Sermons

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    Published: 
    The Rev. Canon Jan Naylor Cope

    Pentecost XVI: Have you wondered what it would be like for you if that mark, that identification as a follower of Christ, were visible forever, like indelible ink on your forehead?

  • Cathedral logo
    Published: 
    The Rev. Canon Jan Naylor Cope

    Pentecost XV: What would it take for us to change the habit of mashed potatoes to maybe a holy habit of seeking Christ in those times?

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    Published: 
    The Very Rev. Gary Hall

    Pentecost XIV: God calls us to judge and heal our nation of the ongoing sin of racism, but we can only do that as we judge and heal ourselves.

  • Cathedral logo
    Published: 
    The Rev. Canon Jan Naylor Cope

    Pentecost XIV: The transformation was palpable and powerful, so much so that I had to struggle to hold back my own tears by what I was seeing of God’s great love that surpasses all of our understanding.

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    Published: 
    The Very Rev. Gary Hall

    Pentecost XIII: Taken as a whole, reading the Bible is like attending a really dysfunctional Thanksgiving dinner, one where the kids at that separate table are fighting over more than who gets the cranberry sauce.

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    Published: 
    The Rev. Canon Gina Gilland Campbell

    Pentecost XIII: The flame of love Jesus bears for God consumes every unnecessary thing while carefully preserving the essential.

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    Published: 
    The Very Rev. Gary Hall

    Pentecost XII: Christians don’t live in a fantasy. We live in ultimate reality.

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    Published: 
    The Very Rev. Gary Hall

    Pentecost X: Learning to read a rock—a piece of God’s creation—is very much like the life of prayer itself. … Prayer is about accommodating ourselves to what God is doing in and through us and the world.

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    Published: 

    For the majority of people … a low-grade faith life with periodic worship, haphazard spiritual practices, and a relationship with God that asked little of them was just fine.

  • Cathedral logo
    Published: 
    The Rev. Canon Jan Naylor Cope

    Pentecost IX: Jesus spoke five times more about economic and money issues than he did about prayer, harkening back to Deuteronomy and particularly the fifteenth chapter where we are commanded to do something about the poor and the needy.