Sunday, February 4, 2024

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, February 4, 2024

 Worship Service for February 4, 2024

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      Welcome!  Open your hearts to God’s love this day!

P:      Praise be to God who has called us here!

L:      Let the words wash over you and offer you healing and hope.

P:      Praise be to God who continually blesses us!

L:      Place your hope and trust in God!

P:      With joyful hearts, we come to worship and praise God who continually blesses and provides for us.  AMEN.

 

Opening Hymn –  Great Is Thy Faithfulness           #276/139

 

Prayer of Confession

How can we look at this world and not sing of Your praises, O God?  The beauty and majesty of the world is overpowering!  Yet we have a tendency to take all that You do for us for granted.  We treat the world with callous indifference, using its resources carelessly and with little regard to the future.  We insist on war as solutions for problems rather than peaceful striving.  We turn our backs on people in need, the weak and downtrodden go unnoticed in our midst.  We always believe that someone else will care for those in need.  How foolish we are, O God!  How ignorant we have become!  You have given to us all that we need.  You have blessed us with the witness of Jesus Christ who came so that we might learn how You would have us live, in honor and peace.  Forgive us.  Heal our hearts and spirits.  Make us fully aware of all our blessings and our responsibilities.  Give us again a spirit of joy in serving You.  Help us be agents of peace and hope to others.  We offer this prayer in Jesus’ name.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      Jesus has come to heal our spirits and our souls.  The demons of arrogance, indifference, and apathy are being cast out.  New life is offered to you in Jesus.

P:      Let us rejoice and be glad for God’s love is poured out to us this day and always.  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

Tragedies abound, O Lord.  Our newspapers, television, newscasts, and media all report the troubled happenings in our world.  War and strife seem to be the order of the day.  And we are caught up in the midst of this chaos.  Calm our spirits, Lord.  Help us focus on the love You have given to us in Jesus Christ.  Remind us again that His healing mercies extend to us this day as surely as they did to the people of long ago.  We have gathered this day to hear Your word, to hear of Your forgiveness, and to be healed, to find ways in which we may serve You in peace.  We have lifted names of those near and dear to us who stand in need of Your healing mercies and compassionate love.  Some names we have spoken aloud; and others we have uttered only in our hearts.  You hear all our prayers this morning. 

We especially pray for ….

You know our needs and concerns before our voices can frame them.  Let us accept the love You give to us.  Empower us to take that love and use it for good in Your world.  Let the message of hope and compassion flow forth from us again to this world which focuses on tragedy and turmoil.   And once again, let us know fully that You are with us.  Hear now our heart-spoken prayers in this moment of silence.

 

Lord, hear all our prayers this day and turn your ear to our cries.  We unite with one voice 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 –  God of Grace and God of Glory                         #420/435

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – Isaiah 40:21-31

Second Scripture Reading – Mark 1:29-39

Sermon –

Great and Wonderful, Wise and Kind

(based on Isaiah 40:21-31, Mark 1:29-39)

 

          This morning, I want to talk about both of our scripture texts.  The Old Testament reading which comes from Isaiah was written concerning the close of Israel’s exile in Babylon.  It is a passage that is filled with hope as the prophet is instructed in the first two verses of this chapter to “comfort my people”. 

This period of exile in Babylon had lasted 70 years – not extremely long if you compare it to the years of slavery in Egypt which were over 300 years, longer than our country has even existed as a country, but for the purpose of understanding imagine who was living 70 years ago today.  Some of us weren’t even born yet, while others of us were mere infants, children, or young teenagers.  So, our entire lives would have been during the exile and only our parents or grandparents would have remembered what life was like before the exile.  But how life had been before the exile was in their collective memory.  God told Isaiah to go to my people and speak tenderly to them – speak to their hearts.

Isaiah goes to them and recounts for them what they may have known or heard about from their parents and grandparents, what they were told about the beginning, about all the wonders God had done.  In answer to their prayers for God to hear them in their exile, now that it is over, God asks them to recall the ancient stories.  To remember who God is and what God has done for them.

Verse 22 reads, “It is He who sits above the circle of the earth and its inhabitants are like grasshoppers; who stretches out the heavens like a curtain, and spreads them like a tent to live in…”

The ancients believed that the earth was covered by a great dome.  The Israelites believed that God had created that dome, fixed the sun, moon and stars upon it and that God reigned above the dome looking down on creation.  Those of other faiths, who worshiped other gods like the Babylonians, had similar ideas.  The earth was covered by a great dome, but for them the sun, moon, and stars were the manifestation of the gods, each representing a different god. 

Isaiah tried to remind them in this passage that their God was above all other gods, that God reigned supreme, beyond and above the dome, looking down on all of creation like grasshoppers.  That no matter what happened, no matter what the other religions might belief about the greatness of their gods, the Israelite God was greater still who “brings princes to naught, and makes the rulers of the earth as nothing.”

Isaiah goes on to ask the freed exiles, who can even compare to that kind of god?  Who then is God’s equal?  Lift up your eyes and see all that the Lord has created.  Isaiah says in verse 26, “God knows all of them by name, and not a single thing is missing from God’s eyes.”  And he continues, “How can you possibly say, ‘My way is hidden from the Lord, and my right is disregarded by my God?’”

Isaiah builds up the people coming out of exile who feel discouraged and depleted, “The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth.”  He tells those who are returning home, “God does not faint or grow weary.”  In other words, He is always watchful, always present, always there for you.  Even this most awesome God, the Creator of the earth, knows your name, you have been heard and not counted among the missing.  He is present for you.  And this amazing God will give power and strength to those who feel weak and powerless. 

In verse 31 it says, “…those who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength.”   The word wait in Hebrew is qavah, which literally means to twine around something in order to bind it that which has strength.  If you think of a vine that grows without support, after a bit it just flops over because it can’t support itself.  Here, in this passage the idea is that if you “wait for the Lord”, grow and twine around the Lord for support, you will have all the strength you need.  But this takes time.  It isn’t immediate.  A vine grows season after season around its support structure.  I saw  grapevines in Italy that were well over 100 years old, the trunk of the vines were thick, but weren’t more than a foot or two high while the branches wound around their supports reaching out for long stretches.  Or a Wisteria that grows over a patio.  It doesn’t grow to cover the patio in one summer.  Friends of my family owned an old plantation home in Maryland and their back patio was covered in an old Wisteria vine.  It was so dense that you could hardly see the sun through the leaves.  I remember Ondene telling us that her grandmother had planted it when she was just a little girl.

I always thought that waiting for the Lord was just about having patience, to wait for God to do something.  But that’s not it at all.  It is so much more than that when you really understand the meaning behind the word – qavah in Hebrew.  It is being active in that waiting.  It isn’t passive.  You, the vine, have to be growing and twining around the Lord who gives you strength, who supports you and allows you to grow even more.

Those who qavah for the Lord; those who wait for the Lord will renew their strength.  They shall mount up with wings like eagles.  What an amazing image.  In time, as you grow with God, you will have renewed strength.  With the support and strength of God, you will have the ability to stretch your wings…and fly.

Now, let’s move on to the New Testament passage.  When we read the gospel story on Sunday mornings week after week, one passage from this gospel, another passage from another gospel, you may not have a complete picture of these gospel writers.  But when you compare all the gospels against one another they are all very different. 

Matthew begins with the heritage of Christ, but it is filled with miraculous beginnings – angel appearances and wise men following a star.  Luke is more historical, shares more details of Christ’s beginnings, but no less miraculous.  There are still visitations and early announcements, angels and shepherds.  John begins his gospel in poetry, reaching back to the beginning trying to connect the threads of creation with the birth of Christ and immediately Jesus performing a miracle at the wedding in Cana turning water to wine.  Mark doesn’t do any of that.  Mark doesn’t even mention Christ’s birth.    

In Mark, John the Baptist announces that there is someone coming who is greater than he is and then all of a sudden Jesus appears to John in order to be baptized.  From then on, in the beginning of Mark, it’s just about Jesus collecting disciples, teaching in the synagogues or by parables to the people that gather around him outside, and healing people who were afflicted with various diseases.  And there’s a lot of that in Mark.  Jesus heals more people in Mark, than he does in all the other gospels put together.  But there is nothing really spectacular until almost chapter 5 and there are only 16 chapters in all of Mark, half the size of the other gospels.  Matthew, Luke and John have miraculous things and over the top miracles happening from the beginning of their narratives.

Instead, Mark seeks to define Christ by the many ways in which he proclaims the Good News of the Kingdom of God as he goes about doing everyday things – preaching and teaching.  That included being alone with God in prayer.  Mark mentions this in the first chapter.  Matthew and John both allude to the idea that Jesus goes off to a lonely place, but they don’t say he does so to pray.  They don’t talk about Jesus actually praying until the end of their gospel accounts.  Luke does a little bit better of a job about Jesus praying because in Chapter 6 Luke mentions that shortly before he collected his twelve disciples he spent the night in prayer with God.  However, it’s an important aspect of Mark’s gospel.  He mentions Jesus taking time away to pray right from the beginning.

Mark wants the readers to fully engage with Christ right from the beginning of his gospel, not in a miraculous/spectacular way, but rather in an everyday way.  For Mark, Jesus doesn’t have to turn water into wine, Jesus doesn’t have to walk on water, Jesus doesn’t have to feed five thousand people from two loves of bread and five fish.  Instead, Jesus engages with people in their everyday lives and teaches them.  Jesus engages with people while they are sick, afraid, ostracized from their community because of their disease or their demons.  And Jesus is able to do those things because he grounds himself in prayer.  I think Mark knows and understands that this is more important than the spectacular.  That Jesus embodies the idea of what we read about in Isaiah this morning.  Jesus “qavah” on the Lord.  He waited on the Lord through his time with God in prayer each day and therefore was renewed in strength each day to be present in the lives of those around him to teach and preach and heal them.

May God give you the opportunity and the motivation to wait (to “qavah”) upon him in prayer, as well.

 

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

  We thank You, Gracious God for our of the blessings you bestow upon us and we give back a portion of those gifts for You to use.  Take them, O Lord, and multiply their usefulness in the world that others might be blessed through our giving.  Amen.

Closing Hymn – Amazing Grace                    #280/343

Benediction

          Friends, we are being sent into a world in need of healing.  We have been given all that we need to be God’s messengers of peace.  Go now into the world, rejoicing in God’s presence with You.  Bring the news of peace and hope to all you meet.  AMEN.

Postlude


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