A Selection of Recent St. Paul’s Sermons

Below are text versions of some of our recent sermons. Prefer to watch the sermon? Check out this link to our Youtube page!

Dale Dale

Sermon for the Fifth Sunday after Easter - The Rev. Elise A. Feyerherm - May 15th, 2022

To view a video of the Rev. Elise A. Feyerherm’s sermon, click HERE.

I’m not much for shopping these days, but I do like to poke around second-hand stores when I’m in need of a piece of clothing or flowerpot or small furniture item. It can be frustrating to find exactly what you need, but if you go in with open eyes and mind, there are treasures to be had. My two winter coats are examples of this – a grey tweed I found at a Good Will store in Columbus, and a purple car coat I snagged at the St. Paul’s yard sale back in 2018. It didn’t matter to me that they weren’t “new,” or someone else’s cast-offs. They were in good condition, and they were new to me. And of course the price was right!

I wonder often about our culture’s obsession with all that is brand new, hot off the press or assembly line. In contrast to that, there’s a parallel obsession these days with rehabbing – making old houses, or furniture, or clothing, or even people – fresh and new again. There’s something so hopeful, miraculous even, about taking something that is tired and beat up and broken and restoring it to a new beauty and purpose. I never tire of those stories. They are like resurrection to me.

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Dale Dale

Sermon for The Fourth Sunday after Easter - The Rev. Jeffrey W. Mello - May 8th, 2022

To view a video of the Rev. Jeffrey W. Mello’s sermon, click HERE.

Acts 9:36-43; Psalm 23; Revelation 7:9-17; John 10:22-30

When I was a Clinical Social Worker, a client once said to me, “You know, Jeff, I spend a lot of time up in my head. And that’s not always a good neighborhood for me to hang out in.”

I’ve never forgotten that wisdom, and I’ve heard it from many sources since.

Of course, when the client said it, it was true for me as well, as it is now, as it is for most of us. We spend a lot of time up in our heads, and that’s not always a good neighborhood for us to hang out in.

Sticking with the metaphor of our minds as a neighborhood, I wonder why it isn’t always a good place for us to spend time. And I think of who the neighbors are in the community of our minds. I think of the voices that are opening windows and yelling at us as we pass by.

There is the house that fear lives in. They are always yelling to watch out, to be careful, not to trust others.

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Dale Dale

Sermon for Easter Sunday - The Rev. Jeffrey W. Mello - April 17th, 2022

To view a video of the Reverend Jeffrey W. Mello’s sermon, click HERE.

Isaiah 65:17-25; Psalm 118:1-2, 14-24; Luke 24:1-12

Alleluia! Christ is Risen!

The Lord is Risen, indeed! Alleluia!

Why do you look for the living among the dead?

This is the question the two angels ask the women who had come to complete the burial rituals they had not had a chance to do when Jesus had been placed in the tomb.

I imagine them standing there, spices and oils in hand, looking around the empty tomb, devastated that Jesus’ humiliation, begun at trial, followed him even after death, assuming someone had stolen the body they came to honor.

Why do you look for the living among the dead?

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Dale Dale

Sermon for Good Friday - The Rev. Jeffrey W. Mello - April 15th, 2022

To view a video of the Rev. Jeffrey W. Mello’s sermon, click HERE.

Hebrews 10:16-25; John 18:1-19:42

Therefore kind Jesus since I cannot pay thee, I do adore thee, and will ever pray thee. Think on thy pity, and thy love unswerving, Not my deserving. - Johann Heerman, “Ah, Holy Jesus” Hymnal 1982 #158

We are a culture obsessed with deserving.

We spend a great deal of time and energy trying to determine whether or not someone deserves something coming their way, good or bad.

Did that celebrity deserve that award? Were they that good? And after what they did?

Does that person in need deserve my assistance? What have they done for me? Why can’t they get it together like I did? Is there someone in greater need?

Did my loved one deserve the pain they are enduring? Did that person, so young, so kind, deserve the tragic events they endured?

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Dale Dale

Sermon for Fifth Sunday in Lent - The Rev. Jeffrey W. Mello - April 3rd, 2022

To view a video of the Rev. Jeffrey W. Mello’s sermon, click HERE.

Isaiah 43:16-21; Psalm 126; John 12:1-8

We have a banner that sometimes hangs on the front lawn. It reads, “Love God. Love your neighbor. Change the World.”

We know that, according to the Jewish Shema from Deuteronomy, quoted by Jesus, and recited at the start of our worship this morning, the two great commandments are to love God with all our heart, with all our soul and with all our mind and to love our neighbor as ourselves.

I wonder, if you had the choice, would you rather do something to show your love of God, or something to show your love for your neighbor?

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Dale Dale

Sermon - Fourth Sunday in Lent - The Ven. Pat Zifcak - March 27th, 2022

To view a video of the Ven. Pat Zifcak’s sermon, click HERE.

It was not too long ago that I preached on this parable in Luke. There was a father who had two sons. My focus was firmly on reframing the story to help us to place our empathy and understanding on the father and not, as so often happens, on the sons, especially the older. Fine, welcome him home if you must, but does he have to have an elaborate party, too? That is where the resentment lies. We could easily stay right there with the older son, feeling sorry for himself and angry with his father and definitely not ready to welcome and celebrate the return of his younger brother.

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