By This Sign You Will Conquer

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Sermons and audio

Leaves frozen in iceJesus describes a world where the poor are lifted up, the mourners are comforted, the peacemakers are honored, and those who suffer for righteousness are named as blessed.

Micah describes a people shaped by justice, kindness, and humble faithfulness.

Both texts point toward a way of life that runs directly against the grain of the principalities and powers of this world.

The message of the Cross is that this way of life — this way of justice, mercy, humility, peacemaking, solidarity with the vulnerable — will ultimately confound and overcome the systems of domination and fear that structure so much of human history.

In the ancient Christian imagination, the Cross was not only a symbol of suffering; it was a sign of victory. By this sign — by lives shaped like the Cross — the powers of the world are unmasked and undone.

Not through force.
Not through triumphalism.
But through costly love.

[…]These texts invite a serious question: Where shall we stand?

The Beatitudes do not let us remain neutral observers. They ask us to locate ourselves in God’s unfolding future.

Will we stand with those who hunger and thirst for righteousness — even when that hunger makes us uncomfortable?
Will we stand with peacemakers — even when peace requires truth-telling and repair?
Will we stand with the merciful — even when mercy is misunderstood as weakness?

Micah reminds us that faithful living is not an abstract idea. It shows up in concrete choices: how we treat the foreigner who sojourns among us, how we care for widows and orphans, how we protect the poor and the outcast, how we respond to those whom society pushes to the margins.

If we are true to the Gospel and to the Prophets, then we trust that this way of life is not in vain.

Not because we will always see immediate results.
Not because justice always comes quickly.
But because we belong to a story that is larger than any one moment.

We are, as Scripture dares to say, children of God. Members of Jesus’ own family. Participants in God’s ongoing work of healing and restoration.

The power of the Cross continues to move in the world — often quietly, often slowly, often through ordinary people making faithful choices in unremarkable places.

(This sermon is a reworked version of a sermon I preached in 2016).

You can view the entire sermon here.

Tribalism turned to 11 via the Outrage Machine

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Current Affairs


Does Evidence Even Matter? – On my Om:

Federal agents shot an American citizen, and it was caught on video. It is the sickening outcome of virulent tribalism sweeping our world, enabled by the internet. We have forgotten that life is not a football game. Pick your team. Defend your side. Ignore evidence if it contradicts your tribe. 

We think democracy is the flag, the ability to vote, or words in the Constitution. It is not. Democracy is an idea, an ideal, an agreement. Once you decide evidence does not matter if it hurts your team, you have already lost the thing you think you are defending. We are not seeing what is happening to us.

Red Sox vs. Yankees. Mac vs. Windows. Harmless tribalism. Then the internet scaled it to everything. Cable news figured it out first. Outrage gets ratings. Social networks weaponized it. Algorithms reward tribal warfare. Fight harder, see more content that makes you angrier. That’s the business model.

I wish I’d written this. I’ve been thinking it for months. I’m grateful that Om Malik was able to say it so well. Go read the whole essay. It’s worth it.

Large and small – Gothic style churches dot RI landscapes

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Brief Note


7 Most Beautiful Gothic Churches In Rhode Island:

Gothic churches across Rhode Island feature the style’s signature pointed arches, stained glass windows, tall towers, and detailed stone or woodwork, making them stand out against their surroundings, where they often serve as local landmarks. With that, [check out the link above for] some of the most beautiful churches that show how the Gothic tradition took different forms across Rhode Island.

4 of the 7 are Episcopal congregations… just saying. Heh. One of our most beloved churches is actually a barn, so we have that too.

And immediately they left their nets and followed him

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Sermons and audio

A misty shore on a winter's dayThere is no sense of comfortable stasis in the Kingdom of God.

No sense of “I’ve arrived.”
No sense that we are finally done changing.
If you are waiting to be ready before God comes into your life, you will wait forever.
You will not be ready.

And that is not a flaw — it is the point.

The call of Jesus always comes in the middle of things.

In the middle of work.
In the middle of uncertainty.
In the middle of ordinary life.

And the only question is whether we are willing to leave our nets.

Which raises the question we would often rather avoid:
What are the nets? What role are they playing in this story, and in our lives?

For Peter and Andrew, James and John, the nets were not bad things. They were necessary things. Respectable things.

Nets meant livelihood.
Nets meant identity.
Nets meant security.
They were not sinful.
They were familiar.

And sometimes that is harder to let go of.

We imagine that following Jesus means leaving behind only the obviously wrong things. But more often, it means loosening our grip on good things that have quietly become ultimate things.

The nets are whatever we cling to because they make us feel safe.
The nets are whatever define us so completely that we cannot imagine who we would be without them.
The nets are whatever keep us from moving when God says, “Now.”

And the Gospel tells us that when Jesus calls, the response is not careful calculation, but trust.

“I will make you.”

You will be equipped.
You will be taught.
You will grow into this.
Faith is not knowing how to do the thing.
Faith is being willing to step forward when someone says, “I’ll walk with you.”

In practice, that is what Christian life actually looks like.
We travel in response to call, going to places we’d rather not be, to circumstances we’re rather not experience.

Let those who have ears, hear what the Spirit is saying.

You can view the full sermon at this link.

Thilo, Kunst and Marcus: We’re in danger…

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Artificial Intelligence


AI bot swarms threaten to undermine democracy:

Because humans update their views partly based on social evidence—looking to peers to see what is “normal”—fabricated swarms can make fringe views look like majority opinions. If swarms flood the web with duplicative, crawler-targeted content, they can execute “LLM grooming,” poisoning the training data that future AI models (and citizens) rely on. Even so-called “thinking” AI models are vulnerable to this.

We cannot ban our way out of the threat of generative-AI-fueled swarms of misinformation bots, but we can change the economics of manipulation.

The paper linked above explains the danger of the present moment where a single user or group can inexpensively use the existing social media platforms and LLMs to essentially poison democracies around the world.

They have some suggestions about what needs to change, but no specific steps.

Lots of folks have been worried about this for a long time. (Me too.) To my mind it’s an existential threat. If nothing else, it’s important to share this out so that people begin to be skeptical of what they seeing being posted online – especially when there appears to be coordinated outrage about something.

Morality appears to be hard-coded in our brains.

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Brief Note


Some moral acts matter more than others, study shows:

Researchers found a surprising finding […]. Even when participants were mentally overloaded—trying to remember long number sequences while judging others—their reactions to fairness and property violations stayed strong.

“This suggests these judgments are automatic and intuitive, not the result of slow, careful thinking,” noted Ybarra, professor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

From a study done that shows that morality matters in forming opinions of others, some moral acts matter more than others and that for humans (and for other species) some sense of fairness and morality is hardwired.

I wonder if there’s any thought to how “tribalism” overrides this trait…

On the nature of evil

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Brief Note

A comment worth sharing

“Remember the words of G.M. Gilbert, the army psychologist presiding over the Nuremberg trials, who said this after having witnessed the trials of many Nazis:

I told you once that I was searching for the nature of evil. I think I’ve come close to defining it: a lack of empathy. It’s the one characteristic that connects all the defendants. A genuine incapacity to feel with their fellow man. Evil, I think, is the absence of empathy.”

From Reddit

To my mind, more than anything else, the Gospels and the Parables in particular, are about teaching us as disciples to have empathy for others.

A note about brief notes

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Blogging

From time to time, I find myself wanting to share something that doesn’t quite rise to the level of a full reflection, like a short observation, a quick thought, a link worth noting, but not something that needs to be emailed to the thousands of you that subscribe to this blog.

To make room for that kind of writing, I’ve added a new category here called Brief Notes. Posts in that category will appear on the site and may be shared on social media, but they will not be sent out by email.

My hope is that this respects your inbox, while still allowing me a place to post something that in previous years might have shown up on a microblogging site or social media.

Nothing else is changing. Longer reflections will continue to arrive by email as they always have. Brief Notes are simply a lighter layer alongside them.

I’ve been trying to figure out how to do this for a good while. It turns out that AI chatbots are less than useless when you ask them for help. But tonight I finally found the buried setting I’d been seeking!

As always, thank you for reading, and for the care you bring to this shared space.