Guilford Park Presbyterian Church
2100 FERNWOOD DRIVE
​GREENSBORO, NC 27408
CHURCH: 336-288-5452
PRESCHOOL 336-282-6697


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Faith With Fear

12/14/2025

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The season invites us to hear an ancient story with new ears, not as distant myth but as an honest mirror to our lives. The readings from Jeremiah and Luke place us alongside two people called into risky, public obedience: a reluctant young prophet and a shaken young woman. Both hear the same core assurance: you are known, you are appointed, you are not alone. That promise sits inside a complex world—empires flex, communities judge, and bodies carry cost. When we flatten that complexity with easy slogans, we lose the texture of courage that Scripture insists on. Real faith is not a poster on a wall; it is a posture in the world, taken with trembling hands and open eyes.

The sermon challenges a set of common clichés that tend to erase pain rather than attend to it. “God never gives you more than you can handle” can land like blame on the grieving, as if endurance were the measure of love. “Too blessed to be stressed” can shame the exhausted parent who is already running on fumes. Even “faith over fear” sets up a false rivalry, as though fear is a failure rather than a signal inviting care, boundaries, and solidarity. The pastoral counter-example—a parent comforting a child after a nightmare—models a better theology: name the fear, normalize it, locate safety, offer presence. That is not sentimentality; it is discipleship that refuses to weaponize slogans against the wounded.

Scripture itself honors fear’s presence. Jeremiah protests his youth and lack of eloquence; Moses before him said the same. God answers not with platitudes but with presence, touch, and commissioning—“I am with you,” “I have put my words in your mouth.” Mary, too, is not merely puzzled; the Greek points to deep agitation, the body-level jolt of danger under patriarchal and imperial scrutiny. Her yes does not erase risk; it threads hope through it. She moves with haste, not to escape God, but to find shelter and solidarity with Elizabeth. Throughout the Bible, callings are paired with companions: Aaron for Moses, Mordecai for Esther, Elisha for Elijah, Jonathan for David. Calling is communal, and church—ekklesia—literally means a people called out together.

This outward call reshapes how we handle fear. Rather than a binary where faith must crush fear, we learn a rhythm: do not fear and here I am, held together like twin threads in Mary’s garment. The practice is simple and demanding: acknowledge fear honestly, refuse its tyranny, and act in trust with others. Pastors who keep a humble tremor before preaching, surgeons who respect the life in their hands, teachers who risk truth, students who voice conviction, couples who hope again, and friends who walk into recovery rooms—these are not examples of fearlessness but of courage. Fear, faced with company and purpose, becomes a teacher of humility, prudence, and love.

What emerges is a vision of faith with fear. It does not glamorize anxiety, nor does it shame it. It treats fear as information and as an opportunity to lean into community and God’s presence. This reframing guards us from triumphalism and from despair. It invites us to replace bumper stickers with embodied solidarity, quick retorts with patient listening, and performative certainty with honest prayer. The ancient story becomes new when we let it interrogate our shortcuts and call us out—together—into brave, careful love. Perhaps fear is holy, not as a master, but as a companion reminding us what matters and whom we trust, so our yes can be both tender and strong.
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Hope Like A Dancer

12/7/2025

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Advent invites honest questions. John the Baptist, once so sure, sends word from prison: are we waiting on the right one? The reply is not a theory but a catalog of change—sight restored, bodies mended, the poor hearing good news. That answer reframes despair without denying it. Real hope is not blind optimism; it is evidence-based trust grounded in acts that restore people to community. When fear tightens its grip, the path forward is to notice what is being made new right now, right where we stand, even if the prison door has not yet opened.

Art gives that noticing a body. The image of John’s cell lit by a lamp, with dancing figures cast across the wall, turns a locked room into a sanctuary of movement. The halo, the birds, the open cages—each detail testifies to a freedom arriving ahead of schedule in the human heart. Dance becomes a language for what words can’t carry, a reminder that healing ripples beyond the headline miracle into belonging. This is what Jesus highlights: not only are bodies restored, but neighbors are returned to each other. Community is the miracle’s completion, and joy is the proof of life.

Movement practices help us live there. People who carry grief, care for others, or work for change know that the body stores both sorrow and strength. Salsa nights, swing circles, and communal dance floors become places of collective care where the nervous system relearns safety. This isn’t escapism; it’s formation. Rhythm builds resilience, syncs breath with hope, and widens imagination for solutions we cannot think our way into. In trauma-aware work, movement integrates memory and loosens fear’s grip, making room for curiosity and courage to return.

Not everyone dances, but everyone can cultivate ritual. The humble ritual of a record player shows how attention becomes devotion. Removing a vinyl from its sleeve, lowering the needle, hearing the soft crackle, and flipping the record demand presence. It is embodied listening, resistant to the scroll and the algorithm. These small acts build stamina for bigger loves: justice, truth, mercy. They slow time enough for gratitude to catch up, and for the soul to hear that creation is still unfolding, that beauty still insists on showing up, and that we are invited to take part.

Creation is a teacher in that way. When despair tugs, make something—stitch fabric, simmer a stew, sing harmony, plant a seed. Creation argues with cynicism through fruit. It says all is not lost because something new is already here, however small. Attention, astonishment, and testimony become a rule of life. Pay attention to what is mending. Be astonished when light breaks in. Tell about it so others can borrow your hope when theirs runs low. Testimony is a communal battery; we hold a charge for one another.

Courage then becomes contagious. John’s question is not faith’s failure but faith’s door, and Jesus answers with evidence that hope is happening in real bodies and real streets. The civil rights charge to let freedom ring echoes that same current: keep choosing the more excellent way, even when results are slow. Advent’s quiet dare is to prepare room—through movement, ritual, and creation—for the world God is already repairing. If all is not well, all is not over. Keep watch, keep dancing, keep the lamp lit.
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    Rev. Dr. Stephen M. Fearing

    Rev. Dr. Stephen M. Fearing is the Head of Staff of Guilford Park Presbyterian Church.

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