people than pursuing the Devil. He knew that the Devil's days were numbered. But his priority was to reach people; common people like you and me, with the good news of God's love and grace.

And the last question and perhaps the most important, why should I care that God's appointed time has come? I should care, and you should care, because the appointed time has come for God to bless and transform you and me. You see we all need Jesus. We all need spiritual cleansing. We all need to be renewed. In Christ God has offered us this. Jesus can come into our darkened lives and heal them, transforming us from children of darkness into children of the light.

Oh, you may say, "Well, preacher, you didn't convince me to come to Jesus." That may be so. But I did get you to ask, "why," and that's enough - for now.

top of this page


"A Matter of Survival"

1 Corinthians 12:12-30

Corinth was a very metropolitan city. It was on a very busy trade route between east and west. It was also near a port. Many ships docked there. People from all over the world stopped there. As a result Corinth had residents of many different nationalities. People traveling from the east or the west found it a good center from trade. So people from both Rome and the East established businesses there. The church at Corinth, to whom Paul was writing, was a reflection of the city. It included Jews and Gentiles. Many of Paul's converts were from the lower classes but some were wealthy. So it included slaves and the free, both rich and poor. It wasn't just the nationalities of the people that were varied, but also their means of religious expression.

Often people are slow to accept those different from themselves, and the Corinthians were no different. Paul knew that the diversity of the Church was its strength. And he found a beautiful way to explain it to the Corinthians. He said the church is a body. Paul didn't say it is like a body. He said the church is a body. The church is the body of Christ. Because it is a body, it is made of many different parts. This is necessary. A body needs different organs to perform different vital functions. And without all the organs the body would die. In a body, diversity or form and function are a matter of survival. So an eye could not say to the foot, "I do not need you." Nor the ear to the hand, "I do not need you." Every part of the body needs every other part. This had several applications to the Corinthian church.

What was true about the Corinthian church is still true today. The church is the body of Christ. Like any body it is made of many different parts. And all these parts are important. They are all vital organs. The United Methodist Church is a good example of this, and so is Grace.

The lesson that Paul was trying to teach was so simple, but the church still seems to fail to hear it. The Church of Christ still seems set on mutilating itself. High church people look down on the low church. Fundamentalists look down on Pentecostals, Pentecostals look done on the liberals, and the liberals look down on everybody. But doesn't God give us different points of view to teach us. And blacks and whites still can't seem to worship together in most places.

1