Sunday, August 15, 2021

Worship Service for Sunday, August 15, 2021

 

Worship Service for August 15, 2021

Special Announcement:

          If you have found this blog and our worship services/meditations helpful, it would be a great blessing to us if you’d help with our church’s ongoing ministries by providing a monetary contribution to either church. 

Olivet Presbyterian Church

726 Fourth Street  Box 526

West Elizabeth, PA  15088

Or

Bethesda United Presbyterian Church

314 S. 3rd Avenue

Elizabeth, PA  15037

 

Click here (when highlighted) for the YouTube link for the recorded service.

 

Prelude

Announcements: 

Today, we celebrate Communion, if you are worshipping from home, feel free to grab a piece of bread or cracker and some juice or liquid of your choosing to celebrate this sacrament with us.

·        Please feel free to join us for in person worship at Olivet (West Elizabeth, PA) at 9:45am or at Bethesda (Elizabeth, PA) at 11:15am.

·        Church Picnic and worship service will be held on Aug 22 at Round Hill Park and for anyone interested there will be a joint choir singing for that service.  One practice will be held at First Presbyterian Church on Aug 15 at 12:30.

·        Bright Beginnings Preschool will have an Open House on Saturday, Aug 28 from 10am-1pm.  All are welcome for tours.  Come and Touch-a-Truck!

 

Sounding of the Hour (at Bethesda only)

Call to Worship

L:      Come, be nourished by the words and witness of Jesus Christ.

P:      He came that we might know of God’s absolute, steadfast love for us.

L:      Receive the gift of the Bread of Life and hunger no more.

P:      We are grateful for Jesus Christ, who has given to us this magnificent gift.

L:      Come, let us worship and rejoice!

P:      Let us sing our praise to God.

 

Opening Hymn – How Firm a Foundation

Prayer of Confession

          Gracious and Merciful Lord, You have offered to us food for the journey.  You remind us that Your very life will sustain us as we witness to Your love.  But sometimes we let those reminders slip from our consciousness.  We wallow in our difficulty; make excuses for not living the kind of life that You would have us live; treat others in ways which are not healthy or loving.  Please forgive us, Lord.  Stop us in our tracks and help us examine the many ways in which we have not served You well and the callous things we have done to others.  Cleanse our spirits and our souls from these unrighteous acts, and cause us to follow You more closely.  Remind us again that You are the Bread of Life, having given Yourself for us.  Sustain us and encourage us in our service.  These things we ask in Jesus’ Name.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      Even though we turn our backs on God, God is ready to forgive and heal our spirits.  God’s love never fails, and we can rejoice in the power of that eternal love. 

P:      In the name of Jesus Christ, we give thanks for being healed and forgiven.  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

We like directions, Lord.  We want an owner’s manual; a guidebook; a how-to guide for our faith.  Rules and regulations, time constraints seem to dominate our lives and we forget the most basic understanding for our faith; which is our relationship to God through the Son.  God has drawn us here this day, to be healed, to listen, to be encouraged in our service to God’s world.  We have lifted up names of dear ones who struggle with a host of issues and situations over which we feel powerless.  Remind us again that Your power is sufficient for our needs.  We are all in Your loving car.  Help us to place our trust and confidence in You.  Let us feast on the Bread of Life who has given us the best example of what it means to truly serve You and witness to Your divine love.  Encourage us to serve You more fully.

We especially pray for….

In this moment of silence hear our hearts, Lord…

We pray all this in your Son’s name 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 –  Just As I Am

Scripture Reading(s): 

OT – Psalm 111

NT – John 6:51-65

Sermon –

 

Bread of Life

(based John 6:51-65)

 

The sixth chapter of John is full of statements that offended those who heard them.  First Jesus suggested that he was God’s own manna come down from heaven to give life to the world.  We’re used to hearing that sort of thing, but imagine hearing it for the first time – from a human being who doesn’t look all that different from you and I – Jesus said, “I am the living bread that came down from heaven.  Whoever eats of this bread will live forever.”

Jesus took this offense to an even higher level by choosing really gory words to describe what he meant.  In all the other gospels, Jesus simply calls this bread his body – or soma, a generic term for the whole of a person and is the word used in all other places when Jesus talks about the bread being his body.  It’s used symbolically – just as when Jesus says he is the door, or the True Vine.  But in John’s gospel, he defines it further – this bread is not just his body, but it is his flesh – or sarx in Greek.  It is a specific term which means his skin and muscle tissue, the actual flesh that covers the bones.  In all the other gospels, he offers it to be eaten – or phago.  The term that we would often use by saying something like “Let’s sit down and eat.”  But in John’s gospel he uses the Greek word trogon for “chomp” or “gnaw,” a word that is more usually used for what a dog might do with a bone. 

A more literal translation of his invitation goes like this: “Those who chomp my flesh and guzzle my blood have eternal life; for my flesh is true food and my blood is true drink.”  In my mind, that is a rather unsettling image that sounds more like something for a butcher shop or a hedonistic ritual that brings up images of candles, an upside-down star of David inside a circle and animal sacrifice, than it does for a church. 

What is really puzzling about this however, is that on other occasions when Jesus spoke about himself being the Bread of Life and the disciples are confused because they think he means it literally, when he meant it figuratively, Jesus gets upset with them and says, “How is it that you do not understand that I did not speak to you concerning bread?”  And yet here, he seems to mean it quite literally with the specific word chooses he uses.

This is also where Catholics and various Protestants have parted ways when it comes to the understanding of what happens during the Sacrament of Communion.  Catholics have held on to the belief that the body and blood of bread and wine are somehow transformed into Jesus real flesh and blood at Communion – this has been called Transubstantiation.  Some Protestant denominations, such as Lutherans, are of the belief that somehow the body and blood of Christ become part of the physical elements of bread and wine – this has been called Consubstantiation.  Presbyterians have held onto the more symbolic understanding of Communion and that Christ’s body and blood are only symbolically held in the bread and wine.

And for the first century hearers, the Hebrew scriptures or the Old Testament as we know it, the Law clearly forbids the drinking of blood.  And here Jesus is saying “drink my blood” for it is eternal life.  Perhaps now you can understand why Jesus’ followers began to pull away from him at that point.  “This teaching is difficult,” they said, “Who can accept it?”  No kidding.  Jesus is telling them to go against everything they’ve been taught.

Instead of making it easier for them to understand, Jesus made it even harder.  “Does this offend you?” he said to his disciples.  “Then what if you were to see the Son of Man ascending to where he was before?”   He simply would not let up on them.  If they were going to follow him all the way, then they were going to have to give up their need to understand, to agree, or to approve of everything he said or did.  They were going to have to believe him, even when what he said offended them.  They were going to have to trust him, even when what he did went against everything they had been taught.

At this point in following Jesus, you can almost hear their minds slam shut.  They had hoped he was going to explain things to them so they could make reasonable decisions about how best to follow him.  Instead, he let them know that nothing, not even their belonging to him, was theirs to decide.  Because then he raises the bar even higher in terms of offense.  “For this reason I have told you that no one can come to me unless it is granted by the Father,” he said.  If you don’t get it, don’t blame me.  God must not have chosen you.

There must have been a terrible look on his face when he said that, a terrible sound to his voice, because plenty of his disciples turned around and left the room right then.  For all we know, one or two of them spat on the floor as they did, while others simply shook their heads and walked out the door.  At least twelve stayed, because according to John he asked them, “Do you also wish to go away?”  He was ready to watch all of them walk out the door and for all of them to go away.  But Peter answered for them all.  “Lord, to whom can we go?  You have the words of eternal life.”

Maybe it’s just me, but I hear such pathos, a mixture of pity and compassion, in those words.  Peter is as offended as anyone else by what Jesus is saying.  Of all the disciples, he is the one who stands up for traditional faith.  He keeps the dietary laws.  He never eats forbidden things, including any kind of meat with the blood still in it.  The idea of gnawing flesh and drinking blood turns his stomach as badly as it does anyone else’s, but where is he to go?  As confusing as Jesus is, Peter has glimpsed something in him that he cannot turn away from.  He has glimpsed God, and if trusting that means struggling with a whole lot of distasteful things that go with it, then Peter will consent to struggle.  He will not give up the truth he’s found, even if it comes tucked in a box full of spiders.  He will not go away from the life he has been led to, even if it is miles from the life he thought he wanted.

Denominations have fought long and hard about some of these doctrines or ideas in scripture over centuries.  And usually when there is a fight in the broader church it is about scripture passages that seem to have opposing points of view, so that all sides have a legitimate point to make.  But we’ve chosen to argue about things for so long that we are truly becoming irrelevant to the culture and society we are supposed to lead to Christ.

There is no perfect church.   If you become a Christian, you should struggle with what the Bible says.  It is a life-long learning process, but one that is filled, I think, with rewards and in the end, a rich heritage of faith, of action, of guidance for living, and hope and assurance of eternal life in the future.

If you become a Presbyterian, you get a national church heavy with all the bureaucracy.  You get committees that take forever to decide anything and people that still want to fight over rather silly things.  But then you also get inspired worship, deep theologically sound documents and a commitment to world-wide peacemaking and mission that surpasses the outreach of any other denomination and puts all our divisions to shame.

Wherever people are people, there will always be things that offend.  Some of them are things we should pursue until we get some agreement on them, and others we should probably just leave alone – so that they can go on reminding us that there are other people in this world, just as sincere as we are, who do not see things our way.  We need each other, to save us from self-righteousness.  We also need each other to help keep us in shape for God.  Because wherever God is God, there will always be things that offend.  Like Jesus.  Like fleshy bread and bloody wine.  Like this church we call Christ’s body, in which we are grafted to each other as surely as we are grafted to him.

Further on in this passage in John 6, the disciples tell Jesus that this teaching was difficult, who can accept it?  Because of this many disciples turned back and no longer went about with him.  So, Jesus asked the twelve, “Do you also wish to go away?”  Peter spoke for all twelve of them and said, “Lord, to whom can we go?  You have the words of eternal life.  We have come to believe and know that You are the Holy One of God.”

This is where we have heard the words of eternal life.  This is where we have come to believe and know the Holy One of God.  With God’s guidance may we continue to be relevant for our culture and society today.

AMEN.

Offertory

Doxology

Prayer of Dedication

Gracious God, who provides in abundance and in many ways, thank you for your blessings and the gifts we bring to form community.  Give us the will and the ability to make the most of the riches you have showered upon us.  In the name of our Savior, Jesus Christ.  AMEN.

Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper

Closing Hymn – God Be With You Till We Meet Again

Benediction

Filled to the brim with the goodness of God; the nourishment of Jesus Christ, the Bread of life, and the power of the Holy Spirit, go now in peace to serve God in all that you think, do, and say.  May God’s peace be with you.  AMEN.

Postlude

 

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