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.

Psalm 119:129-136

Commentary

Proper 12A

Given a choice, what busy preacher would preach on this reading from Psalm 119?  I mean, it is stanza #17 in an endlessly long, apparently meandering, often boring meditation on a subject that most of your listeners won’t care about at all, namely, the importance and beauty of God’s law. Some brands of Christianity don’t…

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Psalm 139:1-12, 23-24

Commentary

Proper 11A

Psalm 139 is a doctrinal and devotional classic. It bristles with theologically rich ideas and it hums a lullaby of divine care.  Oh yes, it also shocks with its infamous ending; “if only you would slay the wicked, O God!”  But for all its familiarity, Psalm 139 is hard to describe.  Is it a hymn…

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Psalm 65:(1-8), 9-13

Commentary

Proper 10A

In my last church, we used Psalm 65:9-13 as the Old Testament reading for every Thanksgiving Day worship service.  Its description of harvest bounty fit the time of year so well, and its ascription of praise to God for that bounty fit the theme of our national Day of Thanksgiving.  But this harvest Psalm is…

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Psalm 145:8-14

Commentary

Proper 9A

Psalm 145 is an exuberant, but hardly extemporaneous Psalm.  Indeed, it is a carefully crafted Psalm of praise.  The superscription explicitly identifies it as that, using a word for praise found only here in the entire Psalter.  We might call it the quintessential Psalm of Praise, for it uses all the traditional language of praise…

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Psalm 89:1-4, 15-18

Commentary

Proper 8A

Psalm 89 is one of the darkest of all the Psalms, the better looking twin of the exceedingly dark Psalm 88, which ends with “the darkness is my closest friend.”  Psalm 89 rallies from that kind of despair with bright opening words.  In our reading for this Fourth Sunday of Ordinary Time, it’s a new…

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Psalm 69:7-10, (11-15), 16-18

Commentary

Proper 7A

Psalm 69 is the cry of a person in extremis.  He uses the conventional language of drowning to describe his distress.  The Jews were a non-nautical people, so the thought of falling into deep water where there is no firm bottom provoked the deepest terror.  We can almost see the Psalmist flailing about as he…

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Psalm 100

Commentary

Proper 6A

It is not hard to figure out what Psalm 100 is.  The superscription says simply, “For Giving Thanks.”  Thus, it was probably used as liturgical accompaniment when a thank offering was given in the Temple.  Perhaps it called on those who offered such a sacrifice to have the proper attitude of worship, rather than just…

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Psalm 8

Commentary

Trinity Sunday A

On this Trinity Sunday, the other three Lectionary readings can legitimately be used for sermons on that great Mystery.  Both Matthew 28 and II Corinthians 13 explicitly mention Father (God), Son, and Holy Spirit.  Genesis 1 is a bit more difficult.  Although many scholars express reservations about such exegetical movements, an enterprising preacher can work…

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Psalm 104:24-34, 35b

Commentary

Pentecost A

Many scholars suggest that we could use Psalm 104 to put environmentalist spin on Pentecost, because of verse 30.  “When you send your Spirit, they are created, and you renew the face of the earth.”  Imagine a Pentecost version of the secular Christmas carol.  “Have yourself a merry little environmental Pentecost!” I agree with that…

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Psalm 68:1-10, 32-35

Commentary

Easter 7A

Psalm 68 is known as the most difficult Psalm, but it is a fine choice for this Seventh Sunday of Easter, also known as Ascension Sunday.  The connection to Christ’s Ascension is rooted in the way the early church read it, as evidenced most clearly in Paul’s use of verse 18 in Ephesians 4:8-13. Within…

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