PODCAST · religion
First Presbyterian Church of San Anselmo
by First Presbyterian Church of San Anselmo
Join us as each week as we explore and practice what it means to express God's love for the world. First Presbyterian is an inclusive congregation located in the heart of Marin County, California. We are a church that feels called to love one another, express gratitude, ease suffering, and work for justice.
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586
Rev and Restore -- Genesis 1:1-2:4 (Trinity Sunday)
God builds into creation a rhythm of creative action, followed by rest, renewal, and restoration.
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585
Bold in Spirit -- Acts 2:1-21 (Pentecost Sunday)
At Pentecost, the Spirit fills everyone gathered with a spirit of boldness, a spirit of generosity, and a spirit of real and lasting community.
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584
Until We Meet Again -- Luke 24:44-53; Acts 1:1-11 (Ascension Sunday)
In the forty days leading up to the Ascension, Jesus and the disciples had the chance to say good-bye – part of the aliveness that they experience in Resurrection. In Resurrection, no good-bye is ever final.
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583
What We Cannot Know, and What We Can -- Acts 17:22-31 (6th Sunday of Easter)
The Apostle Paul walks around Athens and notices a temple to “An Unknown God.” The God who is beyond our knowing, reaches out to us, in the Risen Christ, and is close at hand.
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582
Where Life Slows, Life Speaks -- John 21:1-13; Proverbs 16:1-3 (Rev. Grace Hyeryung Kim, preaching) (5th Sunday in Easter)
When we pause to think, reflect, and feel, life begins to speak.
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581
"As Any Had Need" -- Acts 2:42-47 (4th Sunday in Easter)
In the days after Resurrection and Pentecost, the community had everything in common, sold what they had, and gave to any as they had need. The Resurrection experience of radical sharing in community is alive with possibility.
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580
Companions on the Way -- Luke 24:13-35 (3rd Sunday in Easter)
This Sunday, we considered the familiar story of the two disciples who encounter the Risen Christ on the Road to Emmaus. The Risen Christ is alive in the world in the steady, sustaining rhythm of human companionship – sharing life’s journey – walking and talking – companions on the way.
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579
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578
Alive in the World -- Matthew 28:1-10, 16-20
Like the women headed to the tomb, we know what it is to wake up in a bad-news world. On Easter morning, there is a different kind of headline: Christ is risen! The Good News is alive in the world, and so are we.
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577
The Good News is... love lived out -- Matthew 21:1-17 (Palm Sunday)
Palm Sunday is a protest. The people follow Jesus, shouting and embodying together Good News. Holy Week is how that Good News then gets lived out.
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576
The Good News is... protection and care of the vulnerable -- Deut. 24:17-22, Matt. 19:13-15 (5th Sunday of Lent)
God creates, commands, and impels an ethic and moral order that center the protection, care, and well-being of the most vulnerable. NOTE: Our usual method of recording did not work as planned, and as a result the sound is not of as high a quality this week.
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575
Lavish Love -- Luke 7:36-50 (4th Sunday in Lent)
As a woman washes Jesus’ feet, we see her lavish love, in response to God’s, inviting us to live out our own.
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574
Sitting Down Is Sufficient Mark 6:31-44 (3rd Sunday in Lent) (Rev. Dr. Nancy Wiens, preaching)
In the feeding of the 5,000, Jesus invites us to sit down and rest in the presence of the holy.
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573
The Good News Is... All Are Welcome -- Luke 15:15-24 (2nd Sunday in Lent)
At a banquet, Jesus tells a story about a banquet. The Good News is... all are welcome. The invitation is for everyone. The response is ours to make.
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572
The Good News is… so good it catches us by surprise -- Matthew 4:1-11; John 2:1-11 (1st Sunday in Lent)
The Good News is that God’s love for us in Jesus Christ catches us by surprise – because God always loves us and the whole world more. What Jesus does in his testing in the wilderness and at the wedding at Cana should catch us by surprise. It’s not the way the world works – but it points us to the way the world ought to be.
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571
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570
And He Sat Down to Teach -- Matthew 5:11-20 (5th Sunday After Pentecost)
Jesus teaches us how to be fully human, and then invites us to be salt and light for the world. How we live our lives teaches something. It makes a difference in the world not only through direct cause and effect – but it also ripples out in what people see and what people hear; in how we convey, in our lived-out lives, what matters most and what it means to be human. We learn by living – and our living teaches something too.
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569
A World Full of Blessing -- Matthew 5:1-12 (4th Sunday After Epiphany)
The Beatitudes describe how God is infusing the world with good. They give us a lens – that draws us into a vision –that comes to life in the lives we live. What we learn with Jesus is nothing less than how to be fully human.
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568
"Come and Ask, Come and See" -- John 1:35-42 (3rd Sunday After Epiphany)
Jesus invites us to ask questions – to seek understanding beyond what we know now; to learn and grow; and to learn to live together in the complexity of the things we can’t yet comprehend.
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567
Learning from Our Mistakes -- Matthew 15:21-28 (2nd Sunday of Epiphany; MLK Sunday)
As part of the humanity we have in Jesus Christ, God gives us the capacity to learn from our mistakes, and help set the world right.
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566
Beginning with Who We Are -- Matthew 3:13-17 (1st Sunday After Epiphany)
Standing knee-deep in the waters of baptism, we find our true humanity in Jesus Christ. Jesus embodies and invites us into that full humanity – the fullness of life lived out in mutuality, sharing, love, healing, and peace.
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565
"Get Out the Map" -- Matthew 2 (Epiphany Sunday)
On Epiphany Sunday, we consider the two journey stories that we find in Matthew 2 -- the journey of the Magi seeking the Christ, and the journey of Joseph, Mary, and Joseph as they seek refuge in Egypt. In a world of disruption and power-over, God accompanies us and empowers us to find our way to the new life birthed in Jesus Christ.
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564
A Longing for Human Decency -- Matthew 1:18-25 (4th Sunday of Advent)
Into a menacing world, in Jesus Christ, God is birthing a new humanity, grounded in human decency and overflowing with tender mercy.
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563
A Longing for a Just World -- Isaiah 11:1-10 (2nd Sunday of Advent)
God longs for a just world, ordered to center the well-being of the poor and vulnerable.
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562
A Longing for Peace -- Isaiah 2:1-5 (1st Sunday of Advent)
In a world of violence and war, we long for peace. In our longing, we find God already longing for us, ready to teach us the ways that lead to peace.
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561
The Turn Toward Gratitude -- Luke 17:11-19 (Thanksgiving Sunday)
God empowers us to see the good that God is doing in the world, give thanks, and then live out our gratitude in ways that keep putting more and more good into the world.
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560
"I am creating..." -- Isaiah 65:17-25 (Rev. Marissa Danney, preaching) (23rd Sunday After Pentecost)
In troubled times, God is creating and inviting us into simplicity of living and relationships grounded in peace.
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559
Grounded in Love -- Psalm 1, Haggai 1:15b-2:9 (22nd Sunday After Pentecost)
Out of the rubble, God encourages us to rebuild: Something will rise up out of this, and we will build it together.
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558
Our Watch -- Habakkuk 1:1-4, 2:1-4 (All Saints Sunday)
God keeps watch with us over the trouble in this world. We, then, keep watch for how God is on the move, and join together in God’s healing, saving work.
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557
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556
"When Discouraged, Listen for God's Mumbling" -- 1 Kings 19:1-15 (Rev. Scott Quinn, preaching) (19th Sunday After Pentecost)
Empathizing with Elijah in the cave, guest preacher Rev. Scott Quinn invited us to think of the stories that hold us back; to notice the nearness of God; and to know that we are seen, heard, and held.
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555
Grow Where You Are Planted -- Jeremiah 29:1, 4-9 (18th Sunday After Pentecost)
Even in calamity, God is near, inviting us to build and plant and live to heal the world.
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554
How Does One "Pray for the King"? -- 1 Timothy 2:1-7 (World Communion Sunday; 17th Sunday After Pentecost)
God exhorts us to pray for all people – including our leaders – so that all people may live free.
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553
Constancy v Consistency in Ordinary Time -- Lamentations 3:22-32; Hebrews 13:1-8 (Rev. Grace Hyeryung Kim, preaching) (16th Sunday After Pentecost)
Constancy is a quality of God: "Jesus is the same yesterday, today, and forever." We are called to live our lives consistently with God's steadfast love.
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552
At the Dimming of the Day -- Genesis 28:10-19 (15th Sunday After Pentecost)
Over the breadth of Scripture, humanity encounters God, not only in the bright light of day, but when the shadows fall, and the world becomes still. At night, God keeps close, and we will not be left alone.
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551
Welcome Sinners, Tax Collectors, and Pharisees! -- Luke 15:1-10 (14th Sunday After Pentecost)
Jesus rejects the world’s separations and the “politics of disgust,” and insists that we welcome everyone to the table of community and shared power.
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550
A Time to Let Go, and a Time to Embrace -- Luke 14:15-23 (13th Sunday After Pentecost)
During “ordinary time” we walk with Jesus through the ordinary days of his life, just as he walks with us through the ordinary days of ours. Jesus invites us to see things as they are, to let go of attachments that hold us back, and to embrace the way of the cross that leads to life.
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549
"Bless Thou the Handling of Our Hands" -- Luke 13:10-17 (12th Sunday After Pentecost)
In his healing hands, Jesus sets the whole world free. In the work of our hands, God’s handiwork can come to life, as well.
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548
From Branches to Blessing -- Luke 19:1-10 (Chaplain Chitoka Webb, preaching) (11th Sunday After Pentecost)
What is hindering you from living into the grace-filled economy of Jesus?
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547
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546
Come, Jesus, Come -- Revelation 22: 1-5, 16-21 (8th Sunday After Pentecost)
Revelation invites us to say Amen to God’s sovereignty in Jesus Christ, creating a new heaven and new earth, right now and forever. Amen – so be it in me, so be it in us. Come, Jesus, Come. Let today be the day.
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545
The Wild Hope of Imagination -- Revelation 21:1-7, 15-24 (7th Sunday After Pentecost)
In the apocalyptic imagination, God gives us a wild and lively vision of a world to inhabit now. The old order of things has come to an end. Behold God’s new heaven and new earth. Live it now.
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544
On Being Lukewarm -- Revelation 3:7-22 (6th Sunday After Pentecost)
Power-over wants us to stay quiet and lukewarm. That's how power stays in power. In the complexity of life, God is near, encouraging and empowering us to stand where we know we ought to stand.
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543
Pause, Refresh, Reset -- Philippians 4:4-8 (5th Sunday After Pentecost)
At the midpoint of the year, we pause to refresh and reset, returning to the 7 spiritual practices that ground us in the new thing God is doing in every new day.
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542
"The One upon the Throne" -- Revelation 1:4-8, 5:11-14 (4th Sunday After Pentecost)
The wild hope of our imagination finds its sure footing in Jesus Christ, the one who enters into the deep suffering of the world and is sovereign from there.
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541
A Healing Imagination -- 2 Kings 5:1-14 (3rd Sunday After Pentecost)
God’s healing imagination comes to life in our collaboration and cooperation – inviting us to an economy of mutuality and a politics of compassion and freedom.
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540
Beyond the Cave -- 1 Kings 19:1-15 (3rd Sunday After Pentecost)
Beyond the caves and fear of domination, God empowers us to imagine and create a world better, brighter, and more beautiful than the struggle and suffering we are experiencing now.
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539
For All Those Who Are Far from Home -- Luke 15:11-32 (Trinity Sunday)
God is willing to re-order the world to seek out and welcome everyone who is far from home. The Story of the Prodigal Son says to us: No matter where we are on the journey – no matter how far from home – no matter who we are – no matter what we’ve done – there is One who is willing to bring us back home.
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538
"What Then Shall We Do?" -- Isaiah 61:1-4; Luke 3:10-14 (5th Sunday of Easter)
In bewildering times, empowered by the Spirit, “what we can do” is the steady work that flows out of our baptism.
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537
Who Then Are We? -- Acts 11:1-18 (4th Sunday of Easter)
In baptism, we enact what has always been true: God loves and welcomes everyone.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Join us as each week as we explore and practice what it means to express God's love for the world. First Presbyterian is an inclusive congregation located in the heart of Marin County, California. We are a church that feels called to love one another, express gratitude, ease suffering, and work for justice.
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First Presbyterian Church of San Anselmo
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