The Rev. Phil Brochard
Using stories of political disagreements with his father and his mother's
earlier conflicts with her own father, the preacher reflects on how family
tensions often arise when visions of justice challenge accepted social
norms. He connects these experiences to a Juneteenth sermon about living
between the "almost" of promised freedom and the "not yet" of fully
realized justice.
Turning to Jesus' difficult teaching about family division, the preacher
argues that Christ is not promoting conflict for its own sake. Rather,
Jesus recognizes that faithful discipleship often creates tension when
people challenge systems, narratives, and comforts that sustain injustice.
The Gospel's call to justice inevitably creates friction between the world
as it is and the world as God intends it to be.
The sermon concludes that freedom and justice require confronting the gap
between promise and reality. The question is not whether conflict will
arise, but whether those conflicts will produce light, growth, and
transformation rather than merely generating heat and division.