• Sermons

    Catching God’s Child

    Exodus 1:6-22 Sermon by Keith Menhinick August 24, 2014 Regarding undocumented children in America, Homeland Security says, “How we treat the children, in particular, is a reflection of our laws and our values.” I am here to propose, How we treat the children is a reflection of our faith. Children of color disproportionately oppressed by our laws and institutions; children of our city disproportionately starved by our food insecurity. Our treatment of children reflects our faith, and it reflects our treatment of all people, for all are God’s children. My question is— How will we, the church of Jesus Christ, treat God’s children? In today’s scripture, two Hebrew midwives find…

  • Sermons

    A Soul At The End Of Its Rope (Suicide)

    Psalm 13 Sermon By Michael Usey August 2014 National Suicide Prevention Hotline: Website or Call 1-800-273-TALK (8255). Edgar Lee Master’s Spoon River Anthology, published in 1915, is a collection of short poems, each narrated by a dead person in a cemetery.  I read parts of it in high school, probably hoping it was ghost stories.  Each of the 244 former citizens of the fictional town Spoon River, Illinois, tells the truth about their lives—with complete honesty and no fear of consequences.  Harold Arnett is a suicide who learns that facing hardship doesn’t end with leaving the physical world. Harold pulled the trigger, killing himself. Immediately, he sees blackness, then light…

  • Memoirs

    Susan Houghton

    She Hath Done What She Could 29 July 2014 Memoir by Michael Usey One time when Ruth, Susan’s mother, was in Atlanta, she worshiped at Inman Park United Methodist Church.  During the service she spied the detail from Martha Beall Candler window there, specifically the ribboned words, “She Hath Done What She Could,” a quotation of course from the KJV of Mark 14.8 that we just heard read.  Those words struck Ruth, and she thought then that they were a pretty good statement of her life’s goal and purpose.  She passed this on to her daughter, Susan, whom we’re gathered to remember.  By the end of this service, I trust…

  • Memoirs

    Marie Chambers

    Sewing Circle: A Memoir for Marie Chambers Memoir by Michael Usey 19 June 2014 Darcie, Marie’s daughter, picked the psalms that we heard read this evening, and they are well chosen.  Psalm 23 is well known to those of us raised in a church or synagogue.  I love hearing texts like this that we’ve read or recited in hundreds of different ways over the course of our lives. Many readers think Psalm 23 was a psalm for a person on the lamb from the authorities.  Perhaps the original writer had committed a murder or unintentionally killed someone, and that person was fleeing from the relatives of the one who was…

  • Sermons

    Same Sex Marriage & College Park

    Exchanging Caution for Courage – Same Sex Marriage & College Park Sermon by Michael Usey February 24, 2014 Scripture: Hebrews 13: 1-6 & Song of Songs 8: 6-7 When my mother, a life-long Baptist from North Georgia wanted to marry my father, a Roman Catholic Cajun from South Texas, they had a problem. No one would perform the ceremony in Georgia in January 1946. They had met on Saint Simon’s Island, my mother a schoolteacher, my dad a Navy aviator. Both sets of ministers declined to participate, and, while a justice of the peace could have married them, neither wanted that option. Finally, after much searching and meeting with priests…

  • Memoirs

    Rozette Huckabee

    Her Own Woman: A Memoir for Rozette Huckabee Memoir By Michael Usey February 1, 2014 One of the most excellent but subtle themes of our Bible is the significant role of ordinary people in salvation history. Read the Bible even casually and it’s clear that God uses ordinary people to do extraordinary things. You can see this truth, for example, if you look at a few of the women in our Bible. Time and time again, first in the history of the Jews, then in the stories of the early Christians, women led the way forward. It is strong women, full of grace and chutzpah, who move God’s love affair with…

  • Memoirs

    Chris Moquin

    Memoir by Michael Usey 28 December 2013 It’s a hard and painful thing to bury a friend who dies unexpectedly at 41. Most of us saw Chris just 10 days ago at our Christmas banquet, with Christopher in tow, the two were looking sharp. Chris had Christopher live by ZZ Top’s credo, “The whole world’s crazy about a sharp dressed man.” What to say when someone as young as Chris dies the day before Christmas with his beloved son asleep next to him? We’re careful not to say things offer false comfort, or things about which we cannot know. I don’t believe God took him, or that his death was…

  • Sermons

    Blue Christmas 2013

    Sermon by Eddie Self December 4, 2013 I should be happy. It’s the Christmas season after all. I should be decorating the house. I should be sending cards to all the people I love. I should be buying gifts for people I care for. I should be feeling the warmth of the season. I should be excited about Christmas day getting closer. I should be thankful that I’ve lived to see another Christmas come. I should be singing songs of good tidings and angels. I should be filled with hope and joy. I should feel the warmth of Jesus being made new in me this Advent season. Isn’t that what…

  • Sermons

    Practice Resurrection

    By Michael Usey Easter Sunday Wendell Berry is a farmer from Kentucky; he is also a poet. One of my favorite poems of his is called Manifesto: The Mad Farmer Liberation Front. The poem starts with a description of the way we have died to true values and have entombed ourselves with petty appetites that lend no meaning long term. The poem begins: “Love the quick profit, the annual raise, vacation with pay. Want more of everything ready-made. Be afraid to know your neighbors and to die. And you will have a window in your head. Not even you future will be a mystery anymore. Your mind will be punched…

  • Baptismal Statements

    Brant Moll

    Baptismal Statement by Brant Moll December 30, 2012 I am a strong believer that God has plans for everyone. If you really knew me as a person you would know that I haven’t always thought like this. I knew that I didn’t have a plan. In other words, I was lost. I’ve been through some pretty rough times throughout my life but none of the other times even come close to the time when I lost peace, hope, and patience. This period of time is also known as seventh grade. I started to become a victim of severe bullying and I never told anyone until I just exploded one night…

  • Sermons

    No Room in the Inn

    Sermon by Vicki Lumpkin December 5, 2012 (Blue Christmas) There are times in life when “Joy to the World” is simply not where your heart is, but “Bah humbug!” doesn’t express where you are, either. You may “gird up your loins”– there’s a good old biblical phrase! – to “troll the ancient yuletide carol,” but somehow in spite of your best effort, you end up half a step off, and half a beat late, somehow totally out of sync with the season. It’s not that your are inherently averse to twinkling lights and Christmas carols, to shiny ornaments and festive gatherings, it’s just that sometimes these things do more to…

  • Memoirs

    Earl Ryals

    With the Old Breed: Earl Edison Ryals  Memoir by Michael Usey August 24, 2012 Clarence Barton, one of my ministry supervisors in seminary, told me once that in every city there are people who are the quiet servant leaders of that place, and that a good pastor will seek those type of people.  They may or may not be prominent or be well known, but they are nevertheless the spiritual backbone of that town.  They are the ones who have touched so many people’s lives that it’s hard to meet someone who hasn’t been changed in some way by them.  I believe that we have come to remember such a…

  • Memoirs

    John Taylor

    John A. Taylor II: Jesus’ Urbane Disciple Memoir by Michael Usey May 16, 2012 John was a one-of-a-kind.  Or at least I’m tempted to think so, but then I wonder, did Jesus himself have an urbane disciple like our John Taylor?  One of the twelve who could cut to the heart of an issue with a rapier wit and wry smile?  A disciple who had strong opinions about the other eleven’s choice of tunics and footwear?  Did one of the Twelve have   the polish and suavity of a sophisticated social life in major cities of first century Israel? Perhaps Matthew, the tax-collect, was as cosmopolitan.  One who loved his…

  • Sermons

    An Attempt to Hold Back the Sea (post-Amendment One)

    Sermon by Michael Usey May 13, 2012 Thanks to all you who voted this week, however you voted.  This is a Baptist church and people follow their own conscience about most things, and I know you did about Amendment One.  Whether you voted for or against it, you are welcome here this morning and always.  If you didn’t vote and wanted to, there are people here that can help you register to vote in November’s national elections.  As on every Sunday, look around and you will see democrats, republicans, and independents; straight, gay and bi folks; pink folk and those with ebony skin and every shade in between; newborns and…

  • Memoirs

    Joseph Albert Haymes, Jr.

    Joseph Albert Haymes Jr.: A Faithful Attention to Life’s Sweet Details (Peggy Haymes’ father) Memoir by Michael S. Usey April 9, 2012 How best are we to live this one brief life that we’ve been given?  This is the unstated question of every funeral we attend, for in every case some one we know and likely love has given their life for his answer.  All of us know that this life is extremely short.  I’ve met more than one senior adult who said just yesterday they were teenagers and suddenly they woke up one day to find themselves getting AARP membership offers in the mail. Like many of you who…

  • Sermons

    The Better Angels Of Our Nature (Amendment One)

    Sermon by Michael Usey [with lots of help from H. Stephen Shoemaker & Pam Strader, and a few others] Feb 19, 2012 My new favorite band, Rev Theory, has a song that begins, “You better hold to something; this one is gonna get bumpy.” (1) Good advice for this morning. First thing: there are copies of this sermon on the way out for you, so that, if what’s being chewed over lunch is my backside, then let it be for something I actually said. We’ll have a sermon talkback after my sermon, but keep in mind death threats should come by the usual avenues: email, phone and blood on my porch.…

  • Memoirs

    Carolyn Wheless

    More Than: A Memoir for Carolyn Wheless Memoir by Lewis Wheless & Michael Usey Feb 3, 2012 Carolyn’s favorite bible verse was Roman’s 8:37, “Yet in all these things we are more than conquerors through Christ who loved us.” It’s a great verse, one the apostle Paul writes to his friends in Rome. The whole passage is about how nothing can separate us from the love of God in Christ, something that Carolyn knew, believed and lived out. I love that phrase, more than: more than conquerors. It’s a great phrase to describe this remarkable woman. She was more than a mother, a wife, a daughter. She was more than…

  • Sermons

    College Park 2011: A Strange Tribe

    Sermon by Matt Cravey December 25, 2011 Why don’t I just stick with the smaller, more practical, safer dreams? I think it has to do with the company I keep at College Park: They dream bigger when they should and then work hard to make sure things happen. They cook pancakes at Applebee’s at six in the morning so they can raise enough money to go to San Francisco and see the best and worst of what humanity is capable of. They sponsor “Green Queen Bingo” in order to tell the gay and lesbian community of Greensboro that there is a place where they are welcome to come as they…

  • Memoirs

    Mary Schwartz

    And the Tree was Happy: A Memoir for Mary Schwartz Memoir by Michael Usey 13 May 2011 I don’t know what being a real person means to you, being authentically human—there are so many different ideas about how to live a good life—but for me one large part of it comes down to is fear. The essence of my Christian faith is to live without fear. Not to be afraid—of anything, really. Not to be afraid to live out loud this beautiful and dangerous life we’ve been given. Not to be afraid of the living God that loves us like sons and daughters. Not to be afraid of death, which…

  • Memoirs

    Robbie Previtte

    Being Fully Human Memoir by Michael Usey September 9, 2010 Why are we humans here? Well, one good answer is from the Westminster catechism: What is the chief purpose of humans? The purpose for humans is to glorify God and enjoy God forever. As much as I like that answer, it’s too general for me. Most people think of glorifying God merely as worshiping and praising God, which has its place. A crucial one, really. Most Americans try to worship at least once a week, and we pray more than that. But glorifying God is much more than worship and praise. As the writer of Ecclesiastes put it, for everything…