Following Jesus today remains as crucial as it was for his disciples by the Sea of Galilee. In John 21:1-14, Jesus’s disciples experienced the significance of obedience to his guidance. When they followed his instructions to cast their nets on the right side of the boat, they were rewarded with an abundance of fish.
Join us this week for worship. Our guests are Majors Brian & Glenda Bishop.
This Sunday, we welcome the United States Eastern Territory Staff Songsters. Colonel Christine Rock will bring us her message.
Join us on Easter Sunday for worship. Major Ken Smith will deliver his message, “The Glory of the Cross.”
Join us on Sunday morning for worship. Major Ken Smith brings us his message, “By What Authority?”
This week, we continue our mid-Lent excursion into the Gospel of John by listening in on Jesus’ conversation with Nicodemus.
This first Sunday in Lent is quite the roller coaster ride, which is honestly quite typical of Year B in the lectionary cycle.
Here we are, once again, at the cusp of a change in the season. Sometimes we treat Transfiguration as if it’s the last Sunday in the season after Epiphany, a kind of exclamation point to the Ordinary Time that takes us from Epiphany to Ash Wednesday. But this year, we chose to make this a stand-alone Sunday, which is appropriate given that this day belongs not to Ordinary Time or Lent but in the liminal space between the two.
As the title of today’s sermon indicates, discernment occurs from among the people. That is why we must nurture and support the work of discernment within communal worship.