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Raleigh Mennonite Church
Raleigh Mennonite Church
20 episodes
20 hours ago
Audio from Raleigh Mennonite Church: primarily the sermons from Sunday morning worship, but some other surprises show up occasionally as well.
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Christianity
Religion & Spirituality
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All content for Raleigh Mennonite Church is the property of Raleigh Mennonite 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.
Audio from Raleigh Mennonite Church: primarily the sermons from Sunday morning worship, but some other surprises show up occasionally as well.
Show more...
Christianity
Religion & Spirituality
Episodes (20/20)
Raleigh Mennonite Church
Stubborn, Prayerful Hope – Oct. 19, 2025
Luke 18: 1-8 Susan Scott preached on the unusual prayer practices of Jesus in the Gospel of Luke. Jesus was steeped in the prayers of the Jewish people, but Luke recounts that he Jesus instructed his followers to pray in a different way, including for those that persecute you. The prayers of Jesus in Luke can be divided into two types. We pray for the glory of God's name, work, and kingdom, and we pray for our business, including our daily bread, the forgiveness of sins, and protection from temptation. Susan reminds us that Jesus also told the Parable of the Unjust Judge to remind us to always pray and not give up, just like the woman pursuing justice, and that God is always a just judge. Of course, wouldn't it be easier to have faith if God instantly answered our prayers instead of us having to wait? It would be nice but that places God in the role of being our servant instead of our lord. Oddly, when the disciples asked for more faith, Jesus told them it already takes very little faith to speak miracles into existence. Jesus wants us to not focus on amounts but rather on the love and greatness of God that can enable us to do the impossible. With this in mind, we must relentlessly pray with a steadfast faith and hope in God's goodness, justice, and mercy.
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20 hours ago
10 minutes 37 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
The “Politics” of Jesus – Oct. 26, 2025
Matthew 4: 8-10 Mauricio Chenlo preached on Satan’s temptation of Christ, offering him all of the kingdoms of the world.  Similarly, often we depend on the kingdoms of the world to deliver the kingdom of God.  Mauricio related his experiences growing up in Argentina where he experienced Christian faith expressed in the nation’s politics swing wildly from right to left as the government went from a dictatorship to a Marxist government.  He even heard the preaching on liberation theology about the kingdom of God from the dictator Ortega of Nicaragua in the 90s.  Politics is the process by which people make collective decisions about how to live together by distributing power, responsibilities and resources.  So, who gets to define these priorities? In this country it seems that we are told to change our politics every four years.  Likewise, the Church historically has been tempted to align with political ideologies.  Jesus, however, brings a different kind of politics.  Jesus rejected alignment with any of the political ideologies of his time.  The role of the Church is to be a witness and an extension of the kingdom of God in this world, because we still must be in the world even if we are not of the world.  We cannot just focus on feeding people’s bodies (not on bread alone); we must also nourish people spiritually.  We must not manipulate God’s word, love, or message to gain power or popularity.    
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21 hours ago
14 minutes 34 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
When Things are Awful – Oct. 5, 2025
Habakkuk 1: 1-4 Susan Scott preached on World Communion Sunday and reminded us that regardless of our various religious journeys, national origins, denominations, and worship practices (including the incarcerated who cannot choose their mode of worship), that we are all a part of larger Christian Church family that is striving to follow the teachings of Christ. Susan also reflected on the lamentations of Habakkuk from the lectionary scripture. During these very tense, frustrating and worrisome times we are experiencing, it is easy to reflect negativity and despair back into the world. Lamentations, a form of brutally honest prayer, is one way that we can offload these feelings and transition our frustrations into a posture of waiting to hear from God and also a trust in God's love, goodness, and mercy for us.
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3 weeks ago
12 minutes 9 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Meeting at the Table – Sept. 21, 2025
Mark 14:16-26, Isaiah 25:6-8 Susan spoke this Sunday about something Christians universally practice and everyone maintains is important in some way: the Lord's Supper. Also called Communion, the Eucharist or the Mass. She painted three word pictures for us that could provide a greater appreciation for what we're doing at the table: a Passover meal, a covenant ratification meal, and a wedding celebration. The thing these three meals and communion all have in common is that they are celebratory. They knit people together and they all have a host. In communion, the Lord's table, Jesus serves as the host.
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1 month ago
14 minutes 18 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Formation in the Rubble of Loss – Sept. 14, 2025
Lamentations 3:17-26 This Sunday Melissa Rogati shared from her personal story of lament and dealing with a dark period in her life. It's very uncomfortable to be in that place. As humans, we don't like being there. But as she came to eventually realize, God is in the dark too! It's us who feel discomfort when we're in the dark. But if we can't sit in the dark and know that we are safe, where is our faith? We can force ourselves to be upbeat, even when we don't see the good coming, but that is not authentic. We don't need to force an upbeat spirit to prove anything to anyone, including ourselves. Even when we can't engage with that upbeat, we don't have to force it when we don't want to. But we continue to seek the goodness of those around us while we wait in the dark. Because we still believe, even in the dark, that there's goodness to be had. Because the Lord is good to those who wait for Him. It is good that one should wait quietly for the Lord.
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1 month ago
15 minutes 6 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
A brief history of Gifts Discernment – Sept. 7, 2025
I Corinthians 12:4-13 Following the summer time of gifts discernment, each September Raleigh Mennonite recognizes the many volunteers who help make the church function. This Sunday Susan provided a brief overview of church history and how Mennonites incorporated the concept of the "priesthood of all believers" as a fundamental tenet of our faith and community life together. The idea is that not only can we communicate with and have direct access to God, but that there are indeed no roles that are the exclusive domain of the clergy. And as we read in I Corinthians 12, all roles are important, and we all have to use our God-given gifts together for the church to thrive. When we use our gifts, or graces, it energizes us. At the same time, we need to check our perceptions of our gifts with others and listen for the affirmation of others in helping us see the gifts that we might have and be called to use. That's where discernment comes in.
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1 month ago
16 minutes 14 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Dramatic Readings – Aug. 31, 2025
Luke 10: 25-28 This week volunteers from the RMC congregation shared dramatic readings, acting out some of the experiences of the founding figures in Anabaptist/Mennonite history that suffered persecution and even martyrdom. This continues our series celebrating 500 years of Anabaptism. The sincere faith and devotion of these individuals to Anabaptist principles are a source of inspiration and encouragement, despite woes and troubles, to follow the path of love set before us by the example of Christ.
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2 months ago
18 minutes 49 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
A Lens of Love – Aug. 24, 2025
Ephesians 2: 14-22 RMC's Leah Weaver preached this week on her own faith story and her history with the Mennonite Church (and RMC specifically). Throughout her time as a youth at RMC, she experienced the love of a "second" family and received inspiration from many members whose lives and ministries demonstrated the love of Christ to strangers. Leah invited us to look at what RMC means to us and where we have found second families in our lives.
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2 months ago
8 minutes 23 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Indonesian Mennonites – Aug. 17, 2025
1 Peter 2: 11-17 RMC's Hans Linnartz shared from the pulpit last week about the inspiring story of the formation of the Mennonite Church in Indonesia. The ideal of nonviolence is difficult to achieve in the best of circumstances, but the slowly growing Mennonite Church in Indonesia had to overcome challenges from the Dutch colonial government, Japanese military occupation, a war for independence, and tensions with their majority Muslim neighbors. From this story we can learn that what initially seems like setbacks and persecution can be the source of growth, peace, and reconciliation.
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2 months ago
19 minutes 12 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
The Stories That Shape Our Lives – Aug 10, 2025
Luke 1: 26-38 Susan Scott preached today for the first time as RMC's interim pastor. Susan shared stories from her life's journey and the bible stories that meant the most to her at these most critical and formative parts of her life. With this act of sharing Susan also invites us as well to examine and share with our fellow believers bible stories that has perplexed, inspired, taught, comforted, and sustained us throughout our lives. This introspection on biblical storytelling can connect us to each other and to a deeper understanding of God's steadfast love for us throughout our lives.
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2 months ago
16 minutes 48 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Love one another as I have loved you – July 27, 2025
John 15:9-17 On this last Sunday of Melissa's pastoral ministry with us at RMC, she spoke from this scripture passage that Jesus shares with his disciples toward the end of his ministry. Unlike clubs and societies, the foundation of our friendship as the church isn't a shared interest, but a shared good. Friends pursue the good together. And with Christ at our center, the church creates space for those who are vastly different to find out what the good is, and to go after it. Antoine de Saint-Exupéry said it this way: "Love doesn't consist in gazing at each other, but in looking outward in the same direction." In the friendship of the church we don't look at each other, but we… stand side by side, so that we're all looking where we're going next. Church is the kind of friendship that says, "I actually think we all need to look at this thing happening here, in this direction and figure out where the path is to get there." We can discern together when God is calling us towards needs that have been overlooked. When there is something that we need to work out in order to find out where we're going together. We learn to pay attention to people who have been ignored or overlooked. We gather on streets to protest wars and to speak against genocide, to raise our voices for our church members, because our first loyalty is to Jesus, in whom there is no violence and no vengeance, and no hatred. We care for one another because when we do we see the face of God.
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3 months ago
13 minutes 49 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Creatively Reordering Stories – July 20, 2025
Luke 10:38-42 This Sunday Elizabeth Korver-Glenn shares of the dearth of information she was able to find about early Black and Brown Mennonite leaders, with an even greater lack of any details about Black and Brown Mennonite women. She found brief information about Phoebe Sheela Bisahu Solomon and Rowena Lark in the archives of Mennonite history. The Gospel reading for today is part of a very long tradition of creative disordering and creative retelling. Jesus upends the established historical archive and the making of an archive by centering the stories of poor and otherwise marginalized people. People who would have been otherwise omitted. The story of Jesus' presence in Martha's home is an example of that reordering. Martha is portrayed and positioned as the head of the house. Mary has adopted the position typically reserved for men: the place at Jesus' feet where she can listen unencumbered by other distractions.
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3 months ago
15 minutes 34 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Storytelling: The Good Samaritan – July 13, 2025
Luke 10:25-37 This summer at RMC we're focusing on telling stories of hope from the Bible. Katie Mangum was our guest speaker this Sunday and shared reflections on one of the most common and beloved of Jesus' parables, that of the Good Samaritan. Jesus' parables can be frustrating, since many don't have clear meanings. Even this story of the Good Samaritan, which may have obvious meanings on the surface, can be looked at from many different perspectives. When we weary, exhausted humans, with all our unsolved problems and unanswered questions show up on Sunday mornings, and Jesus tells us what seems to be a riddle about a Samaritan or a vineyard owner or a seed, it can feel a little frustrating. But we know, as Jesus knows, that pat answers won't bind up our wounds. The only thing that has ever been able to do that is a story.
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3 months ago
21 minutes 15 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Soft Heart, Hard Feet – June 29, 2025
Luke 16: 1-9 RMC's Susan Scott preached this week on what Jesus was trying to do when he spoke in parables. The parables Jesus spoke in are often confusing, indirect, and seldom leave the listener with clear answers to their questions. Why won't Jesus get to the point? However, this storytelling tactic forces the listener to actually listen, ponder, and wrestle in their minds with content of the story. The settings and people in the stories have familiar jobs and roles in Jewish society to draw in the listener, but their unexpected actions require a level of engagement for the listener that precludes the audience from "zoning out". Jesus primarily used two types of parable. One to undercut and derail the accusations of his detractors, and the other to prepare his followers for the radically new kind of kingdom Jesus was ushering in that had nothing to do with their current political subjugation. Furthermore, the parables of Jesus, regardless of the audience, at the end had a punchline that subverted expectations and taught valuable lessons to those with ears to hear. In parables, Jesus told the religious leaders that their obsession with following the law was all a hollow show without any sincere connection to God's will for people to live. Christ's followers in turn were called to live a life of soft hearts and hard feet. A life full of sacrifice, suffering, and radical gift giving that will not make sense to the world, but shows God's love in its fullness . We too must emulate our spiritual forebears and wrestle with these parables so that we may learn to also live with soft hearts and hard feet.
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4 months ago
14 minutes

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Experiments of Peace – June 22, 2025
Matthew 5: 43-48 With the recent American bombing of Iran, we now move into a time filled with tension, fear, calls for war, and calls for reprisal. As Christians we must remember that we are called to a different path than the world. Melissa Florer-Bixler preaches on our Covenant Sunday that we must pay close attention to Jesus' first teachings after his temptation in the desert; we must love our enemies and pray for those that persecute us. Yet the gift of peace that God has given us must be worked out through imperfect vessels, namely pacifists like Mennonites and other Christians who hold the ideal of peace close to heart. And how do we figure out this way of peace? Church is where we gather every Sunday to conduct our experiments of peace. There we try, sometimes fail, learn, and share with each other as we try to pass on God's gift of peace to others. As an intentional community of believers we take the risk of being hurt by each other for the opportunity to heal and to be healed.
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4 months ago
11 minutes 57 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Not What God Is, But Who – June 15, 2025
Romans 5: 1-5 On Trinity Sunday Melissa Florer-Bixler preached on the words of Paul in Romans. Paul didn't focus on what the makeup of the Trinity is, but who the persons of God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit are. Essentially, God is not vengeful, cruel, or indifferent. God, through the trinity, is the giver of gifts. Jesus is the gift that redeems our sins, and the Holy Spirit is our guide and the wellspring of our hope. Who God is, not what, instructs us on how we should treat each other, our neighbors, and how we build together a faithful Church body. If God is the giver of precious gifts, then we must live a life of radical gift giving and receiving that does not count the cost.
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4 months ago
8 minutes 4 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
When God is Lost in Translation – June 1, 2025
1 Corinthians 3:11 This Sunday RMC's own Jordan Morehouse preached on the foundations of our faith. We often use scripture, tradition, and faith practices to justify all manner of evils against our neighbors. Jordan reminds us that we must be ready to change our actions and views when we see that time honored parts of our theology fail to show God's love in its fullness. As we face uncomfortable inconsistencies in our politics, traditions, and theologies, it can be especially difficult to find God's purpose amidst all of the fear and confusion of our current social, political, and economic environment. Today's scripture and sermon instruct us to look to the life and words of Jesus to help us to interpret what parts of our faith need tearing down and what parts are a solid foundation to build upon, instead of clinging to what we have constructed that is not working to build God's kingdom.
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5 months ago
9 minutes 9 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Swimming Toward Sharks – May 25, 2025
Scripture: Isaiah 12:1-6 Melissa opened her sermon sharing about a man who helped rescue a friend who was attacked by a shark. He swam directly toward the injured swimmer, putting himself in direct vicinity with the shark. The backstory about most people who show real bravery in the midst of danger is that they're backfilled with disciplines, convictions and patterns that people cultivate, sometimes over a lifetime. The same can be said about the Israelites that Isaiah is speaking to in the passage above. While things are really bleak, they are from a long line of people who have trusted God, who left their homes, who gave up their gods to follow the Lord. In other words, they were trained for this. It's not just doing what God says, it's about knowing God. The first Anabaptists were willing to "swim toward sharks" in their quest to follow Jesus. Who would be willing to die to follow Jesus as a member of this Anabaptist group? The message also featured the testimony of one our community who will be baptized in a couple of weeks. Grant shared his confession of faith with us.
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5 months ago
18 minutes 53 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Abide! – May 18, 2025
Scripture: John 15:1-10 "Abide" is central to John's gospel. Abide is the orientation of our lives to Jesus, but also of Jesus's life with us. Jesus tells his disciples that he will abide with them, even as he goes away. In this goodbye it's interesting that Jesus actually never tells the disciples that they ought to bear fruit. It's actually the work of God to bear fruit. Our job, our only role, is to abide. Sabbath is the way we abide. Why do we yield our time around the Lord's day? Because Sabbath is an invitation to rest. Because God rests. But God doesn't need rest. Rest is the time to delight in the pleasure of what God creates.
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5 months ago
14 minutes

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Come as Children – May 11, 2025
Scripture: Matthew 18:1-5 The disciples of Jesus have "power problems." Who's going to be greatest? Who's going to sit next to him? And as usual, Jesus has to gently put them in their place. He tells them, Unless you turn around and become like a child you will never enter the kingdom of heaven." Jesus brings attention to children because of their social rank--at the very bottom of the hierarchy. Melissa held up the Presbyterian minister and children's TV icon, Mr. Rogers, as someone who took seriously the experiences of children. He treated them with dignity. Jesus tells his disciples to convert to children but Mr. Rogers shows us what that might look like.
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5 months ago
13 minutes 25 seconds

Raleigh Mennonite Church
Audio from Raleigh Mennonite Church: primarily the sermons from Sunday morning worship, but some other surprises show up occasionally as well.