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.

Hebrews 5:1-10

Commentary

Lent 5B

Comments, Observations, and Questions I doubt that most preachers will chose this lectionary reading for their sermon on this fifth Sunday of Lent.  Hebrews is just plain tough to preach.  For one thing it is so complex, dealing as it does with long forgotten aspects of the Jewish faith.  Sermons on Hebrews require detailed explanations…

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Ephesians 2:1-10

Commentary

Lent 4B

Comments and Observations The first three verses of this text reminded me of my two favorite criticisms of Calvinism, which has historically taken these verses as a proof text for its doctrine of total depravity.  A car critic described the famously boxy Volvo as something that might have been designed by “a Calvinist with a…

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1 Corinthians 1:18-25

Commentary

Lent 3B

Comments, Observations, and Questions This is a great text for this third Sunday of Lent because it focuses our attention not on Lenten disciplines (important and helpful though they may be), but on the cross of Christ.  That’s what Lent is all about.  Indeed, the cross of Christ is what Christianity is all about.  That’s…

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Romans 4:13-25

Commentary

Lent 2B

Comments and Observations Did the apostle Paul distort the teachings of Jesus?  That’s the claim of some higher critics of the New Testament.  Jesus taught a simple but stringent Jewish Gospel, while Paul complicated it with categories taken from Hellenistic thought that dramatically changed Jesus’ message.  Paul, say the most radical critics, invented Christianity. A…

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1 Peter 3:18-22

Commentary

Lent 1B

Comments, Observations, and Questions As I move through the lectionary year again and again, I often think that someone needs to revise the Revised Common Lectionary because it can be so repetitive.  Take this text as case in point.  Just 10 months ago, this was the text for the Fifth Sunday of the Easter season. …

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2 Corinthians 4:3-6

Commentary

Epiphany 6B

Comments and Observations How fitting that the season of Epiphany ends with a celebration of Christ’s Transfiguration, that bright and shining moment near the end of his ministry when his true glory burst through the veil of his humility!  And what a fitting text this reading from II Corinthians 4 is!  It fits so perfectly…

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1 Corinthians 9:16-23

Commentary

Epiphany 5B

Comments and Observations On this fifth Sunday after Epiphany, this lesson from the epistles seems to have nothing to do with Epiphany, until we take a wider and deeper look.  A review of the wider context reminds us that Paul is writing here to a church that is deeply divided—by the abuse of spiritual gifts,…

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1 Corinthians 8:1-13

Commentary

Epiphany 4B

“Now about food sacrificed to idols….” That is not a zinger opening sentence for a sermon addressed to 21st century North American congregations. Who in the world can relate to something like that? Well, in fact, people in some parts of the world can relate to that very easily, because they do still sacrifice food…

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1 Corinthians 7:29-31

Commentary

Epiphany 3B

Comments and Observations In a text bristling with problems, Paul calls us to live “As If.”  The entire chapter is about marriage, prompted by a question from the Corinthians as seen in the chapter’s first verse, which may be another quotation summarizing the aberrant view of some overly ascetic Corinthians.  Some scholars see our text…

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1 Corinthians 6:12-20

Commentary

Epiphany 2B

Comments, Observations, and Questions On this second Sunday after Epiphany, the lectionary reading from the Epistles seems to have little to do with Epiphany, unless we consider the behavior of the Body of Christ to be an epiphany of Christ’s own glory.  If that is the case, then this text is very relevant, because it…

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