Field Notes: Stories from St. Martin's
In this Pentecost Sunday message, the Rev. Mark Odieny opens with a disarmingly honest confession: as a youth leader in Kenya, he once faked speaking in tongues to meet the expectations of his peers. That moment of pretending becomes the launching pad for a frank exploration of how deeply human the desire to perform and impress truly is.Drawing on 1 Corinthians, Mark connects the divisions in the ancient church at Corinth to familiar dynamics in modern Texas, where extreme wealth and poverty often sit side by side, and where certain churches are built around the celebrity of a single pastor's gifts. He challenges the congregation to see how spiritual gifts, when turned into status markers, can become the very things that divide the Body of Christ.The heart of the message is a vivid personal story: a wire brush injury on a factory floor that took Mark off work for a week, despite affecting only a small patch of his thigh. The whole body suffers when any part is wounded. The same is true of the church.Key takeaways:- Every member of the Body of Christ carries a necessary gift, from preaching to ushering to caring for restless five-year-olds in the pew- A bicycle chain is strongest at its weakest link- Diversity is not a problem to manage; it is the source of the church's beauty and strengthThe sermon closes with a simple, joyful Pentecost invitation: "Let us be different."
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