Sunday, November 10, 2019

SERMON SNAPSHOT


 

Dear Friends in Christ –

This Sunday Catherine is joining the church. She’s excited! She told me she’s found a place where the word of God is preached and lived and seen in the people. That God’s presence is felt in the house.

Catherine is a companion to residents at Bishop Gadsden – already engaged in the work of the realm. What presence she brings. What a gift to this body. 

We’ll be engaging Paul’s letter to the Corinthians – his 2nd. 

Come and celebrate with God’s people. Come meet and worship with and welcome Catherine.

See you Sunday,

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Sunday, November 3, 2019

SERMON SNAPSHOT


 

Dear Friends in Christ –

This Sunday Jesus speaks salvation. You say, "Of course.” But I say that in Luke’s gospel this Sunday Jesus speaks to yet another of the despised, the easy to ridicule, the easy to dismiss. Jesus not only speaks to a short guy in a tree, he calls him down from the limbs of the sycamore and invites himself to supper! Of course the proper folk scoff and grumble, but Jesus allows the fellow, a sinner in the crowd’s eyes to stand his ground and state his case – his integrity that no one present could have imagined…but Jesus.

We forget so quickly that when we look into the eyes of another, we look into the eyes of an eternity! So we’re told. Who may we be ridiculing, dismissing with contempt in our pettiness and myopia? 

Jesus calls us to better – and God’s sacred word shows us the way. 

See you in church. We’ll share communion… and salvation!

In Christ, 

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Reformation Sunday, October 27, 2019

SERMON SNAPSHOT


 

Twenty years ago I spent most of a summer at the Tantur Ecumenical Institute in Jerusalem. Tantur is a Roman Catholic study enter that welcomes Christians from all over the world. In our group of 36 we had equal numbers of Catholics and Protestants from Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Africa, and North America. As we gathered on the first morning, Father Thomas Stransky, the rector, said, “We all of us come from flawed ministries.”
In my years growing up in the largely Roman Catholic city of San Francisco, I remember Reformation Sunday as an occasion to bash the pope and everything papist. Having made my career in the church, when reading news accounts of problems and scandals in various branches of the Christian community including our own denomination, I’ve often reflected on Father Tom’s wisdom. When all is said and done, there’s far more that unites us with rather than divides us from our sisters and brothers in other communions.
Because we are all part of flawed ministries, the church is always in need of reforming. An appropriate starting point is a reminder of how simple is God’s message of salvation in the scriptures.

With grace & peace,
Deane

Deane Kemper is an honorably retired member of Charleston Atlantic Presbytery for 15 years, having served as interim minister at Peace Church in Goose Creek and Harbor View Church on James Island and Dorchester Presbyterian Church in Summerville. Prior to his service here he was a faculty member at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in Boston and senior minister at Lakeside Presbyterian Church in San Francisco, an adjunct professor at San Francisco Theological Seminary in San Anselmo. Dean was Stated Clerk of Presbytery for five years and lives on Daniel Island.


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Sunday, October 20, 2019

SERMON SNAPSHOT


 

Dear Friends in Christ –

Jeremiah 29 “… a practical message that the people who have been taken into exile are to make the most of it. To make the best of the present situation and to trust the God who had delivered them from the brick kilns of Egypt. To trust the God who loved them enough to chasten, but who is yearning to take them back.

When my daughter SaSa was reading the text from Jeremiah this past Sunday, I was struck by many thoughts. 

  • How wonderful it was to have her home. 

  • How the day was already filled with the Spirit of God as we get to know each other better and are strengthened through our Meet a Member moments. 

This particular passage from a prophet who was known as ‘the weeping prophet ‘ (because he was never the bearer of news that was well received) speaks to Second Presbyterian in a particular way. Jeremiah is saying, though it may feel hard, and in fact be hard, keep on!

The God of all time and all moments wants only the best for us, will not abandon us, and wants us to flourish in this moment in this place. Scripture says so! 

This Sunday we’ll dive deep and discover what’s right before us  - that our God yearns for us and can’t wait to shower us with blessing right where we are… even as we are! 

I hope to see you, your family, your friends, visitors and walk ins – all and everyone whom the holy, gracious and restless Spirit is calling for God’s purpose through Second Church.

In anticipation -

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Sunday, October 13, 2019

SERMON SNAPSHOT


 

Dear Friends in Christ –

A friend had met me at the church. We hopped in the car to head to lunch. 

First encounter: a pickup truck on Mary Street pulling out of a lot. Beefy arm comes out signaling let me in. ‘Sure,’ I think. The arm stays out the window, without a wave.

Second encounter: a young woman pulling out of the lot behind The Grocery. Easing out, looking both ways. Furtive. I flick the headlights she pulls out, turns in front of us – no acknowledgement.

Third encounter: huge truck maneuvering to position himself in front of the dumpster. We back up a quarter of the block to allow the driver to get where he needs. He pushes the lever to slide under the dumpster. Nary a "thank you."

Now with the chaos in the headlines, rampant incivility, I thought that Charleston, in the middle of the day, would offer a balm – an oasis. Courtesy met with gratitude. Nope. 

Now I know there are matters of import, global strife, lives in danger, friend, sickness and foe, but I know that grace may enter into any moment – as in our text for this Sunday.

Ten lepers, 10 healed, but only one takes the time to say ‘thanks’ and is not only healed, but saved

I had a friend in New York who in the grips of a disease – a disease that carried a death sentence – would remind me and others both by what he said and how he lived his life: Gratitude is the prince of the emotions! 

We’ll explore this on Sunday. Invite a friend. (Invite a member.) I hope to see you in worship!

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