A present that can only be understood by remembering the past.

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Once we see how Matthew reads history, we are forced to ask a more uncomfortable question:
If God’s saving work repeats and deepens across time, where is it happening now?

Where is the Christ Child today?

Not sentimentally – but concretely.

Where is new life appearing that unsettles old power?
Where is hope being born in places that seem too small, too ordinary, or too marginal to matter?
Where are children – and others – whose vulnerability exposes the violence and fear that still shape our world?

And if there is a Christ Child, then there will also be Magi.

So where are they?

Who are the ones paying attention, reading the signs of the times, willing to travel far, willing to risk misunderstanding, willing to kneel before a truth that does not flatter their own power or certainty?

And where, if we are honest, does Herod still show up?

Where does empire still strike out against the innocent?
Where does fear disguise itself as order?
Where does control mask itself as security?

Matthew does not let us keep these characters safely locked in the past. He writes in such a way that they step out of the story and into the present.

You can view the sermon directly at this link.

The Fast Day of the Holy Innocents

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Religion

Small evergreen cross growing out of a tree trunkToday I am fasting.

It is the transferred observance of the Feast of the Holy Innocents, the day when the Church remembers the children killed by Herod as he sought to secure his position and protect his power. Liturgically, it is a feast day. But this year, I am keeping it instead as a day of penitence and fasting.

There are many reasons to fast right now.

Across the world, people in positions of power continue to treat innocent lives as expendable; collateral damage in the pursuit of control, security, or empire. We see it in the Holy Land, where cycles of violence and retaliation feel endlessly self-justifying. We see it in Ukraine, in Sudan, and in parts of Southeast Asia, even now, in the midst of Christmastide. The names and contexts differ, but the pattern is painfully familiar. It is even happening in our own country.

Why fast?

There are many faithful people working through political, diplomatic, and humanitarian means to end violence and protect the vulnerable. I give thanks for that work, and I support it. But I am a person of faith, and a bishop of the Church. I believe that the conflicts we see are not only political or economic or strategic. They are also spiritual. Scripture names this plainly: there are forces at work that distort our loves, harden our hearts, and tempt us to preserve ourselves at the cost of others.

And people of faith have tools to meet that reality.

Prayer matters. Fasting matters. Not because they are symbolic gestures, but because they are ways of aligning ourselves with the purposes of God. They interrupt our habits, unsettle our certainties, and remind us that the world does not ultimately belong to the powerful. They have power to change us, and in ways we may never fully see, they have power to change others.

So today, in a season marked by feasting and celebration, I am fasting. And I invite you, if you are able, to join me.

Let us fast for the innocent, the Holy Innocents of every age, who continue to perish when fear outweighs mercy and power eclipses love. Let us respond in a way the world may not fully understand, but which God surely does.

+Nicholas

Lingering with the Light this Christmastide

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A blue bird in the nightAt the end of the Gospel we hear on Christmas Eve, we are told that Mary pondered these things in her heart.

She did not rush to explain them.
She did not try to resolve all the questions.
She held them—patiently, prayerfully—allowing their meaning to unfold over time.

That may be the most faithful response available to us right now.

Rather than rushing ahead to the next obligation, the next resolution, the next task, what if we allowed ourselves to linger?

What if we treated these days not as a wind-down, but as an invitation?

An invitation to reflect.
To remember.
To notice.

To allow the memories of what has been, the realities of what is, and the hopes of what may yet be to gather within us.

To look again for the light we might have missed.

To let the Holy Spirit work quietly within us—healing what is wounded, softening what has grown hard, rekindling what has dimmed.

Because when the light fills us, it does not stop with us.

It becomes visible to others.

Not in grand gestures or dramatic displays, but in patience.
In kindness.
In attentiveness.
In the simple, faithful presence of people who know they are not alone.

Christmas is all around us.

The Word is still dwelling among us.
The light is still shining.

The question is not whether God is present.

The question is whether we will take the time to see.

And perhaps, in seeing, help others see as well.

Christmas is all around us. Perhaps we can help others see it too by letting it fill us with its blessings this week.

You can view the whole sermon here.

The Light of Christmas, Eternal in a Changing World

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Christmas Moonrise over the waterAn excerpt from my sermon linked below:

Christmas has a way of feeling as though it exists outside of time. The music, the ritual, the familiarity can give the impression that we are stepping into something eternal. And in a sense, we are. But at the heart of this celebration is not an idea or a feeling. It is an event. Something that happened on a particular night, in a particular place, to particular people.

That is one of the great paradoxes of the Incarnation.

Christmas is ordinary and cosmic at the same time. Accessible and overwhelming. Intimate and vast. God does not arrive with spectacle or force. God comes as a child, born to Mary, entrusted to Joseph, laid in a feeding trough. And yet that birth as the Lamb of God is announced by angels. It is proclaimed as good news for all people. It bends history around itself.

The eternal enters time—not to escape it, but to dwell within it.

Clinging to that truth, to that experience, to those layered emotions, is, I think, at the heart of why we keep Christmas at all. Why we return to it year after year. Why we go to the trouble of the rituals and the music and the decorations.

Because keeping Christmas—keeping it well, as Ebenezer Scrooge famously learned to do—gives us strength for the rest of the year. It gives us a way to meet the worries and pressures we carry, not by denying them, but by placing them in a larger story.

There is a scene in The Lord of the Rings that I find myself returning to often. Sam and Frodo are nearing the end of their long and dangerous journey. They are in Mordor—a blasted, lifeless land of ash and rock. They are hiding in a ditch, exhausted, hungry, frightened, and convinced that they will not survive what remains of their task.

And in that moment, Sam looks up. Through the smoke and the gloom, he sees the stars—high above them, distant, clear, untouched by the devastation below. And the sight of them fills him with comfort. Because it reminds him that no matter how terrible the present moment is, there are still things of enduring beauty. Things that cannot be reached or ruined by the darkness they are passing through.

Professor Tolkien knew something about darkness. He had lived through the trench warfare of the First World War. That scene has always felt less like fantasy to me and more like memory—translated into story. A testimony that even in the worst places, beauty and hope can still break through.

For me, Christmas is like those stars.

The tree. The music. The warmth and the light. The Christmas star itself. They are not escapism. They are reminders. They point beyond themselves to something eternal and unchanging in the midst of lives that are always changing.

Christmas tells us, year after year, that God has not remained distant from us. God has not observed our struggles from afar. God has come among us. Born of Mary. Cared for by Joseph. His birth witnessed in the town of David. Proclaimed by angels. Received by shepherds—people accustomed to darkness and night.

The highest and the lowest are drawn together at the manger. Heaven and earth, Angels and Shepherds meet there. Glory and vulnerability sit side by side. The Lamb of God enters human history—not to conquer by force, but to save through love.

And that matters—especially when we feel stretched thin. Especially when the future feels uncertain. Especially when the world seems louder and harsher than we remember it being before.

So my hope for you, this Christmas, is a simple one.

I hope you find a moment—perhaps with a cup of cocoa or eggnog, perhaps with your favorite Christmas music playing softly in the background—to sit beside a Christmas tree. Or a candle. Or a manger scene. And in that moment, I hope you allow yourself to simply be present.

Let the memories come—both joyful and bittersweet. Let the emotions surface without needing to explain or resolve them, just experience them. Let yourself remember that some things endure. That God has entered the world. That God is still present among us.

The light shines in the darkness. And the darkness does not overcome it.

More here at this link.

Christmas Thanks

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Church altar with Christmas decorationsThis Christmas Eve I’m giving thanks for all the clergy, music ministers and volunteers that will make this night and tomorrow so special for many.

God bless you all and may you have the brightest of nights as we celebrate God who is in our midst.

Merry Christmas!

“You Shall Name Him Jesus”

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Sermons and audio

Sunlight and shadows on a snow covered deckThe portion of the Gospel according to Matthew we read this day tells the story of Jesus’ birth in a way that is, at first glance, surprisingly restrained. There are no shepherds here, no angels filling the sky with song, no frantic journey to Bethlehem. Instead, Matthew gives us a quiet, almost domestic scene, focused not on Mary, but on Joseph.

Joseph, we are told, is a righteous man. And his righteousness shows itself not in rigid rule-keeping, but in mercy. When he discovers that Mary is pregnant, and knows the child is not his, he resolves to dismiss her quietly. He chooses the path that protects her dignity, even at cost to himself.

It is only after he has made that decision, after he has acted according to the best light he has, that God intervenes. An angel appears to him in a dream and says two things that change everything.

First: Do not be afraid to take Mary as your wife.

Second: You are to name the child.

That second instruction matters more than it may first appear. In the ancient world, to name a child was not a sentimental gesture. It was a legal and social act. By naming Jesus, Joseph is commanded to claim him as his own. The angel is, in effect, telling Joseph to adopt this child—to bring him fully into the house and lineage of David.

Joseph does not speak a single word in Matthew’s Gospel. But he listens. He wakes from sleep and does exactly what he has been told. He takes Mary as his wife. And he names the child Jesus.

At one level this would be plenty to understand, but there’s so much more. In particular what it means that God has come as God has done. That’s the rest of the sermon below.

You can view the sermon directly by using this link.

When the light seems far away.

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Current Affairs

We are all in shock. A mass shooting event has happened here in Rhode Island, on the campus of Brown University. It’s something we feared but hoped would never happen.

We are devastated by the loss of the inspiring lives cut short. We pray for the members of the Brown community who were wounded, for those who have been harmed, and for the whole school community as they live into the nightmare of these days.

And yet like others, I have been inspired by the courage and mutual support shown by the students, staff, and faculty.

In moments like this, when the light can feel far away, it is the love and care shown in response to senseless violence that shines most clearly. That love becomes a beacon, illuminating all of us with a quiet but powerful grace. It reminds us that even the deepest shadows cannot endure when just a single candle is lit.

We ask God to receive the lives that have been lost, to tend those who are wounded in body and spirit, and to hold close all who are grieving. We pray as well that God would make us lights to one another; that through small acts of love, patience, and care, we may bear witness to hope even in the face of what harms and destroys. In such faithfulness, the darkness does not have the final word.

+Nicholas
Bishop of Rhode Island

Prayers for Providence

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Current Affairs

Dec 13 2025

As we gather across the Diocese of Rhode Island this Sunday morning, following a mass shooting event in Providence late this afternoon, and which is still unfolding as I ostensibly this; I ask that we pray for all the victims of this violence, all those whose lives have been impacted and the first responders and medical personnel.

I offer this prayer, written by Bishop Rob Hirschfeld:

Give us courage for the facing of this hour. Guide us by the bright vision of your Heavenly Realm where no weapon is drawn but the sword of righteousness, no strength known but the strength of love.

O Christ, show us your mercy
As we put our trust in you.

There are many more resources for prayer here:
https://bishopsagainstgunviolence.org/resources/liturgical-resources/

Behold, Rejoice, for God has quietly come near!

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A Christmas tree growing out of the rocky soilWe arrive this week at a kind of turn toward Christmas. Advent has its own pace — measured, expectant, leaning toward the horizon — but today the season deepens and brightens at the same time. This Sunday has a name all its own: Gaudete Sunday. The Sunday when we rejoice. The Sunday of the rose candle — if your Advent wreath includes such a thing. It is the liturgical hint that the long night is shading toward morning, that even in our waiting, joy is breaking in.

And this particular joy comes because the character of the season’s proclamation changes. Earlier in Advent we were listening for what will be—the future God is drawing toward us, the world as God intends it. But today the Gospel turns us toward what was and now is. We are invited to remember the promises made long before us, promises entrusted to prophets who lived and died without seeing their fulfillment. And we are invited to notice that God has kept those promises in the most ordinary of places and in the most ordinary of ways — so ordinary, in fact, that even the prophets themselves could scarcely have imagined it.

We are recalling the extraordinary work of God, wrapped in the ordinary. That is the Christian mystery we are preparing to celebrate. And it is a mystery that we witness again and again in Salvation History, and one that plays out still in our own day.

Into this shift of emphasis steps John the Baptist—no longer thundering from the riverbank, but speaking now with a quieter, plaintive tone. There is a bittersweetness folded into John’s question: “Are you the one who is to come, or are we to wait for another?” John is asking for reassurance. He is asking, from his prison cell, whether this long-awaited moment is truly at hand.

It must have been hard for him to believe it. Hard to imagine that in his day—under Roman occupation with Herod, the cruel client King ostensibly ruling over Israel at the leave of the Emperor, with the grinding realities of poverty and violence and dashed hopes — this was the moment God had chosen to act. Hard to imagine that the One the prophets longed for was already present among them, right there in the moment John voices his question, healing and reconciling, teaching and restoring. Hard to imagine that God’s work was unfolding not through spectacle or power, but through mercy given to the poor, sight restored to the blind, and hope rekindled in the hearts of ordinary people.

More (and a reference to Godel’s Theorem) in the sermon below.

You can view the sermon directly here.

Beacons for a Weary World: Hope in the Darkness

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Snow flakes on a fallen tree trunkThere are moments in Scripture where a poet-prophet like Isaiah seems to gather up all the fear, all the exhaustion, all the longing of a people under threat, and then answers it with a vision so unexpected, so extravagant in its hope, that it almost takes our breath away. Isaiah’s words today were spoken into a world that was collapsing. The Assyrian Empire—one of the most terrifying military forces the ancient world had ever known—was sweeping across the region. Cities were being razed. Ancient promises felt fragile. Israel looked, for all the world, like a stump: cut down, lifeless, finished.

And into that moment Isaiah dares to speak: “A shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse.” A new beginning, from what everyone else saw as an ending.

Historical scholars remind us that this section of Isaiah is among the oldest pieces of the Old Testament—not in the order we read it, but in terms of when it was first proclaimed. These words belong to a world where the Assyrian invasion was not a story but a current event, as immediate and terrifying as the news cycles we follow today.

And yet Isaiah’s message is not simply political commentary—it is theological defiance. Assyria, with its armies and monuments and its boastful kings, will one day be forgotten; but Israel, small and vulnerable and seemingly marginal, will endure. Its story will continue. Its witness will matter.

Think of Ukraine today, caught in the path of a resurgent Russian imperial vision. The language and uniforms have changed since Isaiah’s day, but the logic of empire—territorial ambition, economic extraction, the normalization of violence—remains painfully familiar. Isaiah is making the same point we could make now: the future does not belong to the empire that appears unstoppable. The future belongs to the people who hold fast to righteousness, and to the God who refuses to let violence have the final word.

Isaiah’s image of the “shoot from the stump” is a stubborn affirmation that God works life out of what looks dead. A broken political order, a devastated landscape, a people overwhelmed by fear—and yet, from that very place, something will sprout. Something small. Something tender. Something easily dismissed. But something unstoppable.

And notice how Isaiah describes this coming one—not by military power, but by the Spirit resting upon him. Wisdom. Understanding. Counsel. Might. Knowledge. Reverence. This is not the profile of another imperial ruler. This is an entirely different kind of leadership. A ruler who does not judge by appearances or by rumor; one who looks beyond the surface, into the truth of things. One who stands with the poor and the meek, those who never get a hearing in the courts of power.

Isaiah is imagining nothing less than a reconstituted creation.

Last week we heard another part of Isaiah’s vision—the turning of swords into plowshares, the transformation of instruments of destruction into tools of cultivation. Today that vision widens to include the whole created order. The wolf lying down with the lamb. The leopard beside the young goat. The calf and the lion sharing pasture. Animals whose very natures seem opposed suddenly inhabiting a world where fear is gone.

The prophecy imagines a world safe enough for children to explore without fear. And there’s a song-like quality to this passage. You can imagine people whispering it to themselves while hiding in their homes as soldiers marched past outside. A lullaby reminding them that the world as it is is not the world as God intends it to be.

Isaiah closes this vision with another startling image: “On that day the root of Jesse shall stand as a signal to the peoples.” Not just Israel, but the nations—all nations—will seek out what God is doing through this humble stump-shoot. A ruined past becomes the very sign of hope for the world.

Our call—especially in a moment like this—is to be that signal fire. That beacon of hope.

Some of you will remember that remarkable scene from the last film in The Lord of the Rings trilogy. Gondor is under siege. Hope is nearly extinguished. And then, in a desperate act of courage, the warning beacons are lit—one mountaintop after another erupting into light. Each fire sends a message across impossible distances: “Help is needed. Help is coming.” The riders of Rohan see the flame and rise.

I think of Isaiah’s words this way. Each of us who sings this ancient song—each of us who holds onto hope even when the world is shaking—we become a beacon. In a culture where fear and resentment move faster than truth or compassion, the Church becomes a line of light stretching across the mountains of our own time. We hold the flame. We signal the possibility of another way. We bear witness that violence and domination are not the only forces shaping the world.

That is the vocation of the Body of Christ. John the Baptist understood it when he ran ahead of Jesus announcing that the Kingdom was drawing near—a kingdom rooted not in conquest but in mercy, justice, and renewal. His proclamation sounded like doom to some, and like liberation to others. But for those who were longing for God’s future, God’s Reign, and not Empire, his voice was a beacon.

We stand in that tradition. Not by ignoring the darkness but by refusing to believe it is final.

This Advent, Isaiah invites us to light the beacons. To be the ones who speak of peace when others speak of inevitability. To hold space for mercy when the world defaults to retaliation. To imagine a future where the vulnerable are safe, where creation is reconciled, where children walk without fear. To remind one another that God brings life out of stumps and hope out of ruins.

———————-

I preached on these lessons three years ago. You can see that sermon here. (Or watch it below.)

But I reworked the text of that sermon, and will be preaching it this weekend when I’m visiting a small congregation that has simply refused, against all odds, to stop doing effective ministry in its neighborhood. The ideas I had last time I preached this as just as fresh and appropriate as they were then, maybe even more so.

I won’t have time this week to record a new version of the older sermon, so I’ve shared the full text of this year’s version above. Here’s the version of the sermon as I preached it three years ago: