Sunday, January 16, 2022

Worship Service for Sunday, January 16, 2022

 

Worship Service for January 16, 2022

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.

·        Beginning on Tues/Wed, Jan 18/19, you can follow along at this blog address on a daily basis for pictures and experiences of my Sabbatical leave.  There will NOT be a Sunday morning post of worship again until March.

Call to Worship

L:      Do we dare place our trust in God?

P:      God has promised to be with us and to guide us.

L:      Are we willing to continue on the journey when we don’t know the dangers and are not sure of the destination.

P:      No matter what, God is with us.  That’s the promise and the hope.

L:      Let us step forward boldly, listening for God’s call in our lives.

P:      Let us place our trust in God always.  AMEN.

 

Opening Hymn – All Creatures of Our God and King #455  verses 1,5,6 in Blue Hymnal

Prayer of Confession

          Lord, like Jesus changing water into wine at the wedding feast in Cana, we need a miracle today.  We are tired, Lord, of the hurts and pain of this world.  We are discouraged in the face of injustice, war, poverty, and indifference.  We need a miracle today, Lord.  Your steadfast love, like a mighty mountain, will not be moved.  Your gifts, as many as the mighty winds, cannot be counted.  Your glory, like a mighty torch, will not be put out.  Lord, crown us with Your love.  Show us Your glory, that in You we may be moved to acts of kindness, love, justice, and mercy.  Lord, we need Your miracles today.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      God’s love is continually poured out for us.  God’s cup of forgiveness and compassion has been given to us.

P:      In Jesus’ name, we are 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

 

Choir: See Among the Winter’s Snow

 

Pastoral Prayer and Lord’s Prayer

Lord of Light and Joy, the daylight hours are becoming longer for us.  Evening comes a little later, and the dawn is earlier, but the darkness in our hearts persists.  We continue to look at the miraculous ways You work in our lives as mere stories or happenstance.  How foolish we are!  From the beginning of all that is, You have poured Your love and light into this world and into our lives.  You have offered us countless blessings and opportunities for service, some of which we have followed, and others that we have ignored.  You have forgiven and healed our spirits.  We continue to bring before You the names and situations of people that are in direst need.

We pray for…  

We ask for Your healing mercies and yet we wonder if You really are with us.  Turn our moaning and crying into songs of praise and hope.  Give us spirits of trust and rejoicing, that we may truly be Your people all of our days.  Prepare us for joyful service in Your world; for we ask this in Jesus’ name.

As we pray in silence hear the groaning of our hearts, O God…

We give You thanks, O Lord, for hearing our petitions this mornings, as we now pray saying…

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 –  Here I Am, Lord #525/589

Scripture Reading(s): 

OT – Isaiah 62:1-5

NT – John 2:1-11

Sermon –   

Water Into Wine

(based on John 2:1-11)

 

Our scripture reading from the New Testament this morning records Jesus’ first miracle that the disciples witnessed and it helped plant those seeds of belief in Him, but what are we to learn from this specific miracle and the circumstances that brought it about?

I’d like to suggest that there are three lessons for us to learn from this story in John:

The first one was a bit of a surprise to me, as I’ve been reading this story and interpreting the words quite differently for many years.  To our modern ears, Christ’s response to His mother may seem flippant or unfeeling: “Woman, what concern is that to you and to me?  My hour has not yet come.”  But further study opens the real intent and true impact of this response to our hearts and minds because a different translation of that passage shows Christ’s deep respect for women.  A different translation of this passage says, “Woman, what will you have me to for you?  That I will do, though my hour has not yet come.”  This difference in translation brings to light Jesus’ loyalty and deference to His mother.  Not only does He say He is willing to do whatever she needs, but He also gives her an opportunity to specify a request in faith rather than just telling her what He will do for her.  As you see in the text, it is she, not Jesus, who then turns to the servants to direct the next move.

Additionally, even the very title with which He addresses her is significant.  I’d always read it with a condescending tone because we, in our modern age, don’t address our mothers as “woman” without that tone.  But, evidently, it was more of the Old English translation that has gotten lost here from the Original Greek, meaning, “Lady”, or rather “My, Lady”, as you would address a woman of deep respect, or even a queen.  If we change the translation to a more accurate one with the proper tone, it will read something more like, “My lady, whatever you ask of me in faith, I will grant it to you.” Jesus Christ honored His mother by doing whatever she needed done.

Now this passage is much more in line with how Christ showed respect for women throughout his ministry, doesn’t it?  He demonstrated it through his gentle treatment of the woman of Samaria at the well.  He knew the details of her life that made others shun her and He still testified of her potential for purity and salvation through the living water that He could offer.  He demonstrated it through his compassion for the woman taken in adultery even in the face of great disdain and judgment from all those that surrounded Him.  He demonstrated it as he wept with Mary and Martha about the loss of their brother He knew He would be able to bring back.  He demonstrated it by noticing the touch of His hem by the hemorrhaging woman.  Even in a bustling crowd, He felt and cared for the distresses of one woman.  And of course, He demonstrated it by making Mary Magdalene the first witness of the resurrection, reminding us that women are central to the gospel message.

The second lesson is that Christ’s miracles were simply a reflection of the miracles God performs around us everyday.

We gasp in wonder at the one-time miracle of Christ being able to change simple water into wine in those clay pots, but what about the miracle and beauty of taking a tiny, hard, round seed of nothing, planting it in the soil, and watching it grow to produce grapes that create the wine.  Isn’t that the real miracle that surrounds us everyday, which we often forget to acknowledge? 

Too often we take for granted the everyday splendor of the vineyard, waiting instead for our water to be turned to wine.  When Jesus took on the mantle of Messiah, he stepped into His father’s shoes.  And everything he would do would be to help us better understand and glorify His Father in heaven.  And this first miracle was only the beginning of that.

The third lesson goes back to the context of the exchange between Mary and Jesus.  Christ mentions that His hour had not yet come.  It is undeniable that Christ’s hour would be the performance of that greatest act of love, Christ’s atonement and redemption on the cross, for our sins.  So, how is the conversion of water to wine a symbol of the atonement?

It says right in the verses that the water pots being used were made of stone “after the manner of the purifying of the Jews”.  In the first century most temple rites and rituals were performed with stone vessels because it was believed that unlike ceramic or clay, a stone vessel couldn’t be rendered impure.  If Christ is the pure vessel, one made of stone, and we are the water surrendering ourselves to Christ for the purpose of being made new, then the transformation that occurs is not only symbolic, but authentic and real. 

The power to convert water to wine might parallel the power of Christ’s redemption and atonement to change us from our old natures to a new creation, pure and holy, as the vessel by which we are transformed is pure.  Sometimes we probably fear fully giving ourselves over to Jesus Christ.  

I hope that when you come across this story in our scriptures again, you no longer think of the wedding at Cana as a miracle with not much to explore or study.  I hope you remember the way Jesus showed his respect for women in that place, how He modeled his miracles after the cosmic miracles of His Father in Heaven, and how we—like the wine—can be changed completely through the purity and atonement of Jesus Christ.

         

Offertory

Doxology

Prayer of Dedication

          We give You thanks for all our many blessings, take these and bless them for Your work in the world.  As we give our offerings as gifts, we ask that You give us hearts and spirits for service to You.  Amen.

Communion

          Invitation:

          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

          Words of Institution

          Breaking of the Bread/Drinking of the Cup

          Closing Prayer

Closing Hymn –  Have Thine Own Way, Lord  #591   Brown Hymnal

Benediction

Go and proclaim that God’s love is here; Go in the power of God’s Holy Spirit to make all things new.

Postlude

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