Sunday, March 29, 2026

What Kind of King?

Jesus challenges our assumptions about power, status, and position



The Liturgy of the Palms

Matthew 21:1-11

Psalm 118:1-2, 19-29


The Liturgy of the Word

Isaiah 50:4-9a

Philippians 2:5-11

Matthew 26:14- 27:66

or Matthew 27:11-54

Psalm 31:9-16


©2026 The Rev. Seth Olson


This sermon was preached on Palm Sunday: The Sunday of the Passion at the Episcopal Church of the Holy Apostles in Hoover, AL. A video of the sermon may be found here


Holy God, may my words be your words and when my words are not your

words, may your people be wise enough to know the same. Amen.


I wonder what kind of king they thought they were getting. That question has been rattling around in my brain all week. Because this week begins with excitement. Energy. Movement. A kind of holy parade.


Jesus comes into Jerusalem, and people start throwing their cloaks on the road. They wave branches. They shout, “Hosanna!” which doesn’t mean “praise God,” but something more like, “Save us now!”


And fair enough. If you had lived under the shadow of empire…
if you had known instability, oppression, religious anxiety, political fear…
if you had been longing for God to finally do something…
you might shout too. “Save us now!”


But here’s the curious thing: Jesus does not arrive the way kings normally arrive. No war horse. No army. No chariot. No spectacle of force.


He comes on a donkey. Not exactly the image of domination. 

He comes in humility. 

He comes in vulnerability. 

He comes in peace.


And so I wonder:
Did they really want this king?

Or did they envision a different kind of savior entirely?

A savior who would crush enemies.
A savior who would make things easy.
A savior who would fix the world quickly and on their terms.

And before we get too hard on them, I think that question belongs to us too.


What kind of Christ do we actually want? What sort of Jesus do we seek?

Do we yearn for one who blesses our plans, confirms our assumptions, and defeats the people we don’t like?

Or do we desire the Jesus who comes gently… 

who refuses the way of domination… 

who rides into the center of power without becoming power as the world understands it?


Palm Sunday is strange that way. It begins with praise, but it does not let us stay there in a shallow kind of triumph. In this liturgy, we move from palms to Passion. From “Hosanna!” to the story of suffering and the cross. And maybe that is because the Church, in her wisdom, knows how quickly human beings can change.


How quickly devotion can become disappointment. 

How quickly excitement can sour when Christ does not perform according to our expectations. 

How quickly we can praise a Messiah on Sunday and resist him by Friday.


So maybe Palm Sunday is not just a celebration. Maybe it is also an unveiling. Maybe it reveals the kind of king Jesus is. And maybe it reveals the kind of disciples we still struggle to be. 


Because Jesus does not enter Jerusalem to seize control. 

He enters Jerusalem to give himself away. 

He does not come to reign by fear. 

He comes to reign by love. 

He does not come to save by standing far off from human pain. 

He comes to enter it fully.


And that means this day is not just asking, “Will you wave a branch?”


It is asking, “Will you follow?” 

Will you follow this Jesus into the week ahead? 

Will you follow him to the table on Maundy Thursday, where love kneels down to wash feet? 

Will you follow him to Good Friday, where the love of God refuses to turn away from suffering? 

Will you follow him into the silence of Holy Saturday, where nothing seems resolved and yet God is not absent? 


That, I think, is the invitation of Palm Sunday. Not just to admire Jesus, the Christ. Not just to cheer for Our Lord. But to follow him.


And not the Jesus of our fantasies. 

The real Jesus. 

The humble one. 

The peaceful one. 

The brave one. 

The one who enters the holy city not to destroy, but to redeem.


So perhaps the most faithful thing we can do today is hold our palms with gratitude and honesty. Yes, gratitude — because Christ has come to us. But also humble honesty — because we do not always know what kind of king we are asking for.

And still, he comes.

Still, he comes to us in humility.
Still, he comes to us in mercy.
Still, he comes to us not as a tyrant, but as love in the flesh.


So let us greet him with joy.
And let us follow him with courage.
One day at a time.
Through the whole holy week.


Amen.


Household of Believers


©The Rev. Seth Olson 2026

This sermon was preached on the Fifth Sunday in Lent (Year A, 2026) at the Episcopal Church of the Holy Apostles in Hoover, AL. A video of the sermon may be found here.

Holy God, may my words be your words, and when my words are not your words, may your people be wise enough to know the same. Amen.

Ezekiel is set down by God in a valley full of bones. Not just bones.
Dry bones. Very dry bones.

 

That detail means this is not fresh pain. This is old devastation. The kind that has settled in. The kind that starts to feel normal. The kind that becomes the landscape.

 

And God asks Ezekiel, “Mortal, can these bones live?” 

That is a hard question. Because the answer to this sort of question doesn’t feel obvious.

 

Can this faith live?
Can this heart beat with love?
Can this family heal?
Can this weary soul breath again?

I know something about that.

 

When I was a junior at Sewanee, I looked impressive on paper. I was heavily involved in chapel life, Bible studies, residential life, cross-country/track and all while maintaining my grades. From the outside, I looked like someone whose spiritual life was strong and headed in the right direction.

 

And during that season, our Suffragan Bishop Mark Andrus and my rector, Marc Burnette, invited me to come talk with them. They told me they thought I should pursue ordination and go straight to seminary.

 

It was kind. It was humbling. But I had to tell them the truth. Despite how I looked on paper, inside, my life was falling apart. My heart had been broken. My faith was unraveling. The worldview I had carefully built was coming apart. I was still showing up and doing all the right things, but inwardly I felt as dead as Lazarus.

 

Thanks be to God, those men did not shame me. They listened. And they encouraged me to meet with the Rev. Annwn Myers, the associate chaplain at Sewanee at that time.

 

When I sat in her office, I told the truth. And she did not rush to fix me. She made room for me. She reminded me that I did not need a huge faith. Just faith the size of a mustard seed.

 

Still, I felt dead on a soul level. This persisted for not four days, not even four months, but about a year. By that time, I had all but put down the spirituality of my childhood. In the liminal space, walking from what was to what would be I became more open and spent time seeking, wandering, and wondering what my life’s path was and whether God was part of it, nonexistent, or actively trying to sabotage me. I pondered could my spiritual life live again—could my life change?

 

And not on my timeline, but on God’s something did change. It took a long time for me to realize what God was doing, but eventually I realized God was filling my spiritual lungs with something fresh. And looking back now, I know this: through grace God brought me back to life, but it was the community—folks like Annwn, my friends, and my family—it was the community that brought me back to living.

 

And that is why Bethany matters. Bethany is the home of Martha, Mary, and Lazarus. It is more than the place where a miracle happens. It is where this household of believers lives. And each of them shows us something.

 

Martha goes out to meet Jesus. She is active, direct, engaged. And here in John she is not just busy. She is bold in faith. She says, “Yes, Lord, I believe that you are the Messiah, the Son of God.” She shows us that discipleship includes action. Serving, reaching out, showing up, loving our neighbors in concrete ways.

 

Mary shows us something different. She is the one who grieves, who weeps, who stays close to the sorrow. She reminds us that discipleship also includes contemplation. Stillness. Listening. The willingness to sit with grief and let God meet us there.

 

Sometimes people say, “I’m a Martha” or “I’m a Mary,” but we are both—we need both! Action without contemplation can become self-aggrandizing or frantic. Contemplation without action can become self-enclosed, even apathetic. We need both action and contemplation as we experience God’s grace. But, what about when we don’t have either?

 

There’s another member of this household of believers—there is Lazarus. And Lazarus reminds us that sometimes we are not Martha and we are not Mary. Sometimes we are the one in the tomb. Sometimes we are so exhausted, so wounded, so overwhelmed, so heartsick, that we cannot get ourselves to Jesus and we cannot even pray, except with sighs too deep for words.

 

And that is when today’s Gospel becomes especially good news. Because Jesus does not only meet the active. He does not only meet the prayerful. He also goes after the dead. He stands at the mouth of the tomb and calls life forth.

 

And then he says to the community, “Unbind him, and let him go.” That is what the Church is meant to be—a place of God’s liberating love. A place where people do not have to pretend to be fine. A place where some serve like Martha. A place where some pray and weep like Mary. And a place where those who come stumbling out of the tomb, still wrapped in bandages, are not shamed.

 

They are loved. They are seen. They are unbound. So, whether you find Jesus like Martha, or wait for Jesus to find you like Mary, or need Jesus to drag you out of some dead place like Lazarus, the truth is the same:

 

He comes. He enters our grief. He enters our homes. He enters our tombs. And wherever he finds us, he brings resurrected life.

Amen.

 

Sunday, March 15, 2026

One Thing I Do Know

 1 Samuel 16:1-13



This sermon was preached at the Episcopal Church of the Holy Apostles in Hoover, AL on the Fourth Sunday in Lent (Refreshment Sunday). A video on the sermon may be found by clicking here. Thank you for being here!


Holy God, may my words be your words, and when my words are not your words, may your people be wise enough to know the same. Amen.

 

Have you ever been looking for something—your keys, your glasses, your phone—only to discover it was there the whole time?

Not hidden. Not stolen. Not mysteriously vanished.

 

Just… there. In your hand. On the counter. On your head. In the very place where you had already looked three times. The frustrating thing is not simply that you missed it. It is that once you see it, you realize it was never really out of sight. You just could not recognize what was right in front of you.

 

That is funny when it is a phone charger or a pair of sunglasses. It is less funny when it is something more important. When we do not see the hurt in someone we love. When we miss a destructive pattern in our own behavior. When we remain blind to the way fear has been driving us for years. When we stop seeing the humanity of another person because we have grown too used to sorting people into categories.

 

And sometimes—this is where John 9 takes us—we do not see the work of God because we have already decided what God is allowed to do, how God is allowed to do it, and through whom God is allowed to do it.

On the surface, this is a story about a man born blind. But that is only the top layer. Because the deeper question is not simply, “Can the blind man see?” The deeper question is: “Can anybody else?”

 

Jesus and his disciples are walking along when they see a man blind from birth. Immediately, the disciples ask, “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?”

 

And before we are too hard on them, let’s admit that we do this all the time. Whose fault is it? Who caused this? What did they do wrong? How do we explain suffering in a way that keeps the world neat and morally satisfying?

That is the first blindness in the passage. Before the man is healed, he is analyzed. Before he is loved, he is discussed. Before he is treated as a person, he is treated as a theological problem.

 

We do this too. We may use therapy words, political words, or church words. But we still do it. When someone suffers, we often rush to explanation before compassion. We move toward a theory before a relationship.

 

But Jesus will not play that game. He says, “Neither this man nor his parents sinned.” That does not answer every question we have about suffering. It does not solve the mystery of pain. But it tells us something crucial about Jesus: he will not reduce this man’s life to blame. He refuses shame as the story line. And that is good news.

 

Because some of us have spent years living under other people’s explanations. Your suffering is your fault. Your struggle is weakness. Your difference makes you a problem to be solved. Your pain must mean God is trying to teach you something.

 

But here comes Jesus, refusing to let this man’s life be narrated by shame.

He makes mud. He anoints the man’s eyes. He sends him to wash. The man goes, and he comes back seeing.

 

That should be the end of the story. A man who has never seen in his life can now see. That should lead to joy. That should lead to wonder. That should lead to praise. But it does not.

 

The healing is not the end of the story. It is the beginning of the trouble. Because grace disrupts systems that are comfortable with people staying in their assigned places.

 

The neighbors do not know what to do with him. “Is this not the man who used to sit and beg?” Some say yes. Some say no. Some say, “Well, he looks like him.” And the man keeps saying, “I am the man.”

He is not only identifying himself. He is reclaiming himself. The one who had been known only by his lack is now speaking in his own voice.

 

His parents are afraid. The religious authorities are offended. And the people who are supposed to know how to recognize the work of God are the very ones who cannot perceive what is happening.

 

They interrogate the man. They question his parents. They debate Jesus. They circle around Sabbath law, propriety, and authority. And do you notice what nobody does? Nobody simply rejoices.

 

A man has been healed, and they cannot celebrate because the healing does not fit their framework. That is the deeper blindness here. Not the blindness the man was born with, but the blindness of people so certain that they can see that they can no longer recognize the Light of the world standing right in front of them. And that kind of blindness is more dangerous.

 

Because if you know you are blind, you ask for help. If you know you are confused, you seek understanding. If you know you need healing, you can receive care.

 

But if you are absolutely certain that your categories are complete, your judgments are pure, your tribe is righteous, your religion is tidy, and your framework is final—then how will the light ever get in?

 

Meanwhile, the man who had been blind becomes the clearest-sighted person in the chapter, other than Jesus himself. He does not know everything. He does not have polished theology, institutional authority, or a seminary degree. But he does have honesty. 

 

“One thing I do know, that though I was blind, now I see.”

 

That is one of the most powerful lines in all of Scripture. Not because it explains everything, but because it does not pretend to. He does not claim more than he knows. He simply tells the truth about what grace has done.

And Holy Apostles, that is often how faith deepens. Not through mastering everything. Not through winning every argument. But through telling the truth: here is who I was, here is what Christ has done, and here is what I now see that I could not see before.

 

That is witness. Then comes one of the best moments in the whole passage. The religious leaders keep pressing him, and finally he asks, “Do you also want to become his disciples?”

 

That is holy mischief. Sanctified sass. The one who was being interrogated now exposes the blindness of the interrogators. He sees them more clearly than they see themselves. And that is what grace does: it makes a person harder to control.

 

But this story is not here so we can smugly point at ancient religious leaders and say, “Look how blind they were.” That would be to miss the point all over again. The story is here so we might ask where this same blindness lives in us.

 

Because this kind of blindness is not just personal. It can be communal. It can live in the church. It can show up whenever religion gets more interested in control than compassion, more interested in managing people than healing them, more interested in protecting itself than telling the truth.

Public life is not the enemy. Political leaders are not automatically villains. Power itself is not evil. Some have used authority in ways that bend toward justice, mercy, peace, and the common good. Thanks be to God for them.

But when religion becomes obsessed with preserving influence, blessing tribal certainty, or defending its own status, it risks losing its ability to recognize Christ.

 

Because Jesus is not found flattering the powerful or sanctifying our exclusions. Jesus is found reclaiming the excluded. Dismantling shame. Crossing lines. Telling inconvenient truths. Giving dignity back to people who have been treated as objects, problems, or threats.

 

Whenever Christianity starts caring more about influence than faithfulness, more about control than compassion, more about access than agape, it starts to go blind. And that is the question this Gospel puts before us: not simply, “Do we believe in Jesus?” but “Do we see as Jesus sees?” Or is our vision obscured by fear, pride, certainty, or the need to keep the world neatly sorted into insiders and outsiders?

 

Because the final paradox of the story is this: the real problem is not blindness. The real problem is claiming sight while remaining closed off to grace. If you know you are blind, there is hope. If you know you are confused, there is hope. If you know your life has gotten tangled up in fear, pride, status, or tribal identity, there is hope.

 

But if you insist that you already see just fine—that you have no need to repent, no need to listen, no need to be interrupted, no need to be changed—then even the light can start to feel like a threat.

 

So maybe that is the prayer for us this Sunday. Not, “Lord, show me who the blind people are.” But, “Lord, where am I still blind?” Where have I treated people as problems instead of neighbors? Where have I mistaken certainty for faith? Where have I wanted Jesus to endorse my world rather than remake it?

 

Open my eyes, Lord. And until I can see clearly, make me honest enough to say that. For the man born blind becomes a disciple not because he knows everything, but because he tells the truth about what grace has done.

 

“One thing I do know… though I was blind, now I see.” 

 

May Christ save us from the blindness of false certainty. May Christ open our eyes. And may Christ give us the courage to tell the truth: that by grace, we are beginning to see.

 

Amen.

 

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Found at the Well

Just like the woman at the well, Jesus meets us—not just where we are—but precisely in the places where we don’t want to be found.


 Exodus 17:1-7

Psalm 95

Romans 5:1-11

John 4:5-42


 

© The Rev. Seth Olson, 2026


This sermon was preached on the Third Sunday in Lent, at the Episcopal Church of the Holy Apostles in Hoover, AL. A video version of the sermon may be found here


Holy God, may my words be your words, and when my words are not your words, may your people be wise enough to know the same. Amen.

 

There’s a particular kind of feeling that comes over you when you’re trying not to be seen. Not the kind of “I forgot to comb my hair” feeling. I mean that deeper instinct we all know—the one that says: If anyone really knew what’s going on in me… if anyone really saw what I’ve done, what I’ve left undone… if anyone saw what I’m afraid of… I might not survive the shame of it.

 

So, we learn to manage. We learn to hide in our own lives. We learn to show up at the well when nobody else is there.

 

And that’s why I love this story in John 4—because it tells the truth about us without humiliating us. Jesus is traveling. He’s tired. He sits down by Jacob’s well in Samaria. And a woman comes to draw water. Then, John gives us a detail that is easy to miss: it’s noon.

 

Noon is a strange time to draw water. That’s not usually when someone does their daily work. That’s done in the cooler hours—during the morning rush—when everyone else is there. When one would have the rest of the day to use the water.  When you can blend in.

 

But she’s not there during the morning rush hour. She comes at noon. Which means—at the very least—this woman is alone.

 

And I’m going to say what the text invites us to wonder: maybe she likes it that way. Maybe noon is safer. Maybe noon is quieter. Maybe it’s the only time she can breathe without feeling eyes on her, without feeling the weight of whispers. She comes at noon because she doesn’t want to be found.

 

But, Jesus is already sitting there—where this woman probably did not expect him to be. This noon-time encounter has had me pondering a radical truth all week: God meets us—not just where we are—but precisely in the places where we don’t want to be found.

 

Not when we’re polished. Not when we’ve done enough penance. Not when we can finally explain ourselves. But right there. At noon. At the well. In the place we would rather avoid.

 

And the conversation begins so simply. In such a human way: Jesus says, “Give me a drink.” Which is already startling, because there are lines here—religious lines, ethnic lines, moral lines, gender lines—and Jesus steps right over all of them and shows us that love is more influential to him than the world’s categories.

 

She says, “How is it that you, a Jew, ask a drink of me, a Samaritan woman?” In other words: Do you know who I am? Do you know what group I belong to? Do you know the story you’ve been told about people like me?

 

And Jesus doesn’t answer by defending himself. There’s no lecture. He offers a gift: “If you knew the gift of God… you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water.”

 

Living water. Fresh water. Running water. Not stagnant. Not what sits too long in a jar and starts to taste like the container.

 

And at first—she doesn’t get it. You may recall from last week’s Gospel passage with Nicodemus that in John: people misunderstand Jesus, and Jesus uses the misunderstanding as a doorway. He doesn’t shame them for not being enlightened yet. He stays with them until they can receive what he’s actually offering.

 

Confused, she says, “Sir, you have no bucket.” Then—like so many of us—she tries to steer the conversation into a religious debate. Where is the right place to worship? Which tradition is correct? Who has the true lineage? Whose holy place counts?

 

And did you notice Jesus’ response? He meets her there. He doesn’t dismiss the question. He doesn’t say doctrine doesn’t matter. He goes with her theology.

 

But then Jesus takes it deeper. Because Jesus is not interested in winning an argument. Jesus is interested in freeing this woman from her bondage. And that’s where the turning point comes.

 

Jesus cuts to the heart of things: “Go call your husband and come back.” Friends, that is the moment when most of us would bolt. That is the moment where the conversation stops being interesting and starts being personal.

 

It’s one thing to talk about worship locations. It’s another thing to talk about your life. But, she doesn’t balk, responding: “I have no husband.”

 

So, Jesus continues, “You’re right. You’ve had five husbands, and the one you have now is not your husband.” Now—this is important—Jesus does not say this to humiliate her. Jesus does not say this to punish her. Jesus says it because he is doing what love does: he is bringing her into the truth that can finally set her free.

 

And it’s complicated, right? We don’t know her whole story. We don’t know whether she’s been discarded, widowed, exploited, trapped, or surviving. John doesn’t give us a neat moral résumé.

 

What John gives us is this: whatever the story is, it’s heavy enough that she’s drawing water at noon. And Jesus looks straight at the place she would rather keep hidden. 

 

And she does something brave. She doesn’t deny. She doesn’t spin. She doesn’t offer an excuse. She stays.

 

For a moment, she is fully seen. And somehow—mysteriously—the weight shifts. Because this is what happens when you are seen with mercy: you don’t collapse under the truth; you rise inside it. This is the holiness of Jesus: he knows the truth about you, and he stays at the well anyway.

 

I know some of us grew up with the picture of a God who is angry, vengeful, and waiting for us to slip so we can be punished. But this story will not allow that portrait of God to stand. Because Jesus already knows. Jesus already sees. And what does he offer? 

 

Living water. Not shame-water. Not “try harder” water. Not “come back when you’re fixed” water. Living water!

 

And the result is not that she becomes small and silent. The result is that she becomes a witness. She leaves her water jar—the very thing she came for—and she runs back to the village and says, “Come and see a man who told me everything I’ve ever done.”

 

That phrase—“come and see”—matters in John’s Gospel. It shows up at the beginning when disciples are first invited into relationship. It shows up when someone is skeptical and needs an invitation, not an argument. And here it shows up again on the lips of this woman.

 

In John’s Good News she’s not explicitly “sent,” and yet she becomes a prototype of apostleship: a person who has encountered Jesus and cannot keep it to herself. She doesn’t say, “Come and see the perfect doctrine I’ve mastered.” She doesn’t say, “Come and see how I cleaned up my life.” She says, in essence: Come and see what mercy feels like.

 

And that means, Church, we do not only admire her. We are meant to emulate her. So, what would it look like for us—at Holy Apostles—to emulate her?

 

It might look like this: 

It might look like telling the truth to God in prayer instead of managing God with religious language. Not “Lord, I’m fine,” but “Lord, I’m thirsty. I’m lonely. I’m angry. I’m scared. I’m exhausted.” 

 

It might look like letting a trusted friend or spouse or counselor see what we usually keep hidden—because secrecy is where shame breeds, and mercy is what shame cannot survive. 


It might look like naming the “noon places” in our own lives—those patterns we return to when we don’t want to be found: the doomscrolling, the numbing, the drinking, the controlling, the overworking, the sarcasm, the emotional shutdown, the quiet resentment.

And it might look like a different kind of witness: not loud, not performative, not “holier-than-thou”—but honest.

 

“Come and see. I met Jesus in the place I didn’t want to be found, and somehow, I’m still standing.”

 

Now—let me speak carefully, but plainly. From my pastoral perspective—which aims to see the world through the lens of Christ’s love—from my view as a pastor, we have seemed lost as a country over the last several years. We are at odds with one another. We are cynical. We are quick to disdain. We are more practiced at outrage than repair.

 

And whatever your politics, we are living with the consequences of forces bigger than any one of us—violence in the world, fear in the air, an addiction to domination, a cheapening of truth, and a hardening of our hearts.

 

And I wonder if what this story does for us in Lent is lead us—not into political debate—but into spiritual honesty. Because the question isn’t, “Can we find someone else to blame?” The question is: Will we let ourselves be seen? Will we tell the truth about our complicity—about how easy it is to want the world to change without wanting our own hearts to change?

 

Will we tell the truth about the ways prejudice still lives in us and among us? Will we tell the truth about the ways we can spend our lives trying not to be found—by God, by one another, by our own conscience?

Because here is the best news: Jesus already knows everything we’ve ever done. 

He knows the broken relationships we’ve been part of. 

He knows the ways we’ve harmed and the ways we’ve been harmed. 

He knows the ways we’ve tried to quench our thirst with stagnant water—domination, consumerism, addiction, gluttony, greed, lust, revenge, the need to be right, the need to win, and all those other versions of tainted water.

 

And still—Christ sits at the well. Still—he speaks. Still—he offers living water.

 

Christ’s living water is not a religious product. It’s not something we earn. It is the life of God poured into the dry places of the human heart. And Jesus says: “The water I will give will become in you a spring of water gushing up to eternal life.”

 

Not from the ground. Not from the empire. Not from the market. Not from the powers and principalities of this world. From within you. From your inmost being—the seat of your soul—where Christ is meant to reign.

 

So, in this season of Lent, I wonder:

When Christ finds you hiding at the well… will you run and hide?

Or will you do what this brave Samaritan woman did?

Will you stay?

Will you let him see you?

Will you receive the mercy that tells the truth and still loves you?

And then—will you become a witness?

Not because you have it all figured out.
But because you’ve tasted living water.

 

Come and see a man who told me everything I’ve ever done, he can’t be the Messiah, can he?

 

Amen.