Seekers recognizes that any member of the community may be called upon by God to give us the Word, and thus we have an open pulpit with a different preacher each week. Sermons preached at Seekers, as well as sermons preached by Seekers at other churches or events, are posted here, beginning with the most recent.
Click here for an archive of our sermons.
Feel free to use what is helpful from these sermons. We only ask that when substantial portions are abstracted or used in a written work, please credit Seekers Church and the author, and cite the URL.
Ken Leinbach: Being from God, for God, and of God
November 06, 1994
His instinct was to grab a large rock and try to kill it. Fortunately I saw the toad and its impending doom in time to yell “Hey, Stop it!” The rock was thrown, but my tone startled Ben just enough to change its trajectory. Once again, I could have yelled at him, but something kept me from doing it. Instead I scooped up the toad [scoop toad from container and show it to the congregation]. I stopped the group, and praised Ben for finding such an interesting critter, and asked him to name it as I planned to take it back to the Lab to set up an aquarium for it. When I picked it up. [squeeze toad’s back a little and explain vocalization of males] The toad talked. This little instinctive sound completely unwound Ben. He forgot his role as “tough dude” for a minute and said with wonder. “I almost killed him!” The toad spoke to him somehow — or was it the toad doing the speaking.
Kate Cudlipp: Hungers
August 1994
This morning I want to talk about a variety of hungers. Throughout his ministry, Jesus recognized both our physical and spiritual needs to be fed. When he said, in the gospel passage for this morning, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me shall never be hungry; whoever believes in me shall never be thirsty,” he was not telling us that we had no more need of physical food.
Ken Leinbach: God of Nature and the Nature of God
February 06, 1994
A Native American was visiting a friend in Seattle. Walking near Pike Place Market he stopped her and asked “Do you hear it?” “What” she replied. “Listen”… All she could hear was the hustle and bustle of the city, cars, shouts, horns, and buses. He smiled, pulled out a coin and whispered “watch”. It landed on the sidewalk with the soft silver tinkle we all know. Everyone in the radius of 20 feet stopped to look. He then lifted up a nearby stone to reveal a single cricket chirping away — much louder than the coin. She had not heard it, no one else had either. The sound of the cricket was always present, but it took one who was open to make others aware. This is prayer — a listening process, to wash away the everyday trappings of our humanness in order to let in the ever-present voice of wisdom … the cricket … God.