Sweet Spots
Ideas and messages from Len Sweet.
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The Largest Room in Our Lives
The Largest Room of Our Lives Lectionary 17 February 2019 6th Sunday After Epiphany Jeremiah 17:5-10 Psalm 1 1 Corinthians 15:12-20 Luke 6:17-26 Text to Life In our homes today, we have two kinds of rooms, each one determined by our life circumstances. Those two kinds of rooms are rooms…
Metathesiophobia
Metathesiophobia Story Lectionary 10 February 2019 Isaac Puts Down Roots in the Land of the Philistines (Genesis 26) Joseph’s Investment in Egypt and His Plan for Abundance and Famine (Genesis 41) Invest in as Many Ways as You Can for You Do Not Know What Comes (Ecclesiastes 11:1-6) Psalm 1:…
The Overboard Life
The Overboard Life Lectionary 10 February 2019 5th Sunday After Epiphany Isaiah 6:1-8 (9-13) Psalm 138 1 Corinthians 15:1-11 Luke 5:1-11 Text to Life The clock is ticking. You’ve got until Friday. But if you haven’t pre-ordered, pre-thought, or pre-shopped, you are already in trouble. This ticking time bomb at…
Metaphors of Sound –Preaching Tip for 3 February 2019
Sound can create visuals for people, as well as evoke and provoke experience and emotion. You can employ sound within your sermons in ways that help people experience and visualize the stories of scripture. Think about how you might do that, whether in acting out the story, or using sound…
Pastor’s Prayer for 3 February 2019
O Lord, give us the vision to dream the unknowns, the naivety to believe they exist, the faith of first steps forward thrown in paths of resolute grace: to stay the course when, even to revision the vision brings collision, division, and derision. Amen.
–Len Sweet
The Prodigal Prophet
— The Prodigal Prophet —
Jonah and the Mystery of God’s Mercy
by Timothy Keller
–Review by Teri Hyrkas
“You cannot conceive, my child, nor can I or anyone, the appalling strangeness of the mercy of God.” Graham Greene from Brighton Rock
Can you think of a book in the Bible that is named after someone whose life is a bad example for others? How about the book of Jonah? It seems likely that many people are familiar with Jonah’s story, particularly the part that tells about Jonah being swallowed by a big fish because of his resistance to God’s command to preach to the people of Nineveh. But how many have read all four chapters of this short Old Testament book and been disturbed by Jonah’s never ending bad attitude? In The Prodigal Prophet: Jonah and the Mystery of God’s Mercy (Viking, 2018), Timothy Keller zeroes in on this puzzling conduct by Jonah. As he brings the prophet’s bad behavior to the fore, Keller offers perspectives so provocative that the ancient tale of Jonah becomes fresh, cogent, and surprising once again. read more…
Pet Sounds –by Len Sweet
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When I was a doctoral student, I wrote a series of four articles for Foundations on “The Chicago School of Theology” with one of my ethics professors, Kenneth “Snuffy” Smith. Smith was feted and famous for being the person who taught Martin Luther King, Jr. his ethics and some of his theology. White researching and writing the articles, I will never forget listening to the Beach Boys while reading this passage from the Canadian scholar Shirley Jackson Case, one of the “Chicago School” theologians who was both a mathematician and a historian of early Christianity. In his book “Highways of Christian Doctrine” (1936) he writes “Not long ago a well known English novelist, speaking through one of his characters, alleged that Christianity like a passing toad has left behind on the beaches of life a promiscuous deposit of wriggling theologians, hopping and burrowing in the warm nutritious sand. Were it true that the tide has passed, never to return . . . let the deceased champions of Christian opinion rest in peace. . . But tides have a defiant way of ebbing and rising again” (184-85). I have never been able to listen to the Beach Boys without thinking of those toady “wriggling theologians.” “Pet Sounds” may be the greatest album of all times. In this 1966 recording, Brian Wilson and The Beach Boys took pop music as deep as it could go. It set the standard for excellence in rock’n’roll for generations of musicians. But Capitol records was so afraid of these musical “depths” that they released “Pet Sounds” with a tandem album “The Best of the Beach Boys.” The “best” of the old immediately outsold the new greatness, and it took the “Pet Sounds” album 50 years finally to go Platinum. 50 years. Pet Sounds includes arguably the greatest love song ever written, “God Only Knows,” the song Paul McCartney called after hearing it for the first time “the perfect song” every songwriter dreams of writing. This love song begins with the confession, “I may not always love you.” Which is one reason why it’s “perfect”—because the “perfect” always contains imperfections. So too will your greatest sermons. Always imperfect. Always unfinished. Every sermon is an “Unfinished Symphony.” Also remember that it may take years, decades, generations for the impact of your preaching to be appreciated and realized. In the words of those Emmaus disciples, who in looking backward realized the magic of the moment that had passed. “Did not our hearts beat within us WHEN . .. “
Listen to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkPy18xW1j8
And as you do, please know that “God Only Knows What I’d Be Without You.” All of you.
Len Sweet
Attachments area Preview YouTube video The Beach Boys – God Only Knows (Lyrics via Description) (HQ)
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A Charter for Every Chart
A Charter for Every Chart Lectionary 3 February 2019 4th Sunday After the Epiphany Jeremiah 1:4-10 Psalm 71:1-6 1 Corinthians 13:1-13 Luke 4:21-30 Text to Life No one wants to be the bearer of bad news. But sometimes it has to be done. Doctors have to break the news of…
Words at the Threshold
Words at the Threshold
Lisa Smartt
–Review by Vern Hyndman
“Words at the Threshold: What We Say as We’re Nearing Death” is a book that Lisa Smartt wrote while finding her way through the grief of her father’s death. For a book that deals with the last words of dying people, Threshold is a surprisingly hopeful book.
Unlike some other notable books on death and near death experiences, Threshold is not written from a sensational perspective, but rather an academic perspective. Maybe more exactly, from the threshold of an educated researcher in the wrestling of grief. I can’t promise that you won’t weep, as I did. I’m reasonably certain that you’ll learn something new about dying, about eternity, and about the transition from life into life. read more…
Using Nonverbal Signs in Preaching
Not all preaching needs to be verbal. Use hand gestures, motions, signs, even music in your sermons. Non verbal signs can also encourage participation. When a congregation all come together under one metaphor, the result can be unification and empowerment in the Spirit. Experiment this week with non verbal signs. …