Sunday, May 17, 2026

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, March 17, 2026

 The next two Sunday's I'll be away on vacation and the pulpit will be filled by guest pastors.  You can join us at Bethesda on May 24 at 11:15am and at Olivet on May 31 at 9:45am.

Worship Service for May 17, 2026

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      Let praise to God resound in the heavens!

P:      Let praise to God fill the earth!

L:      Let all God’s angels offer praise and rejoicing!

P:      Let all God’s creatures sing praise and joy!

L:      Open your hearts and spirits today.

P:      Let us praise the Lord today always!  AMEN

 

Opening Hymn –  Holy, Holy, Holy Hymn #138/3

Prayer of Confession

Patient God, sometimes we are just too busy for our own good.  We pledge ourselves to hectic schedules, demands on time, energy, and resources that erode all too quickly.  We seem to be rushing through life.  The cries of those in need often go unheeded in our blur of activities which sap our energy, our resources, our spirits.  Slow us down a bit, Lord.  Remind us again that we are responsible for the care of this world, for reaching out and offering Your healing love.  Help us hear the words of patient love that You have for us.  Remind us again of Jesus’ words to his disciples when he told them that they should love one another as He loved them.  May we take time to bear witness to that love in all that we do.  For we ask this in Jesus’ name.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      Wherever you are, Christ is with you.  You are beloved of God and God’s care will always surround you.

P:      With this assurance, we are at peace and we rejoice!  AMEN

 

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

          God of resurrection and renewal, on this Sunday morning we gather again as people longing for hope, for healing, and for the steady assurance of your presence in a world that so often feels uncertain and weary.  We come carrying the stories of this past week: moments of joy and celebration, moments of disappointment and grief, moments when we felt deeply to one another, and moments when we felt painfully alone.  Yet through all of it, you remain faithful, walking beside us in quiet ways we do not always recognize at first.

We thank you for the beauty of spring continuing to unfold around us, for trees budding into life again, for the warmth returning to the earth, and for the reminder that resurrection is not merely an ancient promise but an ongoing reality woven into creation itself.  Open our eyes to signs of new life where despair has tried to settle in.  Teach us to trust that even small acts of compassion, justice, mercy, and courage can become seeds of your kingdom.

Loving God, we pray for your church throughout the world. Strengthen congregations that are discouraged, renew pastors and leaders who are tired, and inspire your people to embody the love of Christ not only in worship but in daily living.  Help us to be communities where strangers are welcomed, where differences are honored, where wounds are tended gently, and where all people may discover that they are beloved children of God.

We pray for the nations of the world and for all places burdened by violence, fear, poverty, and division.  Bring wisdom to leaders, courage to peacemakers, and protection to all who are vulnerable.  Where hatred grows loud, let compassion speak more clearly.  Where systems oppress and exclude, raise up people committed to justice and reconciliation. Remind us that peace begins not only in governments and treaties, but also in our own homes, our neighborhoods, and our everyday relationships.

We lift before you those who are struggling today: those facing illness or recovery, those grieving losses both recent and long carried, those wrestling with anxiety, loneliness, addiction, uncertainty, or financial strain.  Be near to caregivers, medical workers, counselors, teachers, and all whose labor brings comfort and stability to others.  Surround each hurting heart with your grace and remind them that they are never abandoned.  We especially prayer for…

We pray also for this congregation, for the unspoken prayers carried silently this morning, for the hopes we scarcely dare to name aloud, and for the burdens too heavy for words. Receive them all, O God, with tenderness and mercy in this time of silence…

Lord, we pray these things in the spirit of the risen 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 – How Firm a Foundation                    Hymn #361/408

 

Scripture Reading(s): 

         Isaiah 45:1-7

         John 17:1-11

Sermon – One in Jesus Christ

(based on John 17:1-11)

 

John 17 is one of the most intimate moments in all of scripture. In the Gospel of John, Jesus has finished teaching, washing feet, sharing bread, and preparing the disciples for what is about to come.  And now, before the arrest, before the trial, before the cross, Jesus prays.  Not a quick prayer.  Not a polished public performance.  But a deep, heartfelt conversation with God.  It is often called the High Priestly Prayer because Jesus stands in that sacred space between heaven and earth, praying not only for himself, but for the disciples and for all who would come after them — including us.

What strikes me every time I read this passage is the honesty of it.  Jesus knows what is coming.  He knows the pain ahead.  He knows betrayal is already unfolding.  And yet his focus is not fear.  His focus is completion.  “I glorified you on earth by finishing the work that you gave me to do.”

There is something powerful about those words: finishing the work.  Most of us live surrounded by unfinished things.  Unfinished projects on kitchen tables.  Unanswered emails.  Goals we once had but quietly abandoned.  Relationships that need healing.  Dreams deferred because life became complicated or exhausting.  We know what it feels like to leave things undone.  And perhaps that is why these words from Jesus feel so holy.  At the very end of his earthly ministry, he can say with clarity and peace: “I finished the work.”

But what exactly was that work?  The Gospel tells us it was not about power or prestige.  Jesus did not measure success the way the world does.  He did not build an army.  He did not gain wealth.  He did not establish political dominance.  In fact, by worldly standards, the ending of Jesus’ life looked like failure.  Arrested.  Rejected.  Crucified.  That doesn’t sound very successful to me.  Was he really called to that?  Was that really the work he came to complete?  John’s Gospel insists this is precisely where glory is revealed.

That certainly turns our understanding of glory upside down.  Because we often think glory means recognition, achievement, applause, influence.  We live in a culture obsessed with visibility.  People build entire identities around being noticed.  Success is measured by followers, promotions, possessions, and public approval.  But Jesus speaks of glory while walking toward the cross.  The glory of God is revealed not in domination but in self-giving love.  It is revealed in compassion, humility, sacrifice, and truth.

And maybe that is something we, as the church, desperately need to hear today.  Because Christianity was never supposed to be about winning culture wars or proving moral superiority.  Jesus did not say the world would know us because we were louder than everyone else.  He said the world would know us by love.  The work Jesus completed was the work of revealing the heart of God to the world. 

A heart that touched lepers.
A heart that welcomed children.
A heart that sat at tables with sinners.
A heart that listened to the rejected.
A heart that challenged religious hypocrisy.
A heart that forgave even from the cross.

Jesus completed the work of showing humanity who God truly is.  Many people still carry distorted images of God.  Some imagine God as angry, distant, judgmental, or eager to condemn.  Many people have walked away from church not because they stopped longing for God, but because what they encountered did not look anything like Jesus.  Yet when we look at Christ, we see a God who heals, restores, includes, and loves with reckless grace.  Are we, in our daily lives, revealing that God?  Do people see Christ in us?

Jesus says eternal life is this: to know God and Jesus Christ whom God has sent.  Eternal life is not simply something that begins after death.  In John’s Gospel, eternal life begins now.  It is a way of living awakened to the presence of God here and now.  It is knowing that our lives are connected to something deeper than consumption, fear, and survival.  It is discovering that love is stronger than death.

And then Jesus turns his attention toward the disciples.  You can almost feel the tenderness in his words.  I’ve said it over and over again; he knows they are frightened and confused.  He knows they will stumble.  He knows Peter will deny him and the others will scatter.  Yet he still entrusts the future to them.  Imperfect people.  Fragile people.  Human beings who do not always get it right.  Why do I say that over and over again?  I think I say it because that’s what gives me hope.

Because sometimes we imagine God only works through polished and perfect people.  But the Gospel has never been about perfection.  The church began with anxious disciples hiding behind locked doors.  And still the Spirit moved through them.

Jesus prays that they may be one. Not uniform. Not identical. Not all of them agreeing about everything, but united in love and purpose.  That may be one of our own hardest challenges.  We live, once again, in an age of division.  Politics divides us.  Theology divides us.  Social issues divide us.  Even churches split over worship styles, traditions, and personalities.  They split over nuances of theology.  Into that fractured reality comes the prayer of Jesus: “that they may be one.”  Not because agreement on every issue is possible, but because love must be greater than our differences.

Unity does not mean avoiding truth.  Jesus certainly never avoided truth.  But unity means remembering that every person bears the image of God.  It means refusing to dehumanize those with whom we disagree.  It means building communities shaped more by grace than by fear.

Do you know the story of Johnny Appleseed?  He was an actual human being whose real name was John Chapman.  Although stories about him planting trees willy-nilly wherever he went are far exaggerated, he was instead a sound businessman who planted apple trees in a planned orchard on twelve hundred acres in Pennsylvania and Ohio, then sold them cheaply or even gave them away to all those moving west.  His generosity and offer of tree saplings and apple seeds inspired the reputation that he simply planted them everywhere he went.  His entrepreneurial spirit of giving out trees to everyone, never fully seeing the harvest that would come later across the entire United States, earned him the name Johnny Appleseed.  In reality it was small work, not some monumental trek across the country to plant trees.  I think that real image speaks beautifully to the church today because most of the work we do for the kingdom of God feels small.

A prayer offered beside a hospital bed.
A casserole delivered to a grieving family.
Teaching children in Sunday school.
Showing up for someone who feels forgotten.
Speaking kindness in a cruel world.
Standing beside those pushed to the margins.
Offering compassion when anger would be easier.

These acts may never make headlines, but they are holy work.  And perhaps the question this prayer that Christ offers up to God is not whether we will become famous or successful, but whether we will be faithful.  What is the work God has given you to do?

For some, it may be the work of healing.
For others, the work of justice.
For some, the work of encouragement.
For others, the work of creating peace in divided spaces.
For some, simply the sacred work of loving family and neighbors well.

There are two important days in a person’s life: the day you are born and the day you discover why you were born.  I think Jesus knew exactly why he was here.  And because he knew his purpose, he could face even suffering with courage and peace.  The same Spirit that guided Christ now moves within us.  That is why this passage arrives just before Pentecost in the church calendar.  Jesus prepares the disciples (and preparing us) for what comes next.  His earthly ministry is ending, but their ministry is about to begin. The Spirit will come and empower ordinary people to continue extraordinary work.  And the same is true for us.

The church is not simply a building where we gather for an hour on Sunday morning.  The church is a people sent into the world carrying hope, compassion, justice, mercy, and grace.  We are called to continue the work of Jesus in our own generation.

Our calling is not to save the whole world overnight, but simply to remain faithful in the places where God has planted us.  To keep planting seeds of compassion.  To keep choosing love over hatred.  To keep living the Gospel even when cynicism feels easier.  Because in the end, glory is not found in power.  Glory is found in love poured out for others.  And maybe one day, when our own journeys draw to a close, we too might be able to say with humility and gratitude: “I did not do everything perfectly.  But by the grace of God, I tried to finish the work I was given to do.”

Thanks be to God.
Amen.

 

Offertory –        

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

We give you thanks, O God, for the blessings of this life; for family and friends, for work and play, for health and healing, for the good that we receive and that we also give.  We praise your holy name not only with our lips, but by returning to you a portion of the gifts that you have so generously bestowed on us, asking you to use them to build up the body of Christ here and to the ends of the earth.  AMEN.

Closing Hymn – Seek Ye First             Hymn #333/713

 

Benediction

         As our last hymn rang out, let us seek God first in all that we do, in all that we think, in all that we say.  Go from this place inspired by the wonder of God and the joy of God’s presence, sharing his love with everyone.  AMEN.

Postlude

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, May 10, 2026 Happy Mother's Day

 Happy Mother's Day

Worship Service for May 10, 2026

Prelude

Announcements:  

Call to Worship

L:      Sing to God a new song!

P:      For God has done marvelous things!

L:      Make a joyful noise to God, all the earth.

P:      For God is still doing marvelous things!

L:      Break into joyful song!

P:      Sing praises with lyre and melody and trumpets!

L:      Let the seas roar and the floods clap their hands!

P:      For God is coming to judge the world with righteousness.

L:      God is coming to judge the world with equity.

P:      Sing to God a new song!

 

Opening Hymn –  Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing  Hymn #356/11

Prayer of Confession

Forgiving and gracious God, You have called us to be the church, to live out our Resurrection faith.  You have asked us to place our trust in You and to bring to all the good news of Your saving love.  But we have failed to do this.  We have given our faith a back seat to the troubles of the world and to the stresses in our own life.  We look for the quick and easy answers.  Forgive us for the smallness of our faith.  You, who raised Christ from the dead, have promised to raise our spirits and bring us to new life.  You have done this and yet, we remain static in our response to You.  Clear our spirits of the clutter of everyday living.  Help us to be open always to Your word and Your love.  Challenge us to move in directions of peace and hope for all people.  These things we pray in the name of Jesus, our risen Lord.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      Forgiveness and love have been poured out upon you, to offer hope to all nations.  You are called and blessed to be messengers of God’s good news to all people.

P:      For this we give thanks to God.  We are forgiven and called to be a blessing to others.  AMEN

 

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

               God of all creation, we bless you for calling the world and all its peoples to come and share your love, blessing, forgiveness, and healing.  We praise you for the gift of your Son, Jesus Christ, for his ministry and passion, for his dying and rising to free us from sin, and for the gift of your holy church that lives to tell the whole world this good news.

      We give thanks, O Lord, for women everywhere, who look to you for guidance and strength, or have fashioned their very lives after that of a compassionate savior.  We especially pray today for women everywhere, those who have been mothers to their own children as well as those who have played a motherly role in the lives of boys and girls who are not their own.  We pray for women who have taught us the meaning of love, and have shared with us the lessons of wisdom and grace.

      We pray for the gift of peace with liberty and justice for all people everywhere.  On this Mother’s Day, as we celebrate our own mothers and honor all moms around the world, we also pray for the children of the world who have been victimized by war, trapped in many kinds of slavery, orphaned and left motherless and homeless, who need your loving care.  We pray for refugee families struggling for food and housing, for the sick, the helpless, and the lonely.  Remember them and deliver them. 

      We pray for those who are ill in body, mind, or spirit.  Be with all who fight chronic disease or crippling disability.  Ease suffering from pain, stress, and isolation.  Comfort the despairing.  Renew caregivers so they may continue their healing ministries to those under their care.

      We especially lift up to you in prayer….

      In the following moments of silence hear our inner groanings, listen carefully to our heartfelt wishes and prayers O Lord and heal us, as well…

      All these things we ask in the name of Jesus Christ, your Son, our Savior, who taught us to prayer 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 – Glorious Things of Thee Are Spoken    Hymn #446/400

                                                                        3 vs. Blue Hymnal

Scripture Reading(s): 

         Ezekiel 34:1-6

         John 14:15-21

Sermon –

If You Love Me

(based on John 14:15-21)

 

In our gospel reading this morning, the disciples are gathered in a room heavy with uncertainty.  What happens now?  What comes next?  They know something is changing, but they don’t know what.  They know that the comfort of walking beside Jesus each day is slipping away, and fear again is beginning to settle into their hearts.  And into that anxious moment Jesus speaks these words:

“If you love me, you will keep my commandments.  And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate, to be with you forever.”

This remark by Jesus can sound conditional, almost transactional: If you love me, then you will obey me.  But Jesus isn’t threatening the disciples or setting up a spiritual test.  He’s describing what comes from love when it is lived honestly and authentically.  Love is not merely sentiment.  Love moves.  Love acts.  Love reshapes how we live in the world.

And that matters because we live in a culture that often confuses love with performance, convenience, or temporary emotion.  We might say we love people, but sometimes we don’t listen to people’s needs.  We might say we value justice, but we grow quiet when justice becomes uncomfortable.  We might claim compassion, yet we often move too quickly past the suffering of others because we are overwhelmed by our own schedules and anxieties.

In making this statement to the disciples, Jesus speaks into all of that.  The commandments Jesus refers to are not a complicated list of religious regulations.  They aren’t all the rules and regulations laid out in the books of law from the Old Testament.  Jesus has already made his commandments clear: Love God with all your heart, mind, and soul.  Love one another as I have loved you.  Care for one another.  Serve one another.  Forgive one another.  Welcome the stranger.  Protect the innocent and vulnerable.  Live into truth.  Live humbly with mercy.

In other words, love becomes visible.  So visible that others see it.  It’s easy to speak about love in abstract ways.  It’s harder to embody it on an ordinary Wednesday afternoon when patience is thin, tempers are short, and the world feels exhausting.  Yet this is exactly where love and discipleship happen. 

It happens when a teacher notices the quiet child no one else sees.  Sits beside them and listens.  It happens when someone chooses not to respond to cruelty online with more cruelty, but instead tries to understand other’s point of view.  It happens when a church decides that hospitality means more than simply greeting familiar faces and instead asks who still feels excluded and figures out how to include them.  It happens when we refuse to dehumanize people with whom we disagree politically or socially, even when our culture rewards outrage and division.  Love becomes real in the small, persistent decisions of everyday life. 

Jesus then promises something extraordinary: “I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate.”  The Greek word used here for advocate is Paraclete—one who comes alongside another and can be translated as Helper, Comforter, Counselor, or Companion.  Jesus promises that the disciples will not be abandoned. 

That promise still matters deeply today because many people are carrying invisible loneliness.  We live in one of the most technologically connected periods in human history, yet many people feel profoundly isolated.  We can text instantly, scroll endlessly, and still wonder whether anyone truly sees us, hears us, understands us.

There are people sitting in pews every Sunday smiling politely while privately carrying grief, depression, uncertainty, or fear about the future.  There are young people wondering if they are enough who feel invisible, misunderstood, and alone.  There are older adults wondering if they still matter; that their lives are still worth something.  There are parents exhausted from trying to hold everything together.  There are communities frightened by violence, division, economic insecurity, and the constant barrage of bad news.

And into that reality Jesus says: You are not abandoned.  I will send you a Helper, a Comforter, a Counselor, a Companion.  That Spirit of God still moves among us.  Not always dramatically.  Not always loudly.  Often quietly.

The Advocate or paraclete shows up in courage we didn’t know we had.  The Advocate or Comforter appears when we embrace compassion that softens our anger.  The Spirit of God or Helper moves through communities that continue loving even after disappointment and heartbreak.  The Spirit of God or Counselor whispers hope when cynicism would be easier.

Jesus says, “This is the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it neither sees him nor knows him.”  This Spirit of truth is the deep reality of God’s presence breaking into human life.  Truth is what exposes fear, hatred, greed, and injustice for what they are.  Truth is what reminds us that every human being bears the image of God.

And truth can be uncomfortable.  We live in a time when truth is given other names, alternative facts, a political spin.  Truth today often feels negotiable.  Conspiracy theories spread faster than wisdom.  Outrage becomes entertainment.  Many people no longer ask, “Is this true?” but instead ask, “Does this support what I already want to believe?”  Yet the Spirit continually calls us back to find a deeper truth—the truth that love is stronger than fear, that mercy matters more than power, and that human dignity is sacred.

The Spirit also reminds us that Christianity is not merely about personal spirituality disconnected from the world around us.  The love Jesus commands is about the community.  It has social consequences.  If we love as Jesus loved, we cannot ignore poverty.  If we love as Jesus loved, we cannot dismiss racism or prejudice.  If we love as Jesus loved, we cannot remain indifferent to refugees, the marginalized, or those society treats as disposable.  If we love as Jesus loved, then compassion must become more than a slogan.  It must become policy, practice, and presence.

The early church understood this.  They became known not because they had wealth or political influence, but because of their love for one another.  They cared for widows, they fed the hungry, they welcomed outsiders, and they crossed social boundaries that others refused to cross.  It was exactly what Jesus did when he was walking among us.  They embodied Christ.

The Spirit of God, the Companion transformed ordinary people into communities of radical compassion.  I really do believe that this is still the church’s calling today—not to dominate culture, but to embody a different way of being human.  For it to show in our everyday lives.  For it to pour out into the world so much that it is radically different than what the rest of the world offers.

In our gospel reading this morning, Jesus then says something deeply tender to his disciples: “I will not leave you orphaned.”  Abandonment is one of humanity’s deepest fears.  We fear being forgotten.  We fear being alone.  We fear that when suffering comes, no one will remain beside us.  And yet, our resurrection faith insists that even death itself cannot separate us from the love and presence of God.

Even while Jesus says all this to them, he knows that they will fail repeatedly.  Peter will deny Jesus.  Judas will betray him. Others will run away in fear.  Thomas will doubt.  Yet Jesus still entrusts them with the work of love.  That should encourage us because most of us, I’m sure, feel unqualified for God’s work in our world today.

But the Gospel has never been about perfect people.  It has always been about imperfect people learning, slowly and imperfectly, how to love more deeply.  God gives the world The Spirit, the Paraclete, Advocate, Helper, Comforter, Counselor and Companion because God refuses to give up on humanity.  In a weary world, the Spirit still moves.

Love still matters.  Compassion still matters.  Truth still matters.  Community still matters.

And even when fear tells us otherwise, we are not alone.  Jesus says, “Because I live, you also will live.”  Not merely survive.  Not merely exist. 

Friends, may we become people who embody the kind of life that Christ envisioned for us, the kind that he commanded us to live.  Christ wanted us to live a life of abundance with purpose, courage, mercy, and hope for all of God’s creation. 

May we become a community of compassion where the lonely find belonging, where the wounded discover healing, and where love becomes visible again. 

And may the Spirit of God continue to come alongside us, guiding us into truth, compassion, and hope for the sake of the world.  Thanks be to God.  Amen.

Offertory –        

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

Giver of life and all the gifts of our lives, receive now these tokens of our appreciation which we set before you as signs of our love and thanksgiving.  We rejoice with thankful hearts for all your blessings.  Help us to live our lives in service to you as our continuing gift of thanks.  We pray in the name of Jesus Christ.  AMEN.

Closing Hymn – Blessed Assurance            Hymn #341/572

                                                                        3 vs. Blue Hymnal

Benediction

         Friends, may Christ’s command to love one another find a home in your heart, a gathering spot in your mind, and a resting place in your soul so that you can fulfill it in your everyday lives.  Go out into the world to share Christ’s love.  AMEN.

Postlude

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Today's Service - Sunday, May 3, 2026

 

Worship Service for May 3, 2026

Prelude

Announcements:  

Call to Worship

L:      The Lord is our refuge.

P:      We can find peace in God’s abiding love.

L:      When troubles assail us, we call upon the Lord.

P:      When joys abound, we call upon the Lord.

L:      Welcome this day to God’s house, one of many dwellings of the Almighty One.

P:      We thank the Lord and praise God for His refuge and sanctuary.  Let us worship God.

 

Opening Hymn –  All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name Hymn #142/43

Prayer of Confession

Patient God, You know how easy it is for us to stray.  We wander off so easily.  Forgive us, we pray.  Heal our brokenness and our fears.  Remind us again that You lead us in gentle paths and by quiet waters – when the paths are stony and the waves tumultuous, help us remember Your protection and Your care.  Help us extend that same love and care to others, for we ask this in Jesus’ name.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      Christ our cornerstone and our salvation, offers to us hope and comfort, forgiveness and mercy.

P:      We are a forgiven people.  Thanks be to God.  AMEN

 

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

      Merciful and loving God, You call us Your beloved ones and You seek to protect us, but we love to take risks; emotionally, spiritually, and physically.  Call to us again.  Help us hear Your voice.  Give us hearts of love and compassion for all our dear ones who suffer illness and adversity.  Today we especially for ….

Be with those who have no safe homeland for which to go, no land they can call their own, no sense of being part of a community.  Allow us to open our hearts and community to them as You have called us to meet those needs.   Gracious God, You always accepted us, so let us accept others, though they may be different, though they may offer another perspective, another voice, another point of view. 

Help us find ways of challenging our own preconceived notions of the truth and find a larger one as we embrace the stranger, accept the widow, offer home to the orphan and community to the outcast.  You always accepted us, so let us accept others, realizing that the sheep of Your pasture are awash with diversity of spirit and origin.  Let us celebrate those wonderful gifts and learn from them.

Lord, with a sense of Your presence among us, we now lift up our personal prayers in silence….

Gathered in one voice we pray the universal prayer Your Son taught us…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 – Our God, Our Help in Ages Past      Hymn #210/686

                                                                        5 vs. Blue Hymnal

Scripture Reading(s): 

         Proverbs 4:10-18

         John 14:1-14

Sermon – Story

(based on Proverbs 4:10-18, John 14:1-14)

 

         This morning I want you to think about times you’ve spent with your family and friends; cherished moments that you shared with them.  Think about who was there, what you were doing, what the occasion was.  Imagine for just a moment that you are back with them, see their faces, hear their voices cracking jokes - telling stories, feel their bodies in hugs and kisses, taste the food you share, the heady smells of baked bread, perfume or cologne – or the subtle smells of shampoo, the undertones of earth or flowers, maybe even cigar smoke or perhaps bourbon, whatever the senses take in that you associate with them.  Pause

         Such was the occasion during this encounter with Christ.  He is with his friends, his disciples.  The hours before his final leaving are coming swiftly to a close.  He knows that the time is slipping quickly away.  These are precious moments.  Each of these disciples will remember them intimately.  They will recall who was in attendance, where each person was sitting, and the exchanges they had with him.  They will remember his teaching and his story about heaven.  They will retell others that he goes before them to prepare a new place for them in heaven and they will make the connection, if not now, later, about him being one with God.

         They will recite Jesus’ own words as he sat with them at the table and they will record them for future generations to read.  Words like the ones  just before our scripture reading this morning and those we included today, like;

“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another.” 

“Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.  By this everyone will know that you are one of my disciples, if you have love for one another.”

“Do not let your hearts be troubled.” 

“Believe in God, believe also in me.” 

“I am the way, and the truth, and the life.” 

“No one comes to the Father, except through me.” 

Profound words that have been re-used and restated over and over again by Christian followers for 2,000 years.

All too often we take snippets of story, phrases that are said and forget that they come with context.  For example these words, just spoken, were said in the context of Jesus sitting with his disciples for the last time.  They were partaking of the Passover meal when they would have recited together in a ritual feast the story of Moses leading the people out of bondage in Egypt.  During the evening meal, the children would ask the following questions that would prompt the adults to explain the significance of the meal to the children.

Question 1: On all other nights we eat either leavened or unleavened bread.  But on this night, why do we eat only unleavened bread?  The answer the assembled adults would give is this; We eat only unleavened bread on this night to remind us of the haste with which our ancestors left Egypt.

Question 2: On all other nights we eat all kinds of herbs.  On this night, why only bitter herbs?

Answer 2: On this night we eat only bitter herbs to remind us of the bitterness of slavery.

Question 3: On all other nights we do not dip our herbs even once.  On this night, why do we dip them twice?

Answer 3:  On this night we dip once in the salty water to remind us of the tears we cried while in Egypt.  On this night we also dip into the charoset to remind us of the cement we were forced to make to create the bricks used in Egypt.

And finally Question 4 asked by the children: On all other nights we eat sometimes sitting and sometimes reclining.  On this night, why do we all recline?

Answer 4:  We eat reclining on this night to commemorate our freedom from slavery, reclining on cushions like royalty.

The repeated phrases in the Passover Haggadah are:

“Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the Universe, who created the fruit of the vine.” 

“Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the Universe, who brings forth bread from the earth.” 

“Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the Universe, the Lord is One.”

So, the rituals and the phrases come with story, the simple words harken back to a time long before any of the generations present remember and yet it is part of their story, part of their heritage, part of their very DNA.  And each time they sit together at table with one another, they retell the stories, they re-invest in their history and understand perhaps a little bit deeper, who they are from one generation to the next.

During our own worship service, we too use phrases and snippets of meaning that explain a lot to us, they are part of our Christian story, they are part of our history, our heritage, part of our own DNA, that makes us who we are.  But from an outsiders point of view they might not mean a thing or they may mean something entirely different.  For example, our Gloria Patri.

It's a Latin phrase that begins a hymn that we’ve used every Sunday in worship for eons and the moment you, as a Christian having grown up in the church or having gone to church for a long time, when you read Gloria Patri in a bulletin or on our worship screen, you know what words come next, right?  Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost.  As it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be.  World without end.  Amen.  Amen.  You probably can’t even say it without hearing the tune of the hymn we use to say it in your head.  It is that much a part of who you are as a Christian.

It's a song of praise that has within it the entire understanding of the Trinity, their role in creation and their status to hold it all together into eternity.

A couple of weeks ago we needed to have our outside basement steps replaced.  At first, the contractor and I thought he’d be able to just replace the crumbling cement cap, but as that was removed the entire 155 year old stone walls that were beneath the cement cap collapsed, so entire entirely set of steps, walls, cap, door, everything had to be replaced.  So, a two day job ended up being a two week job.  On one of the Friday evenings, I asked Mike if he had plans for the weekend.  He told me that on Saturday he planned to hike at a park near us and then church on Sunday.  He knew I was a pastor, so I asked him what church he attended.  He explained to me that he’d had a circuitous route back to church after only attending things like Vacation Bible School when he was a kid.  Over the last couple of years he’d tried three different churches.  He listed them.  They were all rather large non-denominational, suburban churches up in Cranberry.

He said that he really liked the one he was attending now because they were encouraging him to read his bible and that they didn’t interpret any of the scriptures for the members and allowed them to interpret the scriptures themselves.  He found that really refreshing.  Well, I don’t, but I wasn’t going to get into a long discourse or argument with him about it.

But my first and primary question I wanted to ask him is, how can you read scripture without interpretation?  Everything in scripture requires some kind of interpretation.  The entire book was written by various writers with different understandings, written over the course of hundreds, if not thousands of years, written for people in specific times.  Of course, it has universal and eternal meaning, but everything has context and needs to be interpreted.

I think it is important for us to keep in mind that scripture was written as story.  It’s a story about a people who believed in God and their interactions with God.  It’s a story that is told over and over again at table with one another from one generation to the next.  That our story may not make sense to people who have never heard it before and that each tiny story within scripture tells part of a bigger story and that we should be very careful when we take just a small phrase and create a different reality that doesn’t fit with what we know about the larger picture or should be understood clearly by those who have never heard it.  And yet, at the same time, scripture also needs to be allowed to breathe and move and interact with people of every time period, in all circumstances.  However, the only way it can do that is through interpretation and the sharing of its story and what it means to the people reading it.

Going back to our own scripture reading this morning and one of the teachings that Jesus was giving his disciples we often take out of context, twisting the meaning of how they were meant because we forget that they are part of a larger story or part of a bigger picture.  

“No one comes to the Father except through me.”  For many Christians, this phrase has come to mean that no one can get to heaven without proclaiming Jesus Christ as Lord.  But, when you put it into context here in this story, Jesus is talking about the two of them (God, the Father and God, the Son) being one, that you can’t separate the two of them.  They are one and the same.  I am in the Father and the Father is in me, he says.  In other words, if you know Jesus Christ, you know God.  But the opposite would also have to be true; if you know God, you also know Christ.  They are one.  They are together, inseparable.  Jesus will also make the claim in Matthew 28 that there is a third entity in this dynamic, that of the Holy Spirit.  That these three aspects of the Trinity, the Godhead are one and the same.  That God the Creator, Christ the Redeemer, and the Holy Spirit as Sustainer are together. 

This has been interpreted to be the meaning behind the doctrine of the Trinity for nearly 2000 years, so you can’t really separate one from another by means of taking “No one comes to the Father except through me” out of context. 

Herein lies the problem with today’s Spiritual movement – “I’m Spiritual or Christian, but not religious.”  We weren’t meant to read the Bible in a vacuum.  We were meant to learn scripture and the story of God, Christ, the Holy Spirit and all the villains and heroes of the Bible in context, in story, and in community.  May we continue to do so for generations to come.   Thanks be to God.  AMEN.

Offertory –        

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

Thank You, Lord, for all the wonderful gifts with which You have blessed our lives.  Take these gifts, these tokens and use them to build Your realm, to heal the broken hearted, bind up those who are wounded, welcome the stranger, become the gate of hope for we ask this in Jesus’ name.  AMEN.

Holy Communion

Closing Hymn – Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise         Hymn #3263/33

                                                                                 4 vs. Blue Hymnal

Benediction

Go forth in peace.  Bring hope to this world.  Go forth in love.  Bring joy to

this world.  Go forth with knowledge of God.  God goes with you, loving and

guiding your steps.  Go now and serve the Lord.

Postlude