benadams

Sermon 5/30/21 "Learning to Walk in the Dark" Pr. Ben Adams

Sermon 5/30/21 "Learning to Walk in the Dark" Pr. Ben Adams

The Holy Trinity is mysterious, and this place Holy Trinity will always be synonymous with mystery to me. And It’s precisely because of this openness to the mystery that we can be bold to learn about and dismantle racism together even when it implicates us, we can be bold to provide our confirmation students and our Life Together catechumens an opportunity to ask questions without trying to appease them with easy answers or cliches, we can be bold co-creators with God as we labor together and birth the kingdom of God here on earth as it is in heaven, and near or far we can be bold to risk another step together putting one foot in front of the other as we vulnerably, but bravely learn to walk in the dark.

Sermon 5/9/21: Doing Power Differently (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 5/9/21: Doing Power Differently (Pr. Ben Adams)

Dear people Jesus is sharing power with us. No longer are we in a master/servant relationship where Jesus has power over us, but he has shared his power with us as friends. That is how Jesus loves us, by sharing his own power with us so that we can then love others as Jesus has loved us by sharing our own power with others. This sharing of power is a demonstration of love that gives us the ability to act together as one and to conquer the world wherever worldly power has distorted our relationships through racism, queerphobia, classism, or any other ism.

Sermon 4/11/21: "Of One Heart and Soul" Pr. Ben Adams

Sermon 4/11/21: "Of One Heart and Soul" Pr. Ben Adams

As Jesus was sent to us to share his peace and Holy Spirit with us, we too are sent to share ourselves and the spirit of the living God with others. That is to live as the people of Easter. To trust, to share, and to experience the good, pleasant, and complete joy that is built up when we are of one heart and soul. Alleluia! Amen

Sermon 3/7/21: "Crowded Table" Pr. Ben Adams

Sermon 3/7/21: "Crowded Table" Pr. Ben Adams

Jesus turned the tables in the first place because they were set in such a way that actively discriminated against the poor and ritually unclean to the extent that there was no place for them at the table, and Jesus cannot abide so he overturns the table to communicate that the Lord’s table has a place intentionally prepared for each and every one of us. It was set with you and me in mind. In response we are not only called to be table flippers, but table setters as well, inviting all to God’s table of mercy.

Sermon 2/27/21: "The God of Improbable Outcomes" (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 2/27/21: "The God of Improbable Outcomes" (Pr. Ben Adams)

We can easily talk ourselves out of improbable divine things with some probable human things we would rather put our trust in. But, as we will soon see come Easter, death, evil, hatred, and darkness have already lost and we need not give them any more power because victory is ours, victory is ours through God who loves us.

Sermon 2/7/21: "The Healing Power of Showing Up" (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 2/7/21: "The Healing Power of Showing Up" (Pr. Ben Adams)

Jesus’s healing in our Gospel could not be contained, and God’s healing will be experienced by all people, and on that day, not one will be missing for as our Psalmist proclaims, “The Lord heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.” Even for those who were not healed in this age, God promises resurrection in the age to come. God’s resurrection will bring us into this new day and age, but while we are still in this age, God’s hope and healing will show us the way to show up for one another and ourselves.

Sermon 1/16/21: Godly Positioning System (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 1/16/21: Godly Positioning System (Pr. Ben Adams)

In this moment between stimulus and response we can perceive God calling out to us like God did to Samuel and in this powerful moment we too can say, “Speak Lord for your servant is listening!” The road noise and commotion around us might be pretty distracting and we might miss our exit or our turn, but we can still trust that the moral arc of the universe will bend us back towards justice because each of our Godly positioning systems has a route re-calculator that gets to work whenever we get off track.

Sermon 12/26/20: Finitum Capax Infinity (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 12/26/20: Finitum Capax Infinity (Pr. Ben Adams)

Just as God has embraced all things through Christ's earthly incarnation, God is also at work healing, redeeming, and restoring all things. Through baptism and communion, we finite humans intimately receive God’s infinite presence and grace, and we are God bearers for the world. A life of praise is the only appropriate response to such amazing grace and we take our place in joining the hymn of all creation.

Our very beings are capable of containing, receiving, and bearing the infinite. Jesus’ radical incarnation on this earth has brought heaven and earth together as one.

Sermon 12/24/20: Directionless (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 12/24/20: Directionless (Pr. Ben Adams)

Merry Christmas dear found ones, whoever you are, wherever you are, whatever you have done or not done, Christ has been born to you this day and is with you and leading you towards your ultimate destination, a place we can’t get to with a map because this place is not so much a place at all, but a new day where there will be no more virus, where all will live in unity, and where love and light will fill all creation to overflowing.

Sermon 12/19/20: Rejoice O Highly Favored (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 12/19/20: Rejoice O Highly Favored (Pr. Ben Adams)

This good news of unmerited favor on us all was announced to Mary by the Angel Gabriel and it echoes for us to hear tonight. Through scripture, song, and sacrament we have been reminded not of our power and privilege over others, but of God’s favor and the Lord’s presence with us all, so rejoice O highly favored, the Lord is with you, and Christ is coming to make all things new.

Sermon 11/28/20: The never-ending Advent (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 11/28/20: The never-ending Advent (Pr. Ben Adams)

As we begin this Advent, even though it feels like a never-ending Advent, we can look with hope to the promise of God who stops at nothing, not even death, to come and save us. God’s grace has made us ready for that moment. In the meantime, God sustains us, God strengthens us, and God our potter’s hands support us in our waiting.

Sermon 10/31/20: Meet You on the Other Shore (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 10/31/20: Meet You on the Other Shore (Pr. Ben Adams)

Iin the waters of baptism we connect to our cloud of witnesses who surround us, singing as a testament that these waters can be for us our sign of the end of all tears. One day we will meet with the saints on the other side of the river, but until then we listen deeply for their song and try to find our own part in the song. We join the hymn of all creation as we celebrate the baptized people of God, living and dead, who make up the body of Christ.

Sermon 10/18/20: Whose face do you see? (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 10/18/20: Whose face do you see? (Pr. Ben Adams)

When you are upset about the driver in front of you and you speed up to give them the stink eye, you can ask yourself, whose face do I see in that other driver? Or better yet, if you do go through with giving them the stink eye, whose face would they see? Is it the face of God? Or when you look in the mirror, whose face do you see? Do you see the face of God whose image you have been created in? Or turning the conversation back to taxation, whose face do you see when you pay your taxes? Is it the face of God in the person on the street corner who could benefit from public housing, universal healthcare, and a strong social safety net? Or do you only see the face of those who use the tax system to exploit the poor and further enrich the wealthy?

Sermon 9/19/20: Bread of Heaven (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 9/19/20: Bread of Heaven (Pr. Ben Adams)

This God given bread for the journey is needed more than ever, because we need to be filled with something different than what the world is filling us with. I know for me personally, when I turn on the news, or open my social media feed I am filled with fatigue as we close in towards our eighth month of the pandemic, I am filled with existential fear for our climate future as wildfires and hurricanes rage, I am filled with frustration at the partisan divides that toxically pit us against one another, I am filled with anger at continued racism and police brutality, and now I am filled with grief over the death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Filled as many of us are with fatigue, fear, frustration, anger, and grief, we might think there can’t possibly be any room for anything else, but there is still a hunger for liberation. And, in order for us to carry on towards our liberated promised land, we’ll need some bread for the wilderness journey, some true bread of heaven that comes from God and gives life to the world. And so, in this liminal space between departure and destination, we feast on the bread of heaven until we’re filled with the true presence of the living God who is leading us to liberation.

Sermon 7/12/20: No Rules, Just Response (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 7/12/20: No Rules, Just Response (Pr. Ben Adams)

As followers of Christ we have been set free from the laws of sin and death and in the famous words of Leo Balmudo from Grease, “the rules are there ain’t no rules,” just our response to the love and grace we have experienced through Christ's death and resurrection. Christ IS victorious over death and has sown in us a victory garden with seeds of freedom planted in the soil of our lives, watered by our baptism, that give way to glorious, life-giving fruit. Through the example of rule-breakers like Jacob, Paul, and even God, our profligate seed sower, we are invited to also not follow the rules, and instead follow Christ and respond to the love and grace we have in Christ by extending that same love and grace to others.

Sermon 4/12/20: Dare to be Found (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 4/12/20: Dare to be Found (Pr. Ben Adams)

Christ rose from the dead to liberate us from our captivity, to bring us into the fullness of God’s family, and to be found by God’s divine love over and over and over again. The Marys have shown us what it looks like to dare to be found, and they were found because the first thing that the risen Jesus does is to go find others to invite into a life of divine love — a life of love that death cannot destroy. This morning is your reminder that you have already been found by God’s Divine Love, but it’s also your invitation to live into God’s Easter liberation and to dare to be found again and again by God’s divine love!

Sermon 3/29/20: Breath Work (Pr. Ben Adams)

Sermon 3/29/20: Breath Work (Pr. Ben Adams)

The death and suffering that the COVID-19 virus is causing might take our breath away and cause us to weep like Jesus did, but out of his love for us Jesus takes even that which is dead and dry and resurrects life. Life out of love is the same love that holds us together one to another, and holds us together personally when it seems like we have hit the rock bottom of our depths. So, as these weeks continue, let’s prophesy to the breath by reminding ourselves and others when we forget about the love that holds us all as one.