Sermons:
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BEING WHO WE ARE,
Ephesians 4:25 – 5:2,
by Rev. Rick Thompson
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Directions
or Direction?
Ephesians 4:25 - 5:2,
by Rev. Randy L. Quinn
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Divine Anger?
Ephesians 4.25-52,
by Rev. Frank Schaefer
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David in Recovery 2 Samuel 15 -18,
by Rev. Thomas Hall
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We Know Who You Are, John 6:35, 41-51,
anonymous
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The Goodness of
Anger,
Ephesians
4:25 - 5:2, Jim from B.C.
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Sign, Sign, Everywhere a Sign
based on John 6:35, 41-51
by Rev. Karen A. Goltz
There are so many different types of signs, and
we’d be lost with out them. Signs on buildings that tell us where we are, signs
on roads that tell us where we’re going, signs to tell us when a business will
be open or closed, so we can plan our lives accordingly. To quote a verse from
the 5 Man Electrical Band, “Sign, sign, everywhere a sign, blockin’ out the
scenery, breakin’ my mind. Do this, don’t do that, can’t you read the sign?”
The signs the singer encounters give him information about where he is and is
not welcome. “Long-haired freaky people need not apply,” “anybody caught
trespassin' will be shot on sight,” “you got to have a membership card to get
inside,” and then finally, “Everybody welcome. Come in, kneel down and pray.”
Signs are a big part of our lives, bigger than
we realize. We have no trouble with printed signs, like the ones on the road
and on buildings, the ones that give us needed information. Some of us may
check the fortune under our astrological sign in the newspaper or on the
internet, just out of curiosity, not really expecting that there’s any truth to
it. But when we read of people like the ones in today’s gospel lesson, the ones
who ask Jesus, “What sign are you going to give us, so that we may see it and
believe you?” we have a little trouble relating to them, wondering why they need
a sign when Jesus so obviously is who he is.
The thing I really wonder about them is:
what kind of sign are they looking for? At the beginning of last week’s gospel
lesson we read that the large crowd kept following him, because they saw the
signs that he was doing for the sick. After he fed the five thousand with the
five loaves of bread and the two fish, we’re told that, “When the people saw the
sign he had done, they began to say, ‘This is indeed the prophet who is to come
into the world.’” (John 6:14) So the multiplying of food must have been
interpreted as a sign. In today’s gospel lesson, Jesus says to the crowd, “You
are looking for me, not because you saw signs, but because you ate your fill of
the loaves.” And after he tells them that the work of God is for them to
believe in the one whom God has sent, the crowds ask him what sign he is going
to give them so that they might see it and believe his words. I read that and
wonder, are they blind? What more do they want?
And then they make it worse for themselves by
going on to use as an example the manna Israel received in the wilderness when
they were following Moses out of Egypt. They could recognize the bread from
heaven as a sign, but they couldn’t see the same thing in the incident with the
bread and the fish the night before? I don’t get it.
I think part of the problem might be our
understanding of ‘sign.’ For the most part, we understand a sign to be
something printed that gives information. Only occasionally do we use it to
mean something like a symbol that indicates something has happened or is going
to happen. Like in the movie Sleepless in Seattle Meg Ryan’s character
is trying on her grandmother’s wedding dress in preparation for her own wedding,
and the sleeves rip right out. Skeptical Meg Ryan is suddenly frightened and
says, “It’s a sign,” perhaps realizing for the first time that she may not be
marrying the right man. Her mother reminds her that she doesn’t believe in
signs. Signs like that are taken with a grain of salt in our culture and
society. Maybe some people believe in them, but it’s certainly not something
objective and irrefutable, like the sign out front that proclaims to the world
that this is indeed Trinity Lutheran Church. Belief in that is non-negotiable.
Belief in what it may or may not mean that we’ve had lousy luck getting that
sign lit up at night is entirely optional. [continue]
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