by Stephen Phelps | Jul 1, 2012 | America, democracy, freedom, sermon 2012, social justice
You need both, you know—both wings. Every nation, every organization, needs the conservatives, who give attention to the existing structure. And every nation needs its liberals and progressives, who give attention to what must yet come into being, and must come into our being, if we are to adapt to the forces of change in society and technology which history throws up like siege works against every living thing.
by Stephen Phelps | May 6, 2012 | communion, mass incarceratiom, sermon 2012, social justice
Abide.In.Me Texts on Sunday, May 6, 2012 Acts 16: 16-40; John 15: 4-8 In more than half the books of the New Testament, someone is in prison. The word “prison” peppers the whole of Acts. Good people are being stopped, frisked, stripped, flogged, thrown...
by Stephen Phelps | Mar 25, 2012 | Lent, racism, sermon 2012, social justice, suffering, trial
But we are going there, to a place so far from the mere troubles of institution and organization which have vexed us. Hungering after our own experience of God, we will make the last appeal on behalf of the littlest and lost, the deceived and the dead, and thus we shall meet God anew on holy ground in the faith of the future.
by Stephen Phelps | Mar 4, 2012 | America, criminal justice, democracy, Lent, mass incarceratiom, race, racism, sermon 2012, social justice, suffering
Don’t you sometimes feel that religion, the way we do it, is no match for the way the world does wrong? Every day in this city, police stop and frisk–violate–two thousand mostly black and brown men doing nothing wrong–and what has church to say to that sorrow? A few weeks ago, an eighteen year old Bronx boy was shot and killed by a policeman in the bathroom of his own home. He was unarmed, scared, dumping something in the toilet bowl. What is old time religion for that boy, that family, for any citizen whose heart cries out at the dawning of another day of evil?
by Stephen Phelps | Jan 15, 2012 | economic justice, militarism, nonviolence, racism, sermon 2012, social justice, spiritual community
n this day of honor for our prophet Martin Luther King, it is well that we remember that no individual, no matter how skilled or gifted, ever simply leads a people out of the valley of the shadow of sleep. No, the rising of a people is a work far more complex. It resists all science and prediction. But this much is sure. The greatness of a leader hangs on the people’s awakening to the severity of their crisis.
by Stephen Phelps | Feb 27, 2011 | democracy, history, Lent, salvation, sermon 2011, social justice
. . . Thus, after a long affliction, there was a revolution in Egypt. The people had been treated harshly. Their labors were hard, their pay like slave wages. Then, on the wing of an exterminating angel moving swiftly over the land, the oppression in Egypt crumbled. According to Exodus, it happened one night. According to our newer news, it happened in one fortnight of February 2011. Now, the whole world is astonished as Tunisia, Bahrain, Yemen, Iran, Libya, and even Iraq at last feel movements of the people against their oppressors. But it is too soon to guess what governance the people will secure in these lands. Trusting an ancient pattern, let us undertake to think more clearly about our times by returning to Israel’s central story of liberation in Egypt. . .
Recent Comments