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Monthly Archives: March 2025
Sermon: No, we are not unworthy
Reflection for North Balwyn Uniting ChurchLent 4, 30th of March, 2025 2 Corinthians 5:16-21 Today’s reading from Paul’s Second Letter to the church at Corinth, or at least the second letter of his to the Corinthians that we have, is … Continue reading
Posted in Sermons
Tagged 2 Corinthians 5:16-21, Apostle Paul, John Wesley, Lent, Lent 4, Prodigal Father, Year of Luke
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Sermon: None of us is perfect – and that’s okay
Lent is a time when we are reminded that none of us is perfect. All of us fail and fall short; we always do, say, and do not do, things for which we need to repent. There is something soothing about knowing this: we do not need to pretend to be perfect. God knows that we are not. And despite every way in which we fail to live as the people God created us to be, God remains faithful. Continue reading
Posted in Sermons
Tagged 1 Corinthians 10:1-13, Exodus, idolatry, Lent, Lent 3, Luke 13:1-9, Repentance, sin, sinners, Year of Luke
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Sermon: Jesus IS a wishy-washy liberal
Reflection for North Balwyn Uniting ChurchLent 2, 16th of March 2025 Luke 13:31-35Philippians 3:17-4:1 ‘Their end is destruction; their god is the belly; and their glory is in their shame; their minds are set on earthly things.’ If you have … Continue reading
Sermon: Giving into Temptation
We all face times of trial. We are all tested. The forty days of Lent, spent in self-examination and repentance, by prayer and fasting, by self-denial and acts of generosity, and by reading and meditating on the word of God, provide us in practice not giving in to temptation. Lent trains us to resist temptation’s wheedling ways. Continue reading
Posted in Sermons
Tagged C. S. Lewis, Donald Trump, Good Omens, Lent, Lent 1, Luke 4:1-13, Romans 10:8b-13, Satan, Temptation, testing, the devil, Year of Luke
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Sermon: The Glorious Impossible of the Transfiguration
God alone is the Holy One, and we are called to imitate God’s holiness. God’s glory is far beyond humanity, and we are being transformed into the same image. In Jesus so many boundaries are overcome, and the greatest of them is the division between humanity and God. In the words of L’Engle, we cannot make God’s mighty actions comprehensible to our finite minds. But we can ‘choose to live by the most glorious impossibles,’ in the freedom of the Spirit, with hope and great boldness, because God is with us and we are in God. Continue reading