Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Today's Lenten Devotion - Wednesday, March 25, 2026

 Wednesday – March 25

Scripture: Jeremiah 31:31–34

“I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts.”

Through Jeremiah, God promises something deeper than reform. Not stricter enforcement. Not louder instruction. A covenant written on the heart.

Religion easily becomes external compliance—beliefs recited, rituals observed, identities claimed. But God longs for something interior. A transformation that reshapes instinct, desire, and reflex. When the law is written on the heart, justice is no longer obligation; it becomes inclination. Mercy is no longer strategy; it becomes character.

Lent presses inward. It asks whether our faith lives primarily in public language or private reality. Do compassion and humility arise naturally, or only when convenient? Does forgiveness flow, or do we ration it carefully?

The promise of the new covenant is intimacy: “They shall all know me.” Not merely know about God, but know God. Relationship replaces transaction. Grace replaces fear.

This is not self-improvement. It is Spirit-formed renewal. God does the writing. Our role is receptivity.

When faith moves from stone tablets to living hearts, the Church changes. Conversations soften. Justice deepens. Welcome widens. We begin to resemble Christ not only in confession but in instinct.

Perhaps the question for today is simple: What is shaping my heart most deeply? Media? Anxiety? Resentment? Or the quiet, steady work of God?

The cross will soon reveal how far divine love is willing to go to write this covenant upon us.

Reflection Questions

1.     Is my faith primarily internal or external?

2.     What daily habits shape my heart?

3.     How might I become more receptive to God’s transforming work?

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Today's Lenten Devotion - Tuesday, March 24, 2026

 Tuesday – March 24

Scripture: Mark 10:42–45

“Whoever wishes to be great among you must be your servant.”

Jesus gathers his disciples and dismantles their assumptions about power. They have been arguing about status—who sits where, who ranks highest, who matters most. It is an old argument. It still echoes in boardrooms, pulpits, politics, and even quiet corners of the human heart.

Greatness kneels.

The rulers of the Gentiles “lord it over” others, Jesus says. Domination defines their authority. But “it is not so among you.” In Christ’s kingdom, influence is measured not by control but by service. The Son of Man came not to be served but to serve—and to give his life as a ransom for many.

Servant leadership is not passive. It is active love directed toward the flourishing of others. It asks not, “How can I secure my place?” but “How can I lift another?” It is courageous enough to step aside, strong enough to absorb misunderstanding, humble enough to share credit.

For the Church, this is a continual examination. Do we seek cultural influence to protect ourselves, or to serve the vulnerable? Do we cling to authority, or do we steward it gently? Titles do not confer greatness. Love does.

Lent reshapes ambition. It loosens the craving for recognition and replaces it with holy attentiveness. Where can I kneel today? Where can I listen before speaking? Where can I empower rather than dominate?

Resurrection will come, but it will come through a cross. The path to life winds through humility.

Greatness in God’s kingdom always smells faintly of dust and basin water.

Reflection Questions

1.     Where do I quietly seek recognition?

2.     How can I practice leadership through service this week?

3.     What does Christlike greatness look like in my daily life?

Monday, March 23, 2026

Today's Lenten Devotion - Monday, March 23, 2026

 Monday – March 23

Scripture: John 12:1–8

Mary anoints Jesus with costly perfume.  Others protest waste.  Jesus calls it love.

Devotion often appears impractical.  It does not calculate return on investment.  It pours itself out.

Mary senses what others miss: suffering approaches.  Her act becomes preparation.

In our efficiency-driven culture, love is often evaluated by measurable outcomes.  But some acts are sacred precisely because they are extravagant.

Lent invites us to recover holy attentiveness.  Where is Christ present before us?  In the suffering neighbor?  In the anxious child?  In the weary elder?

To love well is not wasteful.

The fragrance fills the house.  Genuine devotion cannot be contained.

Perhaps we hesitate because we fear judgment.  But Christ receives what is offered freely.

Extravagant love prepares us for costly discipleship.

Reflection Questions

  1. Where might I offer uncalculated love?
  2. What keeps me from generosity?
  3. How does devotion prepare me for suffering?

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, March 22, 2026

 

Worship Service for March 22, 2026

Prelude

Announcements:  

Call to Worship

L:      Coming from places near and far, perhaps having seen better days,

P:      God bids us to celebrate this day, a day full of new possibilities.

L:      Coming with our breath taken away by grief,

P:      the Holy Spirit breathes new life within us, renewing our connection to God and with one another.

L:      Coming to worship seeking a hope that will endure,

P:      Christ unbinds the fetters that hold us in death, speaking in word and sacrament, and building community for holy service.

 

Opening Hymn –  Near the Cross        #319 Brown

Prayer of Confession

Forgive us, O God, when we see the world through rose-colored glasses rather than as it really is, much less the way You seek it to be.  Forgive us, Holy One, when we forsake lively and risky faith calling us to be agents of change in our world for the bland conviction that all will be well.  Renew us with Your grace and ground us with Your Spirit, that we might be empowered to live by word and deed, as testimonies to the power of Your love over the grave.  In Jesus, we pray. (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      In the spirit of repentance, in the mercy of Almighty God, we are forgiven.

P:      In Christ Jesus, our Savior, we rejoice and give thanks!

 

Gloria Patri

Affirmation of Faith/Apostles’ Creed

I believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth; And in Jesus Christ His only Son our Lord; who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried; He descended into hell; the third day He rose again from the dead; He ascended into heaven, and sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty; from thence He shall come to judge the quick and the dead.

I believe in the Holy Ghost, the holy catholic Church; the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins; the resurrection of the body; and the life everlasting.  AMEN

 

Pastoral Prayer and Lord’s Prayer

All-knowing God, you are the Lord of the church, you see our sins, faults and failures.  And although we ask for forgiveness, allow us to see the sin in our own lives before we judge others too harshly.  Allow us to acknowledge the gift of grace you’ve given to us in your son, Jesus Christ.

All-knowing God, we ask that you fill the leaders of the nations and the leaders of our communities with so much of your love that all people would be able live without fear of improper judgment, and the nations would know peace.

All-knowing God, you know every hurt we suffer in body, mind or spirit.  Use your wisdom and guidance to bring health and healing to all who are ill or suffering from disease.  Bring comfort to those who worry or are anxious.

All-knowing God, you knew us before the foundation of the world and chose us to be your own.  We thank you for the lives and influence of those who have gone before us in the faith.  Help us to imitate them in the way of love and forgiveness so that others will see you through us.

All-knowing God, we especially pray for….

All-knowing God, hear the prayers of our hearts in this moment of silence…

O God, we place our very lives into Your hands knowing that you judge us only based on the gift of grace offered to us through Your son, Our Savior, Jesus Christ who taught us to pray together saying …Our Father who art in heaven, Hallowed be Thy name.  Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.  Give us this day our daily bread.  Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors.  And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.  For Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever.  AMEN.

 

Hymn –  What Wondrous Love is This            Hymn #85/314

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – Psalm 130

Second Scripture Reading – John 11:1-45

Sermon –  

Seeing, Believing, and Being Raised
based on John 11:1–45 (with echoes of John 9)

 

There are stories in scripture that feel less like stories and more like thresholds—places where something shifts both in the telling of the story and in us, where what we thought we knew no longer holds, and where we are invited to see something differently.

The raising of Lazarus is one of those thresholds.

And it begins, not with resurrection, but with perception.

Because long before Jesus ever stands at the mouth of a tomb, John’s Gospel has already been asking us a deeper question: What does it mean to see?  Not just with our eyes, but with our hearts, with our assumptions, with the lenses we carry into every moment.

Last week, in John Chapter 9, the disciples see a man born blind and immediately ask, “Who sinned?”  They want a cause, a category, someone to blame.  But Jesus refuses that framework.  He says, in essence: You’re asking the wrong question.

And by the time we arrive at the story of Lazarus, we are meant to understand that blindness isn’t just about sight—it’s about interpretation. It’s about the stories we tell to make sense of suffering, loss, and death.

So, when we come to this text, we have to ask: what are we not seeing?

We’ve often heard this story with familiar names: Lazarus, Mary, and Martha.  We’ve built sermons, devotionals, even personality types around them.  But some scholars have begun to revisit the text—due to the scholastic work of fresh eyes looking at the ancient texts; the oldest surviving copy of this story, they’ve noticed that additions and subtractions and letter changes have altered the original text of Papyrus 66.  And these new scholars, such as Elizabeth Polzer, have begun asking whether the figure of Martha even belongs in this story at all.  There is increasing evidence that Mary and Martha, the two sisters that we have in the gospel of Luke, are not sisters related to Lazarus.  In fact, there is growing evidence that Lazarus only had one sister, whose name was Mary.  And the larger conversation is that this sister at the center of today’s narrative was not Martha, but was instead Mary Magdalene, or Mary the Tower, a title given to her, not the name of the town she was from.  A woman whose role in the Gospel tradition has long been minimized, reshaped, or misunderstood.

Now, whether one agrees fully with that scholarship or not, what it does is important: it disrupts our certainty.  It reminds us that the text itself has been mediated through layers of memory, translation, and tradition. And it invites us to consider that perhaps the story we thought we knew is more complex and more liberating than we imagined.

Because if Mary, Mary Magdalene, is at the center of this story, then suddenly this is not just a story about a grieving family.  It’s also a story about a woman whose voice, whose leadership, whose faith has too often been obscured.  And that matters.

Because resurrection stories are always about more than what is raised from the dead; they are about what is brought back into view, what we get to see and experience, again.

The story as told in John begins with illness.  “Lord, the one you love is ill.”  It’s such a simple sentence, but one that holds so much meaning, so much care, concern, compassion, worry, fear, and dare I say; even hope.  And isn’t that where so many of our stories begin too?  Not with clarity, but with crisis.  Not with answers, but with ache.

We know what it is to send up that prayer of helplessness after hearing: The one you love is ill.  In that simple sentence alone, the world can feel like it is unraveling.  And what’s striking, what’s really unsettling about it, is that Jesus does not immediately respond.  He waits.  He doesn’t immediately say, “let’s go.”  He doesn’t rush off to Lazarus’ side.  He doesn’t even reassure his own disciples by saying something like, “It will be okay, his faith has already made him well.”  No, instead, he is silent and waits for two full days.

Now, let’s be honest: we don’t want a god that is silent in our most vulnerable moments, we don’t want a god that waits.  We want to believe in a god that takes action and answers us immediately.  And that’s the part of the story we don’t like.  We want a Jesus who shows up on time, who fixes things quickly, who prevents the worst from happening.

Instead, we’re given a God who enters into the fullness of human experience; including delay, including grief, including death itself.  Instead, we get a Savior who knows and completely embraces the soul-wrenching heartache of loss.

By the time Jesus does arrive, Lazarus has been in the tomb for four days.  Four days.  Long enough for hope to settle into resignation.  Long enough for the community to say, “It’s over.”

We know that place.  We’ve been there ourselves, where the diagnosis that seemed surreal only days ago is final, where the living relationship we had with our loved one is over and a dreaded new one has taken its place, where they are no longer with us.  Where the dream of healing that you carried has been buried for four days.

And then comes that moment, one of the most human moments in all of scripture; Jesus weeps.  Why does Jesus weep?  He knows what he is about to do.  He knows what he is capable of doing.  He knows that Lazarus will be with them again.  And yet, he weeps.  Why?  He weeps because love does not bypass grief.  Certainly all of us grieve in different ways, but let me repeat, love does not bypass grief.

Perhaps not in our own lives, but certainly in the stories told in scripture we often rush to resurrection.  We want to skip the tears, the questions, the silence.  We want Easter without Good Friday.  But Jesus stands at the tomb of his friend and weeps.  He honors the reality of loss. He refuses to minimize it.   In fact, he enters into it.

And that, in itself, is a kind of resurrection because it tells us that God is not distant from our pain.  God is not waiting on the other side of our suffering.  God is right there, in the midst of it, weeping with us.

But then the story turns.  Jesus approaches the tomb and says, “Take away the stone.”  And immediately, there is resistance.  “Lord, already there is a stench.”  That’s an honest response.  There is nothing that even Jesus can do now.  That’s a real answer and response to what has happened.  It’s too late.  If Jesus had only been there sooner.  If Jesus had only said the words, prayed the right prayer to His Father in heaven.  If Jesus had only….but now, it’s too late.

Here is the deeper meaning of this story in John about Lazarus’ resurrection.  Resurrection sounds beautiful until it requires us to confront what we’ve sealed away.  We all have stones we’ve rolled into place.  Griefs we’ve buried.  Truths we’ve avoided.  Systems we’ve accepted because change feels too risky.

And when Jesus says, “Take away the stone,” our instinct is to say, “No, it’s too far gone.  It’s too messy.  It’s too late.”  But resurrection always begins with that moment of courage; the willingness to move the stone.

And then Jesus calls out: “Lazarus, come out!”  Lazarus emerges still wrapped in grave clothes.  Still bound.  Resurrection is not the end of the story.  It is, in fact, the beginning of a new one.

“Unbind him, and let him go.”  That’s the work of community.  Too often we think of resurrection as an individual experience—my healing, my transformation, my salvation.  But this story reminds us: resurrection is communal.  We are called to help unbind one another.  To loosen the wrappings of fear, of shame, of exclusion.  To participate in the work of liberation.

And this is where the story speaks so powerfully into our present moment.  Because there are still stones that need to be rolled away.  There are still voices, especially the voices of women, of marginalized communities, that have been buried under layers of tradition and interpretation.

If Mary Magdalene, Mary of Magdala, or Mary the Tower, is indeed the one closer to this story than we have been led to believe and the one who actually responds to Christ, “You are the Messiah, the Son of God, the one coming into the world” then her presence here is not accidental.  It is a reminder that resurrection often involves the restoration of voices that have been silenced.  What would it mean for the church to truly hear those voices?  What would it mean to unbind not just individuals, but systems?  To unbind ourselves from racism, from sexism, from theologies that limit rather than liberate?

What would it mean to believe that resurrection is not just something that happened once, but something that is still happening?  We are living in a Lazarus moment.  We are standing at tombs, personal and collective.  Our democracy is strained.  Our communities are divided.  Our families are living in realities we don’t even understand.  And the question is not whether those tombs exist.  The question is: do we believe that resurrection is still possible?

Do we believe that God is still calling life out of death?

Do we believe that we are part of that calling?

Jesus calls Lazarus out.  And that same voice is calling us, too.  Calling us out of complacency.  Calling us out of fear.  Calling us out of the narrow ways we have learned to see.

“Come out,” Jesus cries.  Come out of the tombs we have accepted.
Come out of the stories that limit who belongs.  Come out into a new way of seeing, a new way of being.

And maybe that’s where this story meets last week’s story from John 9 most clearly.  Because resurrection is not just about being raised—it’s about being able to see with resurrection eyes.  To see one another more fully.  To see God more clearly.  To see that life is breaking forth even where we thought it was impossible, or too late.

So today, we stand at the threshold between what has been and what could be.  Between death and life.  Between blindness and sight.  And we hear the voice of Christ:

“Take away the stone.”
“Come out.”
“Unbind him, and let him go.”

May we have the courage to respond.

Amen.

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

Lord, here is our gratitude for all that You have poured out in blessings upon us.  Let these offerings be a true reflection of our thankfulness and a true measure of our discipleship.  AMEN.

Closing Hymn – O Sacred Head Now Wounded        Hymn #98/316

Benediction

         With clarity of purpose in the knowledge of resurrection, with renewed strength in our conviction, we proclaim to the world that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of the Living God.  Go in service out into the world.  AMEN.

Postlude

Today's Lenten Devotion - Sunday, March 22, 2026

 Fifth Sunday in Lent – March 22

Scripture: John 12:20–33

“Unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies…”

Jesus speaks of loss as the pathway to fruitfulness.  Clinging preserves the seed but prevents multiplication.  Surrender appears like failure, yet it becomes abundance.

This is resurrection logic.  It contradicts our instincts.

We cling to control, reputation, certainty, comfort.  But Lent gently loosens our grip.

What must fall in order for life to grow?  Perhaps it is the need to be right.  Perhaps it is fear of change.  Perhaps it is a version of church that once served well but no longer bears fruit.

Jesus does not romanticize loss.  The cross is real.  Yet he trusts that God brings life through surrender.

We often work tirelessly for reform.  But reform without surrender can become exhaustion.  The grain must fall not in despair, but in trust.

Death is not the final word.  But dying—to ego, to fear, to control—often precedes renewal.

The Church flourishes not by preserving itself at all costs, but by offering itself for the sake of the world.

Fruit grows in surrendered soil.

Reflection Questions

  1. What am I holding too tightly?
  2. What might grow if I released control?
  3. Do I trust God’s resurrection logic?

Today's Lenten Devotion - Saturday, March 21, 2026

 Saturday – March 21

Scripture: Ezekiel 37:1–14

The valley is full of bones—dry, scattered, lifeless.  Ezekiel is asked an impossible question: “Can these bones live?”

The prophet does not answer with optimism or despair.  He answers with humility: “O Lord God, you know.”

Exile had drained hope from Israel.  Identity felt fractured.  The future appeared sealed shut.  Yet God commands the prophet to speak—to prophesy breath into what seemed beyond repair.

We know valleys like this.  Congregations weary from conflict.  Communities fractured by polarization.  Justice efforts stalled.  Personal dreams abandoned.  Sometimes the dryness is external; sometimes it is interior.

The Spirit does not deny the dryness.  The Spirit enters it.

Breath—the same breath that animated creation—moves again.  Tendons form.  Flesh returns. Life stands up.

Lent teaches us to name the bones honestly.  But it also trains us to speak hope courageously.

We are not naïve about brokenness.  We are faithful about possibility.

Resurrection does not begin on Easter morning.  It begins whenever God breathes where we had given up.

Reflection Questions

  1. Where do I see dry bones—in myself, in the Church, in the world?
  2. Do I dare believe renewal is possible?
  3. What hopeful word might I speak into a barren place?

Friday, March 20, 2026

Today's Lenten Devotion - Friday, March 20, 2026

 Friday – March 20

Scripture: Luke 7:36–50

Her love is extravagant.

The woman who anoints Jesus disrupts polite religion.  She weeps, she kneels, she pours costly perfume.

Love does not measure carefully.

Those forgiven deeply love deeply.

Perhaps one danger of respectable faith is restrained gratitude.  We forget how much we have been forgiven.

Lent rekindles awareness of grace.

What would extravagant gratitude look like?  Generous giving?  Bold advocacy?  Tender mercy?

Love that flows from forgiveness cannot remain contained.

Reflection Questions

  1. Have I forgotten the depth of grace given to me?
  2. Where can gratitude overflow?
  3. What costly love might I offer?