Sermons

Seekers recognizes that any member of the community may be called upon by God to give us the Word, and thus we have an open pulpit with a different preacher each week. Sermons preached at Seekers, as well as sermons preached by Seekers at other churches or events, are posted here, beginning with the most recent.

Click here for an archive of our sermons.

Feel free to use what is helpful from these sermons. We only ask that when substantial portions are abstracted or used in a written work, please credit Seekers Church and the author, and cite the URL.

New Story Leadership 2016

June 26, 2016 Sixth Sunday after Pentecost New Story Leadership is an organization that brings together Israeli and Palestinian young adults to work, live, and share their stories with one another and with faith communities. Participants in this summer’s program spoke at Seekers this morning during the time of sharing the Word. Three speakers from among the twelve participants, one Israeli and two Palestinian, shared their experiences of growing up in the midst of the long-standing conflict. Each is committed to an ongoing project in support of peaceful sharing of the land they all call home.

“To Mourn, and to Act” by Elizabeth Gelfeld

June 19, 201616 After Pent Altar Spcl

Fifth Sunday after Pentecost

This is a day of mourning. We mourn the dead in Orlando and their shattered loved ones, the victims of Omar Mateen. We also mourn again the deaths and shattered lives of Emanuel African American Episcopal Church in Charleston, one year ago. I did a Google search on mass shootings, and the first site I went to was a report from the PBS Newshour, published shortly after the San Bernardino, California, shooting, which took place last year on December 2nd. The report called this massacre by Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik “the deadliest mass shooting in the U.S. since Adam Lanza opened fire at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Connecticut, on Dec. 15, 2012, killing 26 children and adults.”

But the point of the report was that PBS Newshour had updated its map documenting all the mass shootings in the United States during the year 2015. When I scrolled down to the map, what I saw stopped my heart. The data source defines mass shootings as incidents when at least four people are killed or wounded, including the gun bearer. The map was covered with 355 red dots representing the mass shootings that year to date, at the beginning of December. Much of the eastern half of the country was practically solid red with all the dots. There was one in Washington, D.C., on October 25th. Five people were shot and wounded, none killed.

What if Omar Mateen had succeeded in shooting only five people, and none of them died? Would our horror be as great? Would we even have heard about it?

“From Elijah to Jesus” by Pat Conover

June 12, 20162016 After Pentecost Altar

Fourth Sunday after Pentecost

[This is a much improved revision for written distribution, June 14, 2016.]

Based on story of Naboth’s Vineyard in I Kings 21

 Those of you shared the theology class with me on learning to think and feel theologically may be interested in the progression of reframed concepts and images in this sermon. My guide to the sequential reframing is consideration and reconsideration of what matters and what matters most in the story of Naboth’s Vineyard.

 On its face, Naboth’s Vineyard is a straightforward  story of corruption and manipulated murder. King Ahab is presented as a weak petulant king and Jezebel is presented as the conniving murderous woman behind the throne. Naboth as victim and Elijah as the heroic prosecuting attorney and judge complete the human voices in the story.

 If you want to keep it simple that’s it. Do good according to the guidance of religious authorities.

If you want to understand and appreciate what “good” is, what is valuable in the guidance, and why one might honor religious authorities, perhaps this sermon will help.

“New Story Leadership” by Paul Costello

June 5, 2016 Third Sunday after Pentecost Paul Costello is the founder and director of New Story Leadership. He shared some of his own story as well as that of NSL and the remarkable students from Israel and Palestine that ib brings together each summer in Washington, DC, for  an intenseive probram of workshops, conferences, seminars, professional work exposure, cultural immersion and team training. Their perspective is Change the World? Change the Story! The full text of Paul’s remarks is not available, but more infromation about NSL can be found on its website: http://www.newstoryleadership.org/ .  /

Worshipping in the Style of Taizé

May 29, 20162016 After Pentecost Altar

Second Sunday after Pentecost

Several times each year, Seekers Church takes time out from its regular preaching schedule for a service of chant, prayer and reflection modeled on the worship of the Taizé Community in France. This Sunday was one such time. Repeating the chants together until they die away into the silence provides rest for our world-weary spirits as well as an opportunity for individual reflection on our faith journeys. As we joined in spirit with the monks at Taizé, we were nourished by their faithfulness as well as by their music.