Mount Olive Lutheran Church

  • Home
  • About
    • Welcome Video
    • Becoming a Member
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Staff & Vestry
    • History
    • Our Building
      • Windows
      • Icons
  • Worship
    • Worship Online
    • Liturgy Schedule
    • Holy Communion
    • Life Passages
    • Sermons
    • Servant Schedule
  • Music
    • Choirs
    • Music & Fine Arts Series
      • Bach Tage
    • Organ
    • Early Music Minnesota
  • Community
    • Neighborhood Ministry
      • Neighborhood Partners
    • Global Ministry
      • Global Partners
    • Congregational Life
    • Capital Appeal
    • Climate Justice
    • Stewardship
    • Foundation
  • Learning
    • Adult Learning
    • Children & Youth
    • Confirmation
    • Louise Schroedel Memorial Library
  • Resources
    • Respiratory Viruses
    • Stay Connected
    • Olive Branch Newsletter
    • Calendar
    • Servant Schedule
    • CDs & Books
    • Event Registration
  • Contact

Gathered in Love

March 13, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

God’s loving wings are wide open to embrace you, and there is no reason not to go  in and find warmth and healing and life.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Second Sunday in Lent, year C
Text: Luke 13:31-35

Beloved in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen

We almost lost our little dog Maggie this week.

She snuck out as I was leaving for work. She’s pretty fast, and must have darted out through the garage while I wasn’t looking. She’s broken free before in the summer – she loves to run. We know she’ll always come back, but there are coyotes nearby and if there’s a squirrel, she wouldn’t stop for a car.

It wasn’t summer, though, it was bitterly cold, and we didn’t know she was gone. A few hours after I left, our neighbor found her barking outside her door. Fortunately, our neighbor and her wife put our packages in the garage for us, and we for them, so she knew our code and took Maggie home.

Our fear after this is not the same as Jesus’ despair at his own people being unwilling to let him draw them all under the loving wings of God’s embrace. Maggie’s only a dog, not a whole nation.

But there is this: Maggie broke out of the loving, warm place that embraced her, to run free. And pretty soon, she likely regretted her decision, and longed for safety and warmth over that freedom. Maybe Jesus’ reluctant chickens have regrets, too.

Jesus proclaimed God’s grace and love for all people.

He had compassion on all who suffered, or were lost, crushed by life, looking for God. And lots of people let him embrace them in the loving wings of God the Mother Hen. But lots did not. Why?

Well, Jesus also called people to a new way, to repent of what they were doing, to change direction. To love God and love neighbor as their Scriptures had long proclaimed, to live in God’s reign that was theirs now, not just in heaven. For some, maybe that was a reason not to follow. Or even to have him killed.

But all the leaders that wanted him out of the way trusted in God, knew the Scriptures, heard their call to love of God and neighbor all their lives. They knew the prophets, and God’s deep concern for those who were poor and in need, the ones most attracted to Jesus. Whether or not they believed Jesus was God’s Son, they ought to have been glad to hear him, support him.

Why would they be unwilling to be drawn into the love of God Jesus embodied and preached? More to the point, since all these people are dead long ago: why would you be unwilling?

Maggie suggests that seeking freedom to do whatever you want isn’t always the best thing for you. But we want it.

If little chicks in the farmyard are running wherever they like and the mother hen tries to gather them, it’s for a reason. Maybe a storm is coming, or a fox is near. She wants her babies safe under her wings, doing it her way. But what does a chick know about foxes or storms? Running’s more fun. Maggie certainly hadn’t read the weather forecast that day.

Freedom to be what you want to be, do whatever you want to do, is intoxicating, even for us. No one gets to tell you anything. Just because we’re here doesn’t mean we always want to do things Christ’s way. But if you accept the embrace of Christ the Mother Hen, you accept the way of Christ. The Mother Hen wants you to live in a way that is abundant and good for you and for all. The way of love of God and neighbor, the path of vulnerable love. That’s the path of healing and God’s warm embrace of you.

So when you go under those wings, you give up your freedom to be and do whatever you want, to find freedom to be God’s love in the world. Maybe you’re not willing to do that.

And of course, the Mother Hen decides who else is under those wings.

That was a lot of the resistance to Jesus’ ministry and proclamation. He attracted all the wrong kinds of people. People that some simply called “sinners” – not calling them by name or occupation, just naming their whole identity as something they did wrong. Some of those drawn to Jesus were beggars, people with mental illness, hated tax collectors. Even enemies, whom Jesus said also were worthy of love and prayers.

It’s good to know you are loved and embraced under God’s holy wings, gathered into the never-ending forgiveness of God for you, snuggling your spirit into the warmth of your acceptance by God.

But look around you under those wings. How long will it take to see someone you don’t want to share the space with? Someone you think no one should love, let alone God? Inside or outside Christianity, we all have some we could name.

You might not be willing to share God’s embrace with some of them.

But life is under those wings. Warmth, healing, hope.

It’s because Jesus welcomes sinners and hypocrites and people who struggle that you know you have a place. Every single one of us is welcomed under God’s maternal wings of love solely because God loves us, not because we deserved it.

And a life free to do whatever you want becomes a life of pain and misery, because no one wants to be with anyone that selfish, that hard, that uncaring of the needs of others. That path seems fine until you realize how bitterly cold your life has become and you wonder where the warmth of love can be for you.

All Jesus, the Son of the Living God, wants is to draw all God’s children into the warm embrace of God’s love.

And put them on a path where that embrace is shared with more and more. Until all are under the wings. All know God’s healing touch and life. All are warm and cared for.

There’s absolutely no reason for you to stay away. And if you do, you’ll learn at some point what a mistake it was to value your own stubborn way over a way of grace and healing, or to value staying away from those you don’t want to be with over a place of warmth and life.

“How often I have desired to gather you together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not willing,” Jesus says.

It doesn’t have to be that way.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

Worship, March 13, 2022

March 11, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Second Sunday in Lent, year C

We are called into the loving embrace of God, our Mother Hen, who longs to gather all God’s children into the warmth and healing of God’s life.

Download worship folder for Sunday, March 13, 2022.

Presiding and Preaching: Pr. Joseph G. Crippen

Readings and prayers: John Crippen, lector; Mark Pipkorn, assisting minister

Organist: Cantor David Cherwien

Download the readings for next Sunday for this Tuesday’s noon Bible study.

Click here for previous livestreamed liturgies from Mount Olive (archived on the Mount Olive YouTube channel.)

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

Worship, Wednesday, March 9, 2022

March 9, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

Midweek Lenten Vespers, week of Lent 1

Download worship folder for Vespers, March 9, 2022, 7:00 p.m.

Leading: Vicar Andrea Bonneville DeNaples

Sacristan and reader: Lora Dundek

Organist: Cantor David Cherwien

Click here for previous livestreamed liturgies from Mount Olive (archived on the Mount Olive YouTube channel.)

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

What You Want

March 6, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Spirit asks you, “What kind of a person do you want to be?” and fills you and gives you power to be Christ, if that’s what you want, for the blessing of the world.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The First Sunday in Lent, year C
Text: Luke 4:1-13 (plus v. 14)

Beloved in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen

What kind of a person do you want to be?

A friend of mine and his husband have a really nice, loving, fifth grader. At his recent teacher conference, though, his teacher reported that when he gets into competitive situations he can be a little aggressive with his peers. But she said, then she asks him, “Is this the kind of person you want to be?” And he’s able to step back from that behavior.

That’s an amazing teacher. It’s a brilliant and beautiful way to guide a young person on the challenging path of maturity.

So it’s kind of surprising the devil is the one who asks this brilliant question of Jesus today.

“What kind of person do you want to be?” is the heart of Jesus’ testing.

With hair dripping wet from his baptism in the Jordan, Jesus goes into the wilderness for forty days, to learn what it will mean for him to be God’s Anointed, God’s Messiah.

But the devil focuses that learning. If you are the Son of God, the devil says, what kind of Messiah do you want to be? Will Jesus use his divine power to help himself when he’s in need, like making bread to feed his famished body? Will he use his divine power to dominate and control the world? Will he test the Father and this mission to see if he really is loved and protected?

It turns out the devil is doing Jesus a huge favor. Jesus will face these same questions on that terrible Thursday night to come, in the garden on the Mount of Olives. This testing in the wilderness not only sets Jesus up for his earthly ministry. It prepares him for the torture and execution he will face, and the testing question of whether he will use his power to stop it.

But the devil is also doing you and me a huge favor.

What kind of person do you want to be? the evangelists ask you.

Jesus isn’t the only child of God, or the only anointed one of God asked that question. Matthew and Luke relate this story because it’s your testing, too. And mine.

What will you do with your blessings and wealth? Use them to remove your own pain and suffering, turn those stones into your bread? Will your priority be making sure you’re comfortable and cared for?

What will you do with whatever privilege and power you have? Maybe you’re not literally kneeling on someone’s neck until they die, but where is your knee and is anyone under it? That question haunts me. Maybe you’re not an autocratic despot brutally attacking a peaceful neighbor, but how do you manipulate your world? Is your comfort and your opinion and your security a higher goal than that of your neighbors?

And what will you do with God’s promise that you are beloved? Will you try to force the Triune God to prove that by giving you all you want, answering all your prayers as you demand?

This story says your sufferings and struggles aren’t the test, any more than Jesus’ were.

The test as God’s child, anointed in baptismal water, is what you do with your struggles, your suffering. And what you do with whatever wealth, power, privilege, or ability to care for yourself you have.

This story says one question is vital for me and for you: What kind of person do you want to be?

Do you want to be a faithful servant of God, living as Christ in the world? Do you want to serve as you were baptized to serve, as God’s Anointed?

If you do, Jesus’ path is the faithful path. A path that doesn’t turn stones into bread for yourself, but uses your gifts and blessings to feed and nurture and care for others. A path that doesn’t seek to dominate or manipulate so you get what you want, but sets aside power, becomes vulnerable for the sake of others. A path that doesn’t need constant proof of God’s blessing and care, but trusts God even when it’s not easy to see or sense.

But I haven’t told you the wonder you need to hear.

Listen to what Luke says once more: “Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, returned from the Jordan and was led by the Spirit in the wilderness,” Luke begins today. And then, at the end: “Then Jesus, filled with the power of the Spirit, returned to Galilee, and a report about him spread through all the surrounding country.”

Jesus’ whole testing, answering what kind of a person he wanted to be, the fasting, the prayer, the discernment, all happens within one unbreakable reality: he is filled with the power of the Holy Spirit from beginning to end, Spirit-led throughout.

And if you say, “well, that’s Jesus, the Son of God, one with the Father and the Spirit in the Trinity, so of course the Spirit filled him and led him throughout,” you’re missing Luke’s point, and his joy.

In fact, Luke wrote an entirely separate book from this Gospel to tell you and all who are baptized into Christ this truth. In Acts, Luke repeatedly says that whatever Jesus was able to do filled with the Spirit, the followers of Jesus can do filled with the Spirit. That’s your promise. It cannot be taken from you.

You are God’s child, without question. You are God’s anointed one, without question.

If you want to be like Jesus, walk as Christ, be a part of God’s healing and love in the world, even if it’s hard, even if that means you’re vulnerable, or hurt by others, or it costs you in difficult ways, then good news, Luke says.

Because you are also filled with the Holy Spirit, without question. The Spirit leads you in whatever wilderness you serve, without question. And you will endure and thrive in every test with the power of the Spirit helping you mature and grow as Christ in your world, to be God’s blessing to whomever you meet. Without question.

Just know that the Spirit will also be the One periodically asking in your heart and mind, “Is this the kind of person you want to be?” Listen when you hear that, be ready to answer. It will change your life.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

Worship, Sunday afternoon, March 6, 2022

March 6, 2022 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

Lent Procession liturgy, 4:00 p.m.

In song and prayer we gather at the doorway of Lent to be strengthened for the journey.

Download worship folder for Lent Procession, March 6, 2022, 4:00 p.m.

Leading: Pr. Joseph G. Crippen, Vicar Andrea Bonneville DeNaples

Readings: Cynthia Prosek, Eric Manuel, David Hellerich, Al Bostelmann, Jim Bargmann

Choir: Mount Olive Cantorei

Organist: Cantor David Cherwien

Click here for previous livestreamed liturgies from Mount Olive (archived on the Mount Olive YouTube channel.)

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 90
  • 91
  • 92
  • 93
  • 94
  • …
  • 165
  • Next Page »

MOUNT OLIVE LUTHERAN CHURCH
3045 Chicago Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55407

Map and Directions >

612-827-5919
welcome@mountolivechurch.org


  • Olive Branch Newsletter
  • Servant Schedule
  • Sermons
  • Sitemap

facebook

mpls-area-synod-primary-reverseric-outline
elca_reversed_large_website_secondary
lwf_logo_horizNEG-ENG

Copyright © 2026 ·Mount Olive Church ·

  • Home
  • About
    • Welcome Video
    • Becoming a Member
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Staff & Vestry
    • History
    • Our Building
      • Windows
      • Icons
  • Worship
    • Worship Online
    • Liturgy Schedule
    • Holy Communion
    • Life Passages
    • Sermons
    • Servant Schedule
  • Music
    • Choirs
    • Music & Fine Arts Series
      • Bach Tage
    • Organ
    • Early Music Minnesota
  • Community
    • Neighborhood Ministry
      • Neighborhood Partners
    • Global Ministry
      • Global Partners
    • Congregational Life
    • Capital Appeal
    • Climate Justice
    • Stewardship
    • Foundation
  • Learning
    • Adult Learning
    • Children & Youth
    • Confirmation
    • Louise Schroedel Memorial Library
  • Resources
    • Respiratory Viruses
    • Stay Connected
    • Olive Branch Newsletter
    • Calendar
    • Servant Schedule
    • CDs & Books
    • Event Registration
  • Contact