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PetraG
Guest
A reasonable question for anyone listening to Sunday preaching is what difference it makes to the listener.I’ve just been drawn to the preaching which are available online. Their sermons are relatable…
Are you looking for someone who forms your conscience correctly and an overall connection with the worship that orients you towards acting in grace? If not, it doesn’t make a lot of difference whether you intellectually
or emotionally “relate” or not.
We are cautioned in the Gospels that “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father in heaven.” (Matt. 7:21) Even if we’re going to Holy Mass itself and are listening to a gifted homilist, that doesn’t guarantee that the seed sown will bear fruit.
I love this story, related by Fred Rogers (the famous “Mr Rogers”) about how important openness is:
“I remember so keenly one of the times I learned how individually the Spirit can work. It was years ago, and Joanne [this was Rogers’ wife] and I were worshiping in a little church with friends of ours, another husband and wife. We were on vacation, and I was in the middle of my homiletics course at the time.”
“During the sermon I kept ticking off every mistake I thought the preacher — he must have been 80 years old — was making. When this interminable sermon finally ended, I turned to my friend, intending to say something critical about the sermon. I stopped myself when I saw the tears running down her face.”
“She whispered to me, ‘He said exactly what I needed to hear.’ That was a seminal experience for me. I was judging and she was needing, and the Holy Spirit responded to need, not to judgment.”
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