Sermon Stuff
The following is the conclusion of a sermon Pastor Paul preached on August 5, 2007, the 18th Sunday of Time after Pentecost,
the Sunday he returned from his vacation in Argentina.  
This reading has been added to the website due to popular request.  
It was originally quoted as the lead article for Forum Letter,
(American Lutheran Publicity Bureau; Delhi, New York) Volume 36, Number 7; July, 2007.


Pools of gentleness, oases of compassion

"It is not, I think, being unduly pessimistic to suggest that we are entering another Dark Age.  The threat now comes, not from savage tribes like the Vandels, Goths, and Huns, but from the brutalising pressures of advertising and the mass media, the crudeness and violence of much popular music and entertainment, and the inexorable rise of the consumer society, with its rampant acquisitiveness and selfishness.  If the churches are to make any kind of effective stand for the Christian values which are increasingly under attack, it is surely by following the example of the Celtic monasteries and becoming little pools of gentleness and enlightenment, oases of compassion and charity in the ever extending desert of secular materialism.  This will not be an easy calling.  It will mean modern Christians becoming like the Celtic monks and pilgrims, never feeling quite at home or at rest in this world, ever seeking their place of resurrection and constantly invoking God's presence and protection against evil forces.  But we will also have much to help us on our way: the inspiration of music, art, and poetry, the refreshment of nature, and the companionship not just of fellow pilgrims among the living, but also the whole host of heaven, that great company who have already traveled the way before us." --The Celtic Way, by Ian Bradley (Darton Longman & Todd Ltd; 2004).