Matthew 2:1-15

Sunday | December 14, 2014

Continuing this Advent series from Matthew, the drama heightens as strangers appear in Jerusalem seeking Jesus. The unexpected homage from unnamed Easterners brings riches, but also puts Jesus’ very life in danger from the despotic Herod. Already Jesus’ identity is provoking radically  differing responses from others, even as the gospel does today.


Matthew 1:1-17

Sunday | November 30, 2014

Beginning an Advent series in Matthew, we find ourselves in a literary context not far from that of Genesis. Genealogies figure prominently in Genesis, and Matthew opens his Gospel with a genealogy, using significant terms and names from Genesis narratives. The covenant promises made by God to his people in Genesis (and developed in the rest of the Hebrew Scriptures) find their fulfillment in Jesus the Messiah.

Genesis 50:22-26

Sunday | November 16, 2014

Fittingly, Joseph has the last word in the book of Genesis, and though the Book of Beginnings ends with a coffin in Egypt, the word that Joseph leaves us with is one of faith, hope, and love. 

On a personal note, it is with some regret that I end this sermon series from Genesis. It began in September of 2010 and with several interruptions, has included 81 sermons, but there is so much that I have not dealt with in the book, that I wish that I could begin again! What a wonderful part of the Scriptures it is!

Hebrews 11

God gave me grace to preach the sermon for the worship service that served as a memorial for my mother, Clema McConnell Broughton. The service was held at the chapel of the Baptist Village in Oklahoma City, where my mother lived the last years of her life. Knowing that my mother was listening to my sermons posted online was a wonderful encouragement to me, and I considered it a high honor to preach at this memorial service. This was, of course, a time of grief, but God was gracious to enable me to focus on the truth of God's Word that was so important to my mother, and that Word ministered to me even as I preached. To God alone be the glory!

[The thumbnail picture shows my mother learning to use the iPad her grandchildren helped buy her a few years before her death. She prayed for and corresponded with many missionaries for whom she prayed, and the iPad made this easier to do, given her severe arthritis, and she took to it quickly.]

Romans 1:16, part 3

The gospel is news that is good to us because it tells us that our stories are given meaning and beauty and joy because God has made them part of his story. We who found it impossible to write a coherent and satisfying story for our lives discovered ourselves to be a part of the story of God, with a beginning and end more beautiful and inspiring than we could have ever imagined.  

Ecclesiastes 11.7-12.14

Concluding a series of sermons on the Bible's teaching concerning itself, this message looks at the literal interpretation of Scripture: how the Bible transforms us, reveals to us truth, and unites us as the people of God. The book of Ecclesiastes provides a text that is as beautiful as it is true, or, we might say, it beautifully communicates truth. As we appreciate that beauty and acknowledge that truth, God's Word is a source of life for us.