94 episodes

Sunday Sermons from San Francisco's Grace Cathedral, home to a community where the best of Episcopal tradition courageously embraces innovation and open-minded conversation. At Grace Cathedral, inclusion is expected and people of all faiths are welcomed. The cathedral itself, a renowned San Francisco landmark, serves as a magnet where diverse people gather to worship, celebrate, seek solace, converse and learn.

Sermons from Grace Cathedral Grace Cathedral

    • Religion & Spirituality
    • 4.4 • 30 Ratings

Sunday Sermons from San Francisco's Grace Cathedral, home to a community where the best of Episcopal tradition courageously embraces innovation and open-minded conversation. At Grace Cathedral, inclusion is expected and people of all faiths are welcomed. The cathedral itself, a renowned San Francisco landmark, serves as a magnet where diverse people gather to worship, celebrate, seek solace, converse and learn.

    The Very Rev. Dr. Malcolm Clemens Young

    The Very Rev. Dr. Malcolm Clemens Young

    Grace Cathedral, San Francisco, CA 2E26
    5 Easter (Year B) 11:00 a.m. Eucharist
    Sunday 28 April 2024 | Earth Day
     
    Acts 8:26-40
    Psalm 22:24-30
    1 John 4:7-21
    John 15:1-8
     
    “Mysterious God we have lost our home. We are wandering. Help us to hear your call and find ourselves again in you. Amen."
     
    1. In wild places I have heard the voice of God... From the time beyond human remembering there existed an island called by the first people Limuw. Every spring fantastic cumulous clouds raced over orange and yellow flower-covered mountain slopes. The fast moving streams, canyons, prairies, oak woodlands, cobbled beaches, tidepools and white foamy waters teamed with life. Thousands of birds nested on the cliffs among the waterfalls. But something was missing. And so Hutash, the name for the Spirit of the Earth, planted a new kind of seed. From these, the ground put forth the first people and the island was complete. Thus begins a story perhaps older than human writing told by people known today as the Chumash. You may know this place as Santa Cruz Island. It is the largest island in California and lies in the archipelago off the coast of Santa Barbara. “The Rainbow Bridge” story goes on. Hutash taught the people how to take care of themselves and their island home. For many years they thrived and multiplied until Limuw became too crowded. Then Kakanupmawa, the mystery behind the sun, conferred with Hutash and they agreed that the people needed a bigger place. So they gathered them on the mountain peak and caused a rainbow to stretch over the sea to a broader land. Some of the people easily crossed over. But others became distracted and dizzied by the waters far below them. They fell from the rainbow bridge into the ocean waters where they were transformed into dolphins. In wild places I have heard the voice of God. When dolphins join me as I surf at Ocean Beach my heart expands with ecstatic joy. It always feels like such a holy encounter. But not only does the story concern the deep kinship between dolphins and humans, some believe it might even be about sea level changes that are part of the geologic record. At the end of the last ice age when the sea level was about 400 feet lower the four channel islands were joined together. As the seas rose, the population that the four separate islands could support decreased forcing people to move to the mainland. Rosanna Xia tells this story in her book California Against the Sea because she hopes that the massive rise in the sea level could be an opportunity for human beings to mend their relationship with the ocean and the rest of the earth. During the last one hundred years the sea has risen by nine inches. Before the end of our century in the lifetime of the youngest people here, the sea will probably rise by six to seven feet. Human beings caused and continue to produce a catastrophic change in the composition of our atmosphere. Almost one third of the carbon dioxide released by human beings since the Industrial Revolution and more than 90% of the resulting heat has been absorbed by our oceans. Carbon dioxide mixing with ocean water causes a chemical reaction that increases the acidity of the seas. The oceans are absorbing the heat equivalent of seven Hiroshima bombs detonating every second. We are the first generation to experience the effects of climate change and the last generation that can make a substantially different course possible. We know this but don’t really comprehend it. It’s hard to be continuously conscious of such a danger, and of such a grave responsibility.
     
    2. In the face of our situation Jesus gives us very good news. During the last weeks of Easter our readings show us how to live in intimacy with God. Today’s gospel comes from the last meal Jesus shares with his friends before being killed. Imagine the tangible fear in that room as he prepares them for his departure from this world. It must have been like a last meal at San Quentin Pr

    • 16 min
    The Very Rev. Dr. Malcolm Clemens Young

    The Very Rev. Dr. Malcolm Clemens Young

    Grace Cathedral, San Francisco, CA 2E23
    4 Easter (Year B) 8:30 a.m. & 11:00 a.m. Eucharist
    Sunday 21 April 2024 Good Shepherd Sunday
     
    Acts 4:5-12
    Psalm 23
    1 John 3:16-24
    John 10:11-18
    “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not be in want” (Psalm 23).
     
    When I was at Harvard, on the advice of a friend who is a nun, I decided to take a leadership course at the Kennedy School of Government. My fellow classmates came from twenty-six countries and included CEO’s, a judge, a District Attorney, an army general, a state senator, the founder of an investment bank, the co-founder of a Political Action Committee, an ambassador, a university dean, the head administrator for airports in Israel, etc.

    Our teacher Ronald Heifetz changed who I am. He spoke with uncanny and absolutely non-defensive frankness. He had an MD, practiced as a surgeon, and had previously taught at Harvard Medical School. He was a cello virtuoso who had studied under Gregor Piatagorsky and music was central to his understanding of leadership. [i]
     
    This week I read all my class notes – everything from doodles that spelled my wife’s Hawaiian name in Greek letters to quotes with three stars in the margin (such as, “in disagreements the first value we lose sight of is the ability to be curious”). [ii] The syllabus says directly that the course’s goal is, “to increase one’s capacity to sustain the demands of leadership.” It was perfect preparation for the rest of my life.
     
    On the first day Heifetz said, “if you are going through a difficult time I strongly urge you not to take this course.” He was right. This was not an ordinary lecture class but a seemingly entirely improvised discussion. Heifetz would start by saying something like, “What do we want to address today?” It felt strangely dangerous. Nothing was going to come easy or be handed to us on a silver platter. We talked about the feeling in class and agreed it was tense.
     
    At one point in the early lectures Heifetz just stopped being an authority figure for a while. In the resulting chaos we learned how much we all crave authority and guiding norms. It felt more like a Werner Erhard seminar than a Harvard lecture.

    Heifetz might not always say it directly but he regards leadership above all as a spiritual practice. The motivations for good leadership are spiritual. The character and the skills that we need to develop for leadership are spiritual. To be effective we have to recognize forces that were previously invisible to us and experience the world with intuition and based on a real understanding of ourselves. Leadership success requires curiosity, compassion, wisdom, honesty, courage, humility, self-knowledge and the right balance between detachment and passion.
     
    Today is Good Shepherd Sunday. In the Fourth Gospel Jesus faces accusers who seek to kill him. He uses the metaphor of a leader as a good shepherd. This idea was already ancient in his time and mentioned in the books of Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel and the Psalms. You might be thinking, “No one listens to me since I retired,” or, “I’m at the lowest level in my company, or I’m just a kid, what could leadership possibly have to do with me?”
     
    Heifetz makes a central distinction between authority and leadership. Authority comes from one’s institutional standing and involves managing people’s expectations. [iii] Jesus was not the Roman governor or the high priest. He did not have this authority.
     
    Leadership on the other hand means mobilizing resources to make progress on difficult problems. [iv] In many instances people exercise more powerful leadership without having formal authority than with it. Jesus did. And make no mistake Jesus expects each of us to act as leaders regardless of our formal or informal authority. We exist to glorify God and to help solve the problems we encounter. For homework I invite you this week to consciously exercise leadership that is inspired by Je

    • 16 min
    The Rev. Jim Wallis

    The Rev. Jim Wallis

    The Rev. Jim Wallis
    The inaugural holder of the Chair in Faith and Justice at the McCourt School of Public Policy and founding Director of the Georgetown University Center on Faith and Justice

    • 14 min
    The Rev. Canon Mary Carter Greene

    The Rev. Canon Mary Carter Greene

    Acts 4:323-35
    1 John 1:1-2:2
    John 20:19-31

    • 10 min
    The Rt. Rev. Dr. Marc Handley Andrus

    The Rt. Rev. Dr. Marc Handley Andrus

    Acts 10:34-43
    1 Corinthians 15:1-11
    Mark 16:1-8

    • 15 min
    The Rev. Canon Anna E. Rossi

    The Rev. Canon Anna E. Rossi

    Exodus 12:1-14
    1 Corinthians 11:23-26
    John 13:1-17, 31b-35

    • 10 min

Customer Reviews

4.4 out of 5
30 Ratings

30 Ratings

SFBrit ,

Great to have this archive of sermons

I love having access to this sermon archive and listening to sermons I have missed or want to relive. I can not stress enough how worthwhile it is to listen to Alan Jones's past sermons. Even with 2 years since he retired they are so powerful and insightful.
Thanks Grace

davidandersonla ,

Inspirational

I live in LA and visit Grace Cathedral every time we are in the City. So glad to have access to these inspiring sermons!!! I listen in the car on the way to work every morning and it always helps me start my day with gratitude. Thank you!!!!

Abjdsf ,

Inspirational

Inspiration available at any time!
The May 26 sermon is labeled as being that of Jane Shaw; however the speaker is not Jane Shaw. Great sermon from whom?

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