"As the Advent story unfolds, Luke poses the question to us: which, do you think, is more powerful, evil or goodness? Is God still at work in this world, or not? In which kind of news are you participating? And where will you pin your hopes?
The philosopher Alfred North Whitehead once observed, "The most important thing you can say about evil is that is has no power to endure." Evil overpowers, crushes?but what is left by the work of evil is always something that has no life. Evil cannot be sustained except by violence, and violence ultimately destroys itself. Every evil empire that has ever existed in history has collapsed. There never has been one that has endured.
Goodness, on the other hand, has the power to endure. It is persistent. Goodness, according to the gospels, should not be thought of as some titanic force that will match the forces of evil violence for violence, and ultimately win out. Goodness doesn't work that way. Goodness doesn't try to crush its opponents. It simply goes about the business of serving the cause of life.
Evil is flashy, a bomb going off in a parking lot. Goodness is unassuming, a group of kids planting flowers along the curb. Evil writes history in terms of criminals that come and go, regimes that rise and fall. Goodness is the underground river that turns the wheels of history, moves life forward, and carries it along. While all the uproar of evil is taking place in the evening news, thousands---millions---of decent people are quietly, day by day, turning the world to God's purposes, loving their families and caring for their neighbors."
http://www.firstchurchseattle.org/yourti93187.htmli'm not a christ worshipper, too many so-called christians are hate spewing bigots and i am sickened by their hypocracy and self-righteousness. but this woman is my kind of Christian. A Christian with a capital "C", one who walks her talk. i respect that, and find her sermons to be somehow comforting in this day and age.
if only more Christians would speak out this way, here's an earlier sermon where she describes the difference as she sees it between the fundamentalists and the open/inclusive Christians.
"We are disciples of Jesus Christ, who came into this world not to condemn, but to open the path to justice and peace. We seek to follow in Christ's way of treating all people with the love, dignity and respect worthy of children of God. Bigotry and discrimination in the name of Christ, and in the supposedly free society in which we live, is simply wrong."
http://www.firstchurchseattle.org/yourti92273.htmlpeace.