Saturday, December 31, 2022

Worship Service for Sunday, January 1, 2023

 

Worship Service for January 1, 2023

Prelude

Announcements:  

Call to Worship

L:      Some say that Christmas is for children.

P:      Christmas is also for people of age and experience.

L:      Elizabeth, Mary’s cousin and Zechariah, the priest accepted new birth breaking into all their familiar patterns.

P:      Simeon the singer and Anna the prophet hoped for many years to see the Messiah and then recognized the Messiah in a poor couple’s baby.

L:      How then shall we respond to Christ’s promised coming?

P:      With willingness for change, with patience in long waiting, with silence and singing, with the ability to see Christ in the least likely of our brothers and sisters.

 

Opening Hymn –  Angels from the Realms of Glory      Hymn #22/259

Prayer of Confession

Creative God, You make all things new in heaven and on earth.  We come to You in a new year with new desires and old fears, new decisions and old controversies, new dreams and old weaknesses.  Because You are a God of love, we know that You accept all the mistakes of the past.  Because You are the God of our faith, we enter Your gates with thanksgiving and praise, we come into Your presence with gladness and joyful noise.  We ask Your forgiveness of our sins of the past and ask that You turn us by the simple wonders of Your love, to a rebirth of faith, hope and joy.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

 

Assurance of Pardon

L:      God is with us this day and always.  Coming to earth as a child, God found us and embraced us with innocence and love.  But above all else, God has forgiven us our sins.

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

God of years past and new beginnings, we throw our hands up to you, offering all that we have been and hope to be.  In the palm of your hands, we have giggled and played, sang and danced to celebrate holidays, birthdays, a snow day and a clear diagnosis.  In the palm of your hands, we have sought shelter and asylum, and shuddered at the news of war and gun violence.  Sickness and strife turn round and round the same old news that we heard before.  So, we pray, and we pray: Can this new year really bring anything new?  God of years past and new beginnings, we want to close the door on ’22 and forget all the fights that tore us apart, all thinking we were right.  Yet with courage, we pray that you keep our hearts open wide to truly believe and join in your strides, creating and making all things new.  We pray that out of the rubble and flames, emerge new steps in caring for the earth and investment change, conversations across the aisle

welcoming diversity and doing justice.  We pray the rights of all people, colors, genders and nations be nourished, for equity, housing and daily bread to flourish, and for mercy, humility and love to define a year of life shared, not kept as yours or mine.  God of years past and new beginnings,

open our hearts to see you in each headline, our souls to listen intently to one another, our fists to find strength in openness and grace, and our minds to the hope that justice will roll down.  So that, as we carry the old news into the new year, our lives will reflect our love for you and every neighbor, and in every neighbor, your holy presence noticed and welcomed, and in every neighborhood, signs of your new creation bursting forth.  We also pray for our loved ones.  We lift up to you….

In this time of silence hear also the prayers of our hearts…

With one voice 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 –  I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day         Hymn #267 Brown

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – Psalm 148

Second Scripture Reading – Matthew 2:13-23

Sermon –  Jesus, Mary, and Joseph: Immigrants

(Based on Matthew 2:13-23)

 

          The next couple of weeks the lectionary readings are a little off kilter; meaning that chronologically, they are out of order.  Next Sunday is typically known as Epiphany Sunday, as it is the Sunday closest to the day of Epiphany which is Jan 6.  Epiphany Sunday is when we recall the visit of the Wisemen, who came to see Jesus, following the star of Bethlehem.  However, today as per the lectionary readings, we read the story that came after the wisemen went to see baby Jesus.  To make things even more confusing, the second Sunday in Christmastide is also usually known as Baptism of the Lord Sunday.  So, here’s what we are doing this year; today we’re reading the story about Mary and Joseph taking baby Jesus to Egypt and next Sunday we’ll talk about the Star of Bethlehem for Epiphany Sunday even though those two stories are out of order.  I have a suspicion that sometime in the near future we’ll be having a request for Baptism as we’ve had two babies born in our Olivet church family this year.  So, on whatever Sunday that falls, we’ll revisit the story of Jesus being baptized in the Jordan river.  (Pause)

For most of us, we were brought up in the Christian faith; believing the message of the gospel because it was taught to us at a young age.  For many others, they have come to believe as adults.  But what makes Christianity a vibrant faith for people to believe?  Why do people still believe in it and why do others adopt it as adults?  I think these are a couple of the key questions for us to always be asking.  In order for us to answer them, let’s take a look at the broader picture before we get to the specifics of today’s passage.

Beginning in our Hebrew/Jewish roots, the message of God’s promises for the future were steeped in the idea that they were available to a people who were persecuted, for people who were isolated and without power.  It was always a message of hope to a downtrodden, an often weak and outcast people.  It was a message that one day Father Abraham’s offspring would number more than the stars; that one day, through a savior such as Moses, they would be freed from slavery; that one day, after wandering in the wilderness for many years, they would have a land of their own; that one day after defeat and exile from Israel many times, they would be a united and powerful nation; that one day an eternal savior would come and save the people from their sins.  That message is woven throughout all of the Old Testament and has continued through the New Testament; that one day, the weak would be strong, the lame would leap with joy, the blind would see, the deaf would hear, the outcast would be embraced, the lost would be found, the prisoner would be set free, the hungry would be fed,  and the foreigner would be welcomed and treated like a brother or sister.

This has been the hope of the ages that both Judaism and Christianity have clung to; that our God was powerful enough to turn the world upside down and embrace the weak and uplift them to victory; the whole concept that the first shall be last and the last shall be first.

During my year abroad, I had some astounding conversations with people I came into contact with.  One of them was on a bus from the ferry terminal near Normandy, France to a little island called Mont St Michele.  My travel companion that morning was a young adult from Italy who was on a two-week holiday.  He asked me what I did back in the US.  I learned, from experience, that saying I was a pastor didn’t always make sense to people in Europe.  That word, PASTOR, evidently for some reason is a bit confusing.  So, I would follow it with additional English words such as; Minister, Priest, then switch gears to Padre, Father.  At least, one of those words would strike meaning and they understood.  Then I would explain that I was a Protestant minister, not a Catholic priest.  That morning, my fellow traveler leaned in closer and said, “How fascinating!”  He continued, “I was baptized in the Catholic religion, but I don’t go.  I have friends at the University who are from the US and go to a Protestant Church.  I don’t remember which one, but I have gone to church with them.”  After a pause, he continued, “It must be difficult to give a message of hope each week.”  I shrugged off his comment at the time and spoke about why I was traveling in Europe and taking a Sabbatical to recharge and refresh my own thoughts and ideas.  We then spoke of other things until we were let off the bus.

His comment didn’t really resonate with me until more recently, months later.  The whole message of the gospel is to give hope to the hopeless.  It is why Christianity thrives in places where there is oppression and outcast groups.  It is why the American slaves quickly embraced Christianity when they heard about it and made the message of the gospel their own.  It is why Catholicism grew by leaps and bounds in South American countries where they are often politically oppressed.  It is why the message of the gospel and Christianity is so strong in Africa where many people are starving, where lack of water is a daily struggle, where a different type of political confrontation makes finding a job difficult.  It is why the gospel is much more prevalent among the poor, than among the rich.  Perhaps that is why Jesus said, it is easier for the a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the gates of heaven.  Because the message of the gospel is to bring hope to the hopeless.

So, how do you give a message of hope to a people who have pretty much everything?  How do you give a message of hope to people that don’t really need it?  How do you make the message of the gospel important to the person or to the people who are in power, who really don’t have daily struggles, who aren’t in any of those categories I listed earlier?

I’m just connecting dots here….but, perhaps that’s why the message of gospel turned into a message of paying your way into heaven in the 15th and 16th Century Europe by people having to buy indulgences; the rising bourgeoises or middle class and the elites didn’t need a message of hope, but the church convinced them that they did need a message of how to get into heaven, if they would just pay for it.  Maybe that’s why the message of hope turned into a message of Fire and Brimstone here and the 20th Century focus turned from hope to a focus on sin and how a lot of televangelists took advantage of that and prayed for people to remove their sin or to pray for their addictions or to, basically, pray them into heaven from their sins if they would just send in money.

So, here’s where we need to reframe the message of the gospel for those who aren’t in those categories – the lost, the lonely, the blind, the lame, the outcast, the prisoner, or the foreigner.  I think we should reframe the message of the gospel for the 21st Century to a people who already have hope, to a people who are those in power, who have the basic needs in life and a little extra; basically, we should reframe the message of the gospel for us.

I think the message of the gospel for us, and to continue my message from Christmas, isn’t that God will provide hope for us, that God will fulfill our needs, but rather that we are to give hope to others, that we are to provide hope to the hopeless.  For centuries the message to the downtrodden was that God would provide for them.  That God saw them, heard their cries, understood their needs and would one day give them all they hoped for.  But, what if the message of the gospel to us is that we are truly the hands and feet of Christ on earth, for us to see the needs of others and to provide that hope to them?  What if the message of the gospel to us is that God is working through us and that we are the means by which people find hope.  That we are the ones that go out and find the lost.  We are the ones that free the prisoner, befriend the outcast, feed the hungry, help the blind see and the lame walk.  That we are the ones that welcome the foreigner with love and call them sister or brother.

To come to our passage this morning and to preach the idea of embracing the foreigner by using Jesus, Mary, and Joseph as an example of being immigrants, I know is rife with political overtones.  I get that, I know that and I’m not going there.  I’m sticking with the message of the gospel and the story we have from scripture.  Jesus, himself says later in Matthew 25 beginning in verse 35:

For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.’ Then the righteous will answer him, ‘Lord, when was it that we saw you hungry and gave you food, or thirsty and gave you something to drink?  And when was it that we saw you a stranger and welcomed you, or naked and gave you clothing?  And when was it that we saw you sick or in prison and visited you?’  And the king will answer them, ‘Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me.’

We often talk about Jesus understanding us being fully human because He suffered as we suffer.  And one of the ways that Jesus suffered and can empathize with our own pain is because he, too, was a stranger, a foreigner.  We read it in our passage this morning.

When the wisemen were warned in a dream to not return to Herod, he became so angry that he sent an order to his army that all the boy babies under the age of two should be executed in and around Bethlehem.  Because Bethlehem was a town and of little consequence his execution order probably didn’t make much of a ripple in the rest of Israel to warrant a revolt.  Some scholars believe that perhaps 20 male infants were killed.  In any case, Jesus, Mary and Joseph fled to Egypt.  Historically, Egypt was not a friendly country to Israel nor to Jews, if you remember your history.  Remember, they had been slaves of the Egyptians.  So, Jews weren’t terribly welcomed in Egypt.  How long were they there?  It might be one thing if they fled to Egypt for a month or two, but it might be another if they had to live there for a number of years.

Historically, this is what we know.  Jesus was under two years old when the wisemen came to visit.  The family fled to Egypt and sometime after Herod died and angel told Joseph in a dream that he could take his family back Israel and settle in Nazareth.  The next story we have of Jesus is when he is 12 years old and stays behind in the temple in Jerusalem while his parents are frantically looking for him.  Scripture only tells us that this was an annual journey or pilgrimage that the family had been doing, so it’s possible to assume that they’d been doing it for at least two years.  Knowing that there are no other references to Jesus as a young boy, it is possible that the family stayed in Egypt for as little as two years or as many as eight years – we just don’t know.  It was definitely longer than a couple of months.  Knowing this, we can assume that the family needed to find housing, a way of supporting themselves and perhaps some schooling for Jesus.

What must that have been like in a land among people that didn’t want you?  And how might that have affected Jesus as a young boy?  Jesus understands our every pain.  Jesus understands our suffering.  Perhaps that’s why he included this category in his list of Matthew 25.

“I was a stranger, a foreigner, and you welcomed me.”

As we begin a new year, may we continue the work of Christmas, the work of Christ, and bring light and hope to the world.

Thanks be to God.  AMEN.

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

God, you have given each of us gifts to use as members of the body of Christ.  Here are our gifts – the work of our hands, our hearts, and our lives.  We pray that they may help to bring the Good News of Jesus Christ to our world, today and always, here and everywhere.  AMEN.

Closing Hymn – Break Forth, O Beauteous Heav’nly Light

                              Hymn #26/264

Benediction

Postlude

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