Sunday, September 25, 2022

Today's Worship - Sunday, September 25, 2022

 Click Here when highlighted for the YouTube link.

Worship Service for September 25, 2022

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      Let us rejoice, for morning has dawned.  A new day has been born and we are newly alive to enjoy it.

P:      We know the beauty of God’s creation and the wonder of the human family.  We remember those whose love has shaped our lives and those whose struggle for justice has been unsleeping even in night-times of loneliness.

L:      We gather in our church to worship God, to share prayers and gifts, to pledge ourselves to God’s work in the world.

P:      May God bless us, so that what we do in this time together may be honest, sacred, and filled with hope.

 

Opening Hymn – Praise, My Soul, the King of Heaven                     Hymn #478  Blue Hymnal

Prayer of Confession

Gracious God, in our wanderings and selfish desires: we have forsaken fellowship with our families, our friends, and our neighbors; we have neglected our sacred communion with You, choosing worldly pleasures and desires over truth, justice, and righteousness.  In a world of plenty, we have hoarded our earthly blessings, rather than storing up our heavenly treasures.  Free us from such bondage, that we may truly reveal the presence of Christ in our lives.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      In faith, we call out to a loving and forgiving God, seeking to put aside our old life and put on Christ.  God surely answers our prayers.  In the name of Christ Jesus, our sins are forgiven.

P:      Thanks be to God!  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 and Lord’s Prayer

Gracious and loving God, our souls sing as we contemplate your awesome beauty, your matchless grace, your all-encompassing mercy, your unparalleled love.  We thank you for being who you are to us, a God who relates to us even when we are undeserving and whose bond with us is so strong that even our rebellion does not create an irreparable breach between us.  Like the apostle Paul, we too are convinced that nothing can separate us from you through faith in Jesus Christ – not life or death, not angels or principalities, not earthly powers.  Nothing in the heavens, nothing on earth, nothing in the future, nothing in our past, nothing at all can separate us from the love you have for us in Christ.  Your Son is truly our Savior.  What a blessing beyond words this is. 

He reaches out to us at all times in life.  Sometimes we hear his call clearly and strongly, reaching out our own hand and heart to take his.  Sometimes that call is muffled by the world around us, by circumstances that seem hopeless and beyond repair.  Even then, as silent as the call might be, our spirits feel it’s tug and we are eventually found.

Thank you Lord for never abandoning us, even when you seem very far away and distant.  We also gives thanks for your love and care, as we pray for our own loved ones.  Continue to reach out to those who are alone, who feel abandoned right now.  Comfort those who are in distress and hurting.  Surround those who are ill with your compassion, understanding, strength, and healing.  We especially pray for….

 

In this time of silence we ask that you look deep within our hearts, minds, and souls; strengthen us Lord, for our daily living.  Give us comfort in the areas of our lives that need tender care and peace in the areas that are in turmoil…

 

We pray these things because Jesus is Lord and he 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 –  There’s a Wideness in God’s Mercy                  Hymn #355 Brown Hymnal

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – Jeremiah 32:1-15

Second Scripture Reading – Luke 16:19-31

Sermon –  Go Deeper

 

          Jesus begins his parable of the rich man and Lazarus by highlighting in graphic detail the gap that exists between the two – the rich man lives in sumptuous affluence, while just outside the gates the poor man sits, dogs licking the sores on his body.  The rich man goes to bed each night having had his fill of food while the poor man goes to bed hungry.  To make matters worse, the rich man pays absolutely no attention whatsoever to the poor man’s plight.  He doesn’t find him a nuisance; doesn’t have him carried away or even shoved along to beg at someone else’s gate.  No, the rich man completely disregards Lazarus.  Doesn’t give him the time of day.

          Jesus continues the story by saying that the poor man dies and is carried to Abraham’s side; a metaphor for heaven or the eternal home of the righteous.  Then, some time later, the rich man also dies and goes straight to hell.  There he suffers terribly.  On the distant horizon, the suffering rich man sees the beggar, Lazarus, enjoying the bliss of heaven and calls out Abraham, pleading for him to send Lazarus on a mission of mercy to cool his burning thirst.

          Abraham and the rich man have an exchange.  Put into succinct words, Abraham says to the rich man, “You had your chance in life and you blew it.  Now you have to pay for your cruel and selfish neglect.  And it’s not only you.  Your ignorant and insensitive brothers, who are still living, are currently going in the same direction.  Moses and the prophets made it perfectly clear what should be people’s duty in life, but your brothers have hardened themselves to such counsel, just like you did.  Forget trying to warn them because it won’t do any good.”

          A story like this should give most of us pause because the truth of the matter is, in terms of relative affluence, we’re the unnamed rich man.  Therefore, we need to sit up and pay very careful attention to what Jesus is telling us here.  Oftentimes this parable or story is used to wag fingers at the unrepentant, to show that there is truly a hell for sinners and there is truly a heaven for the righteous.  Preachers that love to point fingers at sinners find this parable to be their favorite.  It gives them the ammunition they need to prove that heaven and hell are real.

          But I want us to go deeper than that.  Yes, heaven and hell are real and there are eternal consequences to our behavior here on earth.  But the point of the story wasn’t about heaven or hell.  Jesus was trying to get the listeners to understand the here and now consequences of our behavior.  To see the sharp contrast between the unknown rich man and the poor suffering beggar.

          In the story Jesus is telling us that God has a deep protective instinct for the poor, who in this story is named.  There is not a single parable in all the rest of scripture where one of the characters is given a name, only here for this poor starving man who suffered greatly during life.  His name was Lazarus.  His name was written in the Book of Life for all eternity.  And his name will be remembered even if he was not well regarded during life, a nothing, a nobody – but, he is remembered by name by God and in heaven. 

All through the bible there are hundreds of references that clearly attest to God’s eternal protection of the poor.  And, of course, in the life and teaching of Christ we see this concern revealed all the time.  Christ proclaims that God has a broken heart for the unfortunates of our world and that God identifies with them, so much so that our showing kindness to such folks – the least of these – is tantamount to showing kindness to Christ himself.

          Jesus tells us that there will be a payday some day when God will mete out justice, so that those who receive the short end of the stick in this life will be blessed in the next.  And those who are blessed in this life, yet who show no compassion to the destitute will be brought low in the next.  In other words, in heaven there will be a great reversal.  We’ve seen Jesus do that all the time in his parable about the first shall be last and the last shall be first.

          In the parable of the rich man and Lazarus, Jesus also tells us that we as rich men and women have been adequately warned and that we’re without excuse when it comes to our duty to care for those in need.  From Moses and the prophets to Christ himself, God’s word has made our obligation to the poor and broken abundantly clear.  And if it isn’t clear by now, you haven’t been listening.  That is the here and now consequence of our behavior that we’ve often chosen to ignore.  As this parable says, even if someone were to rise from the dead and point out our selfish insensitivity, we may very well ignore what is said. 

Most of us understand full well what we’re being told in this story.  The challenge is to take what we now know and translate it into action whenever and wherever possible.  We need to look around and see the many different faces of Lazarus that surround us – impoverished persons who need our material expressions of support and encouragement.  They’re everywhere.  We just need to open our eyes to see them.  If we don’t, Christ clearly suggests, we’ll receive exactly what is due us.  But, here is the challenge.  It’s not just about material expressions of support.  For most of us it could be easy to write a check or hand over some money to ease our consciousness.  What’s difficult is getting involved in the lives of those who are less fortunate.  What did the rich man do his whole life while Lazarus sat outside his gates?  He ignored him.  He disregarded him.  Maybe he threw a few bits of coins into his bucket, but he refused to get involved in the man’s life.  And when the rich man was suffering in hell, what did he want from Lazarus?  Did he need money?  Did he want lavish accommodations?  No, all he wanted was for Lazarus to come and slake his thirst with a bit of water.  To involve himself in the suffering of the rich man – the very thing that he had failed to do during his life.

          Jesus spends more time talking about money and how it keeps us from God or on how it should be used than on any other topic.  The real issue is about our purpose and mission in life – it’s not about gaining happiness through storing up wealth, or gaining heaven by being able to purchase our way in, or about having the most number of special gadgets and toys.  No our purpose and mission in life is to use our resources to do good in the world and to involved ourselves in those who suffer.

There are so many people in the world today who view God as vacant and uncaring about the plight of the poor, not because God has been deaf, dumb and blind.  But rather God’s messengers, ambassadors or even soldiers if you want to use that term have been deaf, dumb and blind to the needs of the world.  It is our job and our calling to show the world, Christ.  To be the arms and legs, feet and hands of Christ.  And we’ve done a very poor job of it.  It’s about time that the church started acting like Christ, so that the world can find God again.

We’ve been so concerned with keeping doors open and the heat on that we’ve forgotten our purpose and our mission.  We are a faith community, where we come on Sunday mornings to express that faith together, to worship God and praise God for all that God has done for us.  But we’ve forgotten what faith is really all about.

I came across this quote from Mitch Harrison,

“Faith is so much more than just about believing in the things you cannot see.  It’s also about practicing detachment.  If you think about it, everything that we’re comfortable with also means that we’re attached to it, whether it serves us positively or negatively. 

Faith and Detachment can both be scary, because they require us to step out of our comfort zones.  But it’s only in those spaces where comfort and attachment are not in the driver’s seat that offers us the opportunity for more growth and awareness.  So, the next time you feel your faith being challenged, see it less as merely believing in things you can’t see and more about letting go of the feeling of comfort in exchange for the opportunity of expansion.  Let’s get comfortable being uncomfortable and expand.”

This parable or story is calling the community of faith to be uncomfortable with what we’ve done or not done.  It is calling us to a higher purpose and a more compassionate mission to the world.  In light of that, what will we do?

Thanks be to God.

AMEN.

 

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

Holy God of the heavens and earth, bless our offerings this day with your miraculous power, that they will be transformed into effective usage for ministry of your eternal grace, mercy, compassion and love.  Thanks be to God.  AMEN.

Closing Hymn – Lord, Make Us More Holy            Hymn #356  Blue Hymnal

Benediction

Friends, Live boldly, trusting God with everything you are and everything you have.  Take hold of the life to which God calls you.  Go forth, rejoicing in God.

Postlude

No comments: