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No Stone Too Large (6am Service)
Stewart Ruch

Stewart E. Ruch III (birth year unknown–present). Born in the United States, Stewart Ruch III is an Anglican bishop and rector known for his leadership in the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA). Raised in a high-church Presbyterian family within the Charismatic movement, he embraced Anglicanism at Wheaton College, where he majored in English, was active in theater, and earned a Master of Theology, winning the Kenneth Kantzer Prize. After a spiritual crisis, he returned to faith in 1991 under Fr. William Beasley’s ministry at Church of the Resurrection in West Chicago, Illinois. Ruch became rector of the church in 1999, leading its growth and relocation to Wheaton, and joined the ACNA in 2009 over theological disagreements with the Episcopal Church. Consecrated the first bishop of the Upper Midwest Diocese in 2013, he oversaw 30 church plants in five years. Married to Katherine, with six children, he emphasizes family as a “domestic church.” Facing allegations of mishandling abuse cases, he took a leave in 2021, returning in 2022, with ecclesiastical trials pending as of 2023. Ruch said, “The goal of human personhood is the great marriage of our souls with God.”
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Sermon Summary
In this sermon, Pastor Lon Allison, who is battling terminal cancer, shares his belief that the resurrection of Jesus Christ has the power to move any obstacle in our lives, including death. He acknowledges the three possible pathways he may face in his terminal diagnosis, but remains confident that if he is united with Jesus in his death, he will also be united with him in his resurrection. Pastor Lon emphasizes that death is no longer a peril or a panic for Christians, but rather a passage to the resurrected life. He concludes by declaring that there is no stone too large for the resurrection of Jesus Christ to move, offering hope and encouragement to the congregation.
Sermon Transcription
This is Church of the Resurrection in Wheaton, Illinois. Today's sermon is by Bishop Stuart Ruck and is from our Easter Sunrise Service 2018. I would like to declare to you this morning that there is no stone too large that the resurrection of Jesus Christ cannot move from your life. No boulder too great, no weight too overwhelming, that the resurrection of Jesus Christ, the earthquake that changed the world and changes our lives. One of our favorite places as a family is the Morton Arboretum, and I see many of you there from time to time, so I know that's a favorite for many of you. And one of our favorite places at the Morton Arboretum is the Big Rock. It's a massive stone. For the last 15 years, I've watched our children climb that stone, jump on that stone, whack that stone with the largest trees they can carry, and never once, as I've watched them pound themselves into that stone, have I thought, oh, be careful. I hope you don't go through the stone. Oh dear, we shouldn't move this stone. They put it here for a reason. It's never budged, that stone. It's too great to move, but there's never been a stone larger. I speak not of circumference or tonnage. There's never been a stone larger that sought to seal our Lord in a tomb. Never a stone more determined to keep our Lord in death. But that stone was not large enough, that tonnage not great enough. Do you ever have a day where you feel like there's a massive stone on your shoulders, where it just feels like so much pressure that you almost want to buckle in? Or do you ever have a day where maybe the weight is like right in your stomach, and you keep telling yourself not to think about the financial situation that's just happened that's creating that weight, or not to think about the interpersonal conflict that's causing that weight, or not to think about the fact that yet again you gave in to that craving or addiction or lust that's creating that weight? Or maybe it's just that weight, and you don't know why that weight is there. It's a, what's gonna happen tomorrow weight? What's gonna happen to our country weight? What's gonna happen in the world weight? I don't even know why I've got this weight, but it's like we carry it. It's a weight deep inside. Because of the historical fact of the resurrection of Jesus from the dead, I declare to you this morning, based on the revelation of God in the Bible, that there is no stone too great, that the resurrection of Jesus Christ cannot move from your life. Oh, it may be an pornography stone. It may be a same-sex attraction stone. It may be an unbridled desire for the other sex stone. It may be a craving for the security of wealth stone. There is no stone too great that the resurrection of Jesus Christ cannot move. Now, I ask you that for a moment you do not think that I attempt to stir you with a sentence, because that would be malpractice. But instead, I desire to proclaim to you, within proclaimed before me by the Church of Jesus Christ, that if we are united with Him in His death, say it with me, we will certainly be united with Him in His resurrection. Do we still die? We do. Do we still lust, even though we are not in bondage to sin? We do. We are no longer utterly enslaved. And even the stone of mortality, even the great rock of death, perhaps best figured, best captured by the utter and seemingly ubiquitous scourge of cancer that moves throughout our community. Is there not a family that's been touched by cancer? My own mother fought cancer throughout this last year. What does it look like to believe that there's no stone too large, which is to say that you are never without access to life because of the resurrection of Jesus Christ? What does it look like? Let me share with you a testimony of a very dear friend, Pastor Lon Allison, a senior leader at a beautiful church in the Wheaton community called Wheaton Bible Church, who in the name of Jesus we bless on this Easter morning. Pastor Lon has been diagnosed with terminal cancer. So many more years of prime ministry we'd all hoped for and hoped for for Pastor Lon, but he said this because he believes that there's no stone too large that the resurrection cannot move, because he believes that while death still occurs, it is no longer peril for the Christian. It is passage. Death is no longer panic for the Christian. It is pathway to the resurrected life and our resurrected Lord. So Lon said this, I realize before me there are three pathways as I face this terminal diagnosis. I very likely may die in the next year, or I may die in the next two to five years, or I may die in twenty years, but if I am united with him in his death, if I am united with him in my death, if you are united with Jesus when your hour comes to die, certainly, Lon said, I will be united with him in his resurrection. It takes a Christian, a resurrection Christian to not deny that death may come soon, or it may come in the near future, or it may come in the far future. But death is no longer peril, and it is no longer panic. Family of God, death is passage to the Lord Jesus and the resurrected life. Even that stone, even that stone of death, the largest stone to ever be rolled in front of any tomb, even that stone could not stay. For there is no stone too great that the resurrection of Jesus Christ cannot move. He is not here, the angel said about the tomb. He is risen. In the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, Amen. Thanks for listening. Our vision at Church of the Resurrection is to equip everyone for transformation. As a part of that vision, we'd love to share dynamic teaching, original music, and stories of transformation. For more of what you heard today, check out the rest of our podcast. To learn more about our ministry, visit churchres.org.
No Stone Too Large (6am Service)
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Stewart E. Ruch III (birth year unknown–present). Born in the United States, Stewart Ruch III is an Anglican bishop and rector known for his leadership in the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA). Raised in a high-church Presbyterian family within the Charismatic movement, he embraced Anglicanism at Wheaton College, where he majored in English, was active in theater, and earned a Master of Theology, winning the Kenneth Kantzer Prize. After a spiritual crisis, he returned to faith in 1991 under Fr. William Beasley’s ministry at Church of the Resurrection in West Chicago, Illinois. Ruch became rector of the church in 1999, leading its growth and relocation to Wheaton, and joined the ACNA in 2009 over theological disagreements with the Episcopal Church. Consecrated the first bishop of the Upper Midwest Diocese in 2013, he oversaw 30 church plants in five years. Married to Katherine, with six children, he emphasizes family as a “domestic church.” Facing allegations of mishandling abuse cases, he took a leave in 2021, returning in 2022, with ecclesiastical trials pending as of 2023. Ruch said, “The goal of human personhood is the great marriage of our souls with God.”