Sunday, December 15, 2024

Today's Worship Service for Sunday, December 15, 2024 - Third Sunday of Advent

 We're going to try to livestream this morning on Facebook.  You'll need to refriend me, Walt Pietschmann, if I'm not in your friend's list anymore in order to see it.

Worship Service for December 15, 2024

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      Prepare the way of the Lord!

P:      Lift every valley, lift every voice.

L:      Prepare the way of the Lord!

P:      And all flesh shall see the salvation of our God.

 

Lighting of the Advent Candles

L:      Children of God, we come, tired of waiting, burdened by the weight of watching.  We surrender to God’s holy “not yet,” embracing the stillness.  We come, and God-with-us is present in our longing.  As we gather today, we remember the promised gifts of the Messiah.  In the lighting of three candle, we set our gaze upon beacons that sustain us through sleepless nights and restless days.  We bear this light together. 

We call the first candle – Hope. 

We call the second candle – Peace.

We call the third candle – Joy.

(Light the candles.)

Let us pray:

Giver of Life, we inhabit a world that often seeks to steal our joy.  Rejoicing is a courageous embodiment, a tender defiance.  Reveling in Your holy goodness against the current; a quiet rebellion against forces that thrive on fear.  To find beauty amid complexity is a bold act, and gratitude is a balm that brings healing to our souls.  You, O God, are our hope, our peace and our joy, the quiet strength in our deepest longing.  AMEN.

With the Holy Spirit as our guide, we join the apostle Paul in testifying to Your timeless, unending faithfulness in the shadowiest of days.

“Let your gentleness be known to everyone.  The Lord is near.  Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving allow your requests be made known to God.  And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”

We delight in the joy found in God’s presence, a fullness of joy that the world cannot give nor take away.  This joy is a blessed assurance sealed with God’s love by the foretold birth of God’s son.

Opening Hymn –  What Child Is This?          #53/281

 

Prayer of Confession

Great God, as we prepare to behold the birth of Jesus again, we are mindful of how we have failed to receive the fullness of that gift.  The story points us to Your glory, yet we struggle to join in the song of praise and thanksgiving.  We are distracted and confused, so focused on things of little significance we overlook the good news of great joy that You have prepared.  Tell us again that the Savior is born.  Tell us again that we are forgiven.  Tell us again that our lives can be abundant in faith, hope, and love because of what You have given us in Jesus Christ.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      The angel tells Joseph that the child forming in Mary’s womb is to be named Jesus.  “Call him Jesus,” the angel says, “For He will save the people from their sins.”  From his birth through his resurrection, from age to age, Jesus is about salvation.  This is good news.

P:      In Jesus Christ, we are forgiven.  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

Come, Lord Jesus. Bring your presence; bring your peace; bring your

light.  Comfort the sick, soothe the sorrowful, bind up the wounded.

Calm our spirits. Ease our burdens. Mend our hearts. Come, Lord Jesus.

Come, Lord Jesus. Bring your justice; bring your righteousness; bring

your goodness.  Reorder our priorities. Direct our efforts. Strengthen our resolve.  Break down walls. Dismantle oppression. Overthrow tyrants.  Come, Lord

Jesus.

Come, Lord Jesus.  Bring your love; bring your compassion; bring your mercy.  Heal our divisions. Seek out the lost. Restore the guilt-ridden.

Widen our embrace. Teach us generosity. Show us how to forgive.

Come, Lord Jesus.

Come, Lord Jesus. Bring your passions; bring your fire; bring your steadfastness.  Inspire our witness. Motivate our mission. Energize your church.  Open our minds.  Extend our hands.  Overcome our lethargy. Come, Lord Jesus.

Come, Lord Jesus. Bring your hope; your tenderness; your promise.

Build up our common life. Hold us in our frustrations. Brighten our darkness.  Release us. Renew us. Redeem us. Come, Lord Jesus.

Come, Lord Jesus, hear our cries; hear our whispers; hear our prayers.  Today we pray for….  Come, Lord Jesus.

Come, Lord Jesus, into our hearts, into our souls, into our minds to hear the prayers that we cannot say aloud in this time of silence.

Come, Lord Jesus, who taught us, 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 –  Away in a Manger          Hymn #25/262

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – Isaiah 51:1-6

Second Scripture Reading – Matthew 7:24-27

Sermon –  The Rock of Ages

Rock of Ages

(Isaiah 51:1-6, Matthew 7:24-27)

 

         I love to go on a journey.  I love planning out places to see, things to do, people to meet.  I love the anticipation of connecting with things I’ve never experienced before or revisiting favorite places that touched some part of me when last I’d been there.  And getting there is half the fun.  No two journeys are alike. 

But not every journey is an easy one.  In fact, our histories are full of extreme examples of journeys taken under duress—deportations, flights from religious and political persecution, abductions or escapes from the violence of war.  Depending on our own background, we may think back to times when our own people were persecuted, or perhaps when they were doing the persecuting.  However, not all difficult journeys are tragic in this way.  There are also tales of difficult journeys that ended more happily—journeys of exploration, for example.

In this, our journey of Advent, we’ve been continually reminded of the journey of the Israelites—a difficult journey that began when they left their chains behind in Egypt from liberation of slavery and ended at the promised land after 40 years of testing and suffering in the desert wilderness between Egypt and Canaan.  If you remember from the beginning of Advent, in telling this story, Jesus recalled God’s provision of manna in the desert as the Israelites began to despair that they may die of starvation.  Our reading from Leviticus last week recollected the guidance God provided the Israelites to make appropriate sacrifices under his covenant.  Paul also recounted this journey in writing to the Christians of Corinth, retelling the journey of the Israelites as a forerunner to the journey of the Christian life.  Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 10:1-4 “…our ancestors were all under the cloud, and all passed through the sea, and all were baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea, and all ate the same spiritual food, and all drank the same spiritual drink.  For they drank from the spiritual rock that followed them, and the rock was Christ.”

Paul sees, in this story, the precursors of our own spiritual lives.  The Israelites come through the waters of the Red Sea like we come through the waters of baptism.  They are fed by manna in the desert, as we are fed at the Lord’s Supper.  And they drink the same spiritual drink.  Paul identifies the rock that Moses strikes, which pours forth water that is good to drink, as Christ, who offers us living water still.

As he tells the story, however, he also underscores the mistakes that Israel has made.  There is wisdom in not only taking inspiration from our ancestors, but in critically examining and learning from their failings as well.  Keeping this in mind, let us look back to the words of the book of the prophet Isaiah.

This section of Isaiah is dealing with deep feelings of loss.  The Israelites are reeling from mass exile, and the loss of Zion, and they interpret this as punishment for their idolatry, among other sins.  An ancient Christian carol summarizes the mood:

O come, O come, Emmanuel, And ransom captive Israel That mourns in lonely exile here Until the Son of God appear.

It’s hard for the exiled people of God to bear: up to this point in their history, their worship of their God has been tied to place and to space.  They feel distant from the presence of God, but even in their exile, God inspires the prophet to bring a message of comfort to the people: “Listen to me…look to the rock from which you were hewn, and to the quarry from which you were dug” (Isaiah 51:1).  The exiles are told to look back to Abraham and Sarah, to whom God made his promise so long ago.

Biblical scholar Ingrid Lilly writes that Abraham and Sarah represent two different faces of the disorientation that the exiles are dealing with.  Abraham’s call represents “the confidence to follow God even in the midst of this disorientation,” and Sarah’s story is about the experience of barrenness, of desolation, and miraculous consolation.  The rock from which we are hewn refers to these two strong characters, but also to the sure and steady promise God has made to them.  Whether we identify with Abraham and his stalwart, rock solid confidence or with Sarah and her empty, chasmic sized sorrow, we find in the end a promise from God. 

The quarry, or pit of absence, is like the barren desert of Sarah’s womb that symbolizes what Israel must be feeling.  But the exiles are reassured: “The Lord comforts Zion; he… makes her wilderness like Eden” (Isaiah 51:3).  From out of the barren silence, out of the pit, the desert miraculously blooms. There will be joy again.  By invoking Eden, the prophet points even further back—to our ultimate origins, and our original friendship with God, and names that as our destiny.  Medieval theologians loved this concept, and called it “Exitus Reditus.”  What comes from God returns to God. “Exitus Reditus” – what comes from God returns to God. So, like the carol says:

Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel Shall come to thee, O Israel.

The Israelites mourn in lonely exile but are encouraged to rejoice!  Today’s candle represents joy.  It is out of this amazing journey, regardless of how deep and dark the days might be, there is joy at the end.  Our God who made water flow from a rock, who poured forth a people from a barren womb, can make a desert bloom, and will abide with us in the fullness of time. Having heard this message, how do we find ourselves, right now, as we approach Jesus’ words from the end of the Sermon on the Mount?  What is on our hearts?  We are invited, I believe, to think of our own trials and tribulations, our own mistakes, our own desolations.  Sitting at Jesus’ feet, we are both challenged and comforted.

After preaching to his gathered disciples, Jesus concludes by saying:

“Everyone then who hears these words of mine and does them will be like a wise man who built his house on the rock.  And the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house, but it did not fall, because it had been founded on the rock.  And everyone who hears these words of mine and does not do them will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand. And the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell, and great was the fall of it” (Matthew 7:24-27).

These moral and spiritual teachings are a firm foundation, he is saying.  Those who are meek, pure of heart, poor of spirit, who hunger and thirst for justice, and who practice mercy are on solid ground.  Those who love their enemies, and turn the other cheek, and forgive others are building on rock.  Those who fast and give alms without hope of recognition, and those who seek after God have a firm foundation. It is by the grace of God that we are saved, but these works of mercy are given to us by Christ as sturdy stone, a sure base, and a picture of what a life in Christ looks like.

And indeed, it was these verses from the seventh chapter of Matthew that came to the mind of the hymnwriter Edward Mote almost 200 years ago when he was thinking about the grace-filled experience of a Christian.  In “My Hope Is Built on Nothing Less,” he wrote movingly about clinging to Christ even in times when God seems silent:

When darkness veils his lovely face, I rest on his unchanging grace; In every high and stormy gale, My anchor holds within the veil.  On Christ, the Solid Rock, I stand; All other ground is sinking sand.

The very week Mote wrote these words, they gave comfort to a dying woman, which led Mote to publish them to share them more widely.  Two centuries later, they still cut straight to the heart of the Advent message of this Matthew 7:24-27 passage: In journeys that we find ourselves in disruption or desolation, we can rest secure knowing that God blesses and comforts those who mourn, and who are persecuted.  We can rest in peace knowing that God forgives us as we forgive those who trespass against us.  Because we have faith, we have hope.  And ultimately, we have joy.  Advent, among other things, is a season of hope.

So let us rejoice in our hope: The Word of God was the Rock for the Israelites.  He gave them water in the desert and can make even the most sun-parched sand bloom.  By his birth in Bethlehem, in a stable that scholars often claim was hallowed out from stone, he has given us a firm foundation on which to build a life of joy.

On Christ, the Solid Rock, I stand;  All other ground is sinking sand.

Thanks be to God.  AMEN.

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

O God, with faith and hope, we offer these gifts in joy.  Use them, even as You use us, to accomplish Your purposes in Jesus Christ, our coming Lord.  AMEN

Closing Hymn –  Hark! The Herald Angels Sing        Hymn #31/277

Benediction

         Let us go trusting in Jesus Christ, the one who is surely coming.  May the grace of our Lord Jesus, the love of God, and the companionship of the Holy Spirit be with you and abide with you today and always.  AMEN.

Postlude

No comments: