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<div style="font-family: arial,helvetica; font-size: 10pt; color: black;">-----Original Message-----<br>
From: Fr HC Smith <howard.smith@anglican.org.au><br>
To: Propertalk <propertalk.topic@ecunet.org><br>
Sent: Tue, Mar 22, 2011 4:30 am<br>
Subject: [propertalk.topic] Lent 3 on Romans<br>
<br>
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<pre style="font-size: 9pt;"><tt>Friends,<br>
Below are a few thoughts for developing a sermon from the reading in Romans <br>
for Lent 3, from an Australian point of view.<br>
Howard<br>
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br>
* Today we are up to the 3rd Sunday in Lent, that time in the year when we <br>
try a little harder to become more like Jesus.<br>
+ Today Paul takes us on a little further in our journey of being followers <br>
of Jesus:<br>
- he tells us as we practise our faith we will get the gift of<br>
peace, and especially peace with God.<br>
+ We have this peace because of what Jesus has done for us;<br>
- once again it's not something we have to work hard to earn,<br>
we don't have to try to be good, we don't have to go to<br>
Church (though of course those are good things to do when we can).<br>
+ Jesus has introduced us to God's undeserved kindness, as Paul<br>
tells us today - and all we have to do is to act upon it.<br>
+ When we keep that idea in the front of our minds, then we can<br>
cope with all the sufferings which come to us,<br>
- all the difficulties we may have to live through.<br>
+ So when the problems of living seem to be so overwhelming,<br>
- when we can't seem to find a way through;<br>
- when other people, or just life, seem to be doing terrible things to us:<br>
+ That's the very time to remember Jesus and to take hold of his<br>
gift of peace with God.<br>
+ Do you remember the woman we read about in the gospel<br>
- she was all churned up about religion, about laws, about<br>
what other people thought;<br>
- but Jesus got her to stop focussing on those things, and<br>
instead to concentrate on him, and his gift of peace.<br>
+ and once she did that she was transformed<br>
- she was filled with happiness, and set out to deal with all the<br>
other problems in her life.<br>
+ In one stroke, the rigid sanctions of the kind of worship and<br>
religion and custom that she and her people had embraced for<br>
centuries are abolished.<br>
- Jesus proposes a revolutionary new way to God<br>
- not based on the old system of exclusion and judgment,<br>
- but a Way grounded in spirit and in truth.<br>
+ As if all this is not enough, he commissions her to be a disciple<br>
to her own people and does not send "a member of his staff" or<br>
some man to accompany her to make sure she gets it right.<br>
+ The ordination of women is not all that novel, after all.<br>
+ The Samaritan woman dares to accept her charge and returns<br>
to her townsfolk to tell them her tale.<br>
+ That's an example for us to follow: take the time to<br>
concentrate on Jesus: perhaps by reading the Bible, perhaps by<br>
praying the Daily Office, perhaps by looking at, or holding, a cross;<br>
- load all the other problems onto Jesus, trusting God's<br>
word that you do have peace with God, and if you have that<br>
kind of peace, you can let it flow into every other part of<br>
your life, and you can start living at peace with other people,<br>
and so find happiness once again.<br>
<br>
* One of the great things to celebrate at Easter is the gift of<br>
peace which Jesus gives to who choose to take up his invitation<br>
to become his followers<br>
- the gift which Paul underlined for us in today's reading from the Letter <br>
to the Romans.<br>
<br>
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *<br>
The Rev'd Dr H.C. Smith<br>
Retired Anglican Priest<br>
Orange NSW<br>
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
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