How funny, the exact same thing happened at my parish in College Station, TX, the AC was broken and the summers here are closer to 101. Our homily was only worded slightly different: “It’s hot in here, but it’s hotter in hell. So shape up.”
Are you an Aggie, or did you just grow up in College Station? I’m at A&M now, so you know I just had to comment. I’ve been meaning to go to St. Mary’s one Sunday simply because for all the research I’ve done, I’ve never attended a Mass. I’ll tag along with my friend one of these days.
Anyway, I don’t understand all the criticism flowing towards sermons.The purpose of a sermon is to guide and teach the congregation with the intention of building disciples, or at least that is the proper intention. A large part of being a Christian is living an active faith, knowing not only what you believe but why you believe it, and being able to apply that faith to your life. That’s why so many sermons are life-lessons oriented; the pastor is looking to encourage a Christ-centered lifestyle, and frankly, there’s a lot to that.
Granted, there are some pastors that just go on and on, repeating themselves and not building up their congregation at all. There is a certain degree of focus that must be present in a sermon for it to be successful, and I’ve seen many pastors (mostly Baptist, though for fear of generalizing I’ll add that I’ve seen Lutheran and Presbyterian and Methodist pastors do it too) lose sight of that in favor of filling up a time-slot. The other disclaimer is that there are several churches, usually larger ones, that focus on getting a reaction from the audience rather than building their faith. It becomes a show, and that’s never good. I’ve been lucky enough to not fall into a church like that.
Overall, though, I greatly appreciate the structure of the typical Protestant worship service, both traditional and contemporary. I’ve found them to be incredibly useful for reinforcing my faith and encouraging me to keep the focus of my life, not just my Sundays, on Christ, and also to have my actions, speech, and everything else reflect that.