A podcast of sermons from worship at the First Congregational Church of Milton, United Church of Christ
Our Student Minister Emma Brewer-Wallin's final sermon with us.
We say this word every year on Palm Sunday. What does it actually mean?
From our Lenten series on racial justice, by Student Minister Emma Brewer-Wallin
A sermon from Youth Minister Rev. R.G. Wilson-Lyons
A sermon from Student Minister Emma Brewer-Wallin, recorded on January 3
This week has revealed to us that we are in the wilderness. Fortunately, the roots of our faith are set in the wilderness. The roots of any hopeful future will be set in how we respond together to this moment.
Student Minister Emma Brewer-Wallin offers a new take on empathy as she shares about her experience of hospital chaplaincy during a summer of pandemic and reckoning with racial justice
On the scroll they are just words. Can they be fulfilled in our hearing?
After every great calamity. There is a moment. Maybe a mere instant. Where a thin silence surrounds us. Where we stand in a place so devoid of orientation that we may not be able to bear it. What if that is where God speaks?
And have you ever tried to describe something so astonishingly beautiful that even the most poetic language you can muster falls flat, and you are left with that slightly helpless feeling of being unable to convey to another what you yourself have encountered?
If you feel like you are in a fog, you are not alone. Hear what scripture teaches us about living faithfully amidst so much uncertainty.
How does a 2,000 year old theological debate about animal sacrifice inform our ethics during a pandemic?
You can look at the painting that this sermon is about here
"Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds"
On Pentecost the church was born, not a building, but a people.
"God is our refuge and our strength, a present help in times of trouble" Psalm 42