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Sermons

Irreligious: Forsaking Religion and Finding Jesus’ Sabbath (Mk. 3:1-6) Chris Altrock – June 13, 2010

During the first half of this year, newspapers and newscasts were filled with reports about potential abuse occurring within the Catholic Church.  Allegations have poured in from half a dozen countries, including 300 accusations from Germany, the home of the current Pope.  Many Catholics and non-Catholics are fed up with the Catholic Church.

 

Many more people are fed up with church in general.  Dan Kimball has written a book entitled They Like Jesus But Not the Church.[i] In it, Kimball reports that many today find Jesus attractive but not the church.  They feel that the church is too politically motivated.

 

And, in his book God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything Christopher Hitchens writes about the ills of all institutional religion.[ii] He states that religion is “violent, irrational, intolerant, allied to racism and tribalism and bigotry, invested in ignorance and hostile to free inquiry, contemptuous of women and coercive toward children.”

 

There’s a lot of hostility these days toward religion in general and toward the church in particular.

This is nothing new, of course.  Even in Jesus’ day there was ill-will toward religion.  Mark, one of the four biographers of Jesus’ life, focuses on this ill-will.  His Gospel includes 10 occasions during which Jesus and religious leaders got into conflict. This summer, we’re using these 10 conflicts to reflect on the difference between being religious and following Jesus.

Read More »Irreligious: Forsaking Religion and Finding Jesus’ Sabbath (Mk. 3:1-6) Chris Altrock – June 13, 2010

The Ride of Your Life: Why Justice is so Vital to Your Voyage (Ps. 123) Chris Altrock

W.C. Handy is widely recognized as the “Father of the Blues.”[1] Handy was a bandleader and songwriter who performed throughout the South before continuing his career in New York. He came across the Delta blues in the late 1890s.  His composition “Memphis Blues,” published in 1912, was the first to include the word “blues” in the title. A Memphis park was named after Handy in recognition of his contribution to blues music.

 

Read More »The Ride of Your Life: Why Justice is so Vital to Your Voyage (Ps. 123) Chris Altrock

The Ride of Your Life: Why Knowing God is so Vital to Your Voyage (Ps. 128, 131)

Jonathan Hill is the author of a book entitled What Has Christianity Ever Done For Us?[1] Some of you may be asking that question this morning. Maybe you’re here at Highland because a friend invited you since we just opened this facility or because a family member invited you since it’s Mother’s Day.  You may not regularly attend church.  And as someone not wholly committed to Christianity, you may wonder, “What has Christianity ever done for us?”

 

Read More »The Ride of Your Life: Why Knowing God is so Vital to Your Voyage (Ps. 128, 131)