Giving it all to God
a sermon on Matthew 16:21-28
The Rev’d Adam Brown
Giving it all to God
a sermon on Matthew 16:21-28
The Rev’d Adam Brown
Keys to the Kingdom
a sermon on Matthew 16:13-20
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
Walking on Water
a sermon on Matthew 14:22-33
The Rev’d Adam Brown
The Feeding of the 5000
a sermon on Matthew 14:13-21
The Rev’d Adam Brown
The Kingdom of heaven is like…
a collaborative sermon of shared parables
Matthew 13:31-33, 44-52
Gathering in the wheat and the weeds at the end of the age
a sermon on Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
choosing the easier yoke
a sermon on Matthew 11:16-19,25-30
The Rev’d Adam Brown
How long, O Lord, how long?
Holy Lament and Holy Listening
a sermon on Psalm 13
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
The Life of Odeiman
Sacred Teachings Podcast
The Most Rev’d Mark MacDonald
This year, we listened to the powerful story of The Life of Odeiman, shared by National Indigenous Anglican Archbishop Mark MacDonald as part of the second season of the Sacred Teachings Podcast. Archbishop Mark teaches us about the self-sacrificial love shown by Odeiman and brought to our attention each year in the delicious gift that is the strawberry.
Justified by Grace – Called to Justice
Reflections on Prison Ministry
The Rev’d Caroline Ducros
For I am with you always, even to the end of the age
a sermon on Matthew 28:16-20
The Rev’d Adam Brown
Wind, Fire, Word, Water
Gifts of Transformative Power for a World in Need of Transformation
a call to racial justice
Rev. Rhonda Waters
Why do you stand looking up to heaven?
a sermon on Acts 1:6-14
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
We have another Advocate
a sermon on John 14:15-21
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
Lord, show us the Father…again and again and again
a sermon on John 14: 1-14
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
How do you stay home if you don’t have one? Homelessness, COVID-19, and the future
a presentation by Kaite Burkholder-Harris
Alliance to End Homelessness Ottawa
Recognizing Jesus Means Recognizing Ourselves
a sermon on the Road to Emmaus (Luke 24:13-35)
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
Found by Resurrection?
Laurna Strikwerda
This year, I am starting Eastertide reluctantly. I want to stay in Lent, which feels like a more appropriate season for rest and withdrawing. I don’t quite feel ready for resurrection, not yet.
And I am starting Eastertide full of sympathy for Thomas, who has a lead role in this week’s Gospel passage from John. The disciples, we are told, have gathered in a room, where they have locked their doors for fear of the Jewish religious authorities. They are hiding after Jesus has died, and their hopes – for a revolution, a transformation, a fulfillment of prophecies – have been dashed, or so they think.
Imagining myself there, in that room, the first word that comes to mind is “safe”. The locked room would probably feel like one small, certain measure of safety in a violent and chaotic world. Right now, when we in fact need to stay inside, I am even more primed to think of being inside, being locked in, as safe.
Suddenly, regardless of the locked door, Jesus appears. The disciples rejoice, seeing him. But Thomas is not there, and only hears the story later. His words, “unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands, and put my finger in the mark of the nails and my hand in his side, I will not believe,” feel even more poignant now, when the usual ways that we could express care or concern, a hand on the shoulder, a hug, are impossible to give anyone outside our immediate circle. If the resurrection happened today, would Thomas have been able to believe?
My heart goes out to him, and the way he was so honest in his doubts. But Thomas was able to put his hands in the mark of his nails and the hole in his side. He was able to experience the signs of Jesus’s resurrection. He was able to believe.
This Eastertide, still feeling more in Lent than Easter, I wonder if I am actually able to believe in the resurrection, or if it is only a story. I love thinking about the resurrection, love hearing stories about moments that point to renewal, transformation, and rebirth. But I realize that despite the fact that I love stories about resurrection, I sometimes don’t live my life as if the resurrection is true. Sometimes, I live my life to be safe, staying inside both physically and metaphorically.
So as Easter begins, I am starting to look at my life, and wonder if it resembles the life of someone who follows a risen Savior. I am starting to listen, to see if I might notice resurrection in the here and now, those small signs of hope that remind us that Jesus is risen. I am trying to listen and to begin praying, a practice I have long struggled with – actually setting aside time to listen for God. As strange as that feels, this Eastertide, I have a sense of hope when I remember Thomas, tentatively reaching out, touching Jesus’s hands and side. Resurrection found him, even if he didn’t yet believe.
Hope-filled Fear and Fear-filled Hope
a sermon for Easter in a time of pandemic
The Rev’d Rhona Waters
where we consider what “take up your cross” really means
a sermon for Good Friday
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
Take up your cross and follow me. That’s what Jesus told his disciples and those who would be his disciples as they gathered around to watch him heal diseases and cast out demons and go toe-to-toe with the Pharisees. Take up your cross and follow me.
How many of them, do you imagine, understood what he meant before this moment? How many of them, as they watched in horror as Jesus was forced to carry the instrument of his execution – how many of them had to discard lovely poetic explanations for what he meant, for what the cross represented, for why they were right to follow him in the way they chose to follow him?
How many of them, as they watched in horror as Jesus was nailed to a cross and lifted up so that his death might be a sign and a warning – how many of them wept not only for Jesus but for themselves?
When Jesus chooses to speak in plain language, it is often too much to bear.
Take up your cross and follow me.
Even then, Jesus owned his cross. It was not imposed upon him by Rome or the Temple authorities, although they were the ones who passed sentence. He took it up as an act of self-giving – knowing that the life he was called to lead; the life he was inviting others to lead – would surely lead to suffering and death for the sake of that life.
Because a life faithfully lived for the love of other people, the love of the world, necessarily includes suffering – and all life necessarily includes death.
This truth is revealed with an unpleasant starkness on this particular Good Friday when we are all called to take up our cross and follow Jesus, albeit in different ways. And to name all the ways as participation in Jesus’ suffering is not intended to suggest that all suffering is the same; all risks equal; all sacrifices interchangeable. But there is no need for competition – there are crosses enough to go round.
People working with and for the sick and dying; people working with and for those living in shelters and rooming houses and under bridges; people working in grocery stores and pharmacies under stressful circumstances and not knowing who might be bringing disease into their places of work.
People living in fear for vulnerable loved ones; parents and grandparents who won’t stay home or who are in retirement residences or care homes; dear ones who already suffer from illness or disability.
People who contracted COVID-19 and are sick; some of whom are dying of a disease that seems to barely touch some while it kills others; people who are mourning those who have died but have to wait to gather for funerals.
People who have lost income; mental well-being; physical well-being; relationships due to social distance and isolation. People who have had to postpone weddings; cancel long-awaited travel; give up classes.
People who are working long hours to learn more; to find solutions; to reach decisions.
Even, simply, people who have lost the ability to gather for prayer and song and sacrament.
People are suffering for the sake of the well-being of all; for love of the world – so that the greatest suffering may be lessened, especially for the most vulnerable.
This is, fundamentally, the sign of the cross; suffering entered into for love’s sake.
Jesus did not live his life for the cross’s sake – he lived his life for love’s sake and so willingly took up the cross that such a life demanded. His love for the people he dwelt amongst – people suffering from illness and oppression and division and guilt – led to a life that led to the cross. God’s love for the whole hurting world, led to a life that led to the cross.
Our love, for a world endangered by a virus we don’t yet understand, leads to a life that leads to the cross.
And today we are reminded that we are not alone with our cross for suffering entered into for love’s sake is transformed by that love – not made easier, necessarily, or less risky – but made holy because it is God’s own suffering.
Take up your cross and follow me, Jesus said. He is with us as we struggle under our burdens, before and beside us to show us the way.
And, lest we forget, the way leads not simply to death but through death to life – this is our hope and our faith.
So, this Good Friday, as we contemplate the cross, I invite you to claim it for yourself. Unite yourself to Jesus in his compassion and his love and his suffering. Offer your own sorrows and struggles and fears as a sacrifice to be made holy by God’s love in and for you. And then I invite you to wait, in faithful hope and longing, for the life that is to come.
Water without a Bucket
a sermon on the Samaritan Woman, Jesus, and closed churches during the COVID 19 outbreak
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
A sermon on Matthew 4:1-11
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
Matthew 17:1-9
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
You have heard it said … but I say to you …
Matthew 5:21-37
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
you are the salt of the earth
Matthew 5:13-20
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
Powerful, moving stories from people of Ascension, revealing how God has made Godself known to them in their lives.
Dave Andrews
Powerful, moving stories from people of Ascension, revealing how God has made Godself known to them in their lives.
Steve de Paul
Powerful, moving stories from people of Ascension, revealing how God has made Godself known to them in their lives.
Sarah Keeshan
suddenly the heavens were opened to him …
Matthew 3:13-17
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
… he was in the world, and the world came into being through him;
yet the world did not know him …
John 1:(1-9) 10-18
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
… and they shall name him Emmanuel …
Matthew 1:18-25
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
… I am sending my messenger ahead of you, who will prepare your way before you …
Matthew 11:2-11
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
… the voice of one crying out in the wilderness …
Matthew 3:1-12
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
… but about that day and hour no one knows …
Matthew 24:36-44
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
… remember me when you come into your kingdom …
Luke 23:33-43
The Rev’d Linda Posthuma
Lives of the Saints
Ms. Christine Burton
Theological Student
a pharisee and a tax collector go into a temple …
Luke 18:9-14
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
What do we think scripture is?
Luke 18:1-8
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
the parable of the ten lepers and gratitude for creation
Luke 17:11-19
The Rev’d Rhonda Waters
Church of the Ascension is a parish of the Anglican Diocese of Ottawa,
and the Anglican Church of Canada.
We stand on the traditional and unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishnabe nation.