Sunday, November 28, 2021

Today's Worship Service for November 28, 2021 - First Sunday of Advent

 

Worship Service for November 28, 2021

Click Here for the YouTube link when highlighted.

Prelude

Announcements: 

·        You can join us for in-person worship at Olivet Presbyterian Church in West Elizabeth, PA at 9:45 or at Bethesda United Presbyterian Church in Elizabeth, PA at 11:15.

·        Bible Study – Brown Bag and Bible, will meet this Wednesday at 12:30pm for our continued conversation/study on Micah.

·        Communion will be celebrated at both churches today which is the First Sunday of Advent, if you are celebrating this day with us on-line and wish to participate in communion as well, prepare your own with a bit of bread and a bit of drink and share with us at the appropriate time during your reading of the service or following the recording of it on YouTube.

Christ Be Our Light - Choir

Call to Worship

L:      Advent is a time for the human heart to wait, while trusting God’s eternal time.

P:      How long, O Lord, how long?

L:      For those waiting for answered prayer:

P:      Grant your steadfast patience.

L:      For those waiting in the face of uncertainty:

P:      Grant unshakable confidence in Your sovereign provision.

L:      For those waiting for justice and mercy to reign:

P:      Grant a glimpse of Your glory in our wounded world.

L:      for all of us waiting for God’s kingdom to come:

P:      Grant that we might have the peace of Christ as we wait, the love of Christ as we act, and the grace of Christ as we speak.

 

Lighting of the Advent Candle

 

Opening Hymn – Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus  #2/244

Prayer of Confession

          We confess, O God, that we do not take seriously Your coming into our lives.  We do not believe that salvation is near; we do not act uprightly, loving You, our neighbors, or ourselves; nor do we bend our swords and spears.  Forgive us, we pray, that we might once again walk in Your light.  Forgive us, we pray, that we might once again, act faithfully, love tenderly, and find hope in this season of Advent.  We ask this in the name of Jesus Christ.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      Watch!  Wait!  God is bringing to you new hope and peace.  It is a gift, given especially for you – one that you cannot earn – it’s a gift.  Praise be to the Giver of All Great Gifts, our Lord.

P:      Let us rejoice and be glad, for God comes to us!

 

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

 

Choral Anthem:  Receive His Son

 

Pastoral Prayer and Lord’s Prayer

Almighty and merciful God we believe, despite all the strange coming and goings of humanity, that our history belongs to you.  We give thanks that your eternal purpose is weaving its way through the events of time and space.  Sometimes, O Lord, it’s a challenge to hold on to this belief, but our confidence is in Christ, your Son and our Savior.  We believe his death and resurrection are our confirmation that even though we can’t understand the big picture of things, we can know history’s final outcome.  Gracious God, we watch with eager expectation for the return of Christ.  Our souls buzz with anticipation of seeing the One, face to face, who authored and sustains the universe, the One in whom and through whom all things hold together, the One who will one day sit in judgment.  We believe that on that last and great day all of history’s scoffers will drop to their knees in recognition of your Son.

          In this season when the darkness is banished and the light has come, we look to you for comfort and strength.  We hand over to you the concerns of our hearts and pray for….

          Not only these do we pray for, but we also pray for the burdens that are too difficult to share…hear us, Lord, in this time of silence.

          With hearts of endless joy we pray to you this morning, the prayer that your Son 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 –  Lo, How a Rose E’er Blooming #48/255

Scripture Reading(s): 

OT – Jeremiah 33:14-16

NT – Luke 21:25-36

Sermon – 

The Days are Surely Coming

(based on Jeremiah 33:14-16, Luke 21:25-36)

 

If there was ever a time when we needed to look away from all the negative noise around us, it’s now.  With so much bad news everywhere in the world, we need good news.  It is the longing of good news that turns lives around, enabling us to somehow navigate through all the bad news, all the struggles, all the negativities.  Advent is that time which anticipates good news just on the horizon of human destiny - in which the Son of Man comes in glory.  

Jeremiah prophesied about it years ago, “Behold, the days are surely coming, declares the LORD, when I will fulfill the promise I made to the house of Israel and the house of Judah.”  In the midst of their own time of exile in Babylon from the land of their ancestors, Jeremiah speaks words to the Israelite people of Advent – waiting, watching, and hoping. 

And the word that the Righteous Branch which came out of Judah speaks to us in Luke is this, “Stand up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near”.  Advent is the season of our awareness and watchfulness of that waiting and that hope.

Before the days of Jeremiah, Israel had become a divided nation, the northern kingdom of Israel had succumbed to inner rebellion and disobedience of God’s laws before being taken over by a powerful foreign.  The southern kingdom of Judah wasn’t far behind.  Conquered first by the Assyrians and then again by the Babylonians.  They were now mostly living in exile from their homeland and Jeremiah spoke to them of hope for one day returning, anticipating a time when an anointed king, a Messiah, and a descendant of David would appear in Israel’s history to bring righteousness and justice to the nation, and thus give God’s people the security they both needed and wanted.  Jeremiah’s prophetic vision anticipates that the nation’s future will not be decided by the Babylonians, but rather by God.  It is within these words of Jeremiah’s that we discover a hopeful faith during difficult times.

Our own times are perhaps particularly in need of this Advent message – one of waiting, watching, and hope.  Actual and potential crises abound: we wonder anew about the dangers of the coronavirus.  People worry about whether or not they’ll still have a job, or get one if they’ve been out of work.  People worry about whether or not they’ll be able to feed their families.  People worry if the economy, or the food supply chain will collapse.  People worry if they or someone they love will get sick or the surgery that they need can be performed.  People worry about whether the vaccine is enough to hold off any new mutations of the coronavirus.  People worry about some other tragedy that might await them.  I think people worry if there really is a future or anything to hope for, at all?

The prophesy of Jeremiah and the message of Advent is that Christ is the very hope for our own dark time.  Just as the Jewish people were waiting for the appearance of their Messiah, so, too, the Church during this season of Advent is reminded that God’s people wait patiently for the appearing of Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior.  Not only do we wait for God’s appearing, but we live in the expectation that God will come to us; that God will be merciful and show God’s steadfast love.  

 

Poem by J.D. Smith called Still Waiting)

Waiting!  

Yes, patiently waiting! 

Till next steps made plain shall be;

To hear, with the inner hearing,

The Voice that will call for me.

Waiting!  

Yes, quietly waiting!

No need for an anxious dread;

Shall He not assuredly guide me,

Who giveth me daily bread? 

Waiting!  

Yes, hopefully waiting!

With hope that needn’t grow dim;

The Master is pledged to guide me,

And my eyes are unto Him.

Waiting!  

Yes, expectantly waiting!

Perhaps it may be today

The Master will quickly open

The gate to my future way.

Waiting!  

Yes, trustfully waiting!

I know, though I’ve waited long,

That, while He withholds His purpose,

His waiting cannot be wrong.

Waiting!  

Yes, waiting, Still waiting!

The Master will not be late;

He knoweth that I am waiting

For Him to unlatch the gate.

 

When we think of Advent, or the coming of Christ, we need to consider the days for which He needed to come.  Days when the Roman Emperor, ruler of the most powerful and largest empire the world had ever seen, believed he was a god.  Days when the world worshipped such a figure.  Days when the religious minority of Israel vaguely worshipped a different god, but the religious elite, lorded it over the people, were sanctimonious and full of righteous piety.  Yet, these religious elite, the Pharisees, Sadducees, and Scribes rarely behaved and acted by the truth of their own beliefs.  If they could not do it, how do you think the common people, living in difficult times could do it?  The world needed a reset.  It needed a time of Advent – a time of waiting, watching, hoping.  The Advent of Christ comes to a people who need a reset, to reprioritize their lives.  The Advent of Christ comes to a people who need to get right with God, to turn away from their own destruction.  And this destruction comes in many forms.

It comes creeping into our lives, not blatantly and openly.  It comes through the constant need to find approval from others, rather than from within.  It comes from a hungry inner void for more stuff, for more conquests, for more greed, for more power.  It comes from detachment with our fellow travelers on this journey of life, when we no longer seek out connections with others.  It comes from apathy to care for the needs of others – when we care more about self then one another.  And it comes in all the forms of sin that separate us from one another and from God.  All of it comes at great cost and we’ve got a huge debt to repay.

But Advent comes to reset us.  Advent comes to help us break free from all of that and find the prophesy of Jeremiah and the words of the Messiah a balm for our own future.  In Advent we can reboot during this time of watching and waiting.  In Advent we can look to the future with hope, to find within the Word of God a message of love, joy, peace, kindness, gentleness, and self-control.

Advent is waiting for you!

Offertory   

Doxology

Prayer of Dedication

          Eternal God, how majestic is your name in all the earth.  The whole earth is full of your glory.  Please accept our humble offerings of our selves and our resources.  Please use them to herald your hope to all persons everywhere who are living in physical, moral, and spiritual poverty.   Bless our gifts this day, O Lord.  AMEN.

The Lord’s Supper

          Invitation to the Table

          Prayer of Thanksgiving

          L:      The Lord be with you.

          P:      And also with you.

          L:      Lift up your hearts.

          P:      We lift them up to the Lord.

          L:      Let us give thanks to the Lord our God.

Breaking of the Bread and Drink the Cup

Closing Hymn –  Lord, Make us More Holy #536/screen

Benediction

Amen.

Postlude

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