Luke 1:26-38, 46b-55, 2:1-20 (4th Sunday of Advent and Christmas Eve) – December 24th, 2023

This will certainly offend Advent purists, but this is the perfect year to do a little mixing a matching with Advent 4 this year (especially if you have a morning service). Because of Year B’s inclusion of the annunciation and the inclusion of the Magnificat this week, we can tell the long story of who Jesus is promised to be, who he was entrusted to, and how he came into the world. Knowing that many will be picking and choosing how to preach very carefully, I’ll throw out a couple preaching possibilities here and hope that something sticks for you.

John 1:6-8, 19-28 (3rd Sunday of Advent) – December 17, 2023

While I often criticize the decisions of the RCL’s structure, I don’t often completely dismiss it. However, if one were to dismiss it, this might be the week (as you could preach on next week’s Lukan text since it will be Christmas Eve). I get frustrated by this week’s text because it’s almost an exact repeat of last week’s Gospel and contains some deliberate contradictions because Mark and John have different theologies.

Mark 1:1-8 (2nd Sunday of Advent) – December 10, 2023

Where Do We Begin? Of course, what’s driven into us as preachers and seminarians is the difference in the beginnings of all the Gospels. But that’s not always articulated to our congregations. It’s important to note to our listeners, that this is in fact the beginning of Mark’s Gospel. There’s no manger or wise men. No stars, no angels. Just the beginning of the good news. But there’s a nuance to this. When people describe the differences, Mark is often the least talked about of the four gospels. We say, “Mark just jumps right in” and then describe the beginnings of all three others. And in comparison, to the other three, sure, that seems to be the case. But on its own, we should notice that Mark actually begins with a prologue and not right in the story. Mark 1:1-15 is all a prologue. And it’s critically important because it sets us up as a reader to see that Mark’s gospel is an apocalyptic drama.[1] And this is a two-fold apocalyptic view: 1) The immanent end-times that are coming with the Kingdom of God 2) And the revelation of Jesus as the Messiah and Son of God.

Mark 13:24-37 (1st Sunday of Advent) – December 3rd, 2023

In this week’s Gospel, Jesus is leaving the temple with his disciples after having been interrogated and tested by a series of religious leaders. Now out of context, our reading today sounds pretty scary. The sun being darkened out. Stars falling from heaven. The end of heaven and earth. And yet this passage is about hope.

Matthew 25:31-46 (Christ the King) – November 26, 2023

I have already made connection to this parable a number of times the last few weeks. I believe that this is the most important parable that we get in the Matthew’s gospel. I think it is also one of the most important Christological and Incarnational passages that we get as well. This is the text that helps us see most clearly Bonhoeffer’s words, “The church is only church when it is there for others. As a first step it must give away all its property to those in need. The clergy must live solely on the freewill offerings of the congregations and perhaps be engaged in some secular vocation. The church must participate in the worldly tasks of life in the community—nor dominating by helping and serving. It must tell people in every calling what a life with Christ is, what it means “to be there for others.’ In particular, our church will have to confront the vices of hubris, the worship of power, envy, and illusionism as the roots of all evil. It will have to speak of moderation, authenticity, trust, faithfulness, steadfastness, patience, discipline, humility, modesty, contentment. It will have to see that it does not underestimate the significance of the human ‘example’ (which has its origin in the humanity of Jesus and is so important in Paul’s writings!); the church’s word gains weight and power not through concepts but by example.” This is the text that calls us to see God in our neighbor.

Matthew 25:14-30 (25th Sunday after Pentecost) – November 19, 2023

As the Assistant to the Bishop for Generosity in the Delaware-Maryland Synod, maybe I shouldn’t be actively negating this text as a stewardship parable. But I think that this text is actually yet another cautionary tale for our disciples and future leaders of the church. Absolute Power You know the phrase. And so does everyone in our pews. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. As soon as the first two slaves have money in their hand, they begin to use it in ways that will gain them more. That was never the instruction of the master, but it’s immediately what they do? Why? Because power consumes us. Wealth and it’s allure consumes us. We see it additionally in the response of the master too. Again, there was never any explicit instruction that the slaves were required to turn a profit. But after the first two slaves produced a profit, then the master expected the third slave to produce a profit as well.

Matthew 25:1-13 (24th Sunday after Pentecost) – November 12, 2023

Matthew 23:1-25:46 is known as “the Judgment Discourse.” And really all of it builds together. Unfortunately, by skipping most of chapters 23 and 24, we find ourselves in the middle of a complex parable. Without any narrative context, traditionally this parable is all about preparedness, right? “Keep awake therefore!” Preparedness. That’s the moral lesson in traditional interpretation. Always be prepared. Even though the final words (signifying some level of interpretation) are “Keep awake,” the only distinguishable difference is that the wise had extra oil. All of them fell asleep. All of them were awoken by a shout. It’s just a matter of oil. So be prepared for the end times. Because apparently if you don’t have enough oil, you’ll be locked out of the kingdom forever. Go to Costco, they sell it in bulk.   But from everything that Matthew has been doing, this honestly feels wrong. And I think that’s because it is. This is another setup. Afterall the big parable of Matthew 25 is still coming and if we take the sheep, goats, and king seriously, then this parable should be turned completely on its head.

Matthew 5:1-12 (All Saints Sunday) – November 5th, 2023

The first thing many preachers and lay leaders may hear is the differences between these beatitudes and the ones we heard this past All Saints Day from Luke (the poor vs. the poor in spirit). And because of this, we may be tempted to talk about which version we prefer (we may find it easier to preach on blessed are the poor and woe to the rich). We may be tempted to pontificate on who wrote them first and who changed them. As R. Alan Culpepper writes, “Did Matthew tilt the beatitude in a spiritual direction, or did Luke tilt it in a socioeconomic direction?”[1] While we can remind people that Matthew and Luke both use this section, we shouldn’t use preference in our preaching here. Both Matthew and Luke use these with a purpose and in aligning our preaching with their purpose, we can open a world of preaching opportunity. But if we preach on our preference and overly compare these two different Gospels, then we give permission to accept one and throw the other out, when in reality they are used for two entirely different purposes.

Matthew 22:34-46 (22nd Sunday after Pentecost & Reformation Sunday) – October 29, 2023

We are continuing the temple testing. We have heard from the Chief priests and elders, the Pharisees’ disciples and the Herodians, we skipped the question on resurrection by the Sadducees, and now we have the Pharisees, with a lawyer asking another question, “What is the greatest commandment?” First, this question is not a bad one. This was a typical rabbinical question. With 613 commands in the Torah, what should take priority? It’s a fair conversation and a fair debate. R. Alan Culpepper recounts two good stories of this. There is the famous story of Hillel. “When a gentile challenged Hillel, saying that he would become a proselyte if Hillel could teach him the whole law while he stood on one foot, Hillel replied, ‘What you yourself hate, do not do to your neighbor: this is the whole Torah, while the rest is the commentary thereof; go and learn it’ (b. Šabb. 31a; cf. Matt 7:12).” And another, “Similarly, the oral tradition of the Pharisees records that Simeon the Just used to say, ‘By three things is the world sustained: by the Law, by the [Temple-]service [or worship], and by deeds of lovingkindness” (m. Abot 1.2).”[1] These are cherished stories, and the Hillel story in particular is supposed show wisdom and make you chuckle, right? The absurdity of the challenge is met with almost flippant simplicity. This is clearly the trajectory that Mark takes. The scribe is sincere in this question, wanting to know Jesus’ take in this matter and it follows closely in this tradition that we hear in the two accounts above. But Matthew is taking a different trajectory. The lawyer is not sincere. This is a questioning competence, and it is a question of heresy. Is Jesus attempting to destroy the Law?

Matthew 22:15-22 (21st Sunday after Pentecost) – October 22nd, 2023

There are a lot of two kingdom takes on this text that are important theologically and for the nuances of our understanding of institutional ethics and Christian relationship within our government structures. But I think that if we begin preaching on the necessity (or lack thereof) of taxes on April 15th, then we’ve strayed a little too far down the money rabbit hole. Instead, the traditional angle helps to keep us centered. As early church writers focus on, this is a call to give of ourselves to God. Tertullian writes, “That means render the image of Caesar, which is on the coin, to Caesar, and the image of God, which is imprinted on the person, to God. You give to Caesar only money. But to God, give yourself.”[4] And Augustine writes more concisely, “To Caesar his coins, to God your very selves.”[5]

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