Jesus said I am the vine, you are the branches

Rev. Amy Welin (5 Easter):In the one vine, each branch has life and is valuable Through Christ, we are part of the one true vine. Our fruit is the same as that of Christ, and it is priceless. What is our fruit? It is our capacity to love and serve, across barriers and man-made boundaries. In God’s garden of true beauty, the church is not the broker of salvation or judgment. The church is the agent of God’s love for the world, as that love was revealed through Jesus Christ. We are the Body of Christ, part of the vine that offers connection to life for the rest of the world. Read More Read more • Leer más → “Jesus said I am the vine, you are the branches”

Grant that when we hear his voice we may know him, and follow where he leads

Rev. Amy Welin (4 Easter):Many of us keep an image in our minds of the shepherd who carries home the little lamb. Have you seen that picture? Jesus is the gentle shepherd, in a white robe, with a beautiful little white lamb in his arms. Frankly, he looks rather like a gentleman shepherd, one whose hands and clothes never get dirty. This is a comforting image, but I am not sure I would actually entrust this fellow with the care of my sheep. He looks like he could run joyfully across a flowery field, playing with happy lambs, but he would not be useful fighting off a hungry wolf or pulling a mother sheep out of unruly brambles. Read More Read more • Leer más → “Grant that when we hear his voice we may know him, and follow where he leads”

Environmental sustainability is a spiritual issue

Sermon for April 19, 2015 (Third Sunday of Easter)
Rev. Amy Welin:

The collect for the Third Sunday of Easter is well-suited to the Sunday that we read the story of the miracle on the road to Emmaus, when the risen Christ reveals himself in the breaking of bread. In today’s gospel reading, using a passage later in Luke, Jesus also reveals himself in Jerusalem, first by eating a bit of fish and then by breaking open the Scriptures that his followers might understand. The intersection of the Collect and lessons this week is this: we can encounter the Risen Christ in the bread and wine because of the way that Jesus has been revealed in all the Scriptures. Read More Read more • Leer más → “Environmental sustainability is a spiritual issue”

Is doubt the enemy of faith?

Sermon for April 12, 2015 (Second Sunday of Easter)
Rev. Amy Welin:

What do you think: Is doubt the enemy of faith? Is doubt a spiritually destructive force that separates us from God? Were you taught that doubting is a personal spiritual failure? (I was.)
 
To have doubts and questions about faith is unsettling, isn’t it? We can wonder if something is wrong with us - are we just faking it? are we foolish? do we need remedial Sunday School? or just to pray harder? In my years as a church leader, I have noticed that people who live with doubts about Jesus and the resurrection can live in a silent desperation, because doubt in the church is treated almost like a leprosy of the soul. Read More Read more • Leer más → “Is doubt the enemy of faith?”

Are you looking for Jesus of Nazareth?

Sermon for April 5, 2015 (Easter Sunday)
Rev. Amy Welin:

We have known for weeks that spring has been coming, not because the weather has cooperated, but because the peeps and chocolate candy and butterfly toys have arrived in the stores. We have had to trust in the coming of spring, without a lot of observable evidence. Sometimes we realize that the boundary between the dead of winter and the new life of spring is very thin. Read More Read more • Leer más → “Are you looking for Jesus of Nazareth?”

By your holy cross, you have saved the world • Por tu santa cruz redimiste al mundo

Sermon for April 3, 2015 (Good Friday)
Sermón de 3 de abril 2015 (Viernes Santo)
Rev. Amy Welin:

In the cross, I do not see a vindictive God who is satisfied by the blood of the pure sacrifice. I see a God who willingly sacrifices all of himself, in opposition to the violence which we demand. I see a God who chooses to be among the godforsaken. En la cruz, no veo un Dios vengativo que está satisfecha con la sangre del sacrificio puro. Veo un Dios que voluntariamente sacrifica todo de sí mismo, en oposición a la violencia que exigimos. Veo un Dios que elige para estar entre los olvidado por Dios. Read More • Lea más Read more • Leer más → “By your holy cross, you have saved the world • Por tu santa cruz redimiste al mundo

Jesus said: Unless I wash you, you have no share with me • Jesus le dijo Si no te los lavo, no podrás ser de los míos

Sermon for April 2, 2015 (Maundy Thursday)
Sermón de 2 de abril 2015 (Jueves Santo)
Rev. Amy Welin:

What would we do if we knew that our life would end in less than a week? ¿Qué haríamos si sabíamos que nuestra vida terminaría en menos de una semana? Read More • Lea más Read more • Leer más → “Jesus said: Unless I wash you, you have no share with me • Jesus le dijo Si no te los lavo, no podrás ser de los míos

And Jesus said, “I am.”

Sermon for March 29, 2015 (Palm Sunday)
Rev. Amy Welin:

The distance we cover during our procession with the palms is not a long one, at least not physically. And it really is rather fun, to walk out of the parish hall and into the church, waving our palm branches in the air and then beginning to sing our hosannas. On a Sunday morning, it is so good to be with the parish community and to celebrate the joy of a new day. Our palms smell fresh and cool and green, like spring. At the same time, we remember the wonderful, exuberant greeting the people of Jerusalem gave to Jesus when he arrived at the city gates so long ago. They cheered and shouted “hosanna” or “save us now, Lord.” They threw their cloaks and palm branches across his path so the dust would not get churned up and cover him. It was a royal welcome. They were hoping for a new day in a political sense, and they wanted their Messiah, Jesus, to be their king. When we go home, we remember that we, too, were a part of this royal welcome. Read More  Listen to this sermon Read more • Leer más → “And Jesus said, “I am.””

Queremos ver a Jesus

La Rev. Amy Welin (5 Cuaresma):
La semana pasada, mi hijo notó que a medida que la nieve se derritió, el remanente del césped debajo de él parecía muerto. Él no me creyó cuando le sugerí que toda la nieve era fertilizante natural. Podía ver la hierba, marchitas y amarillentas. De verdad, mamá, parece muerto. Si el pequeño glaciar en nuestro patio delantero nunca se derrite completamente, confío en que el césped volverá a algo verde y de vivir. Ese es el patrón de la creación. Algunos evangelios son más fáciles de entender que otras. ¿Te diste cuenta de la desconexión entre la solicitud de los griegos y la respuesta de Jesús en el pasaje del evangelio de hoy? Una parte de mí espera que el editor dejó un par de frases. Señor, queremos ver a Jesús. En la mayoría de los domingos, también podríamos estar listos para decir esto, junto con los griegos. Queremos ayuda. Queremos ser sanado. Deseamos la presencia de Dios. ¿Es Jesús en casa? Tenemos que verlo. Lea más Read more • Leer más → “Queremos ver a Jesus”

We want to see Jesus

Sermon for March 22, 2015 (Fifth Sunday in Lent)
Rev. Amy Welin:
Late last week, my son noticed that as the snow melted, the remnant of the lawn beneath it looked dead. He did not believe me when I suggested that all the snow was nature’s fertilizer. He could see the wilted, yellowed grass. Really, mom, it looks dead. If the small glacier on our front yard ever melts completely, I trust that the lawn will return to something green and living. That is the pattern of creation. Some gospels are easier to work with than others. Did you notice the disconnect between the inquiry of the Greeks and Jesus’ response in today’s gospel passage? Part of me hopes that the editor left out a couple of sentences. Sir we want to see Jesus. On most Sundays, we also might be ready to say that along with the Greeks. We want help. We want to be healed. We long for the presence of God. Is Jesus at home? We need to see him. Read More  Listen to this sermon Read more • Leer más → “We want to see Jesus”