Weekly Message from Trinity and St. Mary’s Whitechapel Episcopal Churches

Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

God’s Mercy

This week our reading from Exodus reaches the point when Moses brings the Ten Commandments to the people. The Israelites have been wandering in the wilderness, free but so unclear on what that means, uncertain, afraid and often taking out their pain on Moses, doubting his leadership, his wisdom, his connection to God.

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

The Last and First

The kingdom of heaven, the kingdom of God, God’s vision, God’s way for life on this earth. Will it look anything like the way we humans run things?

Well, we get another parable today to spin our heads and perhaps help us to let go of our ways, and glimpse God’s kingdom.

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

Forgiveness

Our gospel today finds Peter once more asking a question, and hoping, like all of us humans, that he already knows the right answer! He asks Jesus how often you need to forgive a member of the church who sins against you, and before Jesus can answer, supplies a seemingly good answer:

“As many as seven times?”

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

Gathered In My Name

That passage from Exodus is a page turner, isn’t it? With the threat of the angel of death at the door, those Israelites needed to eat dinner fast! Loins girded, sandals on their feet, staffs in their hands. Ready to go!

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

Who Do You Say I Am

Yesterday morning I led a service at the Labyrinth celebrating the life of Dick Patteson, the brother of Trinity member, Jean Price. One of the first people to arrive at the Labyrinth was an older gentleman who came over to talk to me.

I never got his name, but he told me he had been deaf almost since birth. He went on to say that he had attended many funerals and weddings in his life, and always had to rely on the bulletin at such services because he could not hear a word.

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

Our Mirror

Our reading from Matthew is one of the most difficult, most puzzling and most disturbing passages in the gospels. A Canaanite woman cries out to Jesus for mercy and help, and his responses seem, well, uncaring, even heartless.

Preachers over the centuries have tried to explain away Jesus’s behavior, and have tried to soften what he said.

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

Our new Deacon

Yesterday five deacons were ordained at Grace Episcopal Church in Alexandria, including Deborah Falls Lockhart, now the Rev. Deb Lockhart, Deacon!

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

Transfiguration Sunday, Again.

As you listened to the gospel this morning, and perhaps noticed on the cover of the bulletin that today is the Sunday we remember the Transfiguration of Jesus, you would be forgiven for thinking, wait a minute, haven’t we already done that this year?

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

Do you understand?

Many years ago, when I was serving in school ministry, I taught a summer school enrichment class in Study Skills to rising 6th graders. The students were in the class as they needed help getting ready for the challenges of 6th grade, where more independence would be required, and better time management and organizational skills. We met every day, and after about a week of class, I was explaining some organizational plan that had 3 parts to it.

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

To weed or not to weed?

This is my ninth year of gardening in the Northern Neck, and I have come to believe that weeds grow bigger and stronger and faster here than in Richmond! Goodness, sometimes I think I can hear the weeds snickering at me as I pull some in one area, and they are galloping across another!

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

Listen and Sow

Spoiler alert: Today’s sermon will not be about gardening…. It is about hearing or listening.

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

Sharing the Burden

Sometimes, when I look at the Lectionary, it is difficult for me to see the common thread that draws the readings together. It makes me wonder what the selection committee was trying to get us to think about, or maybe, was it their intent to play a joke on those who have to prepare a sermon. If God can test Abraham, as in last week’s reading, why not have the Consultation on Common Texts do the same for those working on sermons?

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

A Cup of Cold Water

As we gather today, on the first day we are expected to reach 90 degrees, and as the humidity increases quickly, and the wild fire haze settles in, the image in our gospel reading of a “cup of cold water” is still tangible and appealing to us, thousands of years after Jesus spoke of that cup.

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

A Love that Treasures the Stranger

Abraham and Sarah, no less than pillars of our faith, the two from whom Judaism and Christianity came, and from Abraham and Hagar, from whom Islam came, these pillars of our faith, were all just as flawed and petty, and able to be mean and hateful, as me and as you.

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

Freedom Month

Just in the month of June we can gather for so many reasons and enjoy time with family and friends: Father’s Day today, Juneteenth tomorrow, the summer solstice later this week, and throughout June, Pride Month events, celebrate the LGBTQ+ community.

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

Building on the Foundation

Our sabbatical time in Maine was glorious and restful, and included many walks and several hikes. No matter if we were walking in the neighborhood where we stayed in Brunswick, or at the Coastal Maine Botanical Garden, or out in the woods, we saw stone walls everywhere.

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

A Trinity Sunday

Trinity Sunday!

This is the only Sunday in the entire calendar of the Church which is set aside to recognize a doctrine of the Church.

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

Come Holy Spirit Come

When the day of Pentecost had come, the disciples were all together in one place. And suddenly from heaven there came a sound like the rush of a violent wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting.

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Liza Hearns Liza Hearns

We are Not in Control

Christian churches around the world celebrate today as Ascension Sunday, being the closest Sunday to Ascension Day, which was on this past Thursday. Ascension Day, according to Acts, occurred forty days after the resurrection, and was the occasion of Jesus’ being lifted into heaven.

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