Sunday, April 16, 2023

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, April 16, 2023

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Worship Service for April 16, 2023

Prelude

Announcements:  

Call to Worship

L:      Christ our Savior is risen from the dead!  Alleluia!

P:      Break forth into joy!  Sing together!  God comforts those whose hearts are broken in sorrow.

L:      We who once suffered in death, we who once cried in despair -

P:      Now we know victory over death!  Now we know joy over despair!

L:      For God has raised Christ from the grave.

All:    The tomb is empty and death has been defeated for all the earth!

Opening Hymn –  Lift High the Cross            Hymn #371 Blue

Prayer of Confession

Gracious God, we confess before You our slowness to embrace the new life You offer.  You offer springtime to our souls, but we prefer the winter of coldness and indifference.  We continue in despair and self-doubt, rather than rejoicing in knowing You love us.  We forget that we have been baptized into the death and resurrection of Christ.  Afraid to die, we cannot receive new life.  Rejoicing that You forgive us, with our coldness, self-hate, forgetfulness, or fear, we pray to You with the confidence of Your children.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      For all who have come believing in Christ as the Way, there is rest from your fruitless labors, forgiveness of your sins and the guarantee of eternal life.

P:      Let us then continue our journey of faith and obedience, through the grace of Jesus Christ.  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 Lord, Easter was such a high point.  We walked through the weeks of Lent and then boldly marched with Jesus into Jerusalem.  Our steps hesitated and faltered during Holy Week when we ate with our Lord and then ran from his crucifixion.  It was so hard for us to really believe in the miraculous event of Easter when our beloved Lord was raised from the dead.  We, like Thomas, wonder if it was real or something made up from desperate longing.  Help us to listen to your words with our hearts and our ears.  Remind us that the Lord brings his peace to us all. 

Lord, we come to you this day, seeking that peace and asking you to release us from our fears and our darkness.  We know that you are here with us, guiding, healing and loving us. Help us to reach out to others with the same love you give to us.  Make us people who bring words of compassion and hope, actions of help and lovingkindness to all we meet.  Place our feet on the pathway of life, offering ourselves and our gifts for your holy realm.  Encourage us to grow and learn about ministries of reconciliation and compassion.  When we falter, pick us up.  When we fail, remind us that you believe in us.  When we turn and run because of our fear, bring us home again.

This morning we listed people that we love who need your tender mercy, your guiding hand, or your healing power.  We especially pray for….

And now, Lord, hear the prayers of our hearts in this time of silence…

Now gathered together and speaking in one voice, we pray….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 –  He Lives                                              Hymn #368 Brown Hymnal

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – John 20:19-31

Second Scripture Reading – 1 Peter 1:3-9

Sermon

Inheritance 

          Next Sunday I’ll be preaching about the stories we pass on as it relates to our scripture passage regarding Moses flight from Egypt and the Walk to Emmaus, as well as a lot of research and work I’ve been doing since my Sabbatical last year.  Today, I’m going to touch on the story aspect also as it pertains to our passages this morning because today’s text is about the story of Thomas who was not with the other disciples hiding away in somebody’s home for fear of being brought to trial and persecuted like Jesus.  It’s a story we also know well and from this story we’ve even given the disciple called Thomas a nickname – Doubting Thomas.  That nickname has carried into our own language and vocabulary, because we call anyone who doesn’t believe something that others say is true; “a Doubting Thomas”.

          Our other New Testament reading from the lectionary comes from Peter’s first letter to the churches in Asia Minor.  A group of churches that were founded by one or several of the disciples’ missionary journeys to them.  If you remember, Peter was the first to convert Gentiles to this new and growing Christian movement – up to that point it was only a movement within the Jewish faith.  But now it is spreading and changing.  Here, in Asia Minor, several churches had formed that included Jews who had left Jerusalem and Israel – known as the Diaspora, as well as new Gentile converts to the faith, often referred to as pagans.  In his letter to the churches, Peter even alludes to the story in John about Thomas, when he praises these new Christians for their faith without having seen or known the Lord, just as Jesus had said, “Bless those who have not seen yet have come to believe.”  What did Jesus really mean when he said this to Thomas and the rest of the disciples?  Two thousand years later, we are among those who have not seen the risen Lord, yet have come to believe, just like members of these churches in Asia Minor.  So, how have we come to believe when we haven’t seen either?

          I believe it is because of the Holy Spirit that Jesus offers to his disciples in the home where they are all gathered together and this Living Hope that Peter talks about in his letter to the churches.

          Throughout scriptures we’re told that the Holy Spirit is an advocate, a helper – a part of the Holy Trinity that is with you all the time; a presence that helps you when you need it, a guide that inwardly leads you to make better choices, God’s Spirit that speaks to our spirits.  In this way we see with new eyes, we hear with new ears, we feel with a new sense of touch, we smell the freshness of each new day, and we taste the bitterness of suffering and the sweetness of joy.  Through God’s Spirit we are indeed new creations that have a whole new set of senses.  Because of this we have a living hope that is grounded in the gospel of Jesus Christ; a message of love, grace, and forgiveness.

          We inherit all the stories from our ancestors from the beginning of Genesis all the way through to the prophecy of our eternal days in heaven.  We inherit their stories, as long as we continue to share them, and their faith which cannot be destroyed, a living hope which is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading.

Take out the Blue Danube Cup and Saucer

          I have a story to tell you about this cup and saucer.  It belonged to my grandmother, along with about 100 other pieces that went with it – a complete setting for 8 and many serving platters, pitchers, and candlesticks.  They were a prized possession of my grandmother’s.  My grandmother’s mother, my great grandmother died when she was 9 years old.  When she was 12 she ran away from home because her new step mother was abusive toward her and went to live with her grandmother, who would have been my great-great grandmother.  By the time my grandmother was 16 she had quit regular schooling in the public school, began working as a church pianist, played for the silent movies, and got a certificate for typing and general secretarial work through West Chester Model School.  She began working for Standard Oil where she met her husband, had two children, and was left widowed 7 years later.  Raising her two girls was a difficult task as a single mother in the 1940’s, but having a lot of adversity at a young age, had the tenacity to do it.  Any time she was able to save a little bit of money, she’d buy a piece of this Blue Danube China when it came out in the 1950’s.  Eventually, she’d collected the entire setting for 8.  I grew up going to my grandmother’s house being served dinner eloquently in her dining room on this Blue Danube set.  For my grandmother, they represented all of her hard work and what she equated to wealth and prosperity.  When my grandmother died, my sister inherited the set.  Over the years my sister lovingly added most of the serving pieces that went with it.  She adored the blue and white pattern, just like my grandmother. 

When I inherited the set from my sister, the entire collection took up five large boxes, carefully packed.  I didn’t want it.  They just aren’t me.  I’m not really a Blue Danube type of person, so I put it up for sale on the internet as a complete 8 piece set, plus the various extras.  I found a woman in Virginia who was collecting Blue Danube for her adopted daughter who was 13 at the time and had been adopted from Japan.  I told her the story of the set which both made her even more interested in it and clinched the sale since it had history.  She promised that she’d pass the story of my grandmother and my sister on to her child.  As I laid out the entire collection on my dining room table to take a picture of it for her to see, I found that there was an extra 9th cup and saucer.  Rather than mention the extra two pieces to the woman in Virginia, I kept them and placed them in my China cabinet.  Now, every time I see them, I’m reminded of all the dinners at my grandmother’s house and those at my sister’s as well – the stories that were told around the table, like when my grandmother had two detached retinas in the early 1970’s and was expected to lose her eyesight, but received great care and was able to see or the stories we told around the table at my sisters when we went to Mountain Springs Lake in the Poconos and came face to face with a bear, I’d also remember the meals that we had – like my grandmother’s notoriously burnt meatloaf and the gray looking vegetables she served with them.  She wasn’t much of a cook – but they were served on beautiful plates.  I also remember the amazing turkey and quinoa meatloaf my sister would make and the perfectly crunchy green beans she’d have – my sister was a great cook.  These are the memories that I’ve inherited that are imperishable, undefiled, and unfading like the living hope Peter talks about in his letter to the churches in Asia Minor.  They are memories that I’ll keep forever.  Although the Blue Danube set is no longer mine, it will hold new memories for another family who will pass their story on.  And the lone cup and saucer that I kept will be a reminder to those that inherit it from me of our family’s story, the meals we had, the love that was shared around the table, the miracles of eyesight and of not being eaten by a bear.

          I’d like for you to think of an object or a picture in your house or even a memory that is lodged in your mind.  What’s the story behind it?  Silence for a moment.  People may actually share their stories.

          These are the things that create us, that sustain us, that make us who we are.  They are inherited – passed down from generation to generation.  They are imperishable, undefiled and unfading in our memories.

          I wasn’t alive when my grandmother worked hard to raise her children, scraping by just to pay the bills, but every now and then, buying a piece of luxury for herself.  But I know the story, I see the evidence of it.  I watched as my grandmother’s eyes would sparkle as she served us her burnt meatloaf, lovingly prepared on her beautiful Blue Danube plates and I’d eat every bite of it.

          We weren’t alive when Jesus sat with his disciples on a hillside or by a lakeshore, or around the table and told them stories in the form of parables, but the disciples recounted them.  Perhaps reminding each other of them in that room where they huddled in secret, “Remember when Jesus told us that story about the lost sheep.  Remember when Jesus told us that story about the unfair landlord.  Or remember that time when Jesus healed the blind man or turned water into wine.”  And they remembered.  And they passed those stories down from one generation to the next.

          This is what Jesus was talking about.  This belief in a faith through a person – Jesus – whom we’ve never met and will never see, but have faith in anyway because we see the evidence of him.  We see him in the love we share with one another, in the care that we provide to both friends and strangers, and the compassion we show the world to the lost and unfortunate.  These are the stories that we pass on to our children so that they have the same faith.  May we also remember and have it be so from this generation to the next – a faith that is a living hope, imperishable, undefiled, and unfading.

Offertory –         

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

Lord, we thank you for the many blessings which You have poured into our lives.  Now we ask Your blessings on these gifts that they may be used to Your glory.  AMEN.

Closing Hymn – I Sing the Mighty Power of God            Hymn #288/128

Benediction

It’s time for us to go from this place into our everyday worlds.  Lord, make us a blessing to all whom we meet.  Give us courage, love and hope.  And may the peace of God be with you.  AMEN. 

Postlude

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