Pastor Dale’s Sermons

Here’s a playlist of my sermons, classes, and other video teaching.



When I was at Shepherd of the Ridge, I grouped sermons by series if you’re looking for something in particular.

Also, this channel has the recordings of the CrossFeed Religious News video podcast among other things I’ve recorded.

And my current sermon audio:

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[sermons image_size=”sermon_medium” order=”DESC” ]




Lent Series & Hymn based on Lord’s Prayer and Words from the Cross: Prayer is Crucial

Our Lent series this year was based on the petitions of the Lord’s Prayer and how they match up with Jesus’s words from the cross.

Here’s the worksheet/order we used (PDF).

We also had a theme hymn, “Father God, Who Art in Heaven,” that uses the same first and last stanza each week with a different 2nd stanza each week based on the corresponding petition/words. It can be used as a general Lord’s Prayer hymn apart from the series. (Lyrics based on series order) See below for lyrics based on Lord’s Prayer order.

The Lutheran Service Builder file is in the order of the petitions.

Father God, Who Art in Heaven 

Tune: Das grosse Cantional (Christ, the Life of All the Living)

1                   Father God, Who art in heaven,
Your name ever hallow’d be
Let Your kingdom come among us
Earth, like heaven, Your will see
As we pardon, so release us,
From our sins and evil free us.
Kingdom, power, glory be Thine unto eternity.

2                   Let Your name be ever holy
Ever kept in purity
Since by Word and water solely
You have named us family
Help us show in daily living
All the mercy You are giving
Kingdom, power, glory be Thine unto eternity.

3                   Let Your kingdom come among us
May your Spirit help us know:
Since You’ve taken our sin from us
We to Paradise may go
As a citizen of heaven,
Let my life be loving leaven
Kingdom, power, glory be Thine unto eternity.

4                   As Your will is done in heaven,
Here among us so be done
Keep us firm, conviction strengthen,
Ever turn us to Your Son
Let our trust be ne’er diminished
Give us faith that “It is finished!”
Kingdom, power, glory be Thine unto eternity.

5                   Give us each our daily manna
Help us see Your providence
For Your mercy, loud hosanna
Always let our thanks commence
Though You suffered dehydration,
Let us trust complete salvation
Kingdom, power, glory be Thine unto eternity.

6                   Father God, Who art in heaven,
Turn Your eyes from all our sin
We know not the depths we’ve fallen
Purify our hearts within
Let the mercy from Your Word flow,
And our lives your saving grace show
Kingdom, power, glory be Thine unto eternity.

7                   O my God, do not forsake me
Hold me close in every hour
Let no evil overtake me
Keep me from the tempter’s power
Though this world and flesh may charm me,
May they not prevail to harm me
Kingdom, power, glory be Thine unto eternity.

8                   Let us all commend our spirits
To our Father’s loving hands
So that we may all inherit
Joyously a blessed end
Save us, Lord, from all our sorrows
Give us joy for all tomorrows
Kingdom, power, glory be Thine unto eternity.

9                   Father God, Who art in heaven,
Hear the prayers Your children cry
To the cross may our lives beckon
And display Christ crucified
Let us always know Your favor
For through Christ, our only Savior,
Kingdom, power, glory be Thine unto eternity!

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License by Strength & Song Publishing




Poetic Sermon: In Christ Alone

In the time before time, when the past met the future,
Eternity spoke, and His voice produced nature
“Let there be light,” and the darkness was ruptured
Land, feather, hoof by pronouncement alone

Then the One Who is plural, the “They” Who is “He”
Said, “Let love take on form, tangible simile,”
From the Spirit and clay, the Lord formed family
And all was deemed good by Creator alone

But love isn’t love without loving an object
And the infinite King saw the need of His subject
So He acted again to improve on the perfect
Because it’s not good to be a man alone

Alone in the garden, the man anaesthetized
The one became two, dream became realized
Then two became one as each other they prized
So they would be never again all alone

Then serpent and fruit, “Did the Lord really say?”
Brought doubt and mistrust: “No, you won’t die that day.”
Relationship severed brings sorrow, decay
As choice leaves the two both together alone

Excuses aside, the Lord calls to His children
Assuring them they haven’t halted His mission
By wounds in the heel, He would bring restoration
“I will cover your sin. I won’t leave you alone.”

In the fullness of time, man again in God’s image
The Word became flesh; we saw grace in His visage
He went to the cross that the grave He would pillage
To save us from being forever alone

Eli Eli Lama Sabachthani!
The Word cried in excruciating agony
The fruit of a woman gave up life on a tree
The only man ever that God left alone

But why do you look for the dead in a graveyard?
The stone rolled away, the Lord revealed the trump card
“Peace to you; touch the wounds.” Heaven’s gates will not be barred!
Restored to the Father, no longer alone

So now you’ve received the image restoration
Go forth in that image to each people and nation
Spread the word. Speak His name. Baptize for regeneration.
I am with you always, to the end of the age. You are not now, not soon, not ever alone.

(From a confirmation camp weekend that focused on Genesis 1-2)




Benediction: A Sonnet

Benediction: A Sonnet

Grace, mercy, and peace be to you from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.  Amen.

Text: (Num 6:22-27 ESV)

“The LORD spoke to Moses, saying, “Speak to Aaron and his sons, saying, Thus you shall bless the people of Israel: you shall say to them,

The LORD bless you and keep you;

the LORD make his face to shine upon you and be gracious to you;

the LORD lift up his countenance upon you and give you peace.

“So shall they put my name upon the people of Israel, and I will bless them.””

This is the Word of our Lord. In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, Amen.

Broken Promises

As passing go the days of ev’ry year

The promises we make we rarely keep

A resolution make but not adhere

As dreams from mem’ry go when rise from sleep

Pureness of heart will drive the good intent

But those intents have paved infernal roads

And though reflection on them brings lament

It doesn’t change our course as evil goads

So long as flesh is born in fallen earth

Rebellion will precede physical birth.

Our Baptismal Promise

In Baptism we make a solemn oath

Renouncing every devil’s work and way

In purity the One Who would betroth

We pledge our faithfulness to final day

Yet though our bridegroom forfeit all His life

We callously discard His affection

Our hearts and deeds do not befit His wife

And question memory of connection

Though deluge purged out Adam’s legacy,

The patriot still acts the enemy.

God’s Baptismal Promise

Yet from the flood, creation sprang anew,

And from New Adam’s veins, eternity

And just as one tree God’s image withdrew,

Yet with another gives it back to thee

And even though like Gomer, we still stray,

Our Lord forever claims us as His own

By water and His Word with each new day,

Renews His vows until we face His throne

Adopting us, bequeaths to us His name,

Indwells and grants the Holy Spirit’s flame.

The Promise at the Tomb

In Baptism, the New Man comes alive

And transgression’s left buried in the grave

Just as the Lord Himself did once revive

And pave the Way for those He died to save

So those who go again as from the womb,

By water and the Spirit rise again

As Christ was raised exalted from the tomb,

Shall follow His example at the end.

As Resurrection looms, we need not fear

His promised blessing given when He’s here.

Now the peace of God, which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.

Originally preached Dec 30, 2009




How the Grinch Missed Christmas

Ted Geisel, American writer and cartoonist, at...

Ted Geisel, American writer and cartoonist, at work on a drawing of the grinch for “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Here’s my Christmas Eve sermon from 2009:

How the Grinch Missed Christmas

Grace, mercy, and peace be to you from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.  Amen.

Text: (1 John 4:7-11 ESV) “Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God. Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love. In this the love of God was made manifest among us, that God sent his only Son into the world, so that we might live through him. In this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins. Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another.”

This is the Word of our Lord. In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, Amen.

 

You’ve probably heard of the Grinch and the whos

That Christmas comes even when we get bad news

But Christmas is more than bright lights and roast beast

And more than friends, family, and songs, at the least!

 

See, Theodore Geisel’s a great storyteller

That guy, Dr. Seuss, was a talented feller

And as a Luth’ran, he liked Christmas: you said it,

But the Grinch, without Jesus, he just didn’t get it.

 

We think about Christmas and all of its trappings

The travel, the parties, the gifts and their wrappings

The shopping and hunting for whatnots and Zhu Zhu’s

And running around ’til you ache in your shoe-shoes.

 

Along with the tree and the stress and the fun

There’s still deeper meaning that’s second to none

How God sent the Savior to save everyone

The Father sent Jesus. He sent us His Son!

 

See, just like the Grinch, we were born with a defect

A tendency all that is good just to reject

It’s not that our hearts are two sizes too small

Our hearts are so sinful, we’re not live at all.

 

The heart of a human, in sin it is rooted

And thus it’s all poisoned and gross and polluted

We don’t want to live like a child of the Lord

We get more concerned by the riches we hoard.

 

Since God knew the problem with which we all suffer

He isn’t the type to just sit on His duffer

He had Him a plan that He knew from the start

He’d handle our sin. He’d clean up our heart.

 

So just when the time was right, just at that minute

When all was in place, He began to begin it

His Son became flesh, and He came to our earth

He took on our weakness and went through our birth

 

And although in heaven, He had all kinds of glory,

There’s not much of that in the true Christmas story

To fulfill the Law so to God you’re no stranger,

He was born in a stall and was laid in a manger.

 

And not far away, there was noise and commotion

While angels appeared and gave shepherds a notion

That God had sent Love not just to all the wealthy,

But to poor folks and sad ones, the weak and unhealthy.

 

The angel said, “Go,” and the shepherds, they came

And they found a small babe like the angel did claim

And they were so amazed, so they ran through the town

And soon all Bethlehem heard of what they had found.

 

That the God of the ages in a whole new endeavor

Had become mortal man to give us His forever

He put it aside, all His glory and power

To save people who’d weekly maybe give Him an hour.

 

Why, you ask, would a God who’s so righteous and mighty

Give Himself for a people whose commitment’s so flighty?

Is it ’cause we possess some great thingamajig?

No. It’s all ’cause His heart’s extranormously big.

 

Just because God is love in a way we can’t fathom,

And He saw that between us sin had dug a chasm,

He knew that we were lost; hope was beyond diminished,

And the only way was if He started and finished

 

So that’s why on this day we remember the child

And we sing of the infant, “So tender and mild,”

But the story’s not done. Here’s the part that gets lost:

Being laid in a trough’s only part of the cost.

 

Because 30 years later, He gets going and preaches,

Heals lepers, cures blindness, gives all kinds of speeches,

To sinners and tax collectors He outreaches,

And walks to a boat that’s far out from the beaches.

 

And even all that’s not the reason for joy

That we celebrate on this day that little Boy

On the feast of His birth and His first little breath

The real reason we’re feasting is because of His death.

 

Once again, when the time had been fully fulfilled,

He was hauled off to trial, and He got Himself killed

They attached Him with nails to an old wooden tree,

And He willingly went to redeem you and me.

 

Because on that old cross, where He hurt, and He bled,

And He suffered from whips and the thorns in His head,

And He suffered until He was finally dead,

There He paid for our sins as the prophets foresaid.

 

But the story’s not done, no it’s not, don’t you know it?

Since He’d paid with His life for the times that we blow it,

There’s no way death could hold Him, though He didn’t forgo it,

He came out of the grave, life forever to show it!

 

So with hearts full to bursting, we all share on this night

How the Lord of creation put the devil to flight

By a child in a manger, a cross and a grave

The whole world was forgiven, to sin no more a slave.

 

And so as you go forth with all your family

And your thoughts wander north and look under the tree,

As the Bible has told through God’s inspired pen,

Love has come down among us, and in His name, Amen.

 

Now the peace of God, which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.




The Central Goal

3_CenterOfLife by John GreenwaldIn the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, Amen.

A. Sarah Cynthia Sylvia Stout
Shel Silverstein, 1974

Sarah Cynthia Sylvia Stout

Would not take the garbage out!

She’d scour the pots and scrape the pans,

Candy the yams and spice the hams,

And though her daddy would scream and shout,

She simply would not take the garbage out.

And so it piled up to the ceilings:

Coffee grounds, potato peelings,

Brown bananas, rotten peas,

Chunks of sour cottage cheese.

It filled the can, it covered the floor,

It cracked the window and blocked the door

With bacon rinds and chicken bones,

Drippy ends of ice cream cones,

Prune pits, peach pits, orange peel,

Gloppy glumps of cold oatmeal,

Pizza crusts and withered greens,

Soggy beans and tangerines,

Crusts of black burned buttered toast,

Gristly bits of beefy roasts…

The garbage rolled on down the hall,

It raised the roof, it broke the wall…

Greasy napkins, cookie crumbs,

Globs of gooey bubble gum,

Cellophane from green baloney,

Rubbery blubbery macaroni,

Peanut butter, caked and dry,

Curdled milk and crusts of pie,

Moldy melons, dried-up mustard,

Eggshells mixed with lemon custard,

Cold french fried and rancid meat,

Yellow lumps of Cream of Wheat.

At last the garbage reached so high

That it finally touched the sky.

And all the neighbors moved away,

And none of her friends would come to play.

And finally Sarah Cynthia Stout said,

“OK, I’ll take the garbage out!”

But then, of course, it was too late…

The garbage reached across the state,

From New York to the Golden Gate.

And there, in the garbage she did hate,

Poor Sarah met an awful fate,

That I cannot now relate

Because the hour is much too late.

But children, remember Sarah Stout

And always take the garbage out!

 

But Christians have our own garbage, don’t we?

Text: …If anyone else thinks that he can trust in something physical, I can claim even more. I was circumcised on the eighth day. I’m a descendant of Israel. I’m from the tribe of Benjamin. I’m a pure-blooded Hebrew. When it comes to living up to standards, I was a Pharisee. When it comes to being enthusiastic, I was a persecutor of the church. When it comes to winning God’s approval by keeping Jewish laws, I was perfect. These things that I once considered valuable, I now consider worthless for Christ. It’s far more than that! I consider everything else worthless because I’m much better off knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. It’s because of him that I think of everything as worthless. I threw it all away in order to gain Christ and to have a relationship with him. This means that I didn’t receive God’s approval by obeying his laws. The opposite is true! I have God’s approval through faith in Christ. This is the approval that comes from God and is based on faith that knows Christ. Faith knows the power that his coming back to life gives and what it means to share his suffering. In this way I’m becoming like him in his death, with the confidence that I’ll come back to life from the dead. It’s not that I’ve already reached the goal or have already completed the course. But I run to win that which Jesus Christ has already won for me. Brothers and sisters, I can’t consider myself a winner yet. This is what I do: I don’t look back, I lengthen my stride, and I run straight toward the goal to win the prize that God’s heavenly call offers in Christ Jesus. (Philippians 3:4-14, GWV)

Christians all have been set free

When Jesus died upon the tree

So all the sin that ties us down

Was covered by a bloody crown

Yet though Christ rose without a doubt

We just won’t get the garbage out

 

We’ll pray our prayers and sing a song

Catch a sermon, short or long,

Don’t use much profanity

And guard our sexuality

But that’s not what it’s all about

No, that won’t get the garbage out

 

We feed the hungry, serve the poor

Tell of Jesus door to door

Read our Bibles every day

Tell the hurting they’re okay

Help out strangers on the way

And when the plate comes, amply pay

Come to classes more than others

Cook a meal, eat with our brothers

Offer prayers for one another

And don’t forget to call our mothers

Grant forgiveness one and all

Welcome guests both great and small

Love our kids, support our wives

Offer up our very lives

Yet though from hills His name we shout,

That still won’t get the garbage out

 

Though trying hard all good to be

That only makes a Pharisee

Pride credits us with worthless trash

And builds a house on sand and ash

Each time you’re looking down your nose

It’s as if Jesus never rose

The sewage simply piles high

Until it towers to the sky

And when the Lord gives you a glance

He simply sees your arrogance

 

Dear Christian friend, the day’s begun

And there’s a race for you to run

Throw off that pride you’re carrying

So only to the cross you cling

And lift your voice and gladly sing

All glory only to our King

Since long before our first birth shout

He, with our garbage, was taken out

 

The victory’s already won

When Jesus cried out, “It is done!”

And God Himself to us has run

He’s present now: “You’re home now, son.”

Your garbage He’s washed clean away

The cleansing flood brings a new day

And that with Word and bread and wine

You’re called by name. He says, “You’re mine.”

 

What pride are you still clinging to?

That clogs your heart with fearful goo?

This week, what change occurs in you

When not defined by what you do?

How will you jump the hurdles now

His victor’s crown upon your brow

When, knowing that your race is won,

You follow footprints of God’s Son

And to eternity you run

But while you’re breathing, never done

The Lord keep you each day en route

For Jesus took our garbage out.




Shepherd of the Ridge Lutheran Church Sermon podcast

Sermons podcast from Shepherd of the Ridge Lutheran Church, North Ridgeville, OH

 

Engaging. Relevant. Pastor Dale sets aside personal opinion and politics to present the Word of God, the ultimate Truth. Offering forgiveness from guilt, guidance for your daily life, insights from the mind and heart of God, and even the cure for death itself, these weekly messages present God’s love letter to you directly from Shepherd of the Ridge Lutheran Church (LCMS), North Ridgeville, OH (near Cleveland). If you have questions or comments about anything you hear, drop us a note at shepherdoftheridge.org/contact or call (440-327-7321), and find out more about us at our website, shepherdoftheridge.org.

 

Shepherd of the Ridge Lutheran Church (LCMS) Sermon – powered by FeedBurner.




Pericope Discussion List – Yahoo Groups

Pericope Discussion List - Yahoo Groups

Pericope is a list primarily for LCMS pastors for the intention of discussing topics related to the lessons for the coming Sunday, sermons, and other worship related material. While anyone is welcome to join and participate, please know that this list is moderated by LCMS Lutherans for Lutheran pastors and other interested persons, and therefore, the approach is from a decidedly Lutheran perspective.

via Pericope Discussion List – Yahoo Groups.




Communicating the Lectionary for a Change – Google Groups

Communicating the Lectionary for a Change - Google Groups

Using Andy Stanley’s book, Communicating for a Change, the Me-We-God-You-We format, and the lectionary (RCL or the LCMS’s Lutheran Service Book variant): discussions on the main point and key question you find in each week’s readings.

via Communicating the Lectionary for a Change – Google Groups.




The Archive

lcmspastorcross-smallLooking for something from the old site? Check The Archive.