Worship for Feb 5, 2023: Simply the Sermon – Salt to Taste
This week, Pastor Russ urges us to add season and spice to our Christian lives! How do we allow our faith to become diluted, and what can we do about it? Take a listen!
One thing have I desired of the Lord... that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life...Psalm 27:4
This week, Pastor Russ urges us to add season and spice to our Christian lives! How do we allow our faith to become diluted, and what can we do about it? Take a listen!
Reflecting on the prophecy from Micah and the Beatitudes of Jesus in Matthew, Pastor Russ helps us to discern the “what” of following Jesus. While our culture celebrates the strong and the mighty, God leads us to restore justice to the lowly.
This week Pastor Russ takes us on a fishing trip! Well, really it’s Jesus that calls us out to “fish for people.” Pastor Russ explores how the first disciples knew their trade well, understood how fish live, and were willing to go to any lengths to find them. What does this mean for Jesus’s calling to us today?
This week we return to the prophet John the Baptist and hear his introduction of Jesus, the Lamb of God. What exactly is the role of a prophet, and what does it mean that the Lamb of God “takes away the sin of the world?” Intern Monica Holman discusses how Jesus invites us to follow him and see what vision God has for us and for the world.
This week we’re celebrating “Baptism of Our Lord” Sunday, and it’s appropriate that it comes during a week when a river of rain is flowing across our skies. Imagine your baptism as more than a one-time event, but as a perpetual shower of God’s unconditional love.
We welcome back Interim Pastor Russ Gordon, an old friend of Bethel Lutheran Church. He reminds us of God’s never-ending and never-changing love.
Happy new year and a continued merry Christmas! As we stand on the doorstep of 2023, Intern Monica Holman walks us through the names that were given to Jesus before, during, and after his earthly ministry, and invites us to ask ourselves what names and labels we carry; which ones were given to us, and which ones fit who God created us to be. As we hear in the story of Simeon and Anna, the church is the perfect place to be welcomed and celebrated for who we are.
Dear Online Family: We are in a digital ministry transition. Thank you for your patience as we post Simply the Sermon during this time. We will keep you updated on upcoming developments. Thank you to all of you for gathering faithfully in this virtual space.
Merry Christmas! In this shortened Christmas Eve sermon reflection, Intern Monica Holman asks what story you expect to hear on Christmas Eve and invites you to ponder what story you tell about the birth of Jesus Christ.
Dear Online Family: We are in a digital ministry transition. Thank you for your patience as we post Simply the Sermon during this time. We will keep you updated on upcoming developments. Thank you to all of you for gathering faithfully in this virtual space.
For her final sermon at Bethel, Pastor Amy joins in dialogue with Intern Monica Holman about Mary and Elizabeth, what lies at the core of Christian worship, and what she hopes and dreams for Bethel going forward.
Dear Online Family: We are in a digital ministry transition. Thank you for your patience as we post Simply the Sermon during this time. We will keep you updated on upcoming developments. Thank you to all of you for gathering faithfully in this virtual space.
Our Advent series From Generation to Generation continues with Pastor Amy's reflection on getting along with family during the holidays. Through the Joseph story, we consider....for better or worse...the things we carry from our families. Plus a short humorous list of the ways Jesus kept his boundaries with family.
Dear Online Family: We are in a digital ministry transition. Thank you for your patience as we post Simply the Sermon during this time. We will keep you updated on upcoming developments. Thank you to all of you for gathering faithfully in this virtual space.
Pivotal moments happen in life. Each one is an impactful turning point, signaling big change; you know the future will unfold in an unexpected way. Perhaps no such moment is bigger than the one described in Luke chapter 1, when the angel Gabriel appears before Mary of Nazareth and informs her that she will give birth to a son named Jesus. How does Mary react to this monumental news, and how do we react when God calls on us?
(Our own Mary) Pastor Mary Stein-Webber, guides us through this passage. And afterward, she reads “Gabriel’s Annunciation,” a poem by Jan Richardson that imagines this moment through the hesitant mind of Gabriel, who pauses to reflect before massively altering the course of a young woman’s life.
Dear Online Family: We are in a digital ministry transition. Thank you for your patience as we post Simply the Sermon during this time. We will keep you updated on upcoming developments. Thank you to all of you for gathering faithfully in this virtual space.
Dear Online Family: We are in a digital ministry transition. Thank you for your patience as we post Simply the Sermon during this time. We will keep you updated on upcoming developments. Thank you to all of you for gathering faithfully in this virtual space.
Advent is here! We begin the journey to Christmas with the theme “From Generation to Generation.” Hear Intern Monica Holman speak on origin stories, starting with the the genealogy of Jesus in the first chapter of Matthew. She invites us to look to where we came from to discover where we are going.
Dear Online Family: We are in a digital ministry transition. Thank you for your patience as we post Simply the Sermon during this time. We will keep you updated on upcoming developments. Thank you to all of you for gathering faithfully in this virtual space.
This week in observance of Christ the King Sunday, we did a special in-person service of singing and prayer that sadly, does not translate well to the online worship experience. In Pastor Amy’s closing weeks, we also had one last confirmation rite to celebrate. So today, instead of a sermon, we offer two brief statements of faith by the high school students we honor and support.
Dear Online Family: We are in a digital ministry transition. Thank you for your patience as we post Simply the Sermon during this time. We will keep you updated on upcoming developments. Thank you to all of you for gathering faithfully in this virtual space.
Join us this week for a classic meditation on the good life. What does that mean in the context of faithfulness? What are the alternatives we often choose instead? What is the work before us in light of all that is God? Warning: This sermon was delivered in the midst of children and babies. To our delight, their little feet and voices herald their presence in our midst.
Dear Online Family: We are in a digital ministry transition. Thank you for your patience as we post Simply the Sermon during this time. We will keep you updated on upcoming developments. Thank you to all of you for gathering faithfully in this virtual space.
This All Saints Day in our scriptures, Jesus takes on an absurd question about resurrection and heaven. His answer demands we contend with the God of the Living. Pastoral Intern, Monica Holman, delivers the message this week inviting us to see ourselves, even in our deaths, as part of God’s unfinished story.
Dear Online Family: We are in a digital ministry transition. Thank you for your patience as we post Simply the Sermon during this time. We record it live each Sunday. You’ll even hear the swishing of Pastor Amy’s alb! We will keep you updated on upcoming developments. We want to thank our musicians and in particular, Brent Keast for all the hard work and investment in sound production over the last two and half years. It was an amazing run. And thank you to all of you for gathering faithfully in this virtual space.
This Reformation Sunday, we reach the end of our four month series on Acts. Today, the epilogue to the tremendous shipwreck. What happened to Paul once he reached safety? The same things that always happened and why this is liberating rather than stifling. Just a short reflection this week on a day when baptisms and first communions carried us through worship.
Dear Online Family: We are in a digital ministry transition. Thank you for your patience as we post Simply the Sermon during this time. We record it live each Sunday. You’ll even hear the swishing of Pastor Amy’s alb! We will keep you updated on upcoming developments. We want to thank our musicians and in particular, Brent Keast for all the hard work and investment in sound production over the last two and half years. It was an amazing run. And thank you to all of you for gathering faithfully in this virtual space.
Are you in a purple congregation living the political tension? As Pastor Amy prepares to depart, she humorously reflects on what can soothe our red and blue anxieties. Our inspiration again is Paul and his fellow prisoners. At long last, they set out for Rome escorted by centurions and soldiers. When the winter storms rise, he gives the guidance we all need right now: stick together and we’ll get safely to shore.
Dear Online Family: Last Sunday was the final full online worship offering for Bethel. As we let go of the podcast style of worshipping, we enter a time of experimentation and take new steps in our digital ministry. We will keep you posted on upcoming developments. While we are in this transition, we will be offering simply the teaching and sermon recorded live on Sundays. We want to thank our musicians and in particular, Brent Keast for all the hard work and investment in sound production over the last two and half years. It was an amazing run. And thank you to all of you for gathering in this virtual space. We appreciate your patience as we do this work and look ahead to a new era in our ministry.
After sifting through Paul’s trials upon his return to Jerusalem (Acts 20-27), Pastor Amy tackles a core question of faith: is God just? Reflect on the barriers Christians tend to raise to an accurate answer. What distorts how we see God’s justice? Is there another way to imagine God’s courtroom?
Strange things happen when Jesus is around. Even stranger when he leaves the Holy Spirit in charge. Pastor Amy mines the story of Eutychus who literally died of boredom. Or did he? Find out just how wild breaking bread over an intense Bible discussion can be.
Place Finders: Word 9:42 Sermon 15:05 Prayers 26:05
Journey with Pr. Mary Stein-Webber to Athens. Here she lifts up the teaching of Paul who took compassion on a people who did not believe God could be known. Discover with us the grace of the One who wants to know you and throw out a lot of useless worry along the Way.
Place Finders: Word 8:38 Sermon 18:01
“They are turning the world upside down,” complains the crowd. This week, the holy disruption continues as Paul and friends unintentionally provoke mob violence, flee from cities, and threaten the order of the empire. It wasn’t their goal. But it is what happened as they preached the resurrected Messiah to new audiences.