Sunday, December 5, 2021

Today's Worship Service for Sunday, December 5, 2021 - 2nd Sunday of Advent

 

Worship Service for December 5, 2021

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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 new study of Hosea.

Christ Be Our Light - Choir

Call to Worship

L:      The Light shines in the darkness,

P:      but the darkness has not overcome it.

L:      During Advent our weary souls seek God’s daily strength.

P:      The Lord gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.

L:      We grow weary when fear overshadows faith.

P:      The Lord gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.

L:      We grow weary when destructive actions erupt in the world around us.

P:      The Lord gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.

L:      For all of us feeling weary this Advent season:

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 – O Come, O Come Emmanuel  #9/245

Prayer of Confession

          Lord of mercy and peace, open our hearts to receive Your words of hope.  We live far too much in darkness and fear.  We have let the fears invade the very center of our lives and find ourselves changing, moving from Your light to the darkness of despair.  It seems that this world and its people are more pleased to fight and destroy than they are to have peace and harmony.  We become part of that crowd when we wallow in anger, resentment, apathy, and greed.  Forgive us, patient and merciful God.  Help us be people who will look at the ways in which we have blocked Your presence; ways in which we have truly failed to be Your people.  Give us courage and strength to change our lives, that Your peace may become a reality in this world, right now, this day.  For we offer this prayer in the name of Jesus.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      Though the darkness seems so deep, do not fear.  God is with us.  Turn your lives to God.  God’s love is being poured out for you , now and always.

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

 

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:  

 

Pastoral Prayer and Lord’s Prayer

God of Advent waiting and watching; hopeful and full of love, we have come to You this day with hearts that are heavy, with concerns for family and friends; for world situations; for struggles at home, in our community, state, and nation.  We sometimes feel powerless to affect any changes.  So, we withdraw into ourselves, quick to criticize and slow to change our own behavior.  Today, You have called us to prepare ourselves to receive this “shoot” which shall arise from the stump of Jesse.  You remind us that this is the one who will bring messages of peace and love, joy and hope. He will help us to become faithful disciples and servants.  But we have much work to do.  Our preparation needs to focus on our own attitudes and our own actions.  We need to clean our spiritual houses of the cobwebs of hate, greed, apathy, suspicion.  We need to focus more on Your absolute love and forgiveness.  And then, as we turn our lives to You, offering names and situations in prayers for Your healing mercies, help us to remember that our own healing is also vital, that our own healing is necessary, that our own healing, helps heal others.  Enable us to be strong and confident workers for You in this world.

Holy Lord, heal our hearts, heal our wounds, and heal our souls. 

We thank You for all that You’ve done for us in the past.  Hear our heartfelt pleas for those we love….We remember….

 

And now in this moment of silence, hear our unspoken prayers.

 

Gracious God, we thank You for this day, for one another, and for our opportunities to worship You as we 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 –  Of the Father’s Love Begotten #309/240

Scripture Reading(s): 

OT – Malachi 3:1-4

NT – Luke 3:1-6

Sermon –  Prepare the Way (based on Luke 3:1-6)

 

During this time period in history, kings were a dime a dozen; practically every town/city, region, tribe or nation had a king, a ruler, a tetrarch, or a governor.  Looking back at history it’s difficult to even understand who was in charge of what.  However, we know that the custom had become that when any of these important people were going to visit a city, he would send before him someone to herald his coming, someone to announce that he would be arriving soon.  This custom helped establish the importance of the person coming.  The herald would go around the city, and go before the leaders of the city, telling them all, “The king (or the tetrarch or the governor) is coming.  He will be here any day.”  This herald also served as a city inspector.  He would go around the city and make a list of things that needed to be fixed, updated or prepared.  He would tell them, “Clean up your city.  Sweep your streets.  Get rid of all the riff raff lying around.  Round up any criminals to make the city safe.  Fix the roads; make them smooth and straight.  Make sure the town is gleaming.  Make sure the city is fit for your ruler to ride through.”  It was an embarrassment for that city, and the people of the city, if they were not prepared when the important person like the king did arrive.  It was also an insult to the ruler if they had not prepared properly for his arrival.  If he came, and they were not prepared, he might execute some judgment and punishment upon the city and its leaders.

As we look at this section of Luke, this is exactly what we see going on…in a slightly different way.  The herald “the one who will pronounce the King’s coming” is none other than John the Baptist.  And the one who is coming is Jesus, the King of heaven and earth.  And John has come to prepare the way.

A north-south ridge of mountains divides Israel. The western slope receives the bulk of the rain blowing east from the Mediterranean, but the eastern slope is much drier, receiving less than 12 inches a year in the southern parts east of Jerusalem and Hebron.  It is in this where John grew up and lived.  John would spend his time in the desolate Judean mountains east of the ridge and roam the deserted arid plains of Jordan north of the Dead Sea.  This area was his home.  He is pictured as a strange and lonely man who had learned to live off the land – eating locusts and wild honey. 

There in the wilderness God had become John’s companion, his confidant, his teacher.  In the desert, John came to know God better than people, and when God fully owned his heart and allegiance, John was ready. 

What does this kind of desert hermit life do to a person?  It produces someone who really doesn't care what "civilized" people think about him. John didn't structure his life in relation to societal norms and expectations, so when he burst upon the scene as a desert preacher, his words were unrefined, blunt, and uncompromising.

I’ve often wondered why God would use such an eccentric man for such a crucial role?  I picture John the Baptist as sort of the character Woody Harrelson plays in the movie 2012: an odd, eccentric believer who owns his own radio show out in the wilds of Yosemite National Park – wearing whatever clothes were closest when he woke up that day, unshaven, speaking over the airwaves truth to people’s doubt and cynicism, having long known what was coming.  

This is how I picture John the Baptist, but perhaps a bit more gruff, a bit more crazy, a bit more unrefined.  Why would God use someone like that?  I think it’s because the ordinary wouldn't do, so God fashioned John to be very different. 

This itinerant preacher began to confront sin noisily.  He probably wouldn't have attracted too much attention if he hadn't publicly rebuked King Herod Antipas, who ruled Galilee at the time, for divorcing his first wife and marrying Herodias, his niece and his brother Philip's former wife.  Because soon after doing this, John's bold preaching drew a tremendous crowd from Jerusalem and the other towns of Judea.  His message was this: the kingdom of God is at hand, the Messiah is coming soon, and you're not ready.  You are sinful and corrupt.  You must repent of your sins and be forgiven.

          John, being so different, uses three very specific and somewhat new words to the hearers of this message.  The first word he uses is “Repentance" which is metanoia in Greek, and it means "a change of mind, turning about, conversion."  Repentance is much more than a sense of guilt.   Repentance is more than sorrow for getting caught or for doing something wrong.  Repentance is an actual change of mind, an action, a step away from a sinful pattern or habit or act.  It is change.  God's call to action to repentance isn't one of guilt or sorrow, but one of change.  That was John's message: repent!  Change!

The second important word he uses is "forgiveness," Greek aphesis, which means “to be released from captivity, or to be pardoned; a cancellation of an obligation, punishment, or guilt.”  John insisted that everyone, both the rulers and the commoners were guilty of sin and needed to repent and find forgiveness in God.  Or, in other words, change and be set free.

But the biggest difference from all others that were preaching somewhat the same message as John was preaching is that he didn't leave them there; he offered God’s forgiveness in a radical way, which brings us to the third important word.

And that word is "baptism", in Greek baptisma, which means to "dip, immerse."   The Community at Qumran, was a community of hermit priests in the desert territory; they practiced repeated ritual washings, which is probably where John picked up the practice adding the First Century idea of Jewish proselyte baptism, a ritual bath by which a Gentile convert to Judaism was cleansed from moral and religious impurity.

The difference is that John preached to Jews not Gentiles.  When John called on people to be baptized for the forgiveness of their sins, he called them to submit to the same kind of cleansing bath required of Gentile converts.  In other words, John wanted the Jews to really understand the importance of their repentance and God’s forgiveness; what they were doing, why they were doing it, and to understand the fullness of their cleansing, as if they knew nothing of their faith and needed to be completely reborn.  Jesus would pick up on this same theme in his own ministry.

As I mentioned in the beginning of the sermon, John was a herald.  He was the city inspector, getting the city and the people ready for their King.  He was, as Luke 3 tells us;

"A voice of one crying out in the wilderness,

'Prepare the way for the Lord,

make his paths straight.

Every valley shall be filled,

And every mountain and hill shall be made low.

The crooked shall be made straight,

And the rough ways made smooth.

And all flesh shall see the salvation of God' "

What a clear image of major road work to prepare the King's highway -- straightening the curves, as well as cutting and filling in so that the road might be level and easy to travel upon.

On a recent trip back to the Philadelphia area, we stopped at one of the rest areas and eating lunch watched a video of how the first major superhighway and toll road across Pennsylvania – the PA Turnpike – was created.  The old route used to wind, dip, and climb as it crossed the rugged mountainous terrain of central PA.  Hundreds of feet were sliced through mountains, then that rock and dirt used to fill deep gorges and canyons to make the highway smoother and straighter from a rough and crooked way.  Even today, the PA Turnpike is undergoing impressive improvements to become one of the most impressive engineering projects in PA, straightening out the road even more where it can and making it wider and smoother. 

In a similar way, God is seeking to prepare you and me.  To cut through the mountains of our pride, to fill up the valleys of our despair, to straighten our crooked ways, and make us fit for the King himself to travel upon.  For God desires us to be ready followers free of obstacles that destroy our confidence and ability to serve Him, so that others will be able to see in us “the salvation of God”.

Prepare the way of the Lord – major roadwork could be ahead for us as our advent journey continues.

Offertory   

Doxology

Prayer of Dedication

Loving God, as a thankful response to these gifts that we offer this morning, we also offer our beliefs, our commitments, and our whole lives, that we may hasten the time when no one will hurt or destroy on all God’s holy mountain.  In Jesus’ name we pray.  AMEN.

Closing Hymn –  What Child Is This? #53/281

Benediction

Friends, be a people of hope.  Let hope live in your heart and share the hope of Christ with all you meet.  Share hope by noticing someone else’s humanity.  Share hope by listening to someone’s story.  Share hope by praying for our world.  In this advent season, we need to see, feel, and share hope.  As you go from this service, go out into the wonder of God’s creation and share hope with those you meet.  Amen.

Postlude

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