Sunday Sermons

Pentecost: The Spirit as Fire and the Church for the Sake of the World

11 min · 27. Mai 2026
Episode Pentecost: The Spirit as Fire and the Church for the Sake of the World Cover

Beschreibung

Rev. Jordan Rippy describes Pentecost as a principal feast rooted in a Jewish harvest festival and as the fulfillment of Eastertide and the Ascension promise that the Holy Spirit (paraclete, a helper alongside) will be with the church. Noting biblical images of the Spirit—especially fire—Rev. Rippy emphasizes that at Pentecost the fire falls on people, then and now. Through a story about a child asking if one must go to church to be a Christian, he explains that Christian life is communal worship, service, and mutual help so congregants can be changed for the sake of the world. The Spirit gives fearful disciples, especially Peter, a voice and empowers ordinary people. He closes with a Desert Fathers saying urging believers to “become all flame.” 00:00 Pentecost Feastday 01:10 Easter Promise Fulfilled 01:53 Paraclete Helper Spirit 02:41 Spirit as Fire 03:56 Why Church Matters 04:54 Family Story Answer 06:29 Changed for World 07:20 Spirit Gives Voice 08:35 Church Beyond Opinions 09:25 Become All Flame 10:36 Pentecost Sending Prayer This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com [https://stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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Episode The Trinity as a Key Change & Finding the Current of God Cover

The Trinity as a Key Change & Finding the Current of God

Rev. Kristen Hawley preaches for Trinity Sunday at St. David’s Episcopal Church, noting the Church’s long, often confusing attempts to explain the Trinity (including the Athanasian Creed) and emphasizing that people come to understanding in different ways. She connects the Trinity to delight, inspiration, and praise, referencing a staff Easter project in which each person wrote about what helps them notice and engage God (from biscuits and words to trains, shoes, gardening, dance, and music). Describing the Trinity as a never-ending relational “dance” and current, she urges congregants to find their way into it through what moves them. She offers the musical key change as an image of Trinity and creation, using Beyoncé’s “Love on Top” and the repetitive, building pattern of Genesis—God said, saw, created, blessed, and it was good—as examples of “home” and surprise. She encourages parishioners to listen for life’s key changes that draw them into deeper connectivity and remind them “it is good.”00:22 Trinity Sunday Explained00:58 Athanasius Creed Deep Dive01:58 Is Trinitarian Language Helpful01:18 Different Paths to Truth03:10 Praise and What Moves Us03:20 Easter Staff Reflections04:01 Delightful Examples and Takeaway05:00 Entering the Trinity Current05:44 Delight as Spiritual Compass00:05 Trinity as Key Change06:30 How Key Changes Work07:29 Beyoncé Demo Love on Top09:35 Genesis as Refrain and Shift11:18 Finding Your Holy Spirit Stride12:43 Music Memories and Everyday Modulations14:26 Listen for the Key Change This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com [https://stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

Gestern14 min
Episode Branded by the Holy Spirit: One Spirit, Many Gifts Cover

Branded by the Holy Spirit: One Spirit, Many Gifts

On Pentecost Sunday at the Celtic Service at St. David’s Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C., Rev. Kristen Hawley reflects on why people come to church by comparing church identity to honest branding and slogans. She recounts teaching the Pentecost story in children’s chapel, where a child defines church as “whenever two or three are gathered” with God, and connects this to the Pentecost reading in which the Holy Spirit breaks down barriers of language and division. Drawing on Paul’s letter to the Corinthians, she emphasizes that many different gifts come from one Spirit and are meant to complete, not compete with, one another. She points to congregants stepping in when staff were absent as evidence of Spirit-filled community marked by love, shared burdens, welcome, and joy, and offers a simple slogan: “St. David’s, not perfect, working on it together.”00:00 Welcome and Pentecost00:33 Church Branding Ideas02:09 Kids Chapel Definition04:22 Pentecost Story and Unity05:39 Corinth and Many Gifts07:40 Spirit in Action Today10:35 Love Across Divisions12:09 Our Slogan and Sending This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com [https://stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

2. Juni 202612 min
Episode Pentecost: The Spirit as Fire and the Church for the Sake of the World Cover

Pentecost: The Spirit as Fire and the Church for the Sake of the World

Rev. Jordan Rippy describes Pentecost as a principal feast rooted in a Jewish harvest festival and as the fulfillment of Eastertide and the Ascension promise that the Holy Spirit (paraclete, a helper alongside) will be with the church. Noting biblical images of the Spirit—especially fire—Rev. Rippy emphasizes that at Pentecost the fire falls on people, then and now. Through a story about a child asking if one must go to church to be a Christian, he explains that Christian life is communal worship, service, and mutual help so congregants can be changed for the sake of the world. The Spirit gives fearful disciples, especially Peter, a voice and empowers ordinary people. He closes with a Desert Fathers saying urging believers to “become all flame.” 00:00 Pentecost Feastday 01:10 Easter Promise Fulfilled 01:53 Paraclete Helper Spirit 02:41 Spirit as Fire 03:56 Why Church Matters 04:54 Family Story Answer 06:29 Changed for World 07:20 Spirit Gives Voice 08:35 Church Beyond Opinions 09:25 Become All Flame 10:36 Pentecost Sending Prayer This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com [https://stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

27. Mai 202611 min
Episode Power to Be Witnesses: Identity Before Action Cover

Power to Be Witnesses: Identity Before Action

Rev. Daniel Bentley’s sermon at St. David’s Episcopal Church (Washington, D.C.) on the Seventh Sunday of Easter reflects on Acts 1, where the disciples ask Jesus when Israel’s kingdom will be restored, and Jesus instead promises the Holy Spirit and names their identity as his witnesses in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and to the ends of the earth. He emphasizes that Christian life is not primarily a checklist of deeds; faithful actions flow from first knowing who we are and whose we are. Congregants become witnesses through encountering the risen Christ in baptism, Scripture, prayer, and the Eucharistic table, and then live that witness in ordinary acts of patience, presence, and care, illustrated by a marathon runner’s “being” and the life remembered at Carolyn Bail’s funeral. 00:00 Power to Witness 00:21 Disciples Ask When 01:14 Identity Over Timeline 02:08 Being Before Doing 03:13 What Makes a Witness 04:07 Meeting Christ Today 05:06 Marathon Runner Analogy 06:47 What Witness Looks Like 08:24 Come to Table 00:13 Closing Amen This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com [https://stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

27. Mai 20269 min
Episode In: Abiding in Christ Through Life’s Transitions Cover

In: Abiding in Christ Through Life’s Transitions

In: Abiding in Christ Through Life’s TransitionsRev. Kristen Hawley greets parishioners on Mother’s Day and reflects on last year’s sermon word “with,” introducing this year’s word from the Gospel: “in,” or “abide.” Drawing from Jesus’ promises (“I am in my Father,” “the Spirit will be in you”) and Paul (“In him we live and move and have our being”), she describes “being in” as the central lens through which life is interpreted, like a marriage serving as the nucleus that steadies everything else. She situates the Gospel in the disciples’ anxious transition before the Ascension, noting Jesus offers not a “spiritual GPS” but presence through the Holy Spirit, continuing Christ’s life among them. Using C.S. Lewis and nesting dolls, she emphasizes God’s indwelling closeness and invites congregants to remember they are already in God, live in love, and be a welcoming, life-giving church amid life’s changes.00:00 Mothers Day Welcome00:12 Last Years Word With01:24 Todays Word In02:33 What It Means To Be In03:36 Marriage As The Center04:36 No Map Just Presence05:21 Gospel Context And Transition07:26 Promise Of The Advocate09:08 Indwelling Not Distance10:55 C S Lewis And Nesting Dolls13:03 Abide In Me Looks Like Love14:11 Steadiness Through Transitions15:02 A Church Alive In Christ17:25 Final Invitation To Live In This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com [https://stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

14. Mai 202618 min