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This Week's Sermons


The Trinity
Matthew 28:16-20




A preacher proudly boasted that he does not preach doctrinal sermons. They are boring he asserts and people do not understand or relate to them. Further, he claimed, I am a preacher and not a theologian. I get down do the practical issues and simply preach Christ crucified.

His thinking is faulty at several points. First, he is wrong when he says that he is not a theologian. The fact is that everyone to a certain extent is a theologian. Theology is nothing more than what you think about God. Well, shouts one person, I don't believe In God. That then is your theology. I would also take issue with him when he claims that he does not preach theology but gets down to practical issues. In my thinking there is no difference in good theology and good practice. Good, solid theology gets down to the very core of our existence.

Finally, I would disagree with him when he says that we should only preach Christ crucified. I know that is what the Apostle Paul said but this preacher doesn't mean what Paul meant. He is saying that he only preaches about the cross and saving the sinner. I submit to you that the cross is not central in Paul's theology; rather, it is Christ. It has always puzzled me why some ministers preach the message of salvation to people who have been sitting in the pews all their life when they need so much more of Christ's teaching on life's other issues. There are many strings on a guitar. To make beautiful music all of them must be played and not just one. That is why in the United Methodist Church we honor the lectionary and the seasons of the church year. That insures a witness to the whole Gospel of Jesus Christ. How can one go through the season of Advent and not touch upon the doctrine of the incarnation. How can one go through Lent without touching upon the doctrine of the resurrection? Likewise, how can we embark upon the season of Pentecost, as we did last week, without mentioning the doctrine of the Trinity?

Today is Trinity Sunday. This is a day that has been celebrated in the Christian church since the 10th century. It is on this occasion that ministers around the world address themselves to the subject of the triune God.

Let me begin by saying that the doctrine of the Trinity does not attempt to explain God. It only explains to us in a very elemental way what God has revealed to us about himself so far. To describe the tip of the iceberg above the water is not to describe the entire iceberg. So we Christians affirm the Trinity, not as an explanation of God, but simply as a way of describing what we know about Him.

The idea of the Trinity is not emphatically stated as a doctrine in the scriptures. Yet, by implication, it is stated many times. The early Christians soon discovered that they simply could not speak of God without speaking of the three ways in which he had revealed himself to them. This does not mean that there are three separate Gods. It means that there is one God who has shown himself in three persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Let's look at these this morning:

  1. First, we affirm God the Father.
  2. Secondly, we affirm belief in the Son, Jesus Christ.
  3. Finally, we affirm belief in the Holy Spirit.
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Leonard Sweet's Sermon


The 3 Rs of a Holy Life
2 Corinthians 13:11-13

An old adage warns, "bad things always come in threes." Have you found this true in your own experience? That bad things (and good things) like to happen in community, in bunches? You say: we invent this connection by suddenly realizing that we got a flat tire on the same day that a computer glitch devoured our hard drive, shortly after our last contact lens just slid down the drain. I say: there seems to be something significant about the power of three.

Today the church celebrates the Triune God-Father, Son, and Holy Spirit-on this "Trinity Sunday." We recognize God as power (the Father), God as person (the Son), and God as presence (the Holy Spirit). Paul's final benediction to the Corinthians switches this order a bit to better express each person's unique experience of the divine. For Paul, Jesus Christ comes first, for it is through the grace of his life, death and resurrection that humans may be reconciled to God. Only grace enables us to experience "the love of God." As we stand renewed and redeemed before this loving God, yet another gift is made available, "the communion of the Holy Spirit." The person, the power, and the presence of God come to us in a threefold design-package.

Those forces that work AGAINST the divine have also traditionally been divided into the "big three." How many of you remember preachers warning their flock to be on guard against the three evils-"the world, the flesh, and the Devil." If we really do experience bad things in clusters of three, it is the result of these Big Three: The World, The Flesh, The Devil.

The Trinity of Evils

The World: This is not the world that the God of Genesis brought forth at creation. This is the "world" that turned deadly force against tens of thousands in Myanmar (Burma) this past week. This "world" is the broken world where tsunamis and cyclones and tornadoes and hurricanes pulverize the landscape. This "world" is the barren world where food disappears and famine grips every living thing. This "world" is the bleak worlds where pestilence hunts its prey.

The Flesh: This is not the Adam-flesh created in the Garden of Eden by the God of Genesis. This is the "flesh" that now knows disease and death and decay. This "flesh" is fragile, subject to infection, physical fodder for plagues and pandemics. This "flesh" breaks down, breaks apart, and breaks our hearts and spirits with its decay.

The Devil: There is no Devil, no antithesis to God's creative power in the first creation story (Genesis 1:1-2:4a). This Devil doesn't make an appearance until the second creation story, the tale of the serpent and the forbidden fruit and the draw-down of desire. Adam and Eve eat the forbidden fruit so that they might become "like God," knowing good from evil. Willful disobedience, a passion for power, seeking to de-throne God, this was the origin of the Devil. Our own irrationalities, hatreds, fears, and despairs bring the "devil" to life.

These three evils-the world, the flesh, and the devil---look like an unbeatable team, dooming humans to a mere scratch-and-claw existence. It was subservience to this spirit, to this "tooth and claw" combativeness, that kept the Corinthian community from experiencing the full embrace of Christ. The apostle Paul was so troubled these caustic Corinthians that he penned at least two (some say three) lengthy letters to this community, offering advice, admonitions and out-and-out orders. The world, the flesh, and the Devil were doing a booming business in Corinth.

In his final letter, in his final words, in his final benediction, to this contentious community, Paul offered a positive, powerful, alternative Trinity to this struggling church. Paul's closing command lays out a new kind of three-fold pattern, a pattern that will lead to wholeness and holy living. I call them the 3-Rs of holiness, or the 3-Rs of godly living. Here are the 3 essentials of holiness: Respect, Responsibility, and Relationship. If you want to live a holy life, a life of godliness and truth, you must learn the elementary but elemental 3-Rs of life: Respect, Responsibility and Relationship...

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