About Stan Mast

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Stan Mast headshot

Stan Mast was the Minister of Preaching at the LaGrave Avenue Christian Reformed Church in downtown Grand Rapids, MI for 22 years. He graduated from Calvin Theological Seminary in 1971 and served four churches in the West and Midwest regions of the United States. He also served a 3 year stint as Coordinator of Field Education at Calvin Seminary. He has earned a BA degree from Calvin College and a Bachelor of Divinity and a Master of Theology from Calvin and a Doctor of Ministry from Denver Seminary. He is happily married to Sharon, and they have two sons and four grandchildren. Stan is a voracious reader and works out regularly. He also calls himself a car nut and an “avid, but average” golfer.

Stan wrote weekly sermon commentaries for the CEP website from 2012 to 2019.

2 Kings 5:1-14

Commentary

Proper 9C

This story has more interesting characters than a novel by Charles Dickens—stormin’ Naaman, commander of the Syrian army, this brave little girl kidnapped from Israel and enslaved, the clueless King of Israel, the greedy Gehazi, and, of course, the unflappable prophet Elisha.  It’s a seemingly straightforward story about a little girl, a muddy river, and…

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2 Kings 2:1-2, 6-14

Commentary

Proper 8C

What a way to go!  That’s my first reaction upon reading this story.  People my age often talk about the end of life.  Many want to live as long as they possibly can, to, say, a hundred, and then die peacefully in their sleep.  Others want to go in their prime, after hitting a three…

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1 Kings 19:1-4, (5-7), 8-15a

Commentary

Proper 7C

This is one of the great short stories in the Bible, indeed, in all of literature.  It has all the elements of a riveting story—a twisting plot, clever symbolism, stylistic devices, unexpected irony, deep pathos, raw humanity, stunning theophanies, and an ending that we don’t see coming.  But best of all, it speaks a message…

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Proverbs 8:1-4, 22-31

Commentary

Trinity Sunday C

There are better texts for this Trinity Sunday than these words about wisdom in Proverbs.  The New Testament readings from John 16:12-15 and Romans 5:1-5 are much more Trinitarian, since they at least mention Father, Son and Holy Spirit.  Of course, you will still have to interpret that three-ness/one-ness language.  And, if you are willing…

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Acts 2:1-21

Commentary

Pentecost C

We have come to the conclusion of our fifty day celebration of Easter.  It is fascinating to me that our exit from Dr. Luke’s account of the spread of Easter faith is the on ramp to that whole story.  With this Pentecost story, we loop back to where it all began.  Even as Luke tells…

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Acts 16:16-34

Commentary

Easter 7C

Our reading for today serves as the exclamation point on Dr. Luke’s history of the Gospel’s spread to the ends of the earth.  No, we haven’t gotten to that far horizon yet, but Luke has introduced all the major themes and players that will get us there.  This story contains all those elements that will…

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Acts 16:9-15

Commentary

Easter 6C

This first reading for the Sixth Sunday of Easter continues to trace the progress of the Gospel to the ends of the earth, as it focuses on an abridged section of Paul’s Second Missionary Journey.  I say “abridged” because the Lectionary starts our reading in mid-paragraph leaving out some crucial historical and theological details found…

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Acts 11:1-18

Commentary

Easter 5C

In this season of Easter, the Lectionary has directed our attention away from the Old Testament readings that are usually the first reading.  Instead we have been following the book of Acts, which traces the new thing God did as a result of the Resurrection of Christ.  That new thing was the spread of the…

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Acts 9:36-43

Commentary

Easter 4C

Reading Dr. Luke’s account of the growth of the early church is a bit like watching a frog hop from lily pad to lily pad—from Jerusalem to the Gaza Strip to Samaria to Damascus to Joppa, from Peter and John to Philip to Stephen to Paul and now back to Peter.  OK, maybe the image…

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Acts 9:1-6, (7-20)

Commentary

Easter 3C

As I said last week in my comments on Acts 5, during the season of Easter the Lectionary switches from its customary focus on the Old Testament in the first reading, in order to follow the effects of Easter on the early church in the book of Acts.  It is an ingenious way to show…

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