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.

“Testing God During Recommitment Season” by Dave Lloyd

25 September 2011

The 15th Sunday After Pentecost

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The descendents of Avraham were working in the Egyptians fields in the Nile delta, or making bricks, or quarrying stone, or dragging huge stones up a ziggurat to form a pyramid or carving a monument into rock. It was hard work and many of them injured or accidentally killed or beaten by cruel taskmasters until they died. Then one day a stranger appeared and began a series of confrontations with the Pharaoh, claiming that they did not belong to Pharaoh and demanding that the Pharaoh release the children of Yisrael from their slavery. The Pharaoh was incredulous at Moshe’s gall: he thought the Israelites belonged to him and so he refused to release them.

A Sermon by Joelle Novey

18 September 2011

The 14th Sunday After Pentecost

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Joelle Novey, Director of Greater Washington Interfaith Power and Light, brought the Word this morning.

 

For the agricultural people who tilled vineyards in Jesus’ time, who read the same Hebrew Bible as we do, the manna in the desert must have seemed like an amazing thing to be able to take for granted. “Do you remember the desert?” they must have reminisced. “When God was our caterer? When we didn’t have to do all this work to sustain ourselves, but when we just took for granted that, every day, manna would just fall onto our plates from the sky? Can you believe anyone ever complained about that?” the people must have said, as they climbed up ladders with tools to prune vines and pick grapes. “That was awesome.”

 

And what about us? We certainly don’t live like the Israelites in the desert, letting our food fall from the sky for us, although supermarkets and factory farming so separate us from the land that it sometimes feels that way.

“God Is: Thoughts on the Book of Job” by Larry Rawlings

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The 11th Sunday After Pentecost

 

When our society was more Bible literate, people would often say of someone who was calm, long-suffering and uncomplaining that they had “the patience of Job.”  While society might have been more Bible literate then, if you read the full text it would be hard to think of Job as patient by our standards