Sermons

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.

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“Salvation Guidance for Political Action” by Pat Conover

November 11, 2018

Twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost

Some of you may not be aware that the cloth napkins we use for Seekers prepared meals do not wash themselves. The main motive for choosing cloth napkins was to avoid using paper napkins. On the other environmental hand, a minute amount of more water is used to wash the napkins because individual Seekers wash them in regular laundry loads. My point is that Seekers actions have political, practical, and spiritual aspects.

How much does spiritual concern about the stewardship of nature matter for your practical, economic, and political motivations? How much of your spiritual concerns for nature is about deepening prayer practices by escaping for awhile from practical, economic, and political “worldly” concerns? Do we live on the natural Earth, or do we live in our garden world where we weed out  invasive species. Caring in the context of environmental concerns is just one kind of caring and each kind of caring has spiritual, practical, economic, and political implications. How much does our Christian faith help us sort out and prioritize such complexity?

“Flooded with Hope” by Michele Frome

November 4, 2018

Twenty-fourth Sunday after Pentecost

The last two weeks of September, I worked as a Disaster Spiritual Care volunteer for the American Red Cross following Hurricane Florence; Florence was the storm set tropical storm rainfall records in North and South Carolina, dumping 10 trillion gallons of water.

A little background: last year, with support from this congregation, I completed training in Clinical Pastoral Education and was approved for certification as a Clinical Chaplain.  I signed up with the Red Cross hoping to get some more opportunity to practice what I’d learned.  In September, the opportunity came.

I was based in Fayetteville, North Carolina, which was headquarters for District 3 of this particular Red Cross operation, covering 9 counties. There were several hundred Red Cross workers in district 3, but only 5 of us assigned to Spiritual Care.  Each day, I was paired up with one or two other people and assigned several Red Cross emergency shelters to travel to by car.  Each day, I spent several hours talking with people who were staying in these shelters.

“Howard Thurman: Restoration and Community” by Deryl Davis

October 28, 2018

Twenty-third Sunday after Pentecost

I. Common Theme in today’s scripture lessons and in theology of Howard Thurman: Restoration to Fellowship and Community (Israel from exile, Bartimaeus’ sight, Howard Thurman’s theology)

A. Idea of community major theme of Thurman’s theology of hope: We are created for community, and any obstacle to that has to be removed.

“Responding Joyfully with Our Lives” by Deborah Sokolove

October 21, 2018

Twenty-second Sunday after Pentecost: Recommitment Sunday

In our gospel reading for today (Mark 10:35-45), Zebedee’s sons James and John ask Jesus to let them sit at his right and left hand when he is in his glory. The answer that Jesus gives them is not the one that they want to hear. He says, you don’t know what you are talking about! I’m about to drink the cup of suffering, to be baptized with blood. Are you up to that?

When they assure him that they are, he says, ok, you will get that, but it’s not up to me to give you the honor that you want, because that’s already been prepared for someone else.

He does not say who will be sitting on his right and left hand in that undefined future that scripture calls “his glory,” but it is clearly not these two pushy brothers. Instead, they almost immediately get a small taste of the cup of suffering they say they are ready for when the other ten disciples angrily confront them for their naked ambition. Jesus then says they are asking the wrong question. It’s not about who is doing the best work or the most important task or who will get honors in this life or the next. Rather, he says, in the upside-down world of the Reign of God, the first will be last and the one who wants to lead must serve the community.

“Why I am Recommitting” by Brenda Seat

October 14, 2018

Twenty-first Sunday after Pentecost

When we first arrived in DC in 1985, I was struggling with so many questions about God, what it meant to be a Christian, who Jesus was, and why any of it mattered.  We had just gone through a complicated pregnancy, losing one baby while another, our oldest daughter Marian, lived.  There were complicated questions about death and life, and why these things happen to good people like us.  It was a complicated time, with Keith working long hours at a high-powered law firm and my choosing to stay at home with Marian.  We heard about Church of the Saviour through the leadership in the church we attended in Kansas City.  We had never read Elizabeth O’Connor’s books and had no idea what we were getting ourselves into when we just showed up one Sunday at 2025 Massachusetts Avenue.