
Glitch: Reframing Sin and Finding Reconnection
Something’s off. We feel it in ourselves, in the world, in the way things aren’t working quite like we think they should. It feels like a glitch—a distortion of something good, a longing slightly off course. But how did we get here? And more importantly, how do we find our way back? Our new sermon series for Lent, Glitch: Reframing Sin and Finding Reconnection, is an invitation to get curious about sin—not as something to fear or hide from, but as something that reveals the deeper truths of being human. Because here’s the thing: Sin isn’t just personal; it’s woven into the very systems that shape our lives, the ways we build walls instead of bridges, the ways fear and scarcity take root in the world, and more. But the good news? Jesus steps into all of it—not to condemn or shame, but to disrupt, to realign, to call us back to what is most true. That’s the work of Lent: to stop running, to name what pulls us away, and to let grace do what it does best—realign, restore, and return us to ourselves.