Come and See

Lee Davis • February 8, 2026

Sermon, January 18, 2025 Come and See

footsteps on a sandy beach
By Lee Davis February 8, 2026
In this fractured time in our country we may be asking ourselves what God requires of us.
Woman shoveling salt
By Lee Davis February 5, 2026
Jesus says, “You are salt.” In fearful times, disciples preserve compassion and dignity, refusing numbness and choosing courageous love.
picture of Biblical page with Micah title
By Lee Davis January 29, 2026
Micah’s do, love, walk meets Jesus’ Beatitudes: a faithful way to live with justice, mercy, and humility in tense times for church and daily life right now
chaotic strings of light
By Lee Davis January 21, 2026
In a loud, divided nation, Peter’s confession in Matthew 16 returns us to Christ—the steady center who frees us from fear and speaks truth with love today.
Image of wise men
By Lee Davis January 4, 2026
Epiphany invites more than admiration—it calls us to move. A short reflection on Isaiah 60 and the Magi: God’s light brings direction, courage, and change.
image of a sparker
By Lee Davis December 30, 2025
Father Lee Davis shares a New Year message after Christmas Day Eucharist with two Iranian sisters at Broward Detention Center—our call to carry Christ's joy.
ime of icon of nativity and candles
By Lee Davis December 29, 2025
God chooses to be with us even when there isn't room, even when life is crowded, even when the timing is hard, even when the world is undkind. God does not wait.
image of christmas lights on tree
By Lee Davis December 23, 2025
A pastoral Christmas message from Rev. Lee Davis offering hope, peace, and God’s presence amid life’s challenges for Sts. MM&M Episcopal Church and beyond.
Picture of Joseph in Nativity
By Lee Davis December 22, 2025
Advent isn’t about pretending everything is fine. It’s about remembering what’s true when fear gets loud: Emmanuel—God with us. And that presence gives us courage
hands holding word rejoice
By Lee Davis December 15, 2025
Gaudete Sunday is not just about feeling brighter. It’s about deciding what kind of Church we will be. Because the Magnificat is clear: God lifts up the lowly.
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