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My “Confession,” or scattered notes on how to live as an ordinary, messy saint

The one where I, an unimpressive minister with ADHD, assure ordinary, unimpressive Christians that Jesus will meet them among the pots and pans of their messy kitchens.
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The Incarnation didn’t end at Christ’s Ascension

The one where I explain that Christ still has a body, and exegete the thorny passage 1 Corinthians 15:45.
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Christ, the Shepherd of our Souls (a sermon from Psalm 23)

Manuscript of my most recent sermon, a Christ-centered exposition of the Twenty-Third Psalm.
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What we will be has not yet appeared (1 John 3:2)

The one where I preached about what it means for those with profound disabilities that humans are in the image of God.
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Flesh & Bone & Broiled Fish: an Easter sermon (Luke 24:36-43)

Text of my sermon for April 9, 2023. What does it mean for our faith; for the Lord’s Supper; and for our future that Christ has been raised with a body? (There’s also an intense footnote at the end clearing up some confusion some seem to have about 1 Corinthians 15:45, 50 regarding the bodily…
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“He descended into hell”: Holy Saturday reflections with Questions 41 – 44 of the Heidelberg Catechism

The one where I consult the Heidelberg Catechism about the phrase “He descended into hell” in the Apostles’ Creed. Christ was baptized for a time into torment, so that, being baptized into Him, and into His death, we might be rescued from hell.
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The Lord’s Supper, the way the good Lord intended (a sermon on Ecclesiastes 9:7-8)

The Lord’s Supper the way the Good Lord intended is much more than a memorial. It is a communion with the living Christ. By His grace, we are able to eat the bread with gladness and drink the cup with cheerful hearts, because God accepts our works, and the blood of Christ keeps our garments…
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“My tongue is the pen of a rapid writer”: Psalm 45, the Church’s love song to Christ, part 4

This post continues a series of devotional meditations on Psalm 45, as the Church’s love song to Christ. In vv8-9, Christ has come for His Bride. The perfume of His garments and the music of heaven fill the air, as the Bride stands at His right hand, adorned in the finest gold.
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If I could erase any man’s legacy from American Christianity, it would be Charles G. Finney

The one where I call upon Christians and churches to renounce Charles Finney’s “new measures” and gratefully return to the “old measures” God gave us in the Bible.

