Sunday, December 19, 2021

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, December 19, 2021 - the 4th Sunday of Advent

 

Worship Service for December 19, 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.

      We will have a joint worship service at Bethesda United Presbyterian Church in Elizabeth for our Candlelight Christmas Eve Service at 7pm.  We will reinstate physical distance in our pews to allow family members to sit together but to put some separation between groups due to an expected larger attendance.


Christ Be Our Light - Choir

Call to Worship

L:      Advent is a time to bind up the broken hearted.

P:      Come, Lord, and make all things new.

L:      For past wrongs that prevent us from moving forward:

P:      Come, Lord, and make all things new.

L:      For any bitterness that scratches our soul:

P:      Come, Lord, and make all things new.

L:      For relationships left in decay and neglect:

P:      Come, Lord, and make all things new.

L:      For any action that has wounded us or by which we have wounded others:

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 – Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silent  #5 in Blue Hymnal

Prayer of Confession

          Loving God, even in the midst of this season of goodwill, there is much to confess.  In spite of the hallelujahs of holiday cheer, stress and anxiety rule our lives.  We sometimes miss the reason for the season with all the bells and glitter, the packages and wrappings.  We fail to think about Your re-ordered world – a world where the lowly are lifted up and the hungry are filled with good things.  Help us adjust our Christmas priorities, that we might join with you, O God, in preparing a world that welcomes the one who brings us love, joy, peace and hope.  In Jesus’ name we pray.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      The light of God’s love shines upon each of us in the gift of God’s love, Jesus Christ.  This is given for you.  Rejoice!  You are loved by God, now and forever.

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:  Emmanuel

 

Pastoral Prayer and Lord’s Prayer

Lord, we can't quite imagine what it must have been like for Mary, to hear God's request and to respond, unconditionally with "Yes!" We have a tendency to put conditions on everything. We want to know what we have to do, how long this will take, what's in it for us, what are the projected outcomes.  Forgive us for our faithlessness, Lord.  Slow us down, and cause us to take time to really consider the wonderful ways you have always worked in our lives.  As we have come before you with concerns on our hearts for our families, friends, and world, remind us that your presence is with us and your healing love comforts and restores us.  Open our hearts and our ears to the cries of those in need.  Let us use our talents and resources to help others.  Give us courage, energy, and enthusiasm as we work for you in this world.  We ask this in Jesus' Name.  We pray for…

And now, O Lord, in the silence, we also pray…

Hear our prayers, O Lord as we pray together…

Our Father who art in heaven, Hallowed by 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 –  Hark! The Herald Angels Sing #31/277

Scripture Reading(s): 

OT – Micah 5:2-5a

NT – Luke 1:39-55

Sermon –  Song of Praise

Song of Praise

(based on Luke 1:39-55)

          Less than a week to go and Jesus will once again be born into the world when we celebrate his birth on Christmas Day.  Year after year our Christmas celebration reminds us that God does not stand at a distance, waiting for us to come to him.  God has instead come all the way to us, and what the waiting is about is for us to comprehend and choose the light not only in word but also in deed and truth.

          Today we are given a good companion in the last days of our wait – Mary the mother of God.  Today’s reading from Luke contains the longest speech she ever makes.  It is a song known through the centuries by its Latin name, the Magnificat.  It is one of the Christian church’s oldest hymns, and it is about Mary’s dawning understanding of what her baby will mean to the world.

          A number of years ago, Mark Lowry and Buddy Greene wrote the song, Mary Did You Know?  It has become one of my own all time favorite Christmas songs, as I’m sure it is also one of yours.  But it puts Mary in the traditional role of an innocent girl who was just a vessel for God to use, who didn’t fully comprehend her own role or even the role her own son would play.  And yet, this song of Mary’s in Luke tells a different story.  Mary knew.

          Mary is a young girl when she sings her song, thirteen or fourteen, probably, sixteen at the most.  She is, like many girls her age, betrothed or engaged as we say today, to a man she hardly knows.  It frightens her to think about leaving home to become his wife, but it does not frighten her nearly as much as some of the other things that have been happening lately.  Every time she thinks about that angel who came to visit her, her stomach does a flip.  The news that angel brought was no news for a young girl.  It was news that would have set a grown woman to trembling, and Mary wonders if she can bear it, if she can truly bear a son, but not any old son, a son by God, who will rule over the house of David forever.

          The whole scene seems surreal and strange – the angel, the whiteness, the voice like bells – she is not even sure it really happened.  If it did, what will become of her?  As she grows larger by the day with this mysterious child foretold by the angel, what will people say?  That God chose her to bear his son, who in the world would believe that?  And more importantly, what about Joseph?  Would he believe her?  But it is better to put faith and belief in God than to doubt when the evidence is already showing.  That is why she answered the angel as she did: “I am the servant of the Lord,” what else could she say?  She was dumbfounded.  “Let it be with me according to your word.”  She had a million questions, but none she could audibly put into words.

          All the same, she is scared, so scared that she asks her mother and father if she can leave town for a while and go see her cousin Elizabeth in the uplands of Judah.  Elizabeth is much older than she is, older than her mother even, but Elizabeth has never patted her on the head or used that tone of voice that adults use when they speak down to children.  No, Elizabeth has always treated her like a full-fledged person, like a friend, and a friend is what she needs right now.  Her parents say yes, that she has been looking a little tired and flushed lately and maybe a change of scenery out in the country will do her some good.  So she goes, and on the journey she has lots of time to worry.  What if Joseph denounces her?   What if her parents disown her?  Never mind the shame – how will she take care of the baby all by herself with no place to live, no way to get food, no one to help her?

          When she finally arrives at Elizabeth’s she is a wreck, but at the sight of her beloved cousin she forgets all her woes.  Elizabeth is six months pregnant herself and gorgeous.  Not gorgeous by ordinary standards, but so full of life that it is hard to see much beyond her joy.  Her gray hair shows in wisps beneath her kerchief, and as she takes Mary’s hands in hers the girl can see dark spots on them, the kind that come with age.  Elizabeth’s face, too, shows her years, but her eyes are clear and full of light.  She sees Mary staring at her big belly and laughs out loud.  “Blessed are you among women,” Elizabeth exclaims, “and blessed is the fruit of YOUR womb.”

          What?  Mary can hardly believe her ears!  How could Elizabeth possibly know?  And if she knows, why isn’t she troubled about it as well?  Can’t she see what a mess this is going to be, how much explaining there is going to be?  But Elizabeth needs no explanation at all.  Without asking a single question, she takes her young cousin in her arms and lets her know that everything, finally, will be all right.  Then Mary’s stomach does another flip, and her soul finally settles ito full acceptance of her situation.  Total acceptance does something to the heart, your foot starts tapping and mere words will not suffice – you want music, a saxophone, a brass band, an entire symphony to accompany your outpouring of gladness.  In just such a frame of mind, Mary opens her mouth and begins to sing, ‘My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my savior, for he has looked with favor on the lowliness of his servant.”

          Without casting any aspersions on Mary’s originality, her song contains echoes of a much older song, sung over a thousand years earlier by her kinswoman Hannah.  Hannah, like Elizabeth, grew old and despaired of ever having a child until the Lord heard her prayer and blessed her with Samuel.  When the miraculous baby boy was born, Hannah took him to the temple and sang, too.  “My heart exults in the Lord, my strength is exalted in God,” she sang.  “The bows of the mighty are broken, but the feeble gird on strength.”  It is a song Mary may have heard before, or else one whose themes are so universal that they crop up again and again whenever God stirs his people’s hearts.

          What Hannah, Elizabeth, and Mary all have in common, what allows them to sing in harmony, is that they know they have received God’s blessing.  Each of them has carried that blessing around in her body, kicking and growing until no one who looks at her can miss it.  Mary is all but overwhelmed by what is in store for her.  “Surely, from now on all generations will call me blessed,” she sings.

Well, after all, she is a young teenager, who has spent the last few days numb with fear.  Out from under that fear, she is as excited as if she has been named Queen for a Day.  For “he who is mighty has done a great thing for me, and holy is his name.”

         

Like the beatitudes in Matthew’s gospel, this blessedness of Mary also has two parts: her past humiliation and her future glory.  “Blessed are the poor in spirit, those who mourn, who are meek, who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake” – who wants that half of the equation?  But the other half – “For theirs is the kingdom of heaven, for they shall be comforted, shall inherit the earth, shall see God.”  Now that is the interesting part of blessedness.  The trouble is, we cannot have one without the other; they come in matched pairs, with no substitutions.  So it is with Mary.  She has been embarrassed and afraid, the most miserable of the miserable, but God has blessed her in her low estate, has made her a promise she believes, and that is the living definition of faith, faith that gives substance to our hopes, faith in things not seen.  In that blessedness Mary knew all that she would welcome, love, embrace, and endure.

         

“And his mercy is on those who fear him from generation to generation,” Mary’s song continues.  But she also believes what she sees in Elizabeth’s eyes.  “He has shown strength with his arm, he has scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts,” Mary sings and already the words are turning in her mouth.  “He has put down the might from their thrones, and exalted those of low degree.” She keeps seeing images of so many people as she sings, kings and queens leaving town all by themselves with their crowns flattened in the dust behind them, beggars dressed in brocade, cripples on white stallions?  It is all backwards!  Everything is upside down!

          But the words to her song keep coming, spilling from her lips before she can decide what she thinks about them all.  She is no longer singing the song; instead, the song is singing her, and what music, what verse!  “He has filled the hungry with good things, and sent the rich away empty.”  Where are these words coming from?  She is not a politician, no revolutionary; she simply wants to sing a happy song, but all of a sudden she has become an articulate radical, an astonished prophet singing about a world in which the last have become first and the first, last.  What is more, her song puts it all in the past tense, as if the hungry have already been fed, the rich already freed from their possessions.  How can that be?  Her baby, just now growing inside her is not bigger than a thumbnail, but already she is reciting his accomplishments as if they were history.  Her faith is in things not seen, faith that comes to her from outside herself, and that is why generation after generation have called her blessed.

          Down through the ages we have seen her as an immature and frightened girl who had the good sense to believe what an angel told her in what seemed like a dream.  But in truth, she was the mother of the son of God, with faith enough to move mountains, to sing about the victories of her son as if he were already at the right hand of God, his father. 

She just wanted to thank God for visiting her, but she ended up bearing his son.  She just wanted to be blessed in a small way, but she ended up changing the future of the world.  She just wanted to sing a happy song, but she ended up singing revolution, singing the Lord’s own upheaval and tumult.  Did Mary know all these things would happen?  Yes, Mary knew.  She sang about it and believed. 

          This Christmas, let God be born in you so that you too, can magnify the Lord and believe.

AMEN.

Offertory   

Doxology

Prayer of Dedication

Holy God, out of all our many blessings, we give You back these offerings today.  Knowing that Your promises will be fulfilled, we pledge our lives to You in anticipation of the coming of the one who brings us peace.  AMEN.

Closing Hymn –  Go, Tell It on the Mountain #29/258

Benediction

As God blessed Mary to carry His gift into the world and gave her purpose, may God also give you purpose as you leave today’s service.  Go in peace, love, joy, and hope.

 

Postlude

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