Spirited Word

Adrian Kitson

By God's Word proclaimed, the Holy Spirit works faith in God's grace in Jesus, when and where he pleases. Sermons by Pastor Adrian Kitson, Lutheran Church of Australia. St Petri Lutheran Church, Nuriootpa, Barossa Valley, South Australia. www.stpetri.org.au

  1. Mercy

    10 Jun

    Mercy

    Send us Fan Mail Sunday 7 June 2026 We enter into the long time of learning the Way of Jesus in this time after Pentecost. First cab off the rank today is that moment when Matthew is called to follow Jesus. It must have been quite a surprise to Matthew, and to the two groups of people witnessing all this. There would have been people who never thought the mercy of God would get close to someone like this ostracised disliked man, Matthew. He was definitely a sinner with big sins for all to see. Every day he strengthened the oppression of the community under brutal rule of the Empire by taking taxes from the local community and then pocketing some of the tax money for his own life project. Some of the them would have marvelled at this flagrant mercy extended to such an obviously bad person with such big sins. Others would have been very upset that mercy like this should ever be extended to someone like that. Jesus does this mercy-act of calling Matthew and then deals with the eyebrow raising it caused – the good and the bad. To the bad people who are sensing joy that God could be this full of mercy to such a bad person (like they know they are), and to the good people who are deeply offended and angered that someone so bad could be treated as good (like they believe they have earned to be), Jesus reveals the heart of God. I desire mercy, not sacrifice Acknowledgement not burnt offerings (Hosea 6:6) May you know the heart of God for you this morning. Pastor Adrian

    25 min
  2. Holy Trinity

    3 Jun

    Holy Trinity

    Send us Fan Mail Sunday 31 May 2026 “To Whom Will You Compare Me? Who Is My Equal?” That’s the question God asked his people in Isaiah 46. He had cared for them before they were born and had promised to care for them “until your hair is white with age”. And the people had seen God’s power at work countless times in their history. They survived in the land of heathen people only because the Lord, the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, loved and cared for them, no matter how many times they rebelled against him. But they constantly turned to gods of stone and wood – to the man-made gods of the nations around them. WHY? There are many reasons, but I think one of the main ones is that the Israelites wanted a god they could understand - and manipulate. The gods were made in their own image, and so the character of each idol was similar to their own. These false gods could be bribed and they operated by set, strict rules – all determined by humans of course. And they could be seen, touched and kept close.  Archaeology has found thousands of these idols to prove this point. By contrast the people could not see God or get close to him. He remained a complete mystery and could not be cajoled or bribed to do anyone’s will. Even though God remained faithful and served the people with grace and justice, they wanted something concrete to hang on to. Today we still have a mystery about God that only became a little clearer in the New Testament. God is Father, Son and Holy Spirit. The Bible never uses the word TRINITY but it’s the only word we humans can find to even begin to explain God. But that brings us to the same temptation as the Israelites. We want to see, touch, smell, and know God. We find it so hard to embrace mystery – to accept that God has revealed all we need to know about him in the person of Jesus. “Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father! So why are you asking me to show him to you?” (John 14:9). So how might our awesome, mysterious, all-knowing, all-powerful, ever-present, three-Persons-in-One God want us to respond today to his questions above? Pastor Robert Voigt

    26 min
  3. Pentecost Sunday - Grace Gifts

    27 May

    Pentecost Sunday - Grace Gifts

    Send us Fan Mail 24 May 2026 It is Pentecost Sunday. We remember that first astonishing coming of the Spirit that set in motion a vast global and timeless new creation community, of which we are a part. This is the victorious King Jesus now ascended to his throne of grace sharing the spoils of his victory. Praise the Lord! It is not always easy to rejoice in other people’s giftedness. The temptation is to get ahead by being super-competitive, or opt out and miss out on or feel inferior even though you do have your own gifts. How can we freely accept and enjoy other people’s gifts and not dismiss our own, but thank God for them all? Paul speaks into that today. We are back in that rather interesting Christian community in Corinth as we hear Paul responding to their questions, and their troubles with the many spiritual gifts they seem to have received. They don’t seem to be doing a good job on handling these gifts. There is that old human problem of comparison, competition and therefore, conflict leading to faction within the Body. Never good. We will hear some home truths about who we are and who God is and what those gifts he gives actually are – all grace. We might also ponder how we are going when it comes to feeling inferior or superior in terms of gifts. Paul is pretty clear that the main thing about any spiritual gift is not so much the gift itself, but what the gift proclaims about the Giver of those gifts. Pastor Adrian

    28 min
  4. Ascending To Heaven?

    19 May

    Ascending To Heaven?

    Send us Fan Mail We draw to the close of these 50 days of Easter as we witness that rather changing moment of Jesus’ ascension. It is hard for us to know what to do with this account Luke gives us – not just once but twice. We don’t treat it anything like Christmas or Easter. And yet, it must be pretty important for it to end Luke’s account of Jesus and begin Luke’s account of how the church began in his Book of Acts. I wonder if we downplay this part of Jesus’ mission because we struggle to make sense of it. Does Jesus go somewhere else or stay right here? How does he stay here? Where is heaven and why are the disciples told to not worry about looking for Jesus in the clouds but head back to their life in the city and wait? It seems that our culture and maybe our own view of heaven is laced with ancient Greek thought – that heaven is some far off other-worldly place to which Jesus went. The only way we get to bridge that vast chasm when we die is with our so called ‘eternal soul’. When we die our soul flies away (with Jesus?) and finds its home in some cloudy space… This is not Luke’s truth. This is not Christian belief through the centuries. This ascension is all about the still human Jesus ascending, but not some far off world of floating souls, but rising to take up his rule here with us! May you know his presence and his rule in your life and work with us to keep fulfilling his purpose for us to bear witness to him everywhere. Pastor Adrian

    26 min
  5. Everybody Needs Somebody

    12 May

    Everybody Needs Somebody

    Send us Fan Mail Sunday 10 May 2026 As this 50 days of Easter celebration winds to its conclusion, it might be easy to think that the best part of the church year and our life together is over and things will become a bit ‘ho-hum’. How would it have been for those close to Jesus when he started talking very directly and pointedly about his imminent departure via suffering, cross and death! Surely a bit more serious than just worrying about things becoming ‘ho-hum! How on earth would they cope? How on earth would they know what to do? Who would stick up for them, guide them, show them what to say and do, teach them so much more than they already knew? In these questions and in this fear, Jesus does two things. He says that life will not go ‘down-hill’ after he goes and that if they just do what they saw him do, they will get through. Jesus sems to know that everybody needs somebody sometimes and says we have that Someone all the time. In all we face, we have this Advocate, this assistant, this Spirit of Jesus guiding, empowering, teaching, leading, protecting. We also have clear direction on how to go about it: Love as we have been loved and leave the rest to the Spirit! Praying that you don’t live like an orphan, thinking you have got to make all this work out and make sense of everything. Praying that you find great encouragement and strength for all you are facing in this ‘Paraclete’; this Advocate whom you have received in your baptism already. Pastor Adrian

    22 min

About

By God's Word proclaimed, the Holy Spirit works faith in God's grace in Jesus, when and where he pleases. Sermons by Pastor Adrian Kitson, Lutheran Church of Australia. St Petri Lutheran Church, Nuriootpa, Barossa Valley, South Australia. www.stpetri.org.au