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Field Notes: Stories from St. Martin's
St Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
73 episodes
2 days ago
Sermons, teaching, and interviews from St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church in Keller, Texas. We seek to proclaim the Good New of Jesus Christ, so that the people of northeast Tarrant County and beyond might know they are loved by God.
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Christianity
Religion & Spirituality
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All content for Field Notes: Stories from St. Martin's is the property of St Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Sermons, teaching, and interviews from St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church in Keller, Texas. We seek to proclaim the Good New of Jesus Christ, so that the people of northeast Tarrant County and beyond might know they are loved by God.
Show more...
Christianity
Religion & Spirituality
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God's Love Endures Forever
Field Notes: Stories from St. Martin's
12 minutes 30 seconds
5 months ago
God's Love Endures Forever

In this week’s sermon, we reflect on what lasts.

We begin with a story about Abraham Lincoln’s cabin. Not the original one, but a recreated version in Kentucky that still draws visitors. Why? Because the story it tells - about humility, strength, and endurance - still matters.

From that same story came something simple but lasting: Lincoln Logs. For over 100 years, children have played with these wooden pieces. They’re not flashy. They’re not high-tech. But we keep returning to them, because they speak to something we trust.

That’s the kind of love we hear about in Canticle 13 — the song sung by Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego in the middle of the fiery furnace. They were thrown into danger for refusing to worship Nebuchadnezzar’s golden statue, a towering idol built to impress and control.

But while that statue is long gone, their song still echoes:

The contrast is clear: idols fall, empires fade, feelings change. But God’s love endures.

This sermon invites us to stop chasing what won’t last, and return instead to the steady, eternal love of God. A love that was there in the fire, and is still here now.

“Praise him and highly exalt him forever.”

Field Notes: Stories from St. Martin's
Sermons, teaching, and interviews from St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church in Keller, Texas. We seek to proclaim the Good New of Jesus Christ, so that the people of northeast Tarrant County and beyond might know they are loved by God.