Sermons
Tag
- Sermons
- Written by Ben Girgis
- Written by Pastor Nancy Walker
- Written by Ryan Turnbull
- Written by the Re. Lauren Schoeck
- Written by the Rev. Andrew Colman
- Written by the Rev. Bryan Bjerring
- Written by the Rev. Dr. Lissa Wray Beal
- Written by the Rev. Jamie Howison
- Written by the Rev. Judy Whitmore
- Written by the Rev. Lynda Trono
- Written by the Rev. Rob Schoeck
- Written by the Rev. Sandi Tankard
- Written by the Rt. Rev. Donald Phillips
- Written by the Rt. Rev. Geoff Woodcroft Bishop of Rupert's Land
- Written by the Very Rev. Paul Johnson
January 11, 2026, The Baptism of Jesus
Jesus does not stand apart. He does not exempt himself. He enters fully into the human condition. He stands shoulder to shoulder with those who have come to the river burdened, hopeful, repentant, longing for change. Before Jesus teaches, before he heals, before he calls disciples or confronts powers, he goes down into the water.
January 18, 2026, The Second Sunday after Epiphany
Epiphany light reveals not only who Jesus is, but who we are in him.
January 4, 2026, The Second Sunday after Christmas
I have wept and felt exhaustion and cried out to God, and what has been the response, “remember who Christ is”.
December 28, 2025, The First Sunday after Christmas
For the child who fled to Egypt grows up.
The child who was threatened lives.
The child who knew exile becomes the one who gathers the lost.
December 25, 2025, Christmas Day
This is what it means to live as people of the Incarnation. Because if God has chosen to dwell among us, then every human life becomes holy ground. Every act of mercy becomes a continuation of Christmas. Every step toward justice, compassion, and reconciliation becomes a reflection of the Word made flesh.
December 24, 2025, Christmas Eve
Tonight, we light candles in the darkness. Not because the darkness is gone, but because it has not won. The light shines, and the darkness cannot overcome it.
December 14, 2025, the Third Sunday of Advent – Gaudete Sunday
If we were to answer Jesus’s question—“What do you see and hear?”—what would we say?
December 7, 2025 – The Second Sunday of Advent
To look toward peace is to hear judgement and turn our eyes upon our God and seek repentance and join Christ in death and resurrection, for Christ has already paved the way.
November 30, 2025 – The First Sunday of Advent
Walk toward God’s future.
Be awake to God’s presence.
Live now as people who expect Christ to come.
November 23, 2025 – The Reign of Christ
And the one who reigns from the cross, the one who forgives his executioners, the one who welcomes a dying criminal into Paradise, is the one who will restore all things in the end.
November 16, 2025 – The 23rd Sunday after Pentecost
This is who I am. I am my community, we are our community.
November 9, 2025 – Remembrance Sunday
Padre Harris’s voice echoes to us across the years, spoken as he plunged into the dark skies over Normandy: “Take it easy, old man. Whatever you do, take it easy.”
November 3, 2025 – The Feast of All Souls
And so, on this day of remembrance, we hold two truths together: we miss them deeply, and they are held securely.
November 2, 2025 – Patronal Feast Day
Today, as we celebrate our patronal feast, we are invited not only to remember the saints but to become them.
October 5, 2025 – The Sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost
You don’t need to move mountains or uproot trees. You just need to trust God with the next step.
September 21, 2025 – The Fifteenth Sunday after Pentecost
Jeremiah’s tears are not wasted. They are a prayer. They are a protest. They are a testimony that even in grief, God has not abandoned the people.
September 14, 2025 – The Feast of the Holy Cross
As we lift high the cross in our worship today, let us also lift it high in our lives: in the way we love, in the way we forgive, in the way we trust God’s power to bring life out of death.
September 7, 2025 – The Thirteenth Sunday After Pentecost
For the same God who shapes us with firm hands is the God who loves us beyond measure.
August 31, 2025 – The Twelfth Sunday After Pentecost
That is the paradox of discipleship: we give away to keep. So what does this mean for us, practically?
August 24, 2025 – The Eleventh Sunday After Pentecost
…when we have a bad day, and we drop the ball, and we don’t live the perfect Christ-centered life—no sin offering is required. Christ did that for us.

