Sunday, September 17, 2023

Today's Worship - Sunday, September 17, 2023

 

Worship Service for September 17, 2023

Prelude                                     

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      When the tides of fear seem to overwhelm us, we cry out…

P:      Lord, come to us and lead us to paths of safety!

L:      When we feel lost and alone and we wonder if anyone cares about us, we cry out…

P:      Lord, come and heal our wounded spirits!

L:      When turbulence within and without seem to threaten us, we cry out…

P:      Lord, bring us peace.  AMEN.

 

Opening Hymn –  Holy, Holy, Holy                                                #138/3

 

Prayer of Confession

Lord, we confess that we don’t always turn to You in our troubles.  Sometimes we are paralyzed by fear and anxiety.  We cannot see “the light at the end of the tunnel”.  For us, there is only the ongoing darkness and hopelessness.  Clear our sight, O Lord.  Bind up our wounded spirits!  Fill us with your mercy and love.  Forgive us when we stray; when we fear; when we falter.  Pick us up and place us on pathways of peace and hope, for we ask this in Jesus’ name.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      No matter what befalls us, the Lord walks with us on the path, bringing us courage and hope.

P:      No matter what, we belong to the Lord, now and forever.  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

With our hearts, minds, and souls we praise you, O Lord, for we are fearfully and wonderfully made.  How grateful we are that you love us with a love that will not let us go even though we have, by design and default, resisted you.  What is it about us that causes such resistance?  We know, O God, even as we ask, that it is the rebellious spirit within us.  Help us.  Don’t leave us to the consequences of our own foolishness.  When we come daily before your throne of grace with repentance and humility, pour out upon us the cleansing power of your forgiveness and fill us anew with the joy of Christ’s victory over death.  Then, Lord, help us not to be just receivers, but givers of these same blessings.  Sensitize us to those who need the merciful touch from you that we ourselves have received.  Grant us, we ask, the courage to extend it even to those who have wounded us deeply.  In so doing, may they then be drawn to Jesus Christ whose forgiveness was, is, and always will be boundless.

Hear our prayers this day as we pray for our loved ones and friends.  We lift up to you….

And in this time of silence listen to the beatings and groanings of our heart’s desire and replenish us O Lord.

We pray these things now in his precious name, who taught us to pray boldly together……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 –  Open My Eyes, that I May See                             #324/563

 

Scripture Reading(s): 

          Exodus 14:19-31

          Matthew 18:21-35

Sermon

Lessons of the Red Sea

(Exodus 14:19-31)

 

The crossing of the Red Sea during the Israelites flight from Egypt is one that most of us recall hearing about during our Sunday School lessons many years ago.  It is one of those lessons that even those who didn’t go to Sunday School probably know from the great movie, The Ten Commandments, starring Charleton Heston.  Let me make this comment upfront – I’ve never liked the story.  I still cringe every time I read it.  I’ve never liked stories where one group of people have to die or be killed in order that another group of people is saved; especially, if that killing seems to be sanctioned by God.  So, as you can imagine, there are a lot of Old Testament stories that I don’t like as well as any story told today that puts the same spin on an angry God killing people out of spite versus a loving God that would prefer for all to be saved.  That said, however, it doesn’t mean that there aren’t things to learn from these stories imbedded in the stories themselves.

          There has been much debate from Biblical scholars, scientists and archaeologists for exact where and how this parting of the Red Sea took place.  If you look at the picture of the map of the Red Sea, you’ll notice the tiny finger at the northern edge almost connecting the Indian Ocean to the south with the Mediterranean Sea to the north.  This is where the current countries of Egypt and Israel meet.  And right about where the V is, lies Mt. Sinai where Moses took the Hebrew people.

          There have been many theories about whether the parting of the Red Sea was strictly a miraculous event by God who whether there is some scientifically based theory behind it.  About 15 years ago, Carl Drews, a software engineer looked at past events that mirrored the story in Exodus which occurred in Lake Erie and also in the Nile Delta itself where strong winds from the East going at about 60 miles an hour pushed the water away, opposite that of a hurricane, leaving the harbor completely dry.

          Last summer at Mont Saint Michel in France, which I showed in the first picture of our PowerPoint slide, I saw a similar phenomenon and couldn’t help but think of the Red Sea Crossing by Moses and the Israelites.  The biggest difference was that at Mont Saint Michel, this phenomenon of dry land and then surrounded by sea was simply caused by the regular rushing in of the tides.  The entire delta surrounding Mont Saint Michel, from morning till dusk, is completely dry with a few streams running here and there.  During this time, you can drive to the island or walk there.  You can even take a stroll out on the sandy floor for miles.  But, at dawn and at dusk, the tide comes in.  And within 20 minutes, I watched and filmed it from my bedroom window, the entire delta fills with thigh-high water faster than a horse can gallop to escape it.  It was at that moment that I wondered about the Israelites that had walked to safety on dry land, while the Egyptians and their chariots in hot pursuit later got mired in the quickly sucking sand, and overcome by water in the Red Sea and drowned.

          Whether or not this was a naturally occurring phenomenon, or one that was completely against nature and a miraculous event, Moses led his people one step closer to the promised land because he had listened to God and the people had followed.

          However, that doesn’t mean that this crossing of the Red Sea for the Israelites was a piece of cake.  Although, they had crossed on dry land and had been spared the fate of the Egyptian Army, the Israelites still had to prove themselves worthy of a relationship with God as they would soon discover in the wilderness.  Besides, this walk through the sea marked a transitional period in their lives, not always a simple and painless process.  They were caught in what Victor Turner, a British anthropologist, would call a liminal state.  A liminal state is a situation in which one stands between what is dead or no longer of any value and what is not yet born (or unknown).  This is a fearful place to be.  The Israelites had been enslaved in Egypt for nearly 400 years.  For countless generations, this was all they knew.  They had hoped in and prayed to God that one day they would be saved from that bondage.  As the years passed, I can’t imagine how that spark of possible freedom and salvation or that God would ever hear their cries, had remained kindled in their cultural identity and in their faith.

Yet it was the will of God that the Israelites, even after 400 years of slavery, should be spared and given the chance to prove themselves true to that relationship.  God had heard their cries and sent Moses to bring them to the holy mountain – Mt. Sinai.  And although the people were in awe of God's grace and believed in the Lord and his servant Moses, they were in a liminal state – turning away from what they had known for 400 years that was of no value to them and facing an unknown future.  As you read through Exodus, the people will rebel over and over again.  They will quarrel and complain.  They will lose faith and gain it again.  And they will wander from one place to another for 40 years with little direction, no firm future in sight, no real sense that their hope in God has been rewarded.  At least, not yet.  It is a fearful time.

It has been written that when the great explorers began navigating their way through the great seas of our world, their mapmakers invariably drew dragons and other great sea-beasts in the areas where ships failed to venture.

Some seafarers thought the strange creatures actually lurked in the deep to devour unsuspecting sailors if they entered the waters.  Others, who refused to be put off, made history with their tremendous discoveries of new worlds.  They, too, were caught between old ideas of no value and the unknown, which had yet to be born in their lives.  But, for those who were willing to risk it, found themselves in the history books of exploring new worlds.

For the Israelites, their exodus from Egypt, was the long hard road out from slavery to freedom.  They were a wandering, bedraggled, forlorn people.  They were just a very large band of slaves.  They were nothing, let alone a nation.  But God’s power to create from nothing, from formlessness and void, is the same power by which God saves and transforms.  It reveals a path for God’s people and builds walls to protect them from the chaos and death of the sea.

But to be in a liminal state between the old and the new, remains treacherous.  There is both light in the new creation and darkness in the remembrance of the old and what is left behind.  This passage portrays slavery’s end in vivid, violent detail.  Chariots, technologies of conquest and visible signs of royal power and status, become a trap for Pharaoh and his armies.

For the Israelites, whether by miracle or by using the perfect order of creation, God rearranges sea and land.  The Egyptians think to pursue their former slaves, but as they enter between the walls of water panic is created among them, their chariot wheels get stuck in mud and sand, and they cannot retreat.  When the Israelites have crossed to safety, and the water returns, they see the bodies of their former masters cast up dead upon the shore.

I have a difficult time justifying God’s violence in this passage against Egypt, of Pharaoh’s destruction or of the deaths of his soldiers and horses.  That part of the story is hard to read and hear.

However, it is part of the consequences of rulers time and time again, regardless of what nation, what circumstance and the grasping for control and power over others.  It shows the end result of an economy built on forced labor, exploitation, and domination.  In refusing to let an enslaved  people go for their freedom, Pharaoh leads his people to their own destruction.  

The two lessons I’d have you remember about today’s story.  The first is about being in a liminal state – the between time.  Letting go of what no longer has value and being part of the creation of what will be born in the future.  I think, we as Christians, are in a liminal state right now.  For the Israelites, it was easy to look at this passage and know exactly what had no value for them anymore.  They were no longer slaves.  They were no longer under the oppression of another.  They were free.  And yet, as you read through Exodus, it isn’t that easy for them.  They’ll want to return to their own ways and their old masters, because of difficulties that lie ahead.  Perhaps one hundred years from now, history books will record the very same thing about this time in history for Christianity.  They will look back and say, how obvious, Christians back in the 21st Century had to let go of – fill in the blank - but living it in now, sometimes it’s very difficult to know what to put in the blank space.  To know what to let go of that no longer has value, to know how to say goodbye to things we’ve held onto for so long, through generations, and yet those things that don’t really define us.  But, I think it is something that we as followers of Christ, in the broad sense of the term have to figure out.  As well as our specific church, rooted here in this community, have to figure out, too.

And the second is this, no matter how difficult it might be, we need to stand up for those who have no voice, who have oppressors that continue to enslave them, even in this 21st Century.

These are the lessons of the Red Sea.  Thanks be to God.  AMEN.

Offertory –         

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

          Lord, You have blessed our lives in so many ways.  In gratitude for all these blessings and in confidence that our gifts will be used for ministries of peace and hope, we offer these gifts.  AMEN

Closing Hymn – Now Thank We All Our God                    #555/788

                                               

Benediction

Go in peace into God’s world to serve and help others.  Go in confidence of God’s presence with you.  Go into this world with messages of hope and reconciliation.  Go in love.  AMEN

Postlude

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