Only one thing to say

Only one thing to say (Click on the sermon title for a .pdf copy)
Ecclesiastes 11:9 – 12:14
November 26, 2017

There is only one thing to say …

After all this, there is only one thing to say …

Useless, useless …  It is all useless …

“Hebel,” הבל.  The Hebrew word is הבל.  We translate it “useless” or “vanity” (“vanity of vanities, all is vanity”) or “emptiness.” … Continue reading ...

TRUTH

TRUTH (Click on the sermon title for a .pdf copy)
Ecclesiastes 11:1-8
November 19, 2017

What is the truth?

The Trump administration claimed that the crowd attending his January 21 inauguration was the largest ever to witness the inauguration of an American president and when news outlets published photos proving otherwise, White House press secretary, Sean Spicer, labeled them as deliberately misleading.… Continue reading ...

Loosen up!

Loosen up! (Click on the sermon title for a .pdf copy)
Ecclesiastes 10:1-14
November 12, 2017

Loosen up, because the grip you have on the life you are trying to perfectly control is not your grip to have — it is God’s.

That is Lauren Reisinger’s take on the book of Ecclesiastes: loosen up.

Next summer, on August 18th, Lynne and I will celebrate our 40th wedding anniversary. … Continue reading ...

Heartbreak

Heartbreak (Click on the sermon title for a .pdf copy)
Ecclesiastes 8:9-17
October 29, 2017

Life, your life, is not all sweetness and light, is it?

Sometimes it is disappointing.

You had to reserve the campground four months in advance, so this one day is your window of opportunity to climb the mountain you’ve waited thirty years to climb, and it’s raining. … Continue reading ...

Plain and simple

Plain and simple (Click on the sermon title for a .pdf copy)
Ecclesiastes 7:1-10
October 22, 2017

It is better to go to a home where there is mourning than to one where there is a party, because the living should always remind themselves that death is waiting for us all.

Sounds rather Eeyore-ish, doesn’t it?  You remember Eeyore?

Eeyore, the old grey Donkey, stood by the side of the stream, and looked at himself in the water.Continue reading ...

I don’t know

I don’t know (Click on the sermon title for a .pdf copy)
Ecclesiastes 6:1-12
October 15, 2017

As of July 1 next summer, my life’s journey will take me into unknown territory.  I have never been retired before.  Some of you are retired and you’ve told me it’s a good thing, but I’ve never experienced it for myself.

My whole life has been impelled by clear duties: obey my parents, do well in school, do well at my job, and my identity and sense of self-worth have come in large part from fulfilling those duties. … Continue reading ...

Awe

Awe (Click on the sermon title for a .pdf copy)
Ecclesiastes 5:1-7
October 8, 2017

Alleluia.

You sing it quietly and confidently.  You sing it loudly and joyfully.  You sing it urgently.  You sing it plaintively.  You sing it gratefully.

You sing it, you say it — “alleluia” — in so many different ways.  There is no one right way to say it. … Continue reading ...

Dust

Dust (Click on the sermon title for a .pdf copy)
Ecclesiastes 3:16 – 4:6
October 1, 2017

This is as bleak as Ecclesiastes gets.  This is one of the darkest chapters in a rather dark book.

Hard work is useless.

Our lives have no more meaning than the lives of animals.

It would be better to have never been born.

Bleak. … Continue reading ...

Business

Business (Click on the sermon title for a .pdf copy)
Ecclesiastes 3:1-15
September 24, 2017

During choir rehearsal last Wednesday evening, Ben commented on the unusual piano introduction to Rutter’s “To Everything There is a Season.”  He said he was not sure what it meant, but that he was sure it meant something!  What do you think it means?  Listen again …

(Miah plays on the piano the first twenty-four measures of the piece.)… Continue reading ...

Chasing the wind

Chasing the wind (Click on the sermon title for a .pdf copy)
Ecclesiastes 2:4-17, 24-26
September 17, 2017

So here we are, you and me, a hundred and some of us, gathered in the sanctuary on a Sunday morning, here together for one hour of the twenty-four hours of this day, for one day of the seven days of this week, for one week of the fifty-two weeks of this year, for one year of the however many years each of us have lived already and however many years each of us have left to live. … Continue reading ...