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Hometown Boy Makes Good

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This is the sermon I preached last week at St. Timothy Lutheran Church. The text was Luke 4:21-30 . Can't you imagine what the talk of the town would be when the residents of Nazareth   find out that Jesus has come home? He's here. He's here. Did you hear what he did in Capernaum? Surely he will perform miracles and heal people here. After all, we're his neighbors. He grew up here. The report of all the works and miracles Jesus had made its way to Nazareth. The hometown boy has made good. These people were expectant! Wouldn't you be? Today's gospel begins with the declaration of fulfillment   Vv. 21-22. In last week's gospel, in the synagogue, Jesus read from Isaiah about all the promises of what God would do for his people. The fulfillment Jesus speaks of must be rooted in his person. He is the One anointed by the Holy Spirit. The crowd heard Jesus' declaration of fulfillment as a promise of special favor for those of his ho

God Arranges and Appoints

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 This is the message I preached at St. Timothy Lutheran Church and St. Mark Lutheran Church  this past Sunday, 1/24. The text is 1 Corinthians 12:12-31a .   Paul writes that we are all "baptized into one body" v. 13.There is tremendous diversity within the groups Paul mentions--some of which are expected, such as Jews and those who are free. But God and Paul also include Greeks, who are Gentiles and slaves who are complete nobodies. And yet, in the waters of baptism, they are made new and become part of the body of Christ. Even from the beginning of the church, God included outsiders in his body. Baptism is the great equalizer that destroys the walls that divide people. Everything in today's epistle is based upon and grounded in baptism. As Lutheran Christians, we emphasize that all we do in life flows out from our baptism. Martin Luther wrote:1 C "Therefore every Christian has enough in Baptism to learn and to practise all [their] life; for