Sermons

DECISION, Sermon by Dr. Rev. Warner Bailey

To Listen to this Sermon, Click Here –>  http://ststphnfw.sermon.tv/9784095

Isaiah 35.1-10   Luke 1.68-79   Matthew 11.2-11   James 5.7-10

December 15, 2013

Following Jesus is not a casual pastime.  You have to plan.  You have to decide.  You have to make an effort.  You have to put your skin in the game.  In the words of Jesus, you have to go out.

Speaking to the crowds about John the Baptist, Jesus put to them the question:  Why did you go out in the wilderness to see him?  What made you take the effort, spend the money, use up your time, and say No to many other options so you could go out to see John the Baptist? Read More »DECISION, Sermon by Dr. Rev. Warner Bailey

Celtic Christ

To Listen to this Sermon, Click Here ->  http://sermon.net/ststphnfw/sermonid/1200118017

World Communion: Encircling Christ

By Rev. Dr. Fritz Ritsch

October 6, 2013

“Lest anyone, then, be excluded from access to happiness, God not only sowed in human minds that seed of religion of which we have spoken but revealed Himself and daily discloses Himself in the whole workmanship of the universe. As a consequence, people cannot open their eyes without being compelled to see him.” John Calvin, Institutes of Faith, I. V. i.

 Philip Newell writes that his infant son Cameron liked to take his midday nap in his carriage in the wooded backyard of their home in England. “One day, toward the end of Cameron’s nap when I thought he would soon be waking, I went out to the yard. There he was, lying on his back in the carriage, fully awake but perfectly still. He was looking at the light dappling through the leaves of a fig tree. I paused to watch him. After a while, he lifted his arms to the light in a type of response. I was witnessing a communion with the Glory that dapples through creation. As I stood watching Cameron, I remembered, perhaps the earliest memory of my life, doing exactly the same thing as an infant, lying under a tree watching light dapple.” [1]

 Read More »Celtic Christ

The Virtues: Generosity

To Listen to this Sermon, Click Here ->  http://sermon.net/ststphnfw/sermonid/1200108094

Psalm 150

II Corinthians 9: 4-15

 

Juanita Cowan was a child of one of the founding families of Broadway Presbyterian, our predecessor church. she was aunt to Peggy Kennedy, great aunt to Katie Hinckley, and great great aunt of Katie and Greg’s three daughters, Trinity, Emory, and Addison. Ms. Cowan was a child when the Great Southside Fire of 1909 burned down Broadway’s original building, across from the site that is now Broadway Baptist Church. Ms. Cowan wrote the history of St. Stephen, and she wrote of being a young child when the rebuilt Broadway Presbyterian Church was completed. “On January 1, 1911, the congregation gathered at the tabernacle and marched to the new building singing ‘Onward Christian Soldiers,” she wrote. “The new building was of beautiful red brick… The sanctuary in brown tones inspired reverence, especially in a small child; even when there was no service going on, I felt I should whisper.”Read More »The Virtues: Generosity

The Virtues: Courage

To Listen to this Sermon, Click Here ->  http://sermon.net/ststphnfw/sermonid/1200094715

Joshua 1: 1-9

Hebrews 13: 1-8, 15-16

God’s people stand on the border of The Promised Land. They’ve wandered the desert forty years, and over that time they’ve been led by Moses. But now Moses is dead, and Joshua, son of Nun, is in charge. Joshua is no stranger to physical courage. He’s a warrior; he was one of the twelve spies sent to investigate Canaan when they first came upon it.

But in our passage, God is calling Joshua to a different kind of courage.

Read More »The Virtues: Courage

The Virtues: Hope

The Lord answers Job out of the whirlwind, a powerful image of suffering prayer.
The Lord answers Job out of the whirlwind, a powerful image of suffering prayer.

To Listen to this Sermon, click here -> http://sermon.net/ststphnfw/sermonid/1200090941

Romans 8: 18-25

The difference between hope and faith is not always clear. It comes down to this: Hope is in the future, faith is in the here and now. Hope is what we long for, what we pursue, what we dream of, but don’t have yet. As Paul says in Romans, “Hope that is seen is not hope.” Faith, on the other hand, is how we make hope visible in the here and now; it is how we put that hope into action. As Hebrews says, “Faith is the substance of what we hope for; it is the evidence of things unseen.” Faith makes our hope concrete in our lives. But our hope is the thing we’re really after. The Olympic athlete longs for the gold medal; when that hope pushes her to train harder and better, it has turned into faith.Read More »The Virtues: Hope

The Virtues: Temperance

To Listen to this Sermon, click here-> http://sermon.net/ststphnfw/sermonid/1200081956

Psalm 107: 1-9

I Corinthians 9: 19-27

Luke 12: 13-21

“Temperance… now usually means teetotalism. But in the days when the Second Cardinal Virtue was christened ‘temperance,’ it meant nothing of the sort. Temperance referred not specially to drink, but to all pleasures; and it meant not abstaining, but going the right length and no further.” —C. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity, Book 3, Chapter 2.

 

Jesus says of the rich fool, “this is how it will be with whoever stores up things for themselves but is not rich toward God.” That could be a description of the self-indulgent man, as Aristotle describes him in his Nicomachean EthicsRead More »The Virtues: Temperance

The Virtues: Justice

To Listen to this Sermon, click here -> http://sermon.net/ststphnfw/sermonid/1200072559

Psalm 85

 

In Plato’s Republic, the philosopher Socrates tells the story of the negotiations between the powerful Athenians and the weak Melians in the Peloponnesian War. The embittered Melians say angrily that “If we refused to submit to these negotiations, if we insisted on our rights and refused to submit to your rule, you’d only wage war with us, conquer us, and make us your slaves.” Shockingly, the Athenians agree. “We won’t insult your intelligence by telling you that we deserve to rule you because we are morally right and that you are morally wrong,” the Athenian negotiators tell the Melians. “You know as well as we do that right, as the world goes, is only a question between equals in power, where the stronger do whatever they can and the weaker suffer whatever they must.”

Read More »The Virtues: Justice

Patience is a Virtue

To Listen to this Sermon, click here ->  http://sermon.net/ststphnfw/sermonid/1200068303

A waiting person is a patient person. The word patience means the willingness to stay where we are and live the situation out to the full in the belief that something hidden there will manifest itself to us.” 

Henri J.M. Nouwen

Luke 10: 38-42, Psalm 52

 You have probably heard of the Seven Virtues. The Greeks identified Four Virtues: Wisdom, Temperance, Justice, and Courage. Later, the three “Christian” virtues were added: Faith, hope, and love. These comprise what tradition has held to be the “Cardinal” virtues.

Read More »Patience is a Virtue

The Virtues: Love

Luke 10: 21-36

This is the second of a series on the virtues.

The other day someone asked me, “What is love?” It’s an important question. The Bible teaches from beginning to end, “Love your neighbor,” so “what is love?” is a crucial question.

It’s not the one that the lawyer asks Jesus.

Instead he asks, “Who is my neighbor?”Read More »The Virtues: Love