Audio of the sermon is here:
Tag Archives: Church Year
The Messy Symbol and the Certain Word
In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
I don’t know how familiar you are with Ash Wednesday, so forgive me if you already know these things. Ash Wednesday begins the season of Lent, which, except for Sundays, makes up the 40 days before the celebration of Jesus’ resurrection. Now there are all sorts of historical factors that go into this. 40 days for Lent goes back at least to the 6th century, and maybe to the 3rd century, because of the obvious connection to Jesus’ 40 days in the wilderness after His baptism. Ashes on the head—probably not in a nice cross-shape, but sprinkled or put on the head with sackcloth—were originally related to public penitence after a public sin, and that public penitence often did happen during Lent. In the 10th century, in England, ashes on the head became popular for the first day of Lent. It was probably only in the 20th century that Lutherans picked it up again, for what it’s worth. Maybe you care about some of that stuff, and maybe you don’t.
Continue readingMade Strange
Watching Within the Confusion
The Holy Covenant
Bishop and Christian*, December 2016
Something you may or may not (want to) know: Advent is my favorite season of the church year. As a personal preference, I appreciate the more meditative season, the expectant hymns, the longing, and the hope in the midst of darkness. It seems much more true to life in this creation, while the full-throated joy of Christmas points to life in the new creation, which we have now only by faith.
Advent is a mixture of longing and hope; the futility of this creation combined with the fertility of Life itself taking flesh in the Virgin’s womb. It is declaring to us the One who has come in flesh to suffer, die, and rise again; the One who comes to us—still God and Man in one person—every time His Word and Sacraments are heard, believed, and celebrated; and the One who will be revealed at the moment when this old, dying creation is renewed eternally and restored through Jesus’ own resurrection.






