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Seeing is on my mind

Seeing is on my mind these days because I am getting cataract surgery this week, Thurs and Saturday. I am having them removed, not added (such a comedian).

I am fairly certain I would have used our Gospel lesson regardless of any upcoming surgeries. The story of the two travellers on the road to the village of Emmaus is reasonably well-known. I have preached on it before, three years of nowhere else, and I think it still has things I haven’t covered. I am not recommending anyone go back to the sermon from three years ago and compare but if anyone does I’d be very curious about what you think of the two; how they are different or the same.

The thing about the story is it gives us an opportunity to reflect on what it means to see. I don’t want to be unnecessarily complicated but there is a difference between what our eyes take in and what we see. If you listen for the brief discussion about the difference between photographers and picture-takers, you’ll understand what I mean.

There is only one sermon this week as the recent weather has made some of the non-primary roads quite unpleasant. There won’t be a sermon, at least not from me, next week and I don’t think there will be a Zoom service either.

“What do we see?” St. Mark’s Presbyterian (to download, right-click and select “Save Link As . . .”)

Blessings,

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One Comment

  1. ‘Open my eyes that I may see.’
    Great message Barry.
    We had Todd and Tam for the weekend so we missed Sunday service.
    Thankfully we can listen to you on Words.
    I am sure all will go well with the cataract removal. My only ‘beef’ was having to put in the drops, before and after, three, four times per day. But a small price to pay for the clarity of vision I now have.

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