About Stan Mast

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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 121

Commentary

Lent 2A

If Psalm 32 was the perfect Psalm for the beginning of our Lenten journey because of its classic description of “the way we should go” to move from guilty silence to joyful song, then Psalm 121 is the perfect Psalm for the next leg of the journey, because of its profound assurance that God will…

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Psalm 32

Commentary

Lent 1A

It is no wonder that the Lectionary takes us to Psalm 32 on this first Sunday of Lent; its somber focus on sin, confession, and forgiveness is perfect for this season.  But it is also a bit tiresome, because this is the third time in a little over a year that Psalm 32 is the…

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Psalm 2

Commentary

Last Epiphany A

This is Transfiguration Sunday, the glorious conclusion of the season of Epiphany.  The story of Christ’s Transfiguration pre-figured in Exodus 24:12-18, told in Matthew 17:1-9, and retold in II Peter 1:16-21 (our other lectionary readings for today) is given a dark twist in our reading from Psalm 2.  The other lectionary readings point to the…

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Psalm 119:33-40

Commentary

Epiphany 7A

Psalm 119 asserts again and again (almost ad infinitum) that the Law of God is the source of joy and delight, because it gives life and light.  But that’s not how the Law feels to most of us most of the time.  And, as we saw last week, that’s not how Paul talks about the…

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Psalm 119:1-8

Commentary

Epiphany 6A

Whenever I read Psalm 119, alarm bells go off in my head.  For one thing, it feels like a literary monstrosity, 176 verses of boring, repetitious monotony.  The great Old Testament scholar Artur Weiser wrote that Psalm 119 is “a particularly artificial product of religious poetry.  The formal external character of the Psalm stifles its…

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Psalm 112:1-9 (10)

Commentary

Epiphany 5A

Well, they did it again.  I mean the compilers of the lectionary.  For the second week in a row, the lectionary returns to a Psalm that we studied less than half a year ago.  I know, I’m beginning to sound like one of those “grumpy old men” who complain about everything. But, really, with 150…

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Psalm 15

Commentary

Epiphany 4A

Psalm 15 opens with a question that will trouble a lot of people in many congregations.  It’s a question put to God.  Now, questioning God is not a problem for most Christians these days.  In fact, it’s much in vogue.  Folks like David Dark speak eloquently about the necessity of asking questions if our faith…

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Psalm 27:1, 4-9

Commentary

Epiphany 3A

It was Emily Dickinson who clearly enunciated one of the great principles of effective preaching: “Tell the truth, but tell it slant.”  Most everyone who hears your sermons already knows the truth.  Thus, you’ll have to find a new way to tell it so they will listen to the “old, old story.”  No, I didn’t…

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Psalm 40:1-11

Commentary

Epiphany 2A

“The correct ‘voice’ for Psalm 40 is not in doubt,” says Patrick Henry Reardon in his Christ in the Psalms.  “We know from Hebrews 10 that these are words springing from the heart of Christ our Lord and have reference to the sacrificial obedience of his Passion and death.”  That may be ultimately true and…

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Psalm 29

Commentary

Epiphany 1A

Anyone who regularly preaches on the Lectionary knows all too well that the there are times when the choice of readings doesn’t make sense.  That is not the case for this First Sunday after Epiphany when we celebrate the Baptism of Jesus.  The “main” reading from the Gospels is, of course, about the baptism of…

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