(The above advertisements are in no way endorsed by this website.)
Return to "Topical Sermons"
Return to "Lectionary Sermons"


Sermon for 1st Sunday After Epiphany
Year B
"A Royal Priesthood"
Mark 1:4-11
1 Peter 2:4-10
"The Lights Won't Come On
If The Power Is Off"
Mark 1:4-11
"Who Do You Think You Are?"
Mark 1:4-11
"There�s Got to be More"
Genesis 1:1-5
Acts 19:1-7
Mark 1:4-11

"A Royal Priesthood"
Mark 1:4-11
1 Peter 2:4-10

Jesus came to John to be baptized. This has often puzzled Christians. You see John was preaching a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. He was calling people to turn away from sin and turn to God to be forgiven because the Messiah was on the way. The Gospels tell us that many including thieves and sinners and tax collectors left their sinful lives and changed their ways and were baptized.

So Jesus came to the Jordan to be baptized by John because the time had come from him to change from being a carpenter to being a Messiah, a Savior. When Jesus had been baptized the Holy Spirit came down upon him. And God said "That's my boy. He makes his Daddy proud!" Well, that is my paraphrase of "You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased." Some have mistakenly thought that this was when Jesus became the Son of God. Other places in the Bible make it clear that Jesus was conceived as the Son of God and that he even existed before Creation. What is happening here is God is affirming Jesus' response to his calling to change the direction of his life: to be the Son of God come to die for the sins of the world. And in Jesus' response we are given a model for our ministry.

We call this doctrine The Priesthood of All Believers. It is deeply rooted in the Methodist Movement. In the early days of Methodism John Wesley set apart lay preachers who traveled around England proclaiming Scriptural Holiness and calling people to repentance. Lay people, the non ordained members of the church, have always been the bread and butter of the ministry of the Methodist church. Without the ministry of the laity the church could not operate. Can I hear an amen from all the ordained ministers present? Even the highest law making body of the church, the General Conference is half laity. If you don't believe me just ask Liz Patterson our resident member of General Conference and a lay person. And so, lay people work side by side with ordained ministers in proclaiming the gospel, leading worship, caring for the needs of the world, and assisting in administering the sacraments.("This Holy Mystery: A United Methodist Understanding of Holy Communion"(2004) p. 22)

So you are a royal Priesthood. What does that mean? It means that just as Jesus was called to the three years of ministry that we read about in the Bible, you are called to your ministry. You are called to follow Jesus in teaching and healing and serving and sacrificing. You are called to proclaim the word. Some are called to teach Sunday School or to fill in for the preacher and proclaim the word that was. But all are called to proclaim the love of God through their daily lives and actions.

top of this page


"The Lights Won't Come On If the Power Is Off"

Mark 1:4-11

The lights won't come on if the power is off. That's a fact, but sometimes our actions seem to ignore that fact. We humans are creatures of habit. We do a lot of things without thinking about it. Most of the time we are operating on automatic pilot.

The lights won't come on if the power is off. This is a universal truth that can be seen in creation itself. In Genesis it says that the universe was a vast dark chaos before God began creating. It says that "darkness covered the face of the deep." But before God can start making something of this vast darkness it says the wind or spirit of God swept over the face of the deep. Then God said, "Let there be light!"

Perhaps we can see this principle at work in Jesus' own life. Mark writes, "In those days Jesus came from Nazareth to Galilee and was baptized by John." For most of his first 30 years Jesus lived in Nazareth. We know very little about his life there. He was probably a carpenter: a pretty peaceful and ordinary existence. In those days Jesus left that life and began a new life. He left the comfort and security of Nazareth to begin traveling to teach and heal. Instead of his bed in Nazareth Jesus slept on the ground. He gave up the security of a carpenters shop for the hazards of the open road. He left a peaceful existence for a life destined to end on the cross.

Right after Jesus was baptized something important happened: the heavens were torn open. I remember one time I was at the Beach for a seminar. My room was on the 15th floor and looked out over the ocean. One afternoon I looked out. It was overcast but the clouds were starting to break up. And the sun was shining through is a few places. And I could see the rays of light shining through the clouds. And way out in the ocean one part of the sea was illuminated and it seemed to glow against the backdrop of the darkness around it. It was as if heaven had broken through and the glory of God was shining through for all to see. That is how I imagine it looked to Jesus.

The lights won't come on if the power is off. Jesus was able to live as he did because he was full of the spiritual power of God. He was able to shine a light in the darkness because the power was on. And the only real source of spiritual power in this universe is the Spirit of God Almighty. Jesus was and is that spiritual power.

The lights won't come on if the power is off. This is a universal principle. The problem is it is contrary to what our society believes. Our society believes in independence and self reliance. "Get a hold of yourself" - "Pull yourself up by your boot straps and be your own man." That is what the world tells us.

The lights won't come on if the power is off. God Almighty is the only power source for abundant life. Turn from your self reliance and turn to God in faith and devotion. Surrender to his will just as Jesus surrendered and was obedient unto death on a cross. Let the Almighty fill you with the spirit and work in you.

Then stand back and watch the lights come on in your life.

top of this page


"Who Do You Think You Are?"

Mark 1:4-11

Today I want to preach on the topic of "Who do you think you are?" The story goes that Jesus and St. Paul were playing golf one day. As Jesus got ready to tee off he pulled out a nine iron. Paul said, "Lord, I wouldn't use that if I were you. You should use the driver. If you use a nine iron you will not be able to hit the ball over the water hazard. Only Tiger Woods could hit a ball that far with a nine iron." Jesus said, "Well if Tiger Woods can do it I can do it." So he hit the ball and it landed right in the water hazard. Jesus went down and when he got to the water he walked out on the water to the place where the ball fell in and reached down for it. Then Jesus came back up and started to tee off again with the nine iron. Paul interrupted and said, "Lord, please be patient with me, but I told you once if you use the nine iron the ball will land in the water hazard." But Jesus went ahead and again the ball landed in the water. Again he went down and walked across the water until he came to the place were the ball was. Just then a foursome came up and they saw Jesus walking on the water. Stunned one of them said, "Who does he think he is? Jesus Christ." And Paul replied, "No, he is Jesus Christ, but he thinks he's Tiger Woods."

This is important because Jesus' friends thought they knew who he was. Up to the time that Jesus started his ministry at the age of thirty, he probably lived a rather ordinary life. The Bible doesn't tell us much about that life. In fact the book of Mark just completely jumps over it. We know that he was a carpenter. Other than the incident that Luke records when he was twelve we know nothing else.

They thought Jesus was a carpenter but we know he was the Son of God. This fact became clear at his baptism. After Jesus was baptized God spoke to him out of heaven and said, "You are my Beloved Son in whom I am well pleased." God is speaking to Jesus. He says, "You..." Now I assume that Jesus knew who he was. It was unlikely that God is telling Jesus something he did not already know.

It is clear that Jesus' baptism was the beginning of his earthly ministry. But why was Jesus baptized to begin with? John's baptism was a baptism of repentance. It says that John was calling people to repentance. And when they were baptized they confessed their sins. In Judaism a baptism was a ritual washing of something. It was common for them to wash pots or eating utensils. The idea was that they be purified of any uncleanness. John was calling people to a ritual cleansing that symbolized the cleansing that the Messiah would work in them.

But more importantly than that, in our baptisms God claims us as his own. When Jesus was baptized a voice came out of heaven and said, "You are my beloved son, in you I am well pleased." When we were baptized God claimed us as his own also. Certainly none of us were born daughters or sons of God in the same way Jesus was. But because of the blood of Christ, God adopts us. We are adopted sons and daughters of the living God. Now some of us were baptized as infants, and some of us were baptized as adults. Some of us were dunked in the water and some of us were sprinkled on the head. It doesn't matter how it was done. What matters is that your baptism represented God's action of accepting you.

top of this page


"There's Got to be More"
Genesis 1:1-5
Acts 19:1-7
Mark 1:4-11

This is how the story of the Good News of Jesus goes. Like the prophet Isaiah used to says, "I'm sending a messenger ahead of me to get things ready. He'll be like someone yelling in the wilderness 'the King is coming'" So John the baptizer showed up in the wilderness and started a camp meeting. He would preach that people needed to change their lives and get baptized.

-(act like sermon is over)-

Have you ever gotten the feeling like there's got to be more? I remember when I was in High School. We all thought that life would be perfect when we had moved away from home and had our own place and our own wheels. Some of us went off to college or went to work. And we discovered that we had our own place and our own wheels. And we had this feeling that there had to be more.

That is how I think the people of Jerusalem felt in Jesus' day. They had it all. The city folk had the Romans to keep the peace. And despite the taxes, and sometimes because of them, they had economic security. The people in the city were often on the government's good side too. So they were comfortable.

There's got to be more! Maybe even God felt that way once. The Bible tells us that in the beginning the world was a formless void, and that the spirit of the Lord swept over the universe. I guess as God looked at that formless void God thought, "There's got to be more." So God said, 'Let there be light," and suddenly there was light.

Paul knew that there was more. The lesson from acts tells us how Paul told some people about it. During his travels Paul met some believers who had never heard of the Holy Spirit. Either John or one of his disciples had baptized them. They had heard of Jesus and believed in him but had not heard the whole story. Somehow no one had told them about how Jesus sent the Holy Spirit.

Have you ever had the feeling there's got to be more? If you have you are right. There is more! There is more to life than the things that most people strive for. There is more than wealth, and power and security and admiration.