September 7, 2025
1 Kings 8:22-23,27b-30;
+ This past week, our candidates
for the next Bishop of North Dakota were in the state.
But sometimes we forget what the Church should be.
This morning, there are many people here who have been wounded by that Church—the larger Church.
I stand before you, having been hurt be the larger Church on more than one occasion.
And for those of us who are here, with our wounds still bleeding, it is not an easy thing to keep coming back to church sometimes.
It is not any easy thing to be a part of that Church again.
It is not an easy thing to call one’s self a Christian again, especially now when it seems so many people have essentially highjacked that name and made it into something ugly and terrible.
A Christ-less Christianity.
And, speaking for myself, it’s not easy to be a priest—a uniform-wearing representative of that human-run organization that so often forgets about love being its main purpose.
But, we, here at St. Stephen’s, are obviously doing something right, to make better the wrongs that may have been done on a larger scale.
We, at St. Stephen’s, (I hope) have done a good job over these last 69 years of striving to be a positive example of the wider Church and of service to Christ who, according to Peter’s letter this morning, truly is a “living stone”—the solid foundation from which we grow.
We have truly become a place of love, of radical acceptance.
the Holy Spirit.
Here.
Among us.
In our reading from First Kings today, we hear
Solomon echoing God’s words, “My name shall be there.”
God’s very Name dwells here.
As we look around, we too realize that this is
truly the home of God.
We too are able to exclaim, God’s name dwells here!
And, as I said at the beginning of my sermon, by
“the home of God” I don’t mean just this
building.
We’re the home of God.
Each of us.
We are the dwelling place of the Most High.
After all—God is truly here, with us, in all that
we do together.
The name of God is proclaimed in the ministries we
do here.
In the outreach we do.
In the witness we make in the community of
Farg0-Moorhead and in the wider Church.
God is here, with us.
God is working through us and in us.
Sometimes, when we are in the midst of it all, when
we are doing the work, we sometimes miss that perspective.
We miss that sense of holiness and renewal and life
that comes bubbling up from a healthy and vital congregation working together.
We miss the fact that God truly is here.
So, it is good to stop and listen for a moment.
It is good to reorient ourselves.
It is good to refocus and see what ways we can move
forward together.
It is good to look around and see how God is
working through us.
Many of the ministries that happen here at St. Stephen’s go on clandestinely.
They go on behind the scenes, in ways most of us
(with exception of God) don’t even see and recognize.
But that is how God works as well.
God works oftentimes clandestinely, through us and
around us.
This morning, however, we are seeing very clearly
the ways in which God works not so clandestinely.
We see it in the vitality here.
We see it in the love here.
We see it in the tangible things, in our altar, in
the bread and wine of the Eucharist, in our scripture readings, in our windows,
in the smell of incense in the air, in our service toward each other. In US.
But behind all these incredible things happening
now, God has also worked slowly and deliberately and seemingly clandestinely
throughout the years.
And for all of this—the past, the present and the
future—we are truly thankful.
God truly is in this place.
This is truly the house of God.
WE truly are the house of God.
This is the place in which love is proclaimed and
acted out.
So, let us rejoice.
Let us rejoice in where we have been.
Let us rejoice in where we are.
Let us rejoice in where we are going.
And, in our rejoicing, let us truly be God’s own
truly loved people.
Let us be God’s people in order that we might
proclaim, in love, the mighty and merciful acts of God to those who need to
hear them and experience them in their own lives. Amen.
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