PODCAST · religion
Central United Methodist Church (Arlington, Virginia) Sermon Podcast
by Central United Methodist Church
An audio podcast of the weekly message preached at Central United Methodist Church in Arlington, Virginia. You're invited to join us online for worship on Sundays at 10:30 a.m. Visit us on the web at cumcballston.org to learn how to join us for worship via zoom or facebook live. You're invited to join our congregation where we worship God, serve others, and embrace all.
-
324
Methodist Mavericks | When the Spirit Breaks the Rules
Methodist MavericksSeries: Defying Limits Scripture: Joel 2:28–29 (Common English Bible)What happens when the Holy Spirit refuses to follow human permission structures?In Joel 2:28–29, God declares a radical vision: the Spirit will be poured out on all people—sons and daughters, young and old, servants and leaders alike. In this vision, spiritual authority is no longer reserved for the elite, the ordained, or the officially recognized. God’s Spirit moves freely, without checking credentials first.This sermon, Methodist Mavericks, explores what it means when God calls people before institutions are ready to affirm them. Across the history of the church, there have always been those who experienced this tension firsthand—people called by God but delayed, resisted, or dismissed by the systems around them.We hear the story of Jarena Lee, who carried a call to preach for eight years before being recognized. We encounter Richard Allen and the founding of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, born out of a refusal to accept dehumanizing treatment in worship. We see Anna Howard Shaw, who expanded her calling beyond the limits of both church and profession to address deeper systems of injustice. And we remember others in the Methodist tradition who refused to confine the movement of the Spirit to institutional boundaries.Together, these stories reveal a consistent truth: the Spirit is not controlled by structure, status, or permission. God’s calling often arrives before recognition does.This sermon invites us to consider where the Spirit may already be moving in our lives—before approval, before affirmation, and before we feel ready. The question is not whether God is speaking, but whether we are willing to respond when the Spirit moves beyond what is expected.Reflection Questions: Jarena Lee felt called to preach for eight years before anyone gave her the chance. Have you ever felt strongly that God was calling you to something, but others said no or not yet? What helped you remain faithful in that waiting? Richard Allen and early leaders of the African Methodist Episcopal Church grounded their dignity in God rather than human approval. When you experience rejection or exclusion, how does your understanding of your worth in God shape your response? Anna Howard Shaw discovered that her calling required stepping beyond institutional approval. Where might God be inviting you to use your gifts even without official permission or recognition? Support the show
-
323
Breaking Systems of Harm
Breaking Systems of Harm Series: Defying Limits Scripture: Galatians 3:26-29 (Common English Bible) In Galatians, the Apostle Paul confronts a crisis in the early church: lines are being drawn about who belongs and who does not. Cultural expectations, religious traditions, and social pressures are reshaping the gospel into something smaller, more controlled, and less inclusive than what Christ proclaimed.Paul responds with urgency, insisting that in Christ there is no longer division by status, identity, or background—all are one.In this message, Rev. Jan Phillips invites us to reclaim that vision through the Wesleyan idea of “being more vile.” Far from its modern connotation, this phrase describes a willingness to resist respectability, challenge harmful systems, and bend social expectations in order to ensure that more people experience the love of God.Drawing on Methodist history, we remember both the courage and the failures of the church. There were moments when Methodists stood boldly against injustice—challenging systems of harm and advocating for the marginalized. But there were also moments when the church chose comfort, influence, and acceptance over faithfulness, reinforcing the very divisions the gospel seeks to dismantle.To be “vile” in this sense is not about disruption for its own sake, but about a refusal to let exclusion have the final word. It is a call to recover a faith that is willing to be uncomfortable, to tell the truth about harm, and to act in ways that reflect the radical inclusivity of Christ.This sermon invites us to examine the systems we participate in, the lines we have drawn, and the ways we might be called to break them—for the sake of a more just, inclusive, and Christ-centered community.Reflection Questions:Are there ways that you think The United Methodist Church is still losing its vile-tality today?How might we apply our General Rule to “do no harm” here in Arlington, VA?What systems might we challenge in order to build a more inclusive, equitable, and wholistic table for all God's people?The call of Christ has never been about maintaining systems—but transforming them. Support the show
-
322
The World Is My Parish
The World Is My Parish Series: Defying Limits Scripture: Matthew 25:31–46 (Common English Bible)In Matthew 25:31–46, Jesus describes a vision of the final judgment that is startling in its clarity and unsettling in its implications. The nations are gathered, and the dividing line is not drawn by status, belief, or reputation, but by how each person has responded to the hungry, the thirsty, the stranger, the naked, the sick, and the imprisoned. In these overlooked places, Jesus says, the presence of Christ is already waiting to be recognized.This sermon explores the radical claim that God is not distant from human suffering but located within it. Drawing on the idea of the incognito Christ, we discover that Christ is present in the very people and places we are most tempted to avoid or overlook. The question is not whether we will bring Christ into those spaces, but whether we will recognize that Christ has already arrived ahead of us.The message also turns to the story of John Wesley, who understood ministry not as something confined to a building or boundary, but as a calling that extends into the whole world. His declaration that “the world is my parish” was not a slogan but a refusal to let limits define the reach of love. It was lived out in risky acts of solidarity, including his advocacy for Thomas Blair, where compassion moved beyond sentiment into costly action.Together, these stories invite us to reconsider what it means to follow Christ beyond comfort, beyond reputation, and beyond the spaces we typically consider sacred. If Christ is already present among the least of these, then discipleship becomes a matter of attention, courage, and willingness to go where love leads.This sermon asks us to see the world not as divided between sacred and secular, but as already filled with the presence of Christ waiting to be encountered.Reflection Questions:Wesley’s willingness to cross a boundary on behalf of Thomas Blair grew out of his conviction that every person is worthy of God’s love. Whose worthiness are you finding hardest to hold onto right now, and what is getting in the way? The Thomas Blair story is not really about tolerance; it is about risk. Who is the person or group in your community that would cost you something to stand with, and what is keeping you from taking that step? The sermon suggests that Christ is already present in the places we are most reluctant to enter. What is one place you have been reluctant to go, and what would it mean to trust that Christ got there first? Support the show
-
321
No Limits at the Kitchen Table
No Limits at the Kitchen Table Series: Defying Limits Scripture: Acts 2:42–47In Acts 2:42–47, the early believers do not gather in cathedrals or formal religious spaces, but in homes—around shared tables where Scripture is taught, prayers are offered, meals are shared, and life is lived in common. The church is born in ordinary spaces, where the presence of God is experienced through fellowship, generosity, and the breaking of bread.Luke describes their life together as marked by agalliasis—a wild, exuberant joy that the surrounding culture found threatening. This was not quiet or contained spirituality, but a visible, embodied way of living that resisted the fear, hierarchy, and scarcity of the Roman world. Their shared meals became a declaration that God’s kingdom operates by a different economy.This pattern of faith lived at the table echoes through the story of Susanna Wesley, whose kitchen became a place of teaching, formation, and spiritual attentiveness. Long before Methodism became a movement, it was shaped in the rhythms of ordinary family life—where questions were asked, Scripture was read, and souls were formed in conversation. From that table comes a tradition that would shape John Wesley’s understanding of discipleship as deeply relational and consistently practiced.At the center of that tradition is a question that continues to echo through Christian community: “How is it with your soul?” Not as a formality, but as a practice of spiritual honesty and care.This sermon invites us to reconsider the sacredness of the table—not as a symbol of comfort alone, but as a place where joy resists despair, where grace is extended to those overlooked, and where everyday life becomes a site of discipleship.Reflection Questions: Acts describes the early believers eating with agalliasis, a wild and exuberant joy that the surrounding culture found threatening. What would it mean for your daily life to practice joy as an act of resistance? How can we transform our own kitchen tables into sanctuaries of grace for those society ignores? John Wesley's discipleship groups always opened with the same question: “How is it with your soul?” This practice traces back to the conversations he had at his mother’s kitchen table. Who in your life asks you that question, and who might be waiting for you to ask it of them? Support the show
-
320
Submitting to the Spirit
Submitting to the Spirit Scripture: Luke 4:16–21 (CEB) Series: Defying LimitsWhat does it look like to submit to the Spirit when it leads us beyond comfort, control, and respectability?In this week’s sermon, we travel back to 1739 Bristol and witness John Wesley’s uneasy but transformative moment of obedience. A man formed by discipline, order, and religious precision finds himself pulled beyond the boundaries of what he believed faithful ministry should look like. Standing before thousands of coal miners in an open field, Wesley does what once felt unthinkable: he submits to the Spirit and steps into a wider, wilder mission field.Wesley later writes in his journal, “I submitted to be more vile”—not meaning shame or corruption, but a willingness to abandon respectability for the sake of the gospel. His story becomes a living illustration of what it means to move from inward devotion to outward action, from carefully contained faith to Spirit-led disruption.That same tension is present in Luke 4, where Jesus stands in his hometown synagogue and declares that Isaiah’s promise is fulfilled today. Good news is proclaimed to the poor, release to the captive, and freedom to the oppressed—not as distant hope, but as present reality. Yet this proclamation also challenges boundaries, disrupts expectations, and ultimately provokes rejection when grace extends beyond what people are willing to accept.Both Jesus and Wesley reveal a Spirit that refuses containment. The Spirit leads into uncomfortable places, calls us beyond familiar circles, and redefines what faithful presence in the world looks like. The question becomes not just what we believe, but where we are willing to go—and who we are willing to go there for.🌀 Reflection Questions• Wesley’s journal uses the word “submitted” because he did not initially want to engage in field preaching; he was pulled by the Spirit into a space he considered “vile” and “filthy.” When has the Holy Spirit nudged you toward a task or a group of people you initially resisted, and what did you discover about God's love once you finally yielded to that pull?• If the “Good News” Jesus proclaims in Luke 4 is for the poor and oppressed, what “respectable” church protocols are we willing to break to ensure that mission is fulfilled?• This scripture moved Wesley from an inward “strangely warmed” heart to one “set afire” for action. How does this scripture challenge you to move from private piety to outward “vile-tality”? Support the show
-
319
In Death, There Is Resurrection
In Death, There Is Resurrection Scripture: Luke 24:1–12 (CEB) Part of the Defying Limits worship seriesWhat if the resurrection isn’t a tidy, comforting ending—but something far more disruptive?On this Easter Sunday, we hear the familiar story of the empty tomb from Luke’s Gospel—but through the eyes of those who first experienced it, the resurrection doesn’t feel like joy at first. It feels like confusion, fear… even “nonsense.” The women come expecting death, not life. The disciples struggle to believe what they hear. No one is prepared for what God is about to do.And yet, this is the scandal and the promise of Easter: God refuses to let death have the final word.In this first sermon of our Defying Limits series, we explore how the resurrection breaks open everything we thought we knew about life, death, and the love of God. Drawing on the story of the empty tomb and the bold witness of the early Methodists, we are invited to consider what it means to follow a risen Christ who defies expectations, crosses boundaries, and calls us beyond fear into a more courageous, expansive faith.Because resurrection isn’t just something that happened long ago—it is something God is still doing. In moments of grief, uncertainty, and change, God is at work bringing new life where we least expect it.So where are you looking for the living among the dead?This Easter, we are reminded that in death, there is resurrection—and that truth changes everything. Support the show
-
318
Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus
Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus Scripture: John 19:30–42 (CEB) Part of the Witness at the Cross Lenten series What does it take to step out of the shadows and live your faith openly?In this week’s sermon, we encounter two men who come forward in the final moments after Jesus’ death—Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus. One has believed in secret, held back by fear. The other is still on a journey of faith, full of questions and uncertainty. Yet both show up when it matters most.Drawing on the Gospel of John and insights from Witness at the Cross by Amy-Jill Levine, we reflect on the different ways people come to faith—and how God meets us in each place along the journey.Joseph’s story reminds us that it is never too late to find the courage to step forward. Nicodemus shows us that faith doesn’t require having everything figured out, but simply a willingness to seek, to question, and to show up.Together, they bear witness to a love that cannot remain hidden.This story invites us to consider where we are being called to respond—to move from fear to courage, from silence to action, and to create space for others who are still finding their way.🌀 Reflection Questions• Joseph of Arimathea believed in Jesus for years but kept his faith hidden out of fear. When has fear kept you a secret disciple? • What did you witness at the cross, in this worship series, that has moved you from silence toward courage? • Who in your life is a Nicodemus—someone seeking understanding and faith in God? How can you support them on their journey? Support the show
-
317
The Women
The Women Scripture: Luke 23:26–49 (CEB) Part of the Witness at the Cross Lenten seriesWhat gives someone the courage to stay present to suffering instead of looking away?In this week’s sermon, we stand at the cross alongside the women who followed Jesus all the way to Golgotha. While many disciples fled, these women remained—watching, mourning, and bearing witness to the suffering of Christ.Drawing on the Gospel of Luke and insights from Witness at the Cross by Amy-Jill Levine, we reflect on what it means to stay present in moments of pain and grief. These women remind us that faith is not about avoiding suffering, but about learning how to face it—with honesty, courage, and compassion.Jesus’ words to the women—“weep for yourselves and your children”—also invite us into the practice of lament. We are called not only to grieve Christ’s suffering, but to acknowledge the pain in our own lives and in the world around us.Even from a distance, the women stayed. And in doing so, they became faithful witnesses.This story invites us to consider how we, too, are called to bear witness—to remain present, to support one another, and to trust that we are not alone at the cross.🌀 Reflection Questions• The women followed Jesus all the way to the cross when most disciples fled. What gives us courage to stay present with suffering rather than look away? • Jesus tells the women to “weep for yourselves and your children.” When is lament for our own world’s pain an appropriate response to Jesus’ story? • The text says the women “stood at a distance observing.” What keeps us at a distance from Jesus’ suffering? What would it mean to come closer? • These women are named as witnesses—they saw, they stayed, they mourned. Who are the faithful witnesses in your life who have shown you how to stay present in hard times? Support the show
-
316
The Beloved Disciple
The Beloved Disciple Scripture: John 19:25–27 (CEB) Part of the Witness at the Cross Lenten seriesAt the foot of the cross, a small group remains with Jesus in his final moments. Among them is an unnamed figure in the Gospel of John known simply as the beloved disciple. In this week’s sermon, we stand beside Mary, the mother of Jesus, and this anonymous disciple to reflect on what it means to remain close to Christ even in moments of suffering.Drawing on insights from Amy-Jill Levine’s Witness at the Cross: A Beginner’s Guide to Holy Friday, we explore why this disciple may have been intentionally left unnamed. By leaving the beloved disciple anonymous, the Gospel invites each of us to step into the story—to see ourselves as the one whom Jesus loves and the one called to care for others in his name.From the cross, Jesus forms a new kind of family. He says to Mary, “Here is your son,” and to the disciple, “Here is your mother.” In that moment, family is redefined—not by biology, marriage, or obligation—but by love, faithfulness, and care for one another in Christ.Standing close to the cross is not only about remembering the past. It calls us to look around and notice who is beside us, and to practice love in concrete ways—through presence, hospitality, and acts of compassion that reflect Christ’s love in the world.🌀 Reflection Questions• What spiritual practices help you stand closer to the cross and gain clarity and focus on what Jesus wants you to see? • What does “family” mean to you after hearing John 19:25–27? How does that shape your commitments? • Who is the person standing at the cross with you whom Jesus is calling you to love like family? What action can you take this week to love them well? Support the show
-
315
The Soldiers
The Soldiers Scripture: Mark 15:16–25 (CEB) Part of the Witness at the Cross Lenten seriesWhat happens when people simply follow orders within a powerful system? In this week’s sermon, we stand at the cross alongside the Roman soldiers who carried out Jesus’ crucifixion and reflect on what their story reveals about obedience, responsibility, and witnessing to truth.Drawing on insights from Amy-Jill Levine’s Witness at the Cross: A Beginner’s Guide to Holy Friday, we explore how Mark’s Gospel presents these soldiers not simply as villains, but as ordinary people participating in the machinery of empire. Their actions invite us to wrestle with difficult questions about the systems we live within and the choices we make every day.Yet even in the midst of this difficult reflection, the Gospel offers hope. At the foot of the cross, a Roman centurion witnesses Jesus’ death and declares, “Truly this man was God’s Son.” In that moment, someone who had been part of the system becomes a witness to the truth.This story invites us to consider how Christ calls us to move from passive participation toward courageous witness—speaking truth, seeking justice, and living as citizens of a different kind of kingdom.🌀 Reflection Questions• The soldiers were following orders when they crucified Jesus. When is it okay to follow rules, and when should we question them? • When have you found yourself “just going along” with something you knew wasn’t right? What made it hard to speak up or step out of line? • The centurion saw Jesus die and declared, “Truly this man was God’s Son.” What would it take for us to become witnesses to the truth rather than just participants in the system? Support the show
-
314
A Thief’s Prayer
A Thief’s Prayer Scripture: Luke 23:39–43 (CEB) Part of the Witness at the Cross Lenten seriesIn this week’s sermon, we remain at the cross and listen closely to a voice we might otherwise overlook—a condemned criminal hanging beside Jesus. In Luke’s Gospel, two men are crucified with him. One joins the chorus of mockery: “Aren’t you the Christ? Save yourself and us.” The other does something astonishing.He sees a king.While religious leaders sneer, soldiers gamble, and a sign above Jesus’ head reads “King of the Jews,” this dying man recognizes what others cannot. He tells the truth about himself—“We are rightly condemned.” He declares Jesus’ innocence—“This man has done nothing wrong.” And then he dares to believe that Jesus’ kingdom is still coming.“Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.”Not if. When.Drawing on insights from Amy-Jill Levine’s Witness at the Cross, we reflect on how this second criminal represents a radically different response to Jesus’ suffering. With nothing left to prove, no reputation to defend, and no time to make amends, he offers only an honest heart and a simple prayer. And in response, Jesus speaks one of the most grace-filled promises in all of Scripture:“Today you will be with me in paradise.”Throughout Christian history, believers have tried to explain how the cross accomplishes salvation—through ransom, satisfaction, substitution, moral influence, Christus Victor, and more. Yet what they all share is this: our salvation rests on God’s action, not our own. Jesus does what we cannot do.The thief understands this before any theologian names it. He brings no good works, no theological credentials, no time to “get it right.” His only claim is this: “The man on the middle cross said I could come.” And that is enough.As we prepare to come to the table of grace and reflect at the prayer stations, we are invited to release our regrets, fears, and shame into the hands of the crucified King. The kingdom that comes through the cross is not built on force or self-protection. It is a kingdom where grace meets us at our worst moment, where a King dies even for his enemies, and where Jesus looks at us and says, “I remember you. You’re with me.”🌀 Reflection Questions:Does seeing Jesus as a suffering King change the way you imagine God’s power?The thief’s only credential for paradise was, “The man on the middle cross said I could come.” How does this simple truth challenge or comfort you in your faith journey?How does focusing on our salvation originating in God’s action through Christ—rather than our faith or our works—influence your daily walk with Jesus?✨ Listen as we stand between two crosses, hear a dying man’s prayer, and rediscover the grace that welcomes us—not because we have earned it, but because Christ has spoken. Support the show
-
313
The Cross as a Witness: Ash Wednesday
The Cross as a Witness: Ash Wednesday Matthew 6:1–6, 16–21We begin Lent by marking ourselves with ashes and hearing the words, “Remember that you are dust.” Ash Wednesday confronts us with mortality — but it also points us to hope.In this opening message of our Witness at the Cross series, we reflect on how the cross stands as a witness to two realities at once: the certainty of death and the greater certainty of God’s love in Christ. The cross exposes the emptiness of performative religion and calls us into a deeper, hidden faith.Drawing from Jesus’ teaching in Matthew 6, we explore how secret giving, private prayer, and unseen fasting become acts of quiet resistance — contending against pride, control, and the lie that more is always better. These Lenten disciplines are not about earning applause or perfecting ourselves. They are about allowing God’s grace to shape us in the hidden places of the heart.In that secret place, resurrection begins. Support the show
-
312
Bystanders and Scoffers
Bystanders and Scoffers Scripture: Matthew 27:27-44 (CEB)Part of the Witness at the Cross Lenten series In this week’s sermon, we step into the final hours of Jesus’ life, witnessing the suffering, mockery, and crucifixion in Matthew 27. From Roman soldiers to passing crowds, from religious leaders to Simon of Cyrene, we encounter the many bystanders and scoffers surrounding the cross—and we are invited to see ourselves among them.Drawing on Amy-Jill Levine’s insights from Witness at the Cross: A Beginner’s Guide to Holy Friday, we explore questions that challenge our daily lives: Are there any innocent bystanders? When do we remain silent in the face of injustice, and what might it take to move from observation to action? How does Simon’s compelled act of carrying the cross deepen our understanding of discipleship and responsibility?This sermon also warns of the danger when those in positions of religious or social authority use influence to harm others in God’s name. How can we hold ourselves and our faith communities accountable, ensuring that our witness reflects Jesus’ inclusive love rather than fear or prejudice?🌀 Reflection Questions:When have you found yourself as a “bystander” to someone else’s suffering or injustice? What made it difficult to step in, and looking back, what might have helped you become a participant instead?How does Simon of Cyrene’s story challenge your understanding of what it means to “carry the cross” in your daily life? Where is Jesus inviting you to carry something this week?How can we ensure our witness in the world mirrors Christ’s inclusive love rather than our own biases?✨ Listen as we journey to the cross, confront the scoffers and bystanders within and around us, and consider how God calls us to active, faithful presence in a world that desperately needs courage and compassion. Support the show
-
311
From the Mountain to the World
From the Mountain to the World Scripture: Matthew 17:1-9 (CEB) The culmination of our series, A Journey of Justice: From the River to the MountainIn this concluding sermon of our worship series, we stand with Peter, James, and John on the mountaintop of the Transfiguration—awestruck by Christ’s radiant glory and tempted, like Peter, to stay where the moment feels holy and safe. But the mountain is not the destination. It is the launching place.As Jesus leads the disciples back down toward Jerusalem—and ultimately toward the cross—we are reminded that every encounter with the living God is meant to send us back into the world bearing light.Drawing on the life and witness of Desmond Tutu, this sermon explores what it means to practice joy as resistance. In the face of apartheid’s cruelty and injustice, Tutu chose laughter, hope, and unwavering love—not as denial of suffering, but as defiance against it. His joy was not naïve optimism; it was a theological conviction that the light of Christ is stronger than any darkness.Rooted in the promises of our baptism—to resist evil, injustice, and oppression in whatever forms they present themselves—this message invites us to consider how mountaintop moments with God equip us for courageous, justice-shaped living. We cannot remain neutral in the face of harm. We cannot stay on the mountain. We are sent.What would it mean for us to become “joy warriors” in our own time? What does it look like to move from silence to action, from cynicism to hope, from private faith to public witness?The world does not need more despair. It needs people so grounded in God’s love that they radiate joy, mercy, and justice wherever they go.🌀 Reflection Questions:Desmond Tutu practiced “joy as resistance” in the face of apartheid’s evil. Where do you see the need for joyful resistance in our world today, and what might that look like in your own life?Tutu said, “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.” Where might God be calling you to break your silence or move from neutrality to action?✨ Listen as we journey from the mountain back into the world—carrying Christ’s light, choosing joy as resistance, and embracing our call to love boldly in a broken world. Support the show
-
310
Corrie’s Reflections
Corrie’s Reflections: A Journey of Justice — From the River to the MountainThis week’s service was something different—and deeply moving. Instead of a traditional sermon, we welcomed guest speaker Olive Horning, who shared Corrie’s Reflections, a first-person portrayal of the life and witness of Corrie ten Boom.Through story, memory, and testimony, Olive invites us to step into Corrie’s world: a quiet Dutch home transformed by war, courage, sacrifice, and an unwavering trust in God. As we listen, we encounter a faith forged not in comfort, but in resistance—one that chose to shelter the persecuted, speak truth in the face of evil, and cling to hope even in the darkness of Ravensbrück concentration camp.Corrie’s Reflections is not a performance for entertainment, but a witness meant to be received. It bears testimony to a God who is present in suffering, faithful in impossible circumstances, and able to bring light even through fear, loss, and human weakness. Corrie’s story reminds us that God’s love truly is deeper than the deepest pit—and that ordinary people, relying on extraordinary grace, can become instruments of mercy and courage.Olive also shares her own story of being called to carry Corrie’s witness forward, offering a gentle reminder that God often uses gifts we did not expect, in ways we could not have planned, for purposes far greater than ourselves.✨ We invite you to listen prayerfully to this special episode, allowing Corrie’s story—and the God revealed through it—to speak to your heart, stir your faith, and renew your hope. Support the show
-
309
Costly Discipleship
Costly Discipleship: A Journey of Justice — From the River to the Mountain Scripture: Mark 1:14–20 (CEB)In Costly Discipleship, our journey of justice brings us back to the water—this time to the seashore—where Jesus calls ordinary people to leave their nets and follow him into an unknown future. With a simple, disruptive invitation—“Follow me”—Jesus reveals that discipleship is never abstract. It always asks something real of us.This sermon reflects on the radical immediacy of the call in Mark’s Gospel and what it means to leave behind the “nets” that offer us security, comfort, or silence. Drawing on the life and witness of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, we confront the difference between cheap grace and costly grace—between claiming faith as private belief and living it as public, embodied obedience.Bonhoeffer’s refusal to remain safely removed from suffering challenges us to reconsider where discipleship leads. His insistence that “the church is only the church when it exists for others” presses against any temptation to retreat into personal piety while injustice persists. Following Jesus, this sermon reminds us, inevitably draws us toward the vulnerable and into the work of resisting evil, injustice, and oppression.Rooted in our baptismal vows and attentive to the realities of our own moment, Costly Discipleship invites us to listen for Jesus’ call today. What are we being asked to leave behind? What next faithful step is Christ placing before us? And how might costly obedience lead not to loss, but to deeper meaning, courage, and hope as we continue our journey—from the river to the mountain.🌀 Reflection Questions:What “nets” in your life might God be asking you to leave behind so you can follow Jesus more faithfully?How does Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s example challenge your understanding of discipleship and public witness?In what concrete way this week can you move from private piety to costly obedience in service to others?✨ Listen as we reflect on the call to follow, the cost of discipleship, and the grace that meets us when we dare to set our nets down and walk with Jesus into the world God so deeply loves. Support the show
-
308
Sent to Heal
Sent to Heal: A Journey of Justice — From the River to the Mountain Scripture: Matthew 10:1–8 (CEB)In Sent to Heal, our journey of justice moves from the river into the world Jesus loves. Having been named beloved at baptism, Jesus now sends his disciples—entrusting them with authority, compassion, and power to bring healing in its fullest sense.This sermon reflects on Jesus’ commissioning in Matthew 10, where he gives the disciples authority to cure disease, cast out spirits, and proclaim that God’s reign has come near. Yet Jesus’ vision of healing is never only about physical cures. It is about restoration, dignity, and the rebuilding of broken lives and communities.Drawing on the witness of Florence Nightingale, we explore a vision of healing that reaches beyond individual illness to include presence, advocacy, and systemic change. Healing, in this broader sense, becomes the work of justice: restoring wholeness where harm, exclusion, or neglect have taken hold.To be sent by Christ, this sermon reminds us, is to carry our baptismal identity into the hurting places of the world—not with all the answers, but with courage, compassion, and love. The same Spirit that met us at the river empowers us to participate in God’s healing work today.This message invites us to reflect on the authority we have received, to expand our understanding of healing, and to imagine what wholeness might look like in our lives, our church, and our community as we continue this journey—from the river to the mountain.🌀 Reflection Questions:In what ways has baptism given you a sense of authority to act for healing and justice?Florence Nightingale understood healing as dignity, presence, and systemic change. When have you experienced or witnessed healing that restored wholeness rather than simply curing? How does this broader understanding of healing reshape what it means to be sent by Christ?✨ Listen as we reflect on baptismal authority, reimagine healing as justice-making work, and discern how Christ sends us to participate in God’s restoring love. Support the show
-
307
Follow Me into the Desert
A Journey of Justice: From the River to the Mountain Follow Me into the Desert Scripture: Matthew 3:13–17 (CEB)In Follow Me into the Desert, our journey of justice moves from the waters of the Jordan into the hard, honest landscape of the wilderness. Jesus steps into the river not out of need for repentance, but in faithful obedience—to “fulfill all righteousness.” He enters cold water, vulnerability, and risk, and is named beloved before he is led anywhere else.This sermon reflects on baptism as both grounding and sending. As heaven opens and the Spirit descends like a dove, Jesus hears words that anchor him for what lies ahead: “This is my Son, whom I dearly love.” Almost immediately, that same Spirit will lead him into the desert—into testing, temptation, and costly faithfulness. Belovedness does not spare him from difficulty; it prepares him for it.Preached on Martin Luther King Jr. Sunday, this message draws deep connections between Jesus’ baptismal calling and Dr. King’s own journey into the desert places of justice work—marked by patience, suffering, exhaustion, and unwavering commitment to love. Water becomes both symbol and reality: cleansing and danger, life and weapon, promise and protest. Beneath the riverbed, the sermon reminds us, lies a deeper truth—a bedrock identity that sustains us when the road grows dry.To follow Jesus, we are invited to follow him not only into the waters, but into the wilderness—thirsty for justice, righteousness, care, and love. This is not a solitary journey. The Spirit who descends also sustains, calling the community of faith to create spaces of renewal for those doing hard Kingdom work.This message invites us to trust God’s timing, to listen for the Spirit’s leading even when it is risky, and to remember that justice does not flow from our strength alone, but from our belovedness.🌀 Reflection Questions:Rev. Dr. King said, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” Jesus waited many years before his public ministry began. How does patience in God’s timing sustain you when justice work feels slow or discouraging?Rev. Dr. King’s “desert” included threats, jail, and exhaustion. Jesus’ desert would include temptation and suffering. What sustains you when following Jesus into difficult spaces for the sake of love and justice? How can we create spaces where people doing hard Kingdom work can be refueled and renewed?After his baptism, the Spirit immediately led Jesus into the wilderness. Dr. King wrote, “The ultimate measure of a person is not where they stand in moments of comfort and convenience, but where they stand at times of challenge and controversy.” When have you felt the Spirit leading you toward something difficult or risky for the sake of justice? What gave you the courage to say yes—or what held you back?✨ Listen as we follow Jesus from the river into the desert—grounded in belovedness, sustained by the Spirit, and called to trust that justice will yet roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream. Support the show
-
306
Beloved and Bold
Beloved and Bold: A Journey of Justice: From the River to the Mountain Scripture: Mark 1:1–11 (CEB)In Beloved and Bold, we begin our journey of justice at the river—standing with Jesus at the waters of baptism. As heaven is torn open and the Spirit descends, God speaks words that shape everything that follows: “You are my Son, whom I dearly love.” Before Jesus performs a single miracle or teaches a single crowd, he is named beloved.This sermon reflects on how baptism grounds our identity not in achievement, productivity, or approval, but in God’s declaration of love. Jesus enters the Jordan not because he needs repentance, but in solidarity with a broken and vulnerable humanity. His baptism marks the beginning of a ministry rooted in presence, compassion, and justice—one that consistently stands with those on the margins.From this moment at the river flows a bold life of resistance to injustice: healing on the Sabbath, crossing social boundaries, restoring dignity to the excluded, and challenging systems of oppression. The same Spirit that empowered Jesus is poured out on us in our baptisms, giving us freedom, power, and courage to live faithfully.To be beloved, this sermon reminds us, is not a passive identity. When we know we are God’s beloved children, we are freed from proving our worth—and compelled to see others as beloved too. Justice then becomes not an obligation, but an act of love.This message invites us to remember who we are, to renew our baptismal vows, and to take our first steps in a season-long journey of justice—from the river to the mountain.🌀 Reflection Questions:When have you most felt affirmed as God’s beloved, and how can that memory strengthen you in times of doubt?How does embracing our identity as God’s beloved compel us to notice and respond to vulnerability and injustice in our community?Our baptismal vow calls us to resist evil, injustice, and oppression. What is one concrete, faithful step you will take this week to live out that promise?✨ Listen as we remember our belovedness, renew our baptismal identity, and begin a bold journey of justice—empowered by the Spirit and rooted in God’s unwavering love. Support the show
-
305
You Are Mine, and I Am Yours
You Are Mine, and I Am Yours Scripture: Jeremiah 31:31–34 (CEB) Theme: Wesley Covenant Prayer · Covenant RenewalIn this sermon, You Are Mine, and I Am Yours, Pastor Sarah Harrison-McQueen reflects on God’s promise of a new covenant—one written not on stone tablets, but on human hearts. Drawing from Jeremiah’s vision of covenant renewal and the Wesleyan Covenant Prayer, she invites us to rest in the truth that our relationship with God is grounded not in what we do, but in who we are: God’s beloved people.This message explores the deep reassurance of covenant faith—that even when humanity falters, God remains faithful. Through Jesus Christ, God fulfills the promise of a new covenant, one marked by grace, forgiveness, and presence. Communion becomes not a transaction, but a vow of relationship, reminding us that we belong to God, and God belongs to us.At the heart of this service is the Wesley Covenant Prayer, a prayer that can feel both beautiful and challenging. Its words ask for trust in seasons of abundance and emptiness, action and rest, praise and suffering. Yet this prayer is not a resolution to “do better,” but an invitation to remember and celebrate a relationship already sustained by God’s grace.Whether you are new to faith or have been walking with Christ for many years, this sermon offers space to reflect, renew, and rest—listening again for God’s promise spoken over our lives: You are mine, and I am yours.🌀 Reflection Questions:As you read the Covenant Prayer slowly, what words or phrases stand out to you?Which parts of the prayer feel easy to say—and which feel difficult? Why?Looking at your whole life, what might God be asking you to stop, continue, or begin as part of this covenant relationship?✨ Listen as we reflect on covenant, grace, and belonging—and as we renew our trust in the God who writes love on our hearts and walks with us through every season. Support the show
-
304
Sacred Doing
Sacred Doing: Reflecting the Sacred Scripture: Isaiah 52:7–10; Matthew 2:13–23 (CEB)In this Christmas sermon from our series Reflecting the Sacred, we turn to Sacred Doing—the call to embody God’s presence through acts of justice, mercy, and solidarity in a suffering world. Drawing from Isaiah’s vision of beautiful feet that carry good news and Matthew’s account of the Holy Family fleeing violence and fear, Pastor Christina Hart-Perkins invites us to consider what faith looks like when it must move, risk, and respond.Jesus’ life begins not in safety or certainty, but in displacement. Forced to flee as a child refugee, Jesus is formed in solidarity with the vulnerable, the grieving, and the displaced. His story confronts us with the reality that fear still breeds violence, that suffering persists even in holy seasons—and yet, God continues to break through with comfort, redemption, and hope.This sermon reminds us that God does not stand apart from human suffering but enters fully into it. Sacred doing is not about grand solutions or easy answers; it is often as simple—and as costly—as showing up, bearing witness, and refusing to let evil have the final word. We are called to be the messengers Isaiah describes: people whose lives carry good news, whose steps lead toward peace, and whose presence reflects the sacred even in the hardest places.🌀 Reflection Questions:Jesus begins life as a vulnerable child who must flee for safety. How does this shape the way you see vulnerable people today?What might “sacred doing” look like in response to fear, injustice, or suffering today?What does it mean for us to dedicate ourselves to reflecting the sacred in all we do?✨ Listen as we reflect on fear and faith, suffering and solidarity, and the invitation to become God’s agents of grace, peace, and healing in the world. Support the show
-
303
Sacred Knowing
Sacred Knowing: Reflecting the Sacred Scripture: Matthew 1:18–25 (CEB)This week in our Advent series Reflecting the Sacred, we turn our attention to Sacred Knowing—the quiet, often overlooked awareness of God’s presence woven into the ordinary fabric of our lives. Drawing from Matthew’s account of Jesus’ birth, Pastor Christina Hart-Perkins invites us to see the story through the eyes of Joseph: a man whose faith is revealed not through words, but through steady, faithful action.Joseph’s story unfolds in uncertainty, risk, and disrupted expectations. Faced with a future that no longer made sense, Joseph listens for God not in spectacle, but in a dream—and responds with obedience that costs him comfort, reputation, and control. In naming the child Jesus, Joseph claims a sacred calling: to embody Emmanuel, God with us, not in grand gestures, but in daily faithfulness.This sermon reflects on the profound truth that God’s saving presence is not confined to holy places or extraordinary moments. God walks among the pots and pans, the schedules and carpools, the disappointments and the mundane rhythms of life. Jesus—fully divine and fully human—meets us exactly where we are, saving us not after we have it all together, but in the midst of our becoming.Sacred knowing helps us look beneath the surface of our lives to discover that even obedience, disruption, and ordinary labor can become holy ground. Advent reminds us that we do not need to escape the world to find God—God has already come to us.🌀 Reflection Questions:When I quiet my mind, where is God calling me?As my schedule grows fuller with the approach of Christmas, where do I find peace, and how might I carry that peace to others?✨ Listen as we reflect on Joseph’s faith, the holiness of the ordinary, and the deep truth that God is with us—and saves us—in every moment of our lives. Support the show
-
302
Sacred Space
Sacred Space: Reflecting the Sacred Scripture: Isaiah 35This week at Central, we continue our Advent series Reflecting the Sacred by exploring what it means to find — and create — sacred space in a world that often feels dry, fractured, and joyless. Drawing from the prophetic vision of Isaiah 35, Pastor Christina Hart-Perkins invites us into a promise of unexpected renewal: that even deserts will bloom, and joy will emerge where we least expect it.Isaiah speaks honestly to a people who have lost home, community, and stability. He does not minimize their pain or rush them toward false hope. Instead, he names the wilderness for what it is — a place of loss, fear, and disorientation — while boldly proclaiming that God does not abandon us there. In the very places that feel barren, God’s saving presence brings life, beauty, and restoration.In this sermon, Pastor Christina reflects on joy not as something we manufacture through seasonal trappings or outward cheer, but as a deep and sustaining strength rooted in God’s faithfulness. Joy, she reminds us, is not denial of suffering — it is what carries us through it. Sacred spaces are often hidden within pain and truth-telling, and it is there that God continues to meet us, renew us, and call us forward.Advent invites us to prepare not only for the birth of Christ, but for the ways God is still entering the dry and weary places of our lives and our world. As we wait, we are called to embody sacred space — shaping homes, communities, and hearts that reflect God’s justice, hope, and enduring joy.🌀 Reflection Questions:How do the spaces I inhabit — at home, work, and in community — reflect God’s justice and joy?What am I being called to create in order to further goodness in the world?What emotions do I feel when I think about visiting a street adorned with Christmas lights or a calming nature spot?✨ Listen as we reflect on wilderness, truth, and the joy that endures — and discover how God is still bringing life to bloom in the most unexpected places. Support the show
-
301
Sacred People
Sacred People: Reflecting the Sacred Scripture: Matthew 3:1–12This week at Central, we continue our Advent series Reflecting the Sacred by turning our attention to what it means to see one another as sacred people. Pastor Christina Hart-Perkins invites us into a surprising and powerful Advent companion: John the Baptist. Far from the serene scenes on our Christmas cards, John comes to us wild, blunt, and uncompromising—yet carrying a message of love that reaches deeper than sentimentality.In a season that often idealizes warmth and harmony, John’s call to repent can feel jarring. But Pastor Christina reminds us that repentance—teshuva, “to return”—is not about shame. It is an invitation to come back to our truest identity: beloved children of God. When we release the guilt, judgments, and stories we hold about ourselves, we also become free to see the sacred in others, even those who are difficult to love.John’s fierce urgency is not meant to make us small, but to call us back to ourselves and to one another. True repentance clears the space for love to grow—for us to recognize that God claims every person as holy, cherished, and worthy. From the marginalized to those we’d rather avoid, from the ones who hurt us to the ones we simply don’t understand, God’s love reaches first into the desert places and invites us to meet Him there.Advent beckons us to return, to release what separates us, and to recognize the sacred humanity in all whom we encounter.🌀 Reflection Questions:Where do I look for the sacred in other people this week, even in those I find difficult to love?How can I remind myself to pause and pray for a new understanding when I feel disconnected from someone?✨ Listen now as we explore what it means to repent, return, and reflect God’s love—discovering the sacred not only in ourselves, but in every person we meet. Support the show
-
300
Sacred Time
Sacred Time: Reflecting the Sacred Scriptures: Romans 13:11–14; Matthew 24:36–44This week at Central, we enter both the first week of Advent and the opening of our new worship series, Reflecting the Sacred. Pastor Christina Hart-Perkins invites us to consider what it means to step into “sacred time”—to live awake, attentive, and present to God’s movement in our everyday lives.In a season often filled with rushing, planning, and distraction, Scripture reminds us that we do not prepare for Christ’s coming by predicting a day or hour, but by waking up to God’s presence here and now. Romans calls us to shake off spiritual sleep, while Matthew urges us to stay alert, ready for the unexpected ways God breaks into our world.Pastor Christina reflects on the story of Noah—on what it means to build something faithful and hope-shaped even when the world cannot yet see its purpose. Like Noah’s ark, our practices, rituals, and communities of faith become vessels of love, justice, and hope that help us live toward God’s unfolding future.Advent invites us to slow down and notice the sacred woven into each hour—to breathe deeply, to reconnect, and to create moments that draw us beyond ourselves and into God’s holy mystery.🌀 Reflection Questions:How can I stay present this week?What ritual helps me stay connected with the sacred in this season?If I don’t have one, how will I create sacred moments?✨ Listen now as we begin this Advent journey together—awakening to God’s presence, embracing sacred time, and preparing our hearts for the hope that is coming. Support the show
-
299
From Complaining to Connecting
From Complaining to Connecting: A Complaint Free WorldScripture: Ephesians 4:29–32This week at Central, we continue our series A Complaint Free World by exploring how God calls us to move from criticism toward deeper connection. Complaints—especially about one another—often spring up quickly and easily, but scripture invites us to pay attention to the heart behind our words. In Ephesians, Paul reminds us that our speech carries the power to either bring life or to spread “rotting” words that tear others down.Pastor Christina challenges us to consider how we relate to one another, especially when frustrations arise. Instead of venting, gossiping, or comparing ourselves to others, we are invited to respond with kindness, compassion, and forgiveness—the same grace God has shown us. By shifting from complaint to direct, grace-filled communication, we open the door to stronger relationships, deeper unity, and a community shaped by love.Together, we discover that the journey from complaining to connecting begins not with changing our vocabulary, but with allowing Christ to transform our hearts.🌀 Reflection Questions:What would it look like to respond with kindness instead of criticism?How could you take the opportunity to connect instead of complaining about someone else?✨ Listen now and reflect on how God invites us to speak life, build one another up, and move from complaint to connection—becoming a community rooted in grace, compassion, and the love of Christ. Support the show
-
298
From Complaining to Seeking Justice
From Complaining to Seeking Justice: A Complaint Free WorldScripture: Isaiah 1:17 & Micah 6:8This week at Central, we explore how to move beyond complaints and toward hope-filled action for justice. Complaining often leaves us stuck in frustration, while seeking justice invites us to channel our concerns into meaningful, positive change. Guided by scripture, we learn that God calls us not only to notice injustice but to actively participate in making our world more compassionate and fair.Pastor Sarah shares practical ways to transform complaints into action, using tools and reflective exercises to reframe frustration into hope, prayer, and tangible steps for change. We discover that spiritual disciplines—prayer, reflection, and community—can guide us in living out justice with patience, courage, and faith.🌀 Reflection Questions:When was the last time you found yourself complaining about a social issue? How might you reframe that complaint into a vision of positive change and use words that sound hopeful instead of angry?In what ways can your spiritual disciplines support active, hope-filled justice work?What's one thing in your world that you'd like to see improve? What are three small steps you could take to help make that change?✨ Listen now and reflect on how God invites us to move from frustration to action, transforming complaints into hope-filled steps toward justice, compassion, and a world shaped by God’s love. Support the show
-
297
From Complaining to Grieving
From Complaining to Grieving: A Complaint Free WorldScripture: John 11:1–44This week at Central, we continue our journey toward a complaint-free life by moving from complaining to grieving. In John 11, Jesus meets Mary and Martha in the depth of their sorrow over the death of their brother, Lazarus—and He weeps with them. In this sacred moment, we see that God does not rush past our pain or demand composure. Instead, Jesus enters fully into our grief, showing us that divine compassion meets us right where we are.Pastor Sarah invites us to move beyond surface-level complaints and explore what lies beneath them—unacknowledged grief, loss, or longing. Through visuals like the Grief Iceberg and the Feelings Wheel, we learn how to recognize what’s truly under the surface and to bring those deeper emotions into God’s presence.Grieving isn’t about control or fixing—it’s about allowing our hearts to break open in the presence of a God who is not afraid of our tears. And it’s there, in that sacred space of vulnerability, that we discover resurrection hope: the God who weeps with us is also the God who calls us to new life.✨ Listen now and reflect on how God meets us in our grief, transforms our pain, and reminds us that even in our sorrow, resurrection is already stirring. Support the show
-
296
From Complaining to Lamenting
From Complaining to Lamenting: A Complaint Free WorldScripture: Numbers 11:1-6 & Lamentations 3:19-24This week at Central, we explored the difference between complaining and lamenting, guided by the experiences of the Israelites in the wilderness and the raw honesty of Lamentations. Complaints often focus on what’s missing, keeping us at the surface of our emotions, while lament invites us to name our pain, confront our deeper feelings, and bring them into God’s presence with trust and hope.Pastor Sarah shared practical ways to notice when we complain, dig beneath the surface using tools like the feelings wheel, and transform those complaints into honest, vulnerable prayers of lament. Through this process, we learn to approach life’s difficulties with faith, awareness, and gratitude, even in the midst of suffering.This week’s sermon also includes helpful visual aids:Feelings WheelComplaint-to-Lament ChartEmotion Deep-Dive🌀 Reflection Questions:Are you willing to take on the challenge to try to go 21 days in a row without complaining?What emotions are typically "hidden below the surface" when you find yourself complaining?Using the feelings wheel, can you identify the deeper emotion behind a recent complaint you've had?Where in your life do you tend to stay "above the surface" with complaints instead of diving deeper into your true feelings?How does God invite us to move from surface-level grumbling to honest, vulnerable prayer?This week, when you catch yourself complaining, pause and ask: "What am I really feeling?"✨ Listen now and reflect on how God invites us to move from surface-level complaints into a deeper, faith-filled dialogue with the Divine — discovering hope, honesty, and God’s unfailing presence along the way. Support the show
-
295
Ambassadors for Christ
Ambassadors for Christ: A Story Worth SharingScripture: Ephesians 6:18–20This week at Central, we celebrated Laity Sunday—a day when members of the congregation step forward to share their stories of faith and discipleship, reminding us that ministry belongs to all of God’s people.Through heartfelt witness, Fabian Rosado reflected on how a simple act of welcome drew him into community and revealed what it means to be an ambassador for Christ—someone whose everyday kindness becomes an invitation into God’s love. Carol Cobb shared her own faith journey, shaped by generations of believers and the quiet, steady witness of those who lived their faith with integrity and joy.Lay Minister Tricia O’Hara offered the morning message, drawing from Paul’s words in Ephesians: a call to pray continually, to speak boldly, and to remember that each of us represents Christ in the world. Prayer, she reminded us, is both conversation and calling—a way of staying grounded in God’s presence and open to being used for God’s purposes, wherever we are.🕊️ This Laity Sunday reminds us that the Church is not built by pastors alone, but by a community of faithful people—ambassadors of grace—whose lives, prayers, and love bear witness to the gospel in every place and circumstance.🎧 Listen now and be encouraged by the stories, prayers, and message of a community living out God’s call together. Support the show
-
294
Seeds That Bless the World
Seeds That Bless the World: A Story Worth SharingScripture: 2 Corinthians 9:6–15This week at Central, we continued our A Story Worth Sharing series by exploring Paul’s reminder that generosity is like sowing seeds—when we give freely and cheerfully, God multiplies our offering to bless others and nurture new growth.Guest preacher Rev. Christina Hart-Perkins shared how the seeds we plant through acts of kindness, generosity, and faithfulness don’t just change individual lives—they ripple outward, bearing fruit in ways we may never see. Just as Ms. Corbin’s small gesture of generosity inspired deeper gratitude and giving, our own gifts can become part of God’s greater harvest of grace.In a world that often measures worth by what we keep, this passage invites us to see abundance in what we share. God supplies both the seed and the harvest, calling us to trust that our giving—whether time, resources, or love—can truly bless the world.🌀 Reflection Questions:Where have you seen the “seeds” of generosity take root and grow in your own life or community?How does the idea of cheerful giving challenge or inspire your approach to generosity?What “seed” might God be inviting you to plant this week, trusting that it will bless others?✨ Listen now and discover how every act of giving, no matter how small, can become part of God’s abundant harvest—transforming lives, communities, and hearts for good. Support the show
-
293
Partners in God’s Good Work
Partners in God’s Good Work: A Story Worth SharingScripture: Philippians 1:3–6This week at Central, we explored Paul’s letter to the Philippians and the remarkable joy he expressed even while in prison. Paul reminds us that we are not alone in our faith journey — we are partners together in God’s ongoing work. From the support and encouragement of the Philippians to our own church community, spiritual partnership strengthens, transforms, and sustains us.Pastor Sarah encouraged us to recognize the ways God is already at work in our lives and to consider how we can actively participate in this good work. Whether through prayer, acts of service, generosity, or simply journeying alongside others in faith, every contribution matters. God begins the work in us and promises to bring it to completion, and our partnerships help it flourish.🌀 Reflection Questions:Where do you see God still at work in your own life, carrying a “good work” toward completion?Paul gives thanks for the Philippians’ partnership in the gospel. Who has been a “partner in God’s good work” in your life, and how did their support shape your faith?What is one specific way our congregation could strengthen its partnership in God’s work with the wider community this year?✨ Listen now and reflect on the joy and confidence that comes from being part of something bigger than ourselves — God’s good work continues, and we are all invited to join in. Support the show
-
292
What I Know Is Enough
What I Know Is Enough: A Story Worth SharingScripture: John 9:1–39This week at Central, we continued our series A Story Worth Sharing with the story of the man born blind in John 9. Pressed with questions he couldn’t answer and pressured to explain what was beyond him, the man gave a simple but powerful testimony: “I was blind, and now I see.” He didn’t have all the theological details, but he had his story — and that was enough.Pastor Sarah reminded us that we, too, do not need to know everything before sharing the difference God has made in our lives. Testimony doesn’t require polished arguments or perfect answers. It asks only for honesty about where we were, what God has done, and how we are living differently because of that encounter. Whether our stories are dramatic or slow transformations over time, they are gifts that can strengthen faith and invite others into the good news of God’s grace.🌀 Reflection Questions:In what ways has God transformed me, and how am I living differently because of that change?Based on how God has been working in my life, what is one specific way I sense God calling me to grow or serve in the coming month?What would it look like for our community to become a place where people feel safe sharing both struggles and celebrations? What barriers might prevent authentic storytelling, and how can we intentionally remove them?✨ Listen now and join us in reflecting on how what you know is enough — your story matters, and someone needs to hear it. Support the show
-
291
Holy Rocks
A Story Worth Sharing: Holy RocksScripture: Genesis 28:10–19This week at Central, we continued our series A Story Worth Sharing with Jacob’s story in the wilderness. Fleeing from the consequences of his deceit, Jacob finds himself alone, exhausted, and afraid, with nothing but a rock for a pillow. Yet it is in this place — the middle of nowhere, in the middle of his mess — that Jacob dreams of heaven touching earth. God meets him not with condemnation, but with a promise: “I am with you now… I will not leave you.”Pastor Sarah reflected on how Jacob’s “holy rock” became a marker of God’s presence — a tangible reminder that even in liminal spaces, God shows up. Just as Jacob turned his stone pillow into a sacred pillar, we too are invited to name and mark the moments where heaven has touched earth in our lives. These “holy rocks” become stories worth sharing, reminders of God’s faithfulness not only for ourselves, but for the generations to come.🌀 Reflection Questions:When have you felt like God was silent or distant in your life? Looking back, can you see signs that God was still present and at work?Jacob marked his encounter with God by setting up a stone. What might it look like for you to create a reminder of where you’ve seen God in your story?Where in your daily routine do you need to pause, “look up,” and notice God’s presence? How might doing that change the way you see your relationships, struggles, or surroundings? Support the show
-
290
From Persecutor to Preacher
A Story Worth Sharing: From Persecutor to Preacher Scripture: 1 Timothy 1:12–17This week at Central, we continued our series A Story Worth Sharing. Pastor Sarah reflected on Paul’s powerful testimony — a story that begins not with triumph, but with failure. Before he became the great missionary of the early church, Paul (then Saul) was a persecutor of Christians, complicit in violence against the followers of Jesus. Yet rather than hide his past, Paul put it front and center. He called himself “the biggest sinner of all,” not to wallow in shame, but to magnify the endless patience and transforming grace of God.In a world that prizes highlight reels and carefully curated stories, Paul’s example reminds us that God doesn’t want the edited version of our lives. Grace shines brightest in the broken places, and our most painful chapters can become powerful testimonies of hope. By leading with vulnerability, Paul shows us that no one is beyond God’s reach — and that our stories, even the hardest ones, can open doors for others to encounter mercy and healing.🌀 Reflection Questions:What part of your story have you found difficult to share because of shame or fear of judgment? How might sharing these honest parts of your journey open the door for healing and transformation by God’s grace?How can acknowledging our shared experiences of failure and brokenness strengthen our relationships within the church community? In what ways can we create a safe space for one another to tell these whole stories without shame?Paul’s testimony reminds us that no one is beyond the reach of God’s grace. How does knowing that God’s redemption includes the totality of your story influence how you view yourself and your journey with Christ? Support the show
-
289
The Unknown God Revealed
A Story Worth Sharing: The Unknown God RevealedScripture: Acts 17:16–34This week at Central, we began a new worship series, A Story Worth Sharing. Pastor Sarah reflected on Paul’s visit to Athens, where the city was filled with shrines, altars, and philosophies — including one altar marked “to an unknown god.” Rather than debate or condemn, Paul began with the Athenians’ spiritual hunger. He connected their searching to the God already at work in their lives, the God revealed fully in Jesus Christ.This is the Methodist story of prevenient grace: God’s love goes before us, stirring in our lives even before we recognize it. Like the Athenians, we may have “altars to an unknown god” — seasons or moments when we longed for something more but didn’t yet have the words or story to name it. Paul shows us that evangelism isn’t argument but invitation, telling the story of God’s grace in a way that meets people where they are.Each of us has a story worth sharing — a story that reveals God’s presence and love in our lives. By telling those stories, we offer others not debate, but light.🌀 Reflection Questions:When you look back at your life, where do you recognize God was already at work in your story before you fully knew it? What were some of your own “altars to an unknown god”?When you think about the people in your life who don’t share your faith, what are they already seeking or longing for? How do you see God at work in those desires? Support the show
-
288
Go Down, CUMC
Singing Our Faith: Go Down, CUMC Scripture: Exodus 5:1–6:8 (CEB)This week in our Singing Our Faith worship series, Central UMC welcomed guest preacher Rev. Lemuel Pearsall, Jr. to reflect on the story of Moses, Pharaoh, and God’s unshakable promises. Standing before Pharaoh, Moses demanded freedom for God’s people, only to see their burdens grow heavier — bricks without straw, beatings without mercy, despair without relief. Pharaoh’s arrogance, the Israelites’ frustration, and even Moses’ own doubt all reveal how unbelief takes root in the face of suffering.Yet God’s response is steadfast: I will bring you out. I will deliver you. I will redeem you. I will take you as my people. I will be your God. Seven promises of covenant love, each later fulfilled in Christ. Rev. Pearsall reminded us that faith is not the absence of questions, but where we bring them. Like Moses, we are invited to groan in the right direction — to lay our pain, doubt, and longing before God, who is faithful even when we are not.The legacy of the spiritual “Go Down, Moses” echoes this truth: God stands with the oppressed, delivers the enslaved, and calls us to confront the Pharaohs of our own time. Our hope is not in our strength, but in the God who has already said yes and amen through Christ Jesus.🌀 Reflection Questions:How does the legacy of the Spiritual “Go Down Moses” deepen our understanding of God’s solidarity with the oppressed?What does it mean for us, like Moses, to confront the “Pharaohs” in our lives and communities today? Support the show
-
287
Tambourine Theology
Singing Our Faith: Tambourine TheologyScripture: Exodus 15:1–21 (CEB)This week at Central UMC, Rev. Sarah Harrison-McQueen invited us to stand on the shores of the Red Sea with the Israelites, who had just witnessed the impossible. Behind them, the waters closed over Pharaoh’s army. Ahead of them stretched wilderness, uncertainty, and freedom. In that liminal moment, the first sound was not a command or a quiet prayer, but music — tambourines and dancing led by Miriam the prophet.Rev. Harrison-McQueen reminded us that throughout history, music has been the language of liberation. From the songs of enslaved Africans in America to the freedom anthems of the Civil Rights Movement, from the rubble of the Berlin Wall to the struggle against apartheid in South Africa, rhythm and song have always carried the power to resist oppression and proclaim hope.Miriam’s tambourine teaches us that celebration is not frivolous — it is prophetic. Her embodied praise declared that oppression did not have the final word and that God’s deliverance was real. Even in the wilderness, the people carried tambourines because they expected to celebrate. This is tambourine theology: a faith that insists on joy, even before the full story of freedom has been written.We are invited to live this same way today. Our worship can be resistance, our joy can be a witness, and our embodied praise can become a proclamation that God is still making a way where there seems to be none.🌀 Reflection Questions:When has God helped you through something that felt really hard or impossible?How can your praise become an act of witness or resistance?What “tambourines” — symbols of joy or hope — are you carrying with you on your journey of faith? Support the show
-
286
The Best Is Yet to Come
Singing Our Faith: The Best Is Yet to ComeScripture: Isaiah 43:15–21 (CEB)This week at Central UMC, we welcomed guest preacher Rev. Michelle Holmes Chaney, Director for Leadership and Church Vitality for the Northern Virginia District. Rev. Holmes Chaney reminded us that even in the midst of uncertainty and reflection, God is constantly doing something new—sprouting, emerging, and unfolding in our lives and in the world around us.Through personal stories, memories, and even a Frank Sinatra song, she showed how hope can emerge in both the ordinary and the extraordinary. Like seeds that inevitably sprout when nurtured, God’s new things are always at work, even if we cannot yet see the full bloom.Rev. Holmes Chaney encouraged us to pay attention to God’s perpetual “now”—a present that is always imminent and filled with possibility. Through trust, faith, and expectation, we are invited to perceive God’s transformative work in our lives, in the church, and in the world. The refrain is simple yet profound: The best is yet to come, and the sun has yet to shine its brightest.🌀 Reflection Questions:Where in your life, or in the life of the church, do you sense God inviting you to let go of the past in order to make room for something new?What helps you remain hopeful when the future feels uncertain or delayed?What is one thing you can do this week to actively cultivate hope, either in your own life or in someone else’s? Support the show
-
285
Directions for Singing
Singing Our Faith: Directions for SingingThis week at Central UMC, we welcomed guest preacher Brian Lamb from Wrights Chapel UMC in Ladysmith, VA. A seminary-educated public high school business teacher pursuing ordination, Brian brings a unique vision for ministry in the public schools — serving God and students where faith and daily life meet.Drawing from John Wesley’s timeless “Directions for Singing,” Brian invited us to see worship music not as a battleground between “traditional” and “contemporary,” but as a living expression of God’s renewing work. Just as the psalmist turned the old story of the Exodus into a new song, God continues to make all things new — even in our music.Through personal stories of worship transitions, seasons of spiritual dryness, and moments when God’s presence broke through in unexpected ways, Brian reminded us that styles may change, but God’s love remains constant. The question is not whether we prefer the organ or the guitar, the hymn or the praise chorus, but whether we are open to God breaking down the barriers — in music and in life — that keep us from deeper communion with Him.🌀 Reflection Questions:What barriers keep you from fully connecting with God?How has God refreshed your faith during dry or difficult seasons?How can we invite others into a relationship with God in ways that are relevant to their lives? Support the show
-
284
Ubi Caritas Deus Ibi Est
Singing Our Faith: Ubi Caritas Deus Ibi EstScripture: Psalm 107:1–7, 33–43 (UMH 830)This week at Central UMC, we welcomed guest preacher Rev. Joanna Dietz, a deacon who ministers in the community—often at farmer's markets and public gatherings—where she makes visible the steadfast love of God.Rev. Joanna invited us to reflect on Psalm 107, a rich song of thanksgiving and reversal: deserts become springs, the lowly are lifted up, and the weary are led to a place to dwell. Through the lens of monastic life—from the chants of the Benedictines to the humble service of the Franciscans—we explored the tension and balance between personal holiness and social holiness.We learned how the early monks not only memorized all 150 psalms through chant but also lived out their faith through daily labor, hospitality, and care for the poor. Their monasteries became oases in the wilderness—places of song, prayer, and service.Rev. Joanna reminded us that in today’s world of doomscrolling, division, and despair, we are still called to create oases of community and compassion. Like the psalmists, we name the desert places—loneliness, hunger, injustice—and trust in God’s transforming love to bring about healing and abundance. Each of us is invited to consider the places we’re called to act, speak out, and stand in solidarity with those on the margins.This is the rhythm of grace: worship and justice, prayer and protest, solitude and service. The question is not just How is it with your soul? but also How is it with your neighbor?🌀 Reflection Questions:Are you spending time in scripture and prayer with God and allowing your heart to be transformed to see the world through God’s eyes?How is God calling you to action in response to the fear and scarcity mentality with love, grace, and abundance?How can you live your life balanced by personal holiness with social holiness as you seek solidarity with those who need one with privilege to speak to those in power against injustice? Support the show
-
283
The Still Center
Singing Our Faith: The Still Center Scripture: 1 Kings 19:8–16This week at Central UMC, we turned to the story of the prophet Elijah—a man who stood against injustice, called down fire from heaven, and then found himself hiding in a cave, burnt out and afraid. In 1 Kings 19, Elijah flees to Mount Horeb, the same sacred ground where Moses once met God, and there, in the quiet, he encounters the divine—not in the wind, earthquake, or fire, but in the sound of sheer silence.Pastor Sarah led us through a powerful reflection on the "still center"—a space of sincere, grounded faith in a noisy and chaotic world. Drawing inspiration from The Swan, a serene musical interlude tucked inside a satirical symphony, we explored how God calls us not to match the noise of the world but to embody grace and stillness within it.In a time of performative religion, relentless news cycles, and spiritual fatigue, we were reminded that God's voice often comes not in spectacle, but in silence. Elijah’s story reminds us that we’re not alone, that faith is passed from generation to generation, and that God is still speaking—quietly, but powerfully.🌀 Reflection Questions:How do you feel God’s presence in small or quiet moments?Where in your life are you experiencing noise right now?How might you create space this week to listen for the still, small voice of God? Support the show
-
282
Singing Toward What We Cannot Yet See
🎶 Faith That Sings: Songs of Heaven and Resistance Scripture: Hebrews 11:1–16This week at Central UMC, we turned to the stirring words of Hebrews 11—a chapter sometimes called the “Hall of Faith”—to reflect on the kind of belief that doesn’t just survive adversity but sings through it. Through the stories of Abraham, Sarah, Noah, and others, we were reminded that faith is not wishful thinking—it is confident assurance. It's the ability to live as if God’s promises are already true.Pastor Sarah guided us through a powerful reflection on how faith has always found expression in song—especially in traditions like Southern Gospel, where music born from suffering becomes a vision of resistance. We explored how singing about heaven is not an escape from reality but a prophetic protest against the brokenness of the world. From enslaved people lifting their voices in hope to revival tents filled with trembling hearts and triumphant songs, we are part of a great chorus that believes heaven is coming—and is already breaking in.As part of our Singing Our Faith series, this service invites us to sing not just for joy, but for justice. To let our music proclaim a better world, even when we cannot yet see it.🌀 Reflection Questions:What does it mean to have a faith that not only endures suffering but also resists it?How might our church reflect a heaven-rooted hope that works for justice in the present? Support the show
-
281
Taizé
🕊️ Sent and Still: A Taizé-Inspired ServiceScripture: Luke 10:1–11This week’s worship service at Central UMC took a contemplative turn as we explored the rhythms and spiritual practices of the Taizé Community, an ecumenical monastic movement in France devoted to prayer, simplicity, and reconciliation. Pastor Sarah introduced us to the story of Taizé’s founding, its daily rhythms of prayer and reflection, and the spirit of unity that continues to draw thousands of pilgrims there each year.Our scripture reading comes from Luke 10, where Jesus sends out 72 disciples in pairs—not to work alone, but to rely on community, hospitality, and trust in God’s provision. The reflection, originally shared with pilgrims at Taizé, challenges us to embrace the mystery of being “sent” not with certainty, but with trust, humility, and openness to those we meet along the way.As part of our Singing Our Faith series, this service invited us into silence, sacred listening, and shared reflection. In a world of noise and speed, Taizé reminds us that the Spirit still speaks—especially when we slow down enough to hear.🌀 Reflection Questions:Have I ever brought some peace to a difficult situation?What helps me believe that Jesus himself is present there?How do “being sent” and having to make choices in life fit together? Support the show
-
280
Eternal Flame
Tending the Flame Scripture: Leviticus 6:8–13In this week's message, Pastor Sarah draws from the rarely-visited book of Leviticus to uncover profound truths hidden within ancient temple rituals. Centering on the command to keep a continuous fire burning on the altar, the sermon invites us to reflect on the fire of God’s presence in our own lives—how it burns, how it flickers, and how we are called to tend it daily.We explore the theological significance of the burnt offering and how it symbolized repentance, reconciliation, and the transforming grace of God. Pastor Sarah weaves in personal stories from summer camp, testimony circles, and even theological debates between traditions, showing how the work of salvation is not a single moment, but a lifelong journey of grace.As part of our Singing Our Faith series, this message reminds us that salvation isn’t transactional—it’s transformational. The fire of God’s love is not confined to a temple altar but lives within us, shaping us through daily acts of mercy, justice, and love. We are not only saved—we are being saved and will be saved.🕊️ Reflection Questions:How do you understand salvation in your life right now? We often talk about being “saved,” but what does it mean to you that we have been, are being, and will be saved? How does that shape your relationship with God and with others? Support the show
-
279
Praying at the River
Praying at the River Scripture: Acts 16:13–15In this week’s message, Pastor Sarah takes us to the riverside in Acts 16, where Paul meets Lydia—a bold and generous woman whose open heart and courageous faith helped birth the first church in Philippi. Drawing from personal stories of outdoor baptisms and the unexpected grace that flows in those holy moments, we explore how prayer, like music, often happens best in community and in rhythm.As part of our Singing Our Faith series, this sermon reflects on how our faith—like a good bluegrass jam—calls us to play in time, tune our hearts, act with courage, and join in harmony with others. Through the story of Lydia’s baptism and hospitality, we are reminded that our faith is not meant to stay private. It flows outward, impacting our homes, our churches, and our world.Whether you're new to faith or have been on this journey for decades, this message invites you to reflect on your own baptismal calling and what it means to live it out together. There's room for every instrument—and every heart—at the river.🕊️ Reflection Questions:Scripture says, “...the Lord opened her heart to listen eagerly.” When in your life have you experienced a moment of spiritual openness like Lydia? What helped prepare your heart?Lydia’s response to the gospel was immediate and public when she and her household were baptized. How do you respond when you sense God moving? What helps you say yes quickly and fully?Lydia’s faith affected not only her but her entire household. How does your faith impact the people around you? Support the show
-
278
Improvising Prayers
Improvising Prayers Scripture: Romans 8:22–27Sometimes prayer begins not with words, but with sighs too deep for words. In this week’s message, Pastor Sarah shares a powerful experience of communal prayer in South Korea and reflects on the Spirit’s ability to speak through our groans, our longing, and even our silence.Drawing from Romans 8 and Psalm 40, we explore the deep connection between lament and hope, silence and song, structure and improvisation. Just as jazz invites us to improvise on familiar themes, our prayers—structured or spontaneous—can become living, breathing expressions of faith. Whether whispered in stillness or cried aloud in anguish, the Spirit intercedes on our behalf.Pastor Sarah also introduces a simple four-part prayer model to help us grow a more personal and creative prayer practice: You / Who / Do / Through. For those seeking a starting point or a new rhythm of prayer, this week’s message offers tools, stories, and encouragement.🕊️ Reflection Questions:Psalm 40 proclaims, “I waited patiently for the Lord…God put a new song in my mouth, a hymn of praise to our God.” Are you waiting on God for something in your life? What song might be forming as you wait?Where in your life are you being invited to pray honestly, even if the words don’t come easily?What collect prayer are you inspired to write today? 👉 Visit https://bit.ly/collect-prayer for a “how to” guide. Support the show
-
277
Singing Our Faith
Singing Our FaithScripture: Colossians 3:12–16What we sing shapes what we believe. As we begin our new worship series, Singing Our Faith, Pastor Sarah invites us to reflect on how music forms us—individually and as a church community.This week’s message explores the connection between worship and formation through the lens of Colossians 3, where Paul calls us to live in compassion, love, and unity—and to “teach and warn each other with all wisdom by singing psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs.” Pastor Sarah shares results from our recent church music survey and invites us into a summer of worship shaped by the songs that move us, challenge us, and root us in the grace of Christ.Whether you're drawn to traditional hymns, contemporary praise, or something in between, this series reminds us that when we sing with gratitude, our hearts and habits are transformed.🎵 Reflection Questions:1 - What does "putting on" compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience look like in my daily life?2 - How does the Word of Christ live in me?3 - What barriers do I experience that prevent me from singing to God with gratitude in my heart? Support the show
-
276
Journey: The Places We Will Go
Journey: The Places We Will Go Scripture: Acts 10:34–36Some transformations lead us far from where we started. When the Holy Spirit moves, we may find ourselves crossing borders, breaking assumptions, and joining in a love that is bigger than we imagined.In this week’s sermon, Pastor Sarah shares the story of Peter’s awakening to the expansive grace of God. What began as a personal revelation became a world-changing proclamation: God shows no partiality. Every person, in every place, is welcomed into the story of Jesus. Like the Monarch butterfly on its long, daring migration, we too are invited into a journey—one that leads to new life, new freedom, and a deeper understanding of the Spirit’s calling.As our butterfly series continues, we’re reminded that transformation doesn’t always keep us in place. Sometimes, it sends us.Sermon Reflection Questions🦋 Butterfly Fact: Each year before winter, Monarch butterflies undertake a truly heroic journey from as far north as Canada and all across the United States to the Gulf of Mexico. Some Monarchs travel more than 3,000 miles during this migration!– Where are you feeling called to go next in your life? – What journeys have you taken to renewed life and freedom? – How does the gift of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost help us understand Peter’s words that God's love is for everyone? Support the show
-
275
Fly: Daring New Heights
Fly: Daring New Heights Scripture: Mark 2:1–5 Some transformations only happen when we’re willing to take risks—when we dare to go higher, dig deeper, and break through the barriers in our way.In this week’s sermon, Pastor Sarah reflects on the bold faith of four friends who refused to let a crowded house keep them from bringing someone they loved to Jesus. They climbed the roof, tore it open, and made space for healing. Their story invites us to consider how faith, community, and courage work together to lift us—and others—into the presence of Christ.As our butterfly series continues, we’re reminded that some butterflies can fly over 30 miles per hour. Transformation has energy. Grace has momentum. And sometimes, faith takes flight.Sermon Reflection Questions🦋 Butterfly Fact: Most butterflies fly at about 5–12 miles per hour. Some species can fly over 30 miles per hour! How are you being energized lately? What makes your spirit soar?What does it mean in your life right now to be a “roof-breaker”? (Someone who breaks through barriers, fears, or expectations so that healing and transformation can take place—either for yourself or someone else.)How does the faith of the friends in this story inspire you to think about the role of community in your own healing—or in someone else’s transformation? Support the show
No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.
No topics indexed yet for this podcast.
Loading reviews...
ABOUT THIS SHOW
An audio podcast of the weekly message preached at Central United Methodist Church in Arlington, Virginia. You're invited to join us online for worship on Sundays at 10:30 a.m. Visit us on the web at cumcballston.org to learn how to join us for worship via zoom or facebook live. You're invited to join our congregation where we worship God, serve others, and embrace all.
HOSTED BY
Central United Methodist Church
CATEGORIES
Loading similar podcasts...