Rev. Joe Evans' Sermons
Sermons from a Presbyterian minister in Marietta, GA
Thursday, April 9, 2026
The Resurrection Will Not be Televised, a sermon based on John 20: 1-18, preached on April 5, 2026
Thanks be to God, for the tomb was empty.
Thanks be to God, for Jesus Christ is risen from the dead.
Thanks be to God that death has lost its sting.
Weeping may last for the night, but joy comes in the morning, and so Jesus asked Mary, “Woman, why are you weeping?”
Why are you weeping when death has been conquered?
Why are you weeping when hope prevails, love never dies, salvation has been secured, and sin has been conquered?
If ever there was a day to proclaim the Good News, today is the day, but notice with me this detail at the end of our second Scripture lesson: Mary Magdaline was the one to preach the first Easter sermon. She left the tomb to tell the disciples, “I have seen the Lord,” for the miracle of the resurrection had to have a messenger.
The story of salvation would not tell itself.
Somebody had to tell the story because the resurrection was not televised for all to see.
No reporters were present at the tomb that first Easter morning.
It happened before sunrise while most were still in bed.
No one was expecting it.
No one was prepared.
Our Gospel lesson ended with Jesus the Christ, risen from the grave, saying to Mary, “Go and tell my brothers.”
Go and tell them, Mary, for the other two who saw and believed didn’t tell anybody about it.
Did you notice that?
Peter and the other disciple, the one whom Jesus loved, saw the empty tomb.
They even entered and saw that Jesus had rolled up the garments He had been buried in as though He were folding up His blanket after a nap. Scripture tells us that they both saw and believed, yet after witnessing the miracle of Jesus Christ risen from dead, Peter and the other disciple, the one whom Jesus loved, just went back home not telling anyone about it as though they were history’s first Presbyterians.
My favorite Presbyterian joke is, “What do you get when you mix a Jehovah’s Witness and a Presbyterian?”
“Someone who knocks on your door but doesn’t say anything.”
If you don’t know much about the Presbyterian Church, know this: We are not the denomination who has been preaching out on the Square with a bullhorn in hand.
That’s not our style, and condemnation is not our message.
Some branches of the Christian Church won’t dance. Others won’t drink. We won’t talk about our faith too much in public, and yet the story of Easter must be told.
The resurrection was not televised.
The miracle requires a messenger, so Jesus said to Mary Magdalene, “Go and tell my brothers.”
Go and celebrate the truth that the Lord has risen.
Let the world know that there is victory over the grave.
Shake your tambourines.
Lift your voices to sing.
Shout it out that He is risen.
And because He lives, I can face tomorrow!
Because He lives, all fear is gone.
Because I know He holds the future,
And life is worth the living,
Just because He lives!
My friends, this is obviously good news for all people. This is a story that needs to be told. It’s the kind of good news that no one should keep to himself. Why, then, did those first two disciples go back to their homes without telling anyone about it?
Why were those two as quiet as two Baptists in a liquor store?
More importantly, why did Jesus have to tell Mary Magdaline, “Go and tell my brothers?”
Think about it with me.
It’s because to the ears of Rome, to the ears of the Pharisees, to the ears of the powers and principalities who put Him in the tomb, news of His resurrection was news of revolution, insurgence, insurrection, and revolt.
The power of God is so rarely televised because the power of God is a threat to the power of evil. Evil people don’t want you to know how fragile their grasp on control is.
To spread news of Christ risen from the dead threatened Roman power because, up until this point, death by crucifixion had been 100% effective, and Rome’s violent grip on their empire depended on it staying that way. You see, they knew what we often forget: that an empire built on control and domination is so fragile a thing that the whole deck of cards will fall with just a whisper of the truth.
It was the same when freedom came to the enslaved people of the South.
President Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, effectively outlawing slavery, yet word of slavery’s end didn’t reach the enslaved people of Texas for two years, five months, and 18 days.
Juneteenth is the celebration of the day when word of that executive order finally reached Texas.
Why did it take so long for that good news to travel?
It’s because the power of evil doesn’t want people proclaiming the Good News, but Mary announced to the disciples, “I have seen the Lord.”
Proclaiming such a truth out loud changes things.
Really, it changes everything.
Days ago, I heard a story about a woman in recovery from drug addiction.
At her Narcotics Anonymous meeting, she was to receive her chip for her first year sober, and she invited the officer who arrested her to come to the meeting to give it to her.
Because this NA group meets in a small town, that officer was the one who had arrested most of the members of that NA group at one time or another. He had been the one to arrest so many at that meeting that as he was introduced to the group, he said, “I see an awful lot of familiar faces.”
Yet when he was handed the 1-year sobriety chip and handed that chip to the woman whom he had arrested on the lowest day of her life, with tears in his eyes, he said to her and anyone else listening, “How thankful I am to see you on the other side.”
My friends, everyone must remember that there is a light at the end of the tunnel.
Everyone needs to hear that miracles still happen.
Everyone who feels stuck needs to know that change has come.
Everyone who feels like she is fighting a losing battle against sin needs to hear that He has won the battle for you. It’s not your job to fight that battle.
It’s your job to share the news that He has won!
In the dark days of Apartheid in South Africa, the great Archbishop Desmond Tutu was all the time preaching the Gospel of Resurrection, assuring his congregation that God would have the final word and not the apartheid government, and so the apartheid government would storm his church from time to time. Uniformed and armed men would barge into the service, yet the Archbishop always welcomed them into his church warmly, saying, “Friends, I’m so glad you’ve come over to the winning side.”
My friends, look around.
Notice miracles and dare to tell someone about it.
The resurrection was not televised then, and the miracles of God so rarely are. Still, people need to hear about good things.
Someone you know needs the reminder that Rome will fall.
Death has lost its sting.
Hope is never lost, for Christ is risen.
A lady walked into our Great Hall during our community Holy Week meals last week and said, “I think this is what heaven will look like.” Another from out of town was so affected by our community and the love that you shared with her that she’s thinking about moving out of John’s Creek to come to Marietta.
Who would blame her?
We live in a world of darkness and despair, yet the emperor’s kingdom will crumble with the sound of your voice: Say it with me, “He is risen.”
He is risen, indeed.
Your sin does not define you, but His victory does.
Hope lives.
Love lives.
The darkness cannot put out the Light.
Halleluia.
Amen.
You Will Never Wash My Feet, a sermon based on John 13: 1-8 preached on April 2, 2026
This week has been an important week.
It’s already been a meaningful week.
You may know that on Monday at 11:30 in this Sanctuary, the Rev. Dr. Tar-U-Way Bright of Turner Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church preached from this pulpit. Then on Tuesday, it was Eric Beckham of Zion Baptist. Yesterday, the Rev. Brandon Owen of First Baptist preached. Earlier today, it was the Rev. Dr. Harden Hopper III of First United Methodist Church.
Each sermon was inspirational.
Each lunch, which followed, was delicious.
Each day, a crowd of around 200 people attended.
Each year that we host these community worship services, the crowds get bigger and there’s more interaction between the members of different churches, but in addition to all these good things, only one of the pastors who preached has a full head of hair.
Three have shiny bald heads.
And it made me feel so much better.
Seeing the beautiful bald heads of those pastors made me feel better about my own receding and retreating hairline.
I started to think that if every balding man could see how good those pastors were looking, Rogaine would go out of business.
This brings me to my point: You must accept the truth that you are God’s beloved. Peter had to allow the Savior to wash his feet, for His commandment, “Love each other. As I have loved you so you must love one another,” that command, that mandate hinges on what Jesus did on the night He was betrayed. Our ability to love one another hinges on the statement that precedes the command: “As I have loved you,” so you must love one another.
Do you believe that He loves you?
It’s not easy to love or to accept yourself.
If it were easy, people wouldn’t spend so much money covering up how they really look.
So much of our economy is built on insecurity.
Do you know what I mean by that?
How many gyms would close if the members of those gyms woke up each morning, looked in the mirror, and said to themselves, “I am looking good today?” People who look in the mirror and see flaws and folds and wrinkles and lines sign up for gym memberships, pay to have their hair dyed and their faces lifted, but those people who look at themselves in the mirror and say to themselves, “I am looking good” are immune to the commercials.
They have the antidote to the insecurity that fuels so much of the beauty product industry.
So much of our economy is built on people who look in the mirror and don’t like what they see, yet on the sixth day, God created humankind.
Genesis chapter 1 tells us that it was in His image that God created woman and man, and when God saw everything that He had made, indeed, it wasn’t just good. It was very good.
That’s what the Bible says.
When God created light, it was good.
When God created land and ocean, it was good.
But when God created humankind, it was very good.
Know then that in the eyes of God, you are more majestic than the mountains He created, for He said the mountains were good, but only when He saw you did He say, “very good”.
You are more precious than the stars of the sky.
More beautiful than the ocean waves.
Not for anything other than for you did He sacrifice himself.
My friends, you are so worthy of love that Jesus knelt at the feet of Simon Peter, but Peter said to him, “You will never wash my feet.”
Why not?
Maybe you know why Peter wouldn’t let Him.
There is an insecurity that creeps inside all our hearts.
There is a voice that speaks to us when we are all alone.
For some reason, that voice speaks up in middle school, and it keeps on talking, making us self-conscious. The insecurity just stays right with us.
I used to think that people grew out of it, but I haven’t.
People have started saying to me, “You look just like my proctologist, or my rabbi.” I’ll ask them to show me a picture, and basically, to an awful lot of people, I look a lot like the last bald, white dude they saw.
Now, that kind of thing makes me self-conscious. It makes me want to buy a toupée or put on a hat, but my friends, we must fight that kind of insecurity, we must doubt the voice of the evil one, for the Word of God incarnate came not to shame or condemn the world, but to save it; not to make you self-conscious, but to wash your feet.
To love you with an undying love.
You must allow Him to wash your feet, for those who cannot accept the love of God, seek it out elsewhere.
Our world feeds on those who are desperate for love and acceptance.
I remember attending a fundraiser for the Boys and Girls Club of Tennessee.
When we lived there, I’d be invited to these things.
Because I was a pastor at an important church, they wanted me there, but I didn’t have any money to contribute, so it was always a little awkward to go to those things. After giving to the church, there just wasn’t much left, so I always felt awkward at those fundraisers because I’d go, but I couldn’t pledge anything. I couldn’t donate much. When they’d give the sales pitch and distribute the pledge cards, I’d excuse myself to the restroom or something, but at the Boys and Girls Club fundraiser, I’ll always remember this moment when the speaker said: I want you to know how important this club is.
It’s important because the street will take these children.
If they don’t have the Boys and Girls Club, they’ll be left to the street, and the street will take them.
If they don’t find direction from us, who will tell them which way to go?
If they don’t find acceptance at our club, they’ll find acceptance from gangs.
If we don’t feed them, who will offer them food and what will they want in return?
It was the most effective fundraising pitch I’d ever heard, and so I made contribution.
The check may have bounced, but I had to give something because I knew the man was right. Those who can’t accept themselves go looking for acceptance.
Those who don’t feel beautiful will pay top dollar until they do, and so much of our economy is built on insecurity, but I want you to know that Jesus commanded His disciples to “love one another” only after He convinced them that by Him they were loved.
How much did He love them?
He washed their feet.
Now, you may have an image in your mind of what it was like for Jesus to wash the feet of His disciples. It’s possible that the image you have in your mind is based on the state of your neighbor’s feet, or when you think of Jesus washing the disciples’ feet, you imagine having to wash a stranger’s feet.
My wife, Sara’s, favorite place to shop is Goodwill.
She finds all kinds of good stuff at Goodwill, and the day before yesterday, she was so excited because she found me some fancy flip flops that retail new for $90-100. These were not new, though. Someone else’s foot juice was all over them. The gunk from between a stranger’s toes had infected the thong of those flip flops, so I didn’t want them. I didn’t want my feet touching where someone else’s feet had been.
It’s not that my feet are perfumed and manicured, so I ask the same question about my feet: What would it have been like for Jesus to wash my feet or your feet?
Maybe you’re thinking, who would want to bathe some feet like mine with blisters, bunions, and yellow toenails? Yet remember with me that this is God we’re talking about and not you.
What did the Creator God incarnate in Jesus Christ see when He held the feet of those disciples in His hand?
What was it like?
How did Jesus feel?
The closest we can get to imagining how Jesus felt to cradle the disciples’ feet in His hands is if we can remember washing our own baby in the sink.
Have you ever bathed a baby?
Have you ever put a baby in a sink full of soapy water?
Have you ever taken a baby’s fat little foot in your hand, with toes so cute you wanted to take a picture of them to hang on your wall?
Jesus washed His disciples’ feet, and it wasn’t any different.
The Creator of us all took those feet in His hands, and He said the same words He said in the beginning, “it wasn’t just good, it was very good.”
Peter had to let Him because Peter wouldn’t have made it through the rest of his trial without knowing that he was loved.
No one makes it through this life whole and complete without the conviction that she is worthy of love.
Only those who know that they are worthy of love trust in forgiveness.
Only those who know they are worthy of acceptance give people the chance to accept them.
My friends, I want you to know that after Peter betrayed Jesus, the only reason he had the courage to seek Jesus out again, pleading for forgiveness, is because Jesus had washed his feet, treated even his feet as precious, and so convinced Peter that the love of His Father in Heaven was something like that of his mother on earth who had held his feet in her hands and kissed them.
It’s hard to return home if you don’t trust the love of the father.
It’s impossible to proclaim the Gospel that you’ve never allowed yourself to feel.
You can’t go on believing in grace unless you’ve experienced it.
Before you go paying for some laser treatment or beauty product, know that there is nothing more attractive than confidence, and it is easiest to love those who love themselves.
Do you believe it?
Would you allow Him to wash your feet?
We say it to babies all the time when they’re baptized.
We all know that a baby is loved in the sight of God.
We all want to wash that baby’s feet.
Why would it be any different with you or with me who are and will always be God’s children?
Would you let Him wash your feet?
My friends, you can’t very well love your neighbor as yourself if you don’t love yourself.
You can’t very well love each other unless you know how much He loves you.
That was His commandment.
That’s His mandate: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another.
You can only fulfill this mandate, this command, if you know He loves you, so to convince you and assure you, He not only washed the disciples’ feet, but He also prepared them dinner.
He took the bread, and He broke it, saying, “This is my body,” broken for you.
Then He took the cup, saying, “This cup is poured out of my blood for the forgiveness of sins.”
Why would you ever doubt such wonderous love?
My friends, taste and see that the Lord is good.
His steadfast love for you endures forever.
Amen.
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
The Tyranny of the Urgent, a sermon based on John 11: 1-45, preached on March 22, 2026
There’s a great story that the author Ann Lamott tells about a women’s Bible study.
The women’s Bible study was discussing Jesus, who He was, and people in their lives who had been like Jesus to them, and so the group went around the circle. The first woman said that as she went through her divorce, her golden retriever never failed to greet her warmly when she walked through the door. That empty house would have been so sad, but because of that golden retriever, she never felt alone.
The next woman talked about her grandmother, who baked chocolate chip cookies and seemed to be pulling a pan of them out of the oven whenever she needed them most.
Finally, the last woman at the table spoke, and she looked at the question differently, saying, “Who was like Jesus to me? Well, that would have to be the person who loved me so much that he was always honest with me, so honest that I wanted to kill him.”
My friends, that’s true about Jesus.
We call Him friend, we know He walks beside us, but we can’t domesticate Jesus.
While we all need a golden retriever and a warm chocolate chip cookie, notice with me how many people in the 45 verses we just read wanted to ring Jesus’ neck.
Jesus disappointed people.
Jesus irritated His disciples because He was always pushing them to prioritize the eternal over the urgent.
Have you ever known someone like that, when what you want is someone who will act immediately? Who will help and respond? When I’m panicking, I want someone who will not just stand there, but will do something, but there are thoughtful people who remain calm in those urgent situations, so calm that they drive me crazy.
Do you know what I’m talking about?
When I was a pastor in Columbia, Tennessee, one hot summer day, the air conditioner went out in the Sanctuary.
Presbyterians get grouchy when they’re hot.
I know that.
You know that, so as I was walking into the Sanctuary to lead the worship service and a church member ran up to me letting me know that the air conditioner wasn’t working, what did I do but make my way out to the HV/AC unit as though I would know what to do once I got there because I’m the kind of person who will respond to your emergency with action whether I know what to do or not. Regardless, I’ll do something.
I won’t always do what’s most important but what’s most urgent.
Jesus never did that.
Jesus never let other peoples’ worries distract Him from His true purpose, and so He often irritated the people around Him who wanted Him to hurry up and act, and that includes His mother.
Do you remember His first miracle in the Gospel of John, when He turns water into wine?
Then you’ll remember how anxious His mother was. She told Him, “They have no wine,” and you can imagine that she was worried about it because she makes a statement that’s obviously a command. “They have no wine.” In other words: Don’t just stand there. Do something!
Sara does that to our children all the time.
“I noticed that there are recyclables in the garbage.”
That sounds like a statement, but somebody had better do something about it. Jesus had better do something about the wine, says His mother, but Jesus didn’t respond to the urgent with the same nervous energy of everyone else.
Why not?
Why didn’t the anxiety overwhelm Him?
It’s because He prioritized the eternal over the urgent, and He could do that because He never forgot the power of God even when worry overpowered all the people around Him.
He wouldn’t have rushed out to look at the HV/AC unit, yet His calm demeanor would have irritated the people around Him because misery loves company, and anxiety will spread through a crowd faster than COVID.
Do you remember when a crowd of people followed Jesus out to a remote place where there was no food, nor any place to buy something to eat?
His disciples were out among them listening to them grumble.
The babies were hungry, so they looked to their parents for something to eat.
The parents looked to the disciples to do something about it.
The disciples looked to Jesus, and Jesus said, “You feed them.”
How could He do such a thing?
But He did.
He was always pushing His followers to trust in the power of God, but it’s hard to trust when your babies are crying, and it’s even harder when your brother is sick.
Think with me about Martha and Mary calling out for Jesus, sending a messenger to go and find Him, asking Him to come and heal their sick brother.
I wish He would have treated their concern with a little more urgency.
I wish He would have rushed over there to heal Him, just as I rushed outside to try to fix that HV/AC, but Jesus wasn’t worried.
Jesus trusted in the power of God.
He never succumbed to the tyranny of the urgent, and that made Him hard for people like us to be around, but my friends, why don’t we all take a moment to consider how we might become a little more like Jesus and a little less like the world?
Think with me about the world.
Gas prices are rising.
How long will it take for people to lose their minds?
I saw a snowflake on Monday.
Was there a run on milk or bread at the Kroger?
There probably was because we are anxious people who want leaders to do something when we’re anxious and afraid, even if it’s the wrong thing that they’re doing. “Don’t just stand there. Do something!” we say. However, Jesus was below deck asleep when the storm began to toss the ship, and He was calm when He received word that Lazarus was ill.
What are we to learn from His demeanor? That in a world of high stress and anxiety, cooler heads prevail.
Those who keep the faith are more than conquerors.
Do you know what’s funny about the Gospel of John?
For the second Sunday in a row, I’ve read a super long second Scripture lesson from the Gospel of John because the author tells long, sweeping stories to make his point, which is the exact opposite of the Apostle Paul. To summarize the 45 verses I just read, let me quote Paul the Apostle, who wrote, “I consider that the sufferings of the present evil age are not worth comparing to the glory about to be revealed to us.”
John takes 45 verses to say what Paul says in one. Regardless of whether you need 45 verses or one to hear this truth, remember the Good News that suffering comes to an end.
Sooner or later, suffering gives way to glory.
Jesus always remembers that which annoys the people around Him, yet how much better would we all be if, instead of wringing our hands anxiously in the face of death, we always remembered that death will not have the final word?
Lazurus died, yet the dead will be raised.
Weeping may last for the night, yet joy comes in the morning.
On American Idol the other night, I heard a man sing: “Your love is running after, running after me.” Would His love not catch up to me a lot faster if I could stop running outside to fix the air conditioner?
Do you hear what I’m saying?
Be still, and let the love of God catch up to you.
Is it not far more faithful not to just do something, but to stand on the promises of God?
The Lord Jesus faced death and conquered it.
I want Him to stand beside me.
I want Jesus to walk with me.
Yet Jesus calls me to have more faith than I have fear.
To have more trust than I have anxiety.
To have more confidence in God than I have confidence in myself.
For by His power, empty water jars will be filled with wine.
Stormy seas will become calm, and tombs for the dead will become wombs of new life.
Do you believe in Him?
Would you trust in Him?
Would you follow Him?
Then conquer the tyranny of the urgent with your knowledge of the eternal victory.
For death will not have the final word.
Sorrow will not have the final word.
Weeping may last for the night, but joy comes in the morning.
If you believe, you will see the glory of God.
Trust.
Rejoice in suffering.
Keep the faith.
Face your fear with this assurance: Nothing will separate you from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Amen.
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
The Question Jesus Asks, a sermon based on Psalm 23 and John 9: 1-41, preached on March 15, 2026
That was a long second Scripture lesson.
You have to read the whole thing, though, to get the whole story, and getting the whole story is something that everyone is interested in. We all want to know the good, the bad, and the ugly. I once knew a lady who said, “If you don’t have anything nice to say, come sit by me.”
Spill.
Give me the dirt.
Tell me the story.
Who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?
When I first read it, I couldn’t believe that anyone would ask a question such as that in our second Scripture lesson, “Who sinned?” Then, I started to think how finding someone to blame is so natural a thing that it’s basically our national pastime.
Think about it.
When someone gets divorced, what kind of questions do we ask?
We ask: What did he do?
Who cheated?
What happened?
Who sinned, was it him or his spouse, that they are getting divorced?
Asking some version of, “Who sinned?” is a natural question for us to ask, yet notice with me that Jesus doesn’t spend any time answering that question, for the question that Jesus asks is, “Do you want to be made well?”
That’s what He asked the first time He healed on the Sabbath back in chapter 5. I wanted to include that chapter in our second Scripture lesson for today, too, but then I thought, “Maybe 41 verses is enough,” and it is for us to get this point: When the disciples asked, “Who is to blame?” the question Jesus asks is, “Do you want to be made well?” and that’s the question to ask people who are going through a divorce.
Not, “Was it your fault or his?” but “How can I support you as you walk through the valley?” It’s hard, though, to ask such a helpful question if we get wrapped up in assigning blame, so know this: We are the ones who like to assign blame, while Jesus came, not to condemn the world, but to save it, and so He asks, not “Who did what?” but “Do you want to be made well?”
That’s the question that Jesus asks, yet the church gets mixed up in assigning blame just as those first disciples did.
Let me give you an example.
Have I ever told you where I got my bike?
I like riding my bike to the church.
People stop and watch me ride by, as though they’ve never seen a man in a suit riding a bike.
I like riding my bike to the church.
Riding a bike gets people’s attention. I like attention.
It’s also good exercise, which I like as well.
Considering traffic in Marietta, a lot of the time I make it here to the church faster on my bike than I would have if I were driving a car. I like that too, but back to where my bike came from.
I bought my bike for $100 about 15 years ago.
If you know anything about bikes, then you might know that my bike is basically an antique. A teal Bianchi as old as mine is a collector’s item. Models like it sell for $500 to $1,000 which is why I keep that bike lock on it. Those who recognize the make and model know it’s worth money, yet I bought it for $100, which I thought was a deal. That was before I heard that the prior owner probably rode it naked.
Did you hear that?
Yes. I said, “naked.” Just like Adam and Eve.
The man who owned my bike before I did was arrested for running through the county park in the nude. Because we lived in a small town, his arrest made the newspaper, and when news of his arrest reached me, I bought a new seat for my bicycle.
Here’s why I’m telling you this: This all happened in small town, Columbia, Tennessee. Columbia, Tennessee has a Church of Christ church on every corner. If you know anything about the Church of Christ, then you know that they don’t have instruments. They sing a cappella. They don’t ordain women to the ministry. They’re very against dancing and alcohol, and if you mess up, you must confess your sins before the whole congregation. The man who owned my bike was a member of the West 7th Street Church of Christ, and the members of the West 7th Street Church of Christ were particularly diligent about having people confess their sins publicly.
If you were caught drinking, you had to confess during worship on Sunday in front of everyone.
If you were caught dancing, you had to do the same.
And if you were caught running nude through the county park, you definitely had to make a public confession, so this man who owned my bike had to stand and repent before the whole congregation.
Can you imagine?
I can because I’m standing up in front of a room full of people who knew me when I was a teenager.
You know, people ask me all the time, “What is it like to be a pastor in the town you grew up in?” I tell you; it’s a strange thing to be a religious authority in the town who remembers me when I was running around this church when I was supposed to be in Confirmation Class or the youth group meeting.
When I first got back here in 2017, Howard Swinford told me how to get on the roof of the church, and when he did, he said, “We can show you this now.”
I got in trouble all the time, and people remember.
The other day, I was with my 7th grade English teacher, Betty Neale Lawton.
I loved Mrs. Lawton.
To know Mrs. Lawton is to love Mrs. Lawton, but that didn’t mean that I was always good in her class, and those memories of misbehavior stay fresh because she keeps bringing them up.
The other day, I was standing in front of the church with Mrs. Lawton, my 7th grade English teacher, and Dr. Bob Harper, who treated my teenage acne.
Mrs. Lawton wanted to tell Bob about the time she had to pull my friends and me out in the hallway to tell us we had to stop talking in her class, and because I loved Mrs. Lawton so much, I took her words to heart. After she let us know that we were being disrespectful to her, I felt shame and guilt in my heart. Those feelings were overwhelming me as I sat back down at my desk, and this is what Mrs. Lawton remembered, that when I sat back down, she saw tears in my eyes.
“He got in trouble all the time, but he had a big heart. That’s what I remember,” Mrs. Lawton said, and I still don’t like getting in trouble, but the story I just told you isn’t about a boy who got in trouble. The story I just told you is the story of a teacher who loves me despite my sin, so what is it like to serve the Lord as a pastor in the same town as the dermatologist who treated my acne and the English teacher who had to address my bad behavior?
It’s healing.
It’s redeeming.
Would you be healed?
You know, it’s not easy to accept the invitation to healing.
If you want to be forgiven, you must confess.
If you want to be saved, you must admit you need a savior.
If you want to be healed, you must let someone see your wounds.
Christians don’t deal with problems by running away from them, but by turning towards the Savior.
Go home to the Father and feel His arms of mercy wrap around you.
Learn to face the people you hurt, not with fear, but with faith.
Don’t avoid what feels awkward or uncomfortable, for you won’t make it to Heaven pretending to be perfect. To get there you must answer His question: “Would you be made well?”
Would you rely on His grace?
My friends: I have no righteousness of my own.
I have been saved by His grace.
Redeemed by His mercy.
Found. Healed. Forgiven.
Would you be made well?
Amen.
Thursday, March 12, 2026
Go From Your Country and Your Kindred, a sermon based on Genesis 12: 1-4a and John 3: 1-21, preached on March 1, 2026
I was blessed to have two grandmothers.
I also had two grandfathers, but my grandmothers treated me with near-celebrity status, and today, I’d like to tell you a little about them in the hopes of reminding you of those people who, to use the words of Mr. Rogers, “loved you into existence.”
My paternal grandmother, my father’s mother, was a painter. Still, to this day, when I smell oil paints and paint thinners, I am teleported in memory to her house where I often spent afternoons. There, she not only painted, but made blackberry jelly, served me Capri Suns, and encouraged me to go explore her yard. In her yard, I would bend sticks into bows and sharpen others into arrows. Once, while I was patrolling her front yard with bow and arrow in hand, headband with a feather on my head, she stopped me so that she could paint my portrait.
That portrait still hangs in my parents’ house, and my sister brings it up sometimes: that there are photographs of us all but there is only one portrait, and that’s of Joe. I was beloved by my paternal grandmother, and my mother’s mother loved me just as much.
One baseball season, a photographer took our team photo, then individual photos, and turned each of our individual photos into our own baseball cards. Had you looked on the back of my baseball card for my batting average, you would not have been impressed, but my grandmother was, so she took my little baseball card to the print shop and had it enlarged to poster size.
Surely for Abraham, there were such people, yet God said to Abraham, “Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house.” I just hope he was able to carry the memory of his grandmothers’ voices with him, for in this world of ours, such love seems to be in short supply. The journey is hard, and the people who loved us into existence cannot journey with us forever.
We all leave the safety of home.
We all step out on the road towards salvation, reading headlines of war and the rumors of war.
Whose voice do you wish you could hear this morning to reassure you that everything is going to be alright?
That’s part of why I come to church.
I want to hear again the promises of God.
I want to hear the reassurance that God is in control.
Last Thursday, I went into the barber shop, and it was my barber who reminded me: There’s less hair for me to cut than last time, Joe, but God is still in control.
I hope and pray that this church is like that barbershop, that here you’re surrounded by acceptance, love, and affirmation, along with the assurance that God is in control, yet years ago, a new pastor came to our church. His wife and four children sat in a pew near the pulpit. Just as they were settling in, a longtime member of our church greeted them with, “You’re sitting in my pew.”
That just can’t happen, so yesterday I emphasized the need for hospitality to our church officers. The new class of elders and deacons will be ordained and installed just after this sermon. Yesterday, they attended a training, and every year for the past couple of years I’ve been telling the deacons the same thing: Each Easter, we’ll have as many as 100 first-time visitors to our church.
Each Christmas Eve, the number is just as high.
And every Sunday, we have between five and 25 people walk through the doors of our church for the very first time. They don’t know where the bathrooms are. They don’t know where they’re going to sit, but what they’re really looking for is a safe harbor.
A place to rest.
A sanctuary from our broken world where they’ll feel valued, wanted, loved, and respected.
Where they’ll hear again that while the world is falling apart, God is in control.
Perhaps that’s what Nicodemus was looking for.
In our Gospel lesson for this morning, we heard about Nicodemus, who went to Jesus looking for answers. Perhaps he was called by God to go as Abraham had been called. Perhaps he was looking for light as the shadow crept into his heart. Whatever it was that pushed him towards Jesus, I give thanks to God for Jesus today because when Nicodemus knocked on His door, Jesus welcomed him in.
Would he have received the same reception if he came knocking on your door?
Would he have felt the same welcome if you found him sitting in your pew?
My friends, Nicodemus went out one night looking for the light.
Do you know how many people in our dark and desolate world are looking for the light today?
Do you know how many are looking for hope?
Think with me about how much it changed you to be loved by your grandmother.
Or if your grandmother was a dried out old witch, then think with me how good it felt to finally feel loved and accepted by someone in your life.
Who was it?
What was her name?
What did he do for you that made the difference?
This is the power of Jesus, not just that He did miracles, turning water into wine, but when people sought Him out, He assured them that God so loved the world that He gave His only Son. Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through Him.
Would you allow Christ’s light to shine through you?
I tell you, you don’t have to save the world, you need only remember that we have a Savior.
You don’t have to welcome everyone into your house, just those who knock on the door.
You don’t have to be a hero to change someone’s life.
Just two weeks ago, a man wandered into our church on the worst day of his life. He walked into our church, and he wept, and I sat there and I listened, and finally I said, “This may seem like the end of the world, but it’s not. Everything is going to be alright because God is in control.”
Halleluia.
Amen.
Monday, February 23, 2026
The Tempter, a sermon based on Genesis 2: 15-17, 3: 1-7 and Matthew 4: 1-11, preached on February 22, 2026
This Gospel lesson from Matthew describes the first temptation of Jesus, and so temptation is my focus for this sermon.
Your temptations.
My temptations.
As well as the particular temptation that Jesus faced.
I say the particular temptation that Jesus faced because Jesus was tempted by none other than the devil himself. Our daily temptations are not like that of Jesus. He gets the Son of God treatment, so the great preacher Barbara Brown Taylor once said, “When it’s our turn, none of us is going to get the Son of God treatment from the devil because the devil only needs an all you can eat buffet and a tax refund to get our attention.”
That’s true.
From Adam and Eve down to us, let’s be honest: The devil doesn’t have to work too hard to tempt any one of us.
It just takes an apple.
Or a chicken wing.
I was at a breakfast buffet determined not to get a donut yesterday, but someone suggested that I have at least one and so I got two.
The devil tempts Jesus in ways that are particular to the Son of God.
When the devil whispers in our ear it’s particular temptations to each one of us, and so the devil may not use the same words that he did with Jesus with us, for to Jesus, he said, “If you are the Son of God,” while to us, the devil might say, “Don’t you want just one more slice?”
The devil may not say, “Throw yourself down from the pinnacle of the temple,” but you may hear the devil tempt you to do harm to yourself in more subtle ways.
My point is that the temptation of Jesus described in our Gospel lesson is more personal to Jesus, and Jesus, being the Son of God, can withstand so dramatic an attack from the devil himself, yet do not underestimate the devil, for he comes to us all, whispering in our ears, and we are most tempted to listen when we are hungry and desperate in the wilderness.
After 40 days and 40 nights, the Tempter said to Jesus, “If you are the Son of God, command these stones to become loaves of bread.”
Don’t you know that He was tempted to do just that?
He was hungry.
His belly was empty.
He would have eaten the crumbs that fell from the table right off the floor, and this is when temptation comes to us. This is when the devil’s words have the most power to tempt us: not when we’re full, but when we’re empty, so we’re cautioned never to go grocery shopping on an empty stomach because when we are hungry, everything sounds good, and just as the food we shouldn’t eat calls to us when our stomachs are empty, so we are tempted to do the things we shouldn’t do when we are far from home and we long to be accepted.
Do you remember the old cartoons when the angel would sit on one shoulder and the little demon on the other?
The angle would lead towards virtue.
The demon towards destruction.
But if you’re hungry, and the Tempter offers you something to fill up your belly, then his voice is hard to ignore.
Therefore, fill yourself up.
Before you face temptation, eat a healthy breakfast, for when we are empty, the voice of temptation is hard to ignore, and that goes for all kinds of emptiness. Before you leave the house, look yourself in the mirror and remind yourself that you’re beautiful. Before you make a big decision, HALT.
HALT stands for hungry, angry, lonely, or tired, for whether we’re desperate for food or desperate for affirmation, the devil has far more power to tempt us when we are empty, so fill yourself up.
Remember who you are.
Many of you know that I grew up in this church.
Last week, I had lunch with the new pastor of Maple Avenue United Methodist Church.
She asked me how long I’d been here.
“I’ve always been here,” I said.
Then she said, “That history comes with a lot of trust and probably a lot of baggage.”
She’s right about both.
When I was in confirmation class here as a 7th grader, for whatever reason, my friends and I thought it would be more fun to skip confirmation class and to hang out by the railroad tracks. I don’t know why we thought that would be such a good idea. Our parents would drop us off at 4:30. Confirmation class met right before the evening youth group back then. My parents would drop me off, and my friends were waiting right by those front doors. We’d wait for our parents to drive off and then go to the back of the building rather than confirmation class to run around and do a bunch of nothing, really.
Why did I do that?
Why was I tempted when I knew it was wrong to go with my friends and not to confirmation class?
I wasn’t hungry for bread, but I was hungry for acceptance, and if the hungry are tempted by bread, what will the desperate do to be accepted?
Parents will say, “If everyone else jumped off a bridge, would you jump, too?”
I literally did.
There was an old railroad bridge that went over Lake Allatoona that I jumped off more than once, not because it was fun but because everyone else was doing it, for the hungry are tempted by bread, the desperate are tempted by acceptance, but Jesus knows who He is and doesn’t need the devil’s approval.
Do you know who you are?
These days, plenty of people are looking for an answer to that question, and they’re finding answers on social media.
Young men, especially, are searching for meaning.
They’re searching for purpose.
They’re searching for affirmation and approval, and who is whispering into their ears?
I’m so interested now in livestreaming and modern technology.
I’ve just been to another conference to do a presentation that Rev. Cassie Waits and I created, telling the story of our church and how God is at work here through livestreaming and our tremendous outreach to the community, and so I’ve read all these books about the internet and social media.
There’s a book out about the dangers of social media called The Anxious Generation. This book presents a convincing argument for keeping kids off the internet for as long as possible because they are so susceptible to the voices of temptation that come through those phones and tablets.
The statistics are concerning.
Young kids on social media suffer from lower self-esteem and higher anxiety because they are bombarded by the message that they don’t look good enough and don’t have the right clothes.
It’s not just the cool kids at school who send them the message but the advertisers and influencers who have access to them, plus the kids at school aren’t just at school, for our kids still hear from them through text messages all day long.
It’s constant.
The only group resistant to the statistics are those kids who are active in a faith community.
Why?
It’s because kids who are a part of a faith community like this one know that they are loved by God, and so they don’t chase after the world’s approval.
Kids who are part of a faith community like this one are accepted so they don’t compromise their morals chasing affirmation from those who would do them harm.
They know what love is.
They know that they matter.
They know that they are beautiful.
Do you remember who you are?
Do you remind the people around you that they are beloved in the eyes of God?
My friends, it’s true that the temptation of Christ is not our temptation, for He gets the Son of God treatment, yet His temptation is not just His. It is for our salvation. Remember what He did for you and rejoice in the truth that you are worthy of His love.
Don’t go out into the world empty, and don’t let your neighbor.
Before you go back out there to face the tempter’s voice, remember that you are God’s beloved and that Christ is ever by your side, and look to the person next to you and tell him the same.
Amen.
Monday, February 16, 2026
Peter Didn't Want Him to Go, a sermon based on Matthew 17: 1-9, preached on February 15, 2026
People are full of surprises, and that includes Jesus.
In this Gospel lesson that we just read, Jesus was transfigured or transformed before three of His disciples. When they reached the top of that high mountain, His face shone like the sun, His clothes became dazzling white, and suddenly appeared before them two great and long-dead heroes of the Old Testament: Moses, who led the Israelites out of Egypt, and Elijah the Prophet, who in his own time, went up to the top of a mountain and was taken by God into Heaven.
Our Gospel lesson describes the disciples as afraid in this moment.
Why wouldn’t they be?
Perhaps, they thought they were hallucinating, thinking to themselves, “I knew we shouldn’t have eaten those mushrooms Thomas found back in the valley,” or more likely they were thinking to themselves, “I thought I knew who this Jesus was, and now I feel like He is someone else entirely.
Have you ever had such an experience?
I’ve been watching a TV show called A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms. It’s about a knight who travels around with a young squire who turns out to be an heir to the throne.
This surprise is so shocking to the knight that he’s rendered speechless.
He feels betrayed.
How did those disciples feel when the Jesus they thought they knew appeared before them next to Moses and Elijah, with His face shining like the sun?
While people are full of surprises, sometimes those surprises are so terrifying that we steer our relationships towards the routine, the safe, the predictable, and the secure.
Do you remember writing in your friends’ yearbooks, “Don’t ever change?”
We want our friends to stay the same.
We want our spouses to stay the same.
Yet monotony can turn into a prison.
Last week, I was at Kroger, and I had the pleasure of running into Jane Pratt in the baking goods aisle. There, she told me that when she got married to John some years ago, she had no idea that saying “I do” meant she’d have to come up with something to cook him for dinner every night from now until the day she dies.
At that, another woman shopping for baking goods started to laugh out loud.
She was eavesdropping in the Kroger aisle and told us, “That’s why I became a flight attendant. I had to get away from cooking dinner night after night, always coming up with something new. My husband would wake up in the morning and ask me, ‘What’s for supper?’ I said to myself, ‘I have to get out of here!’”
The monotony of cooking dinner night after night after night seemed to her like a trap to be escaped, for while routine can feel safe, people need room to grow.
Relationships thrive on both routine and variety.
If you cook and he cleans, why not trade jobs for a week?
Or, better yet, go out to dinner.
Try something new.
Allow each other to break out of the rut.
That’s important in a marriage, and if that’s important in a marriage, wouldn’t that also be important with all our relationships, including our relationship with Jesus?
Does Jesus still surprise you?
Are you still dedicating yourself to the study of Scripture to learn about who He is?
Does following Him push you beyond your comfort zone, or have you put Him into a little box of your own expectations?
Has your relationship with Jesus fallen into a monotonous pattern of meatloaf on Monday, chicken on Tuesday, and then church on Sunday?
Peter didn’t want Him to change.
Up on the mountain top, Peter said to Jesus, “Lord, it is good for us to be here; if you wish, I will make three dwellings, one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.”
When you hear Peter say, “Lord, it is good to be here” up on this mountain top, know that what he’s really saying is, “Lord, let me keep you where I’m comfortable.”
Friends, we must let Jesus be who He is, not who we want Him to be, just as we must let our kids be who they were created to be.
We’re back in that season of high school seniors getting accepted to college.
Parents are thinking of their kids growing up and leaving home.
I tear up just thinking about Lily and Cece leaving home, so I ask parents who have already watched their chicks leave the nest for advice when I have the chance. One parent, years ago, told me that watching your kids leave home is heartbreaking. The only thing worse is watching them stay home forever.
My friends, you know that a part of every human relationship is allowing the people we love to grow and change and become who God called them to be.
Christ was called, not to be Peter’s best friend, but to be the Savior of the world.
Are you letting Jesus be Jesus or trying to put Him in a box and place Him on a shelf?
Nailing Him down was what they tried to do to Him 2,000 years ago, and people are doing it still.
We can’t put Him in a box and confine Him to our agendas.
No one can keep Him up on the mountaintop.
Instead, we must follow Him down from the mountain to encounter again all the broken and hurting people in the valley below, who are just as full of surprises as any one of us.
One of the great ministries of our church is the food pantry.
Leadership of this ministry has just changed.
Martie Moore, who led this ministry and brought it so far, has decided to really retire, so she’s passed the baton to Megan Rubio, an actual rocket scientist with a passion for service. For the first time this month, it was Megan sending out the monthly report of meals, diapers, books, and dog food distributed.
You see, under the leadership of Martie Moore, our pantry expanded.
Not only do we give out food on Tuesdays, but we also give out diapers, dog food, and children’s books. One station even collects prayer requests, but back to the children’s books.
Megan’s monthly report from the food pantry included the story of one child who went through our food line and received a brand-new children’s book a couple weeks ago.
That child was so touched by the gift and moved by the sentiment that the next week, she donated 10 of her old books to contribute to our effort.
I don’t know how you think of the people who come to our food line, but I assure you, those people, like all people, are so full of surprises that you can’t know them without coming down from the mountain top to meet them face-to-face.
People are full of surprises, and that goes for all people.
That goes for all people, even us.
Even Peter.
You may know that this road down from the mountain leads towards the arrest of Jesus, after which Peter will deny Him three times.
Such a moment of weakness filled Peter with such shame, and yet Jesus didn’t confine Peter to that moment. Jesus doesn’t confine us to any one step on our spiritual journey. So long as He is beside us, He will lead us beyond our sins and to salvation, so let us continue being surprised by each other just as Jesus is always willing to be surprised by us.
I want you to know that I plan on giving up social media for Lent because getting to know people based on what they post on social media makes me feel like I don’t like anyone.
I want to be surprised by the goodness of people, so I’m going to try to get to know some of them face-to-face again.
If all people are full of surprises then I’m not going to give up on people based on what they post on the internet.
I’m asking you to do the same thing.
Leave the comfort of your pew to get to know somebody new.
Leave the safety of your living room to be reintroduced to your neighbors.
Start up a conversation with the ladies you see in the grocery store aisle and be surprised by how much you have in common, for we live in a world where people are not all that different, and yet we often act like some are good and others are the enemy.
Did Jesus not come to save all people?
Did He not go down from the mountain to encounter even those who would arrest and crucify Him?
My friends, we cannot hide from the world up on the mountaintop, nor can we rest in our assumptions concerning the people of God, but being continually surprised by the people around us, let us follow Jesus out into the world.
Learn something new about someone who doesn’t look like you.
Learn something new about people who are suffering in this country.
Let us all come down from the mountain, following Jesus out into the world as He leads us all in the path of salvation.
Amen.
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