These letters from Pastor Harry and church leaders explore the challenges we face as people of faith in a complicated and fearful world, not unlike the world that Paul faced, and not unlike the world that Dr. King faced down.
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March 22, 2025
Dear Saints in Santa Fe, and other far-off places:
Greetings in the name and spirit of Jesus Christ!
When I think about it, I am a bit amused and somewhat surprised.
I never imagined in my early years that I would ever give a sermon, let alone keep giving them for forty-one years! By my rough calculation I have given 1,600 sermons and logged around 13,000 hours preparing them.
I cringe thinking about my first sermons and still cringe when I can’t figure out a way to make scripture come alive and grab hold of us and take us to a new address. That’s on me, not scripture. It has plenty of power and resources to change lives.
And it is still relevant today, surprisingly so. I look to the prophets because they have been here before. I look to Jesus because he dealt with oppression and a cruel and callous ruling class. I look to the ordinary folks caught up in extraordinary times. A preacher’s role is to lift up scripture so you can see it and experience it and then want it to walk with you out of the sanctuary and into your life and into our world.
I thought I was doing OK with all this until a presbytery meeting held at my Ohio church on Saturday, March 4, 2000. I remember the date because that was the day my (preaching) life changed. A storyteller named Dennis Dewey told us to get rid of our manuscripts and throw away our notes . . . now . . . and tell the story. People listen to stories. Our ears perk up and our memories and imaginations go into high gear.
Convinced, I walked to the pulpit the next day with nothing in my hands. It was like jumping out of an airplane hoping the parachute would open (the thought of which terrifies me, by the way!). I remember I couldn’t remember everything I had prepared. I stumbled around a bit and tried to look calm as if I’d done this a thousand times. But I did it once, and then the next week, and the next month and the next year all the way to my sermon last Sunday. I never looked back.
Somewhere along the way I decided to get away from behind pulpit because it became a barrier between me and the congregation. I found I could tell stories better this way, aligned with those gospel stories which were always breaking down walls separating people from God and one another. Some have suggested that I am just winging it, as if I didn’t take the proper time to prepare. I can assure you that I am scribbling notes and living with the scripture all week long. It wakes me up at night with something else to tell me. I keep to an outline in my head that I learned from Frank Thomas, preaching professor at McCormick Seminary in my Doctor of Ministry program thirty-five years ago, who taught us the Black preaching style. I do not profess to have the skills to preach in such a style and marvel at those who do.
I honestly don’t know how what I say each week gets to you. Often in shaking hands after worship people will tell me how much they liked this or that, or not, and I am thinking to myself that I never said that. But they heard it. I wonder if the Holy Spirit is helping out a bit. Lord knows we all need the help.
So, in the end, I still find myself a bit amused and somewhat surprised. Not with giving sermons anymore but how the Gospel can grab hold of us and take us on a marvelous journey of mystery, hope, peace, and joy.
May it be so. Even after 1,600 attempts. May it be so.
Grace and peace,
Harry