Sunday, April 25, 2021

Today's Worship Service and Sermon - Sunday, April 25, 2021

 

Worship for the Lord’s Day

April 25, 2021

A Note before we begin this day’s worship:

          Unfortunately, I had to leave town for a family emergency, so we are back on-line for this Sunday and there is no YouTube clip for the sermon, but there will be in person coverage for May 2 and May 9 at our regular worship times at (Olivet Presbyterian Church, West Elizabeth – 9:45am and Bethesda United Presbyterian Church, Elizabeth – 11:15am) with our previous safety precautions in place.  I will post a worship service on-line for those Sundays (May 2, 9), as well.

As always, you can click on the highlighted portions below which will open a YouTube clip of the songs and the sermon.

 

Let’s begin:

 

Prelude All Creatures of Our God and King, on the organ

 

Call to Worship

L:      Praise the Lord who spoke the word which created the grandeur of     the heavens.

P:      For the brilliant moon and countless stars, sun and rain and blue          sky we praise the Lord!

L:      Praise the Lord who spoke the word which created the fragile beauty of the earth and seas.

P:      For changing seasons; the contours of the land and sea; for        heat and cold, wind and calm, we praise the Lord!

L:      Praise the Lord who spoke the word which created trees and plants,   animals and birds, and people of all races and cultures.

P:      For the environment which sustains boys and girls, women and men; poor and rich, young and old, we praise the Lord!

L:      Praise the Lord, the Word who became flesh and who lived among us          full of grace and truth.

P:      We have seen His glory and from His fullness we have all    received grace upon grace – praise the Lord, Hallelujah!

         

Hymn  All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name

 

Prayer of Confession

          Gracious  and loving God, as we reflect on the wonder and glory of Your being, and the depth of Your love for us, we are conscious of our failure to learn from You and from the sacrificial love of Jesus.  So often our understanding of glory is linked with prestige and power and position.  Jesus’ understanding of glory was linked to a love that was prepared to go to the uttermost limits of love.  Forgive us when selfish pursuit of glory takes precedence over Jesus’ command to love one another as He loved us.  Fill our hearts with Jesus’ selfless love so that, like Him, we glorify You in all we do and say.  This we pray in Jesus’ name.  AMEN.

 

Words of Assurance

L:      God makes all things new.  Anyone who is in Christ is a new creation!          The old has passed away; everything has become new!  Friends,     believe the gospel; in Jesus Christ we are loved, we are blessed, we          are forgiven.      

P:      Thanks be to God for God’s abounding grace!

 

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

           Our souls are weary, O God.  We hear too easily the loud clamor of the world.  We witness the terror and trauma all around us.  We long for the "good old days" when life seemed so much safer and simpler; when we felt cherished and protected.  In this spirit, we have come to this time of worship, seeking Your peace and hope.  The Psalmist wrote of green pastures and refreshing springs of water, places of rest.  Offerings of quietness and comfort flood our thirsting souls.  What we would give for such places in the heart!  In the midst of all that is difficult, there is one who leads us to these places where, when we have gathered strength and healing, we are prepared to go forth in confidence to serve again.  Jesus, the Good Shepherd, knows our name and our needs.  He listens for our cries and responds in love.  We can have great assurance in that.  We have offered today the names and situations of illness, mourning, stress, and concern which touch our lives and our souls.  We have breathed our heart’s desire for their healing and restoration.  God’s abundant love shall flood over them until they are more than filled.  God will be with all these dear ones in their situations and needs.  And God will be with us, strengthening us, restoring us, healing us, challenging us, to witness to the Good News of Salvation in the name of Jesus Christ.  Open our hearts this day, O Lord, and enter into our lives.

This day, we offer up in prayer…

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.

 

Scripture Readings

 

Old Testament: Exodus 32:9-10a, Psalm 23

 

9The Lord said to Moses, “I have seen this people, how stiff-necked they are.  10Now let me alone, so that my wrath may burn hot against them and I may consume them…”

 

1The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.  2He makes me lie down in green pastures; he leads me beside still waters; 3he restores my soul. He leads me in right paths for his name’s sake.

4Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I fear no evil; for you are with me; your rod and your staff— they comfort me.

5You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies; you anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows.

6Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life, and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord my whole life long.

 

New Testament: 1 John 3:16-24

16We know love by this, that he laid down his life for us—and we ought to lay down our lives for one another.  17How does God’s love abide in anyone who has the world’s goods and sees a brother or sister in need and yet refuses help?  18Little children, let us love, not in word or speech, but in truth and action.  19And by this we will know that we are from the truth and will reassure our hearts before him 20whenever our hearts condemn us; for God is greater than our hearts, and he knows everything.  21Beloved, if our hearts do not condemn us, we have boldness before God; 22and we receive from him whatever we ask, because we obey his commandments and do what pleases him.  23And this is his commandment, that we should believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and love one another, just as he has commanded us.  24All who obey his commandments abide in him, and he abides in them.  And by this we know that he abides in us, by the Spirit that he has given us.

 

Sermon – Let Us Love

Let Us Love

(based on Exodus 32:9, Psalm 23, and 1 John 3:16-24)

 

          Today’s sermon message could have been written from the vantage point of any numerous Bible passages.  But today’s passages from Exodus, the Psalms and 1 John give us an interesting juxtaposition.  These various passages seem to pit a loving and shepherding God against a more wrathful God.  The Bible is filled with these select passages and stories about God and about how we should strive to be like God, such as “Be holy, because I AM holy.” I Peter 1:16.

          Which one is the God we worship?  The wrathful God that wants to destroy us because of our disobedience or the loving God that embraces us as lost sheep?  Which one is the one we share with others?  Do we believe in a dual purpose, bi-polar God?  A God that is loving one moment and wrathful the next? 

To be perfectly honest, I’m not sure we’ve figured that out yet.  We, Christians, have an awful track record when you look over the long span of Christian history and activity in the world.  We haven’t always lived up to the standards of loving one another.  And when we do love one another, we can be awfully selective about who that love is extended to.  There was a “friendly” phrase used quite often a decade or so ago which said, “Love the sinner, but hate the sin.”  I put the word friendly in quotes because it often still translated into a less than loving relationship, regardless of the sentiment.

Of course, we aren’t perfect people and we shouldn’t pretend that we are.  We all struggle with the same sins that everyone else struggles with.  Although this list doesn’t exist as a whole in the Bible, the 7 Deadly Sins or Cardinal Sins as they are known were widely adopted by the Christian Church from the time of the 4th Century.  They include pride, greed, wrath, envy, lust, gluttony, and sloth.  The early church used these fundamental teachings about sin as a way to help curb our evil inclinations before they festered into bad practices and actions against others. 

But, we all struggle with the same inner battles, the same heartaches, the same demons.  Maybe a good number of us have learned over many, many years of struggle how to cope with them better, how to ignore the voices that lead us down an instant gratification and easier road.  But we are no better than those who are still struggling and still perhaps losing in those struggles.  But the Church (with a capital C - meaning the whole, not the smaller individual parts) over its long history, has not always been kind. 

To counterbalance the 7 Deadly Sins, the church also came up with 7 Heavenly Virtues.  They are chastity, temperance, generosity, diligence, patience, gratitude and humility.  If, perhaps we wanted to put some of this into a contemporary sentiment, it might just be this; “Be Kind.”

Why would I begin my sermon by saying these harsh things?  Because, it’s been on my mind a lot lately.  Especially when I wonder what future we as a Church (again with the capital C) have and why there are so many empty pews?  All the current polls have said that there are fewer “believers” now than those who don’t believe in any particular religion, including Christianity. 

The response to a question I posed a while ago might indicate some of the reasons.  As we wrestle with returning to some kind of life after this pandemic year and find a re-set button, how are we going to respond to the growing non-church members and non believers in our culture today.   I believe that I have spent most of my opportunities in the pulpit to show how God transforms our own lives.  As most denominations continue to shrink and the biggest news is that even evangelical, conservative churches have also lost members by huge percentages each year; my personal, faith-shaking question is this; what’s the point in continuing this “church” stuff?  I asked this question several years ago before the pandemic and I ask it with an even more serious request for answers.  I’m not about to leave my faith, or my job/position, nor am I at some mid-life crisis where I am questioning my choices and my continued energy for sharing God’s awesome Good News.  But I’m just wondering what others think of the future of the church and it’s ability to REALLY lead in helping one another transform their lives.  Be the kind of people that we were meant to be. 

I got lots of answers to this question that came from a huge variety of people I know and respect – believers, agnostics, people who claim to be truth seekers, others who claim no religion, but still believe in the goodness of others, and even some who would claim that they are atheists.

One of my oldest and dearest friends who used to belong to a church but no longer does summed up nearly all of the responses I received;

“I think it’s really quite simple, Walt.  If any church could just get back to the very basics of teaching, modeling, loving the way Jesus did, many people would be drawn to these churches.  As it stands many of them judge, condemn, persecute, alienate, and yes even hate people.  It is what has turned me off of religion.  Because I choose to believe that God loves me, and I actually feel it, I have the ability to love others.  It’s that simple.  Churches have made that simple message so complicated laced with hate and judgments.”

We wonder why our pews are empty, it’s because we have forgotten God’s most important message to us.  We have forgotten how to love.  “For God so loved the world that He sent his one and only son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but have everlasting life.  Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.”  John 3:16, 17

          Our emphasis has been on God’s wrath and not on God’s love.  Yes, there very well might be a bi-polar God who is both wrathful and loving.  But the overwhelming message in scripture is on the incredible love God has for the creation and that this love is to be shared with one another.

I started going to Sunday School when I was still in diapers.  My parent’s brought my sister and I up in the church.  We learned all the Bible stories that we teach children.  Here are a few of them:

          Abraham was faithful, and God made him the father of a nation…and the lesson I learned was…so be faithful like Abraham.

          Joseph was a good little boy (unlike his “bad” brothers), and God made him Prime Minister over all Egypt…and the lesson I learned was…so be good like Joseph.

          David had a pure heart (unlike his brothers), and God made him King of Israel…and the lesson I learned was…so have a pure heart like David.

          Esther was an obedient girl.  God made her Queen of Persia and saved God’s people…and the lesson I learned was…so be obedient like Esther.

          And finally, somewhere in the midst of all those stories, I also heard that if we fail to be faithful, good, obedient or have a pure heart, Jesus will forgive us…sort of a P.S. tacked on at the end of the story.

          At 7 years old I already knew that I wasn’t faithful, or good or obedient or had a pure heart.  At 7 years old I already knew that there was evil in me, that sometimes I was bad, that I sometimes acted more like Joseph’s brothers when I was mean to my sister, or like David’s brothers who were skipped over in favor of the more athletic David, or like Mordecai in the story of Esther who plotted to make himself look better by putting someone else down.  I wasn’t like any of those Bible “Hero” characters, I was a lot more like the villains.

          At 7 years old I wrestled with God and how he could possibly love me when I was like none of those nice characters in the Bible story.

 

What’s so bad about these Sunday school lessons?

Nothing really.  Except that they don’t tell the full story about God, they often leave out some of the more interesting and intriguing characters of our faith,  and they tend to emphasize the wrong things about the gospel of good news, forgiveness and God’s amazing love.  Apart from that, they are pretty good.  But there’s more to the story than just these.  The message of the gospel – the entire storyline of scripture – is God’s loving pursuit of people who run from him as fast as they can and who live lives unworthy of his love.  That’s why it’s called grace.

But our old Sunday School lessons used to teach us to be good little boys and girls, and God will love and use us.  It’s the total opposite of the gospel, though.  The wonder of the gospel is not the love of the beautiful; it’s when Beauty kisses the Beast.

The Beast isn’t loved because he has changed; the Beast is changed when he is loved.  Joy doesn’t come when he’s loved for his beauty; joy overwhelms him when he is loved in his hideousness.

If the Beast were loved for his beauty, it would be an unbearable burden.  Any day he might be scarred, and soon he will certainly be a wrinkled old man.

Let’s teach the wonder of the gospel…a lesson I never learned until much later in life…and because of it…I often still struggle with God about how wretched I am.  But let’s show today’s/yesterday’s/and tomorrow’s generations that God loves them…simply because he loves them and us.  In our beastliness.  That he loves us before we are good. 

That the storyline of the Bible is God’s Search and Rescue mission to find the dying Beast and kiss him into joyous life.

How Abraham was an idol worshipper and God loved him and pursued him;

How Joseph was a narcissistic young teenager and God loved him and pursued him;

How David was a murdering adulterer and God loved him and pursued him;

How Esther had sex outside of marriage with a non-believer and God loved her and pursued her.

 

Our heroes weren’t loved because they were good; they became good because they were loved.

 

A wise colleague of mine posted this on his Facebook page.

 

          Most religions are practiced or doctrinal religions.  In other words, they are based on performing the right practices or having right beliefs.  Christianity, at its core, is a religion of relationships – with God, with others, with ourselves.  If our practices and beliefs don’t lead to loving relationships, then they become ends in and of themselves.

          In most other religions it’s the quality of the particular practices that matter, whether that be strict observance of the law, proscribed prayer at certain times of the day and year, sacrifices, meditative practices, or the like.  Most cults, meanwhile, focus on the sanctity of belief.  It’s the purity of our belief that “saves” us.

          Christianity is a relational religion.  We have core practices and beliefs, but their worth is only in their ability to lead us to grow in love.  Whenever we advocate a certain kind of prayer discipline, a distinct type of mission, or a particular biblical stance, we lost sight of their intent, if our prayer, mission, or Bible study doesn’t lead us to greater love of God and everyone, then it is false and should be done away with.  That’s why what practices we take part in, or beliefs we hold, don’t matter as much as the love they lead us to.  When they become ends in themselves, we become judgmental, hypocritical, and insular.  Think of the worst of Christianity, and you will find Christians who have forgotten that their practices and beliefs must lead to love, and instead are worshiping their practices and beliefs.  Let us Christians, once again, be known for our amazing love for one another as we had been in the First Century after Christ had died and the church was just beginning to find its true message for a world full of evil, hatred, and anger.    

          If you have been a member of a church (and more specifically this church) for decades upon decades, and it’s the church of your ancestors, here is my comment to you.

          You are loved immensely by God.  Whether you struggled with that as a child, as a teenager, or as an adult, it doesn’t matter anymore.  I want you to know that you are loved by God and by me.  Your strength in the faith and in loyalty to this church is what called me here.  It’s time for us to really start living into it.  I want you to take that love of God, that strength in the faith and that loyalty to the church to a new level of love for others, I want you to share your strength in the faith with others, and I want you to lean on that loyalty to the church as we re-vision our future.

          If you are relatively new to the church, or questioning whether to become part of a church or just seeking answers, here is my comment to you.

          You are loved immensely by God.  Whether you struggled with that as a child, as a teenager, or as an adult, it doesn’t matter anymore.  I want you to know that you are loved by God, by me, and by members of this particular church, at least.  Your questioning, your doubts, your journey is what will keep us vibrant and relevant.  And I want you to know that we, as long as I am pastor of this church, embrace your heart, your spirit and your soul, just as God embraces you!

 

Rob Bell is one of my current pastoral and theological heros.  He is a contemporary evangelical who has been named as the father of the new emerging American Christianity.  He has been slapped with the title of a heretic by most of today’s conservative Evangelicals and Fundamentalists because of his boundless love for others and his acceptance of others, just like a First Century Christian.  So be it!  I love what he writes, I echo a huge percentage of his story and his thoughts.  And if I were as smart as he is, I might have written some of the same things, but I’m not, so I will close with his words.

 

Jesus came to give us life, a living, breathing throbbing,

pulsating blow your hair back tingle your spine roll the

windows down and drive fast experience of God right

here, right now.

word taking on flesh and blood.

And when you find yourselves tied up in knots, having

long discussions about who believes what, a bit like

dogs doing that sniff circle when they meet on the sidewalk,

do this:

take out a cup

and some bread

and put it in the middle of the table,

and say a prayer and examine yourselves

and then make sure everybody’s rent is paid and there’s

food in their fridge and clothes on their backs

and then invite everybody to say

‘yes’ to the resurrected Christ with whatever ‘yes’ they

can muster in the moment and then you take that bread

and you dip it in that cup in the ancient/future hope and

trust that there is a new creation bursting forth right here

right now and

then together taste that new life and liberation and

forgiveness and as you look those people in the eyes gathered

around that table from all walks of life and you see the new

humanity, sinners saved by grace, beggars who have

found bread showing the other beggars where they found it

remind yourselves that

this

is

what

you

believe.

 

In the end, the only true test of a faith begins and ends in an incarnation – love made real through actions.  All else is straw.

 

Friends,  Let us love one another, as God has loved us.

AMEN.

 

Hymn  Fairest Lord Jesus

 

Benediction

Nourished by the Shepherd’s abundant love, go forth to walk in the paths of righteousness.  Love one another in truth and action.  May God’s abundant blessings abide in you forever.   AMEN.

 

Postlude  How Great Thou Art, on the organ

 

 

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