Sunday, December 29, 2024

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, December 29, 2024

 

Worship Service for December 29, 2024

Prelude

Announcements: 

·      Joint worship at Olivet Presbyterian Church in West Elizabeth, PA at 9:45 next Sunday with communion.

Call to Worship

L:      Arise, shine, for your light has come!

P:      The glory of the Lord has risen upon us!

L:      Like sages from afar, come and behold your Christ!

P:      Let us fall on our knees in His honor!  Let us lift up our voices in praise of His name!

 

Opening Hymn – Good Christian Friends, Rejoice         Hymn #28  Blue

Prayer of Confession

         All-glorious God, we have faith in Jesus Christ, and love towards Your people, yet we are not without blemish in Your sight, not full of love, wisdom, and other spiritual blessings You still have available for us.  Our love is not as inclusive as Yours, and there is still much we need to learn.  Give us clearer vision of all that we are meant to be, so that by becoming fulfilled, we may increase the glory that is properly revealed in Jesus Christ, Your beloved Son.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      Friends, hear the Good News!  Christ has come to set us free.      He has come to show us the hope, joy, peace, and love of God.

P:      In Jesus Christ, we are forgiven.  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

We give thanks this morning, O God, for Your faithfulness through the many generations that have walked this earth – for You were the God of Job in his suffering.  You were the God of Jeremiah in the exile.  You were the God of David in his wealth, power, and rule.  You were the God of Ruth as she sought to find a place and a people to call home.  You were the God Anna in her old age and in her eagerness to see Your promises fulfilled.  You were the God of Luke, who sought to understand You as Savior and Lord.  You were the God of Mary Magdalene who found forgiveness and strength in You. 

We give thanks that Your people have found ways to worship You in various places of prayer with Cathedral Ceilings and beautiful stained glass windows, with dirt floors and tin roofs, with icons of saints or the cooing of doves.  We have sung Your praise in quiet circles under the stars or with the heavenly voices of trained choirs.  Along our vast pilgrim way through the eons, You have provided the sustenance and refreshment for both body and soul.  We are most blessed when we put our trust in You.  We ask that you continue to provide for us in our generation, be with us Lord and bless us with Your favor.

We pray for our loved ones…

In this moment of silence, hear the voices of our hearts…

And now with one voice, we pray…

Our Father who art in heaven, Hallowed by 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 –  Once in Royal David’s City             #49/286

Scripture Reading(s): 

OT – Psalm 148

NT – Luke 2:21-38

Sermon –  Waiting for God (Luke 2:21-38)

     When you’re in a rush, one of the hardest positions to find yourself in is “on hold.”  It is extremely frustrating to listen to some smooth sounding “elevator music” while waiting for a live person to take your call and help you with a particular problem, especially when you’re trying to get things checked off your “to do” list!   “Did you ever go through a time when you felt like you were put on hold with God?”  Today, we’ll encounter two people who certainly felt that way for a very long time.

It’s important to note that God isn’t always in a rush to get things done, and sometimes that can be really annoying!   But think about it for a moment!   If we’ve read the Hebrew Scriptures correctly, God announced the coming of the Messiah about seven hundred years before His actual arrival, and announced His return at least two thousand years ago!  The truth is that God isn’t in a hurry.  We need to learn to wait and trust God’s plan.  On this journey in life, that isn’t always easy.

Often, we recall the Christmas story and all the events of Matthew Chapters 1-2 and Luke Chapters 1-2 sort of pushed together, as if they happened within days of each other, but in reality those events were actually spread over the course of several years.

         It’s not really a big deal that we push them altogether, it makes a great story.  We often tell long stories in a condensed fashion in order to get across the meaning or the overarching theme of the story we’re telling.  But, we need to keep in mind that although we might tell it has one simple story that happened over the course of a few short days, that this Christmas journey from the time the angel came to Mary to announce that she was with child until Jesus grew up in Nazareth of Galilee, several years went by and as we’ll discover many various journeys that took place.

Our story this morning is set halfway through Luke chapter two, where we find Mary and Joseph, having left Nazareth to make their way to Bethlehem, under a scandalous and shameful situation – that of conception outside a proper marriage.  In that time and place, such an event was the stuff of snickering at the local well.  Yet, the couple continued to serve God faithfully.  These early days for them were, no doubt, difficult, right from the start.  Regardless of the talk around them, when the time came, they carefully obeyed God’s message to them, to the letter.

As the story of the birth and visit of the shepherds ended, we pick up the account in Luke 2:21. 

On the eighth day after the babe was born, along with his circumcision, he was named Jesus, or Yeshua in Hebrew, the name given by the angel before He was conceived in the womb.  His name, Yeshua, was from two Hebrew words that combined God (Yahweh) and Yasha, to save – Yeshua.  Or in English Jesus.

As the story moves forward, somewhere between 25-41 days after the circumcision Mary needed to complete her purification, a ritual for women set aside after childbirth, and Jesus needed to be redeemed as a firstborn son – bought back from God’s special ownership.

Amid Joseph and Mary’s moment of obedience a month after Jesus’ birth, the end of a long wait came to two old people in Jerusalem’s Temple. An elderly man named Simeon (or Shim’on) and an old woman named Anna finally came to the day of God’s fulfillment to them. 

Luke draws our view to an old man standing on the Temple platform, with its large smooth stone pavement. He wrote:

And there was a man in Jerusalem whose name was Simeon; and this man was righteous and devout, looking for the consolation of Israel; and the Holy Spirit was upon him. And it had been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not see death before he had seen the Lord’s Christ.  And he came in the Spirit into the temple; and when the parents brought in the child Jesus to carry out for Him the custom of the Law…(Luke 2:25-27)

There are four extremely important words or phrases of the text to fully understand who Simeon was:

• First, he was righteous. The word “díkaios” in Greek meant he was “approved by God”. He was God’s man, stationed to do God’s bidding by God’s hand. He was selected by God.

• Second, he actively lived his God-given role. The word “eulabēs” in Greek is translated “devout”.  He lived out a practical, daily, “godly respect” for holy things.  He walked in practical ways with God.

• Third, he acted with anticipation. For Simeon, coming to the Temple wasn’t a heavy drudgery, but one filled with expectation. The text says he was “looking for the consolation” the word “prosdéxomai” here translated to consolation, but it literally means he was “ready and willing” to receive what God promised.  So, Simeon went to work every day with excited readiness and expectation.

• Fourth, he carried in his heart a revelation – a promise from God that he would see the Messiah before he died. The word “xrēmatízō” is the word that means “revealed” in this verse, but in Greek this is a business term, it is transactional.  God promised something and that promise would be fulfilled.  Simeon took this promise seriously and literally.

So, each day Simeon went to the temple to receive each child with anticipation that one of this children would be the long awaited Messiah.  And finally, the waiting was over and as Simeon held Jesus in his arms for the rite of passage to redemption, he knew that God’s promise was fulfilled. 

Can you hear the PURE SATISFACTION in the words of Simeon?  He used words like “released” and called his eyes “prepared” for the child.  At the same time, He fulfilled his God-given task and offered hard words of warning to Mary and Joseph, because that was part of the message God revealed to him.

What did he promise?

• He promised the baby was SALVATION (2:30).

• He made clear the baby would have a WORLDWIDE IMPACT among both Gentiles and “His people Israel” (2:31-32).

• He promised the child would bring about the rise and fall of many in Israel (2:34).

• He made clear pain would come into Mary’s heart because of the child (2:35).

• He flatly promised the child would expose the hearts of many people (2:35).

However, Simeon wasn’t the only one waiting at the Temple.  There was another person who went through YEARS of waiting and pain…

When we read the last few verses of today’s Scripture reading we see an elderly woman who lived through tough times on her way to finding God’s peace.  If anything, the record of her life reminds us that God may call upon you to reset your personal expectations in a “Plan B” life. 

 “And there was a prophetess, Anna (shortened form of: Channah, or “Grace”) the daughter of Phanuel, of the tribe of Asher.  She was advanced in years and had lived with her husband seven years after her marriage, and then as a widow to the age of eighty-four.  She never left the temple, serving night and day with fastings and prayers.  At that very moment she came up and began giving thanks to God, and continued to speak of Him to all those who were looking for the redemption of Jerusalem.” (Luke 2:36-38)

This is the story of a life dedicated to God that was forged through real PAIN and LOSS, not through easy blessing and simple living…Anna is described as “advanced in years” and widowed long ago.  Her marriage lasted only a brief seven years when she lost her husband.  Now at eighty-four years old, Anna had learned patience and dependence upon God.  She fasted and prayed day and night, never leaving the Temple.

She was not like most women of her time. God chose for her a different path.  Instead of finding her identity in a second marriage and raising children – she heard God’s direction and went a different way than people around her surely expected.  She chose to serve the Lord night and day, fasting, praying and waiting.  She learned to move through the terrible pain of losing her husband, and kept growing in trust.  She learned to rely on God to financially and emotionally meet the needs of her life. 

I keep thinking about the words “night and day”. She just kept going and kept waiting on God to finish what He was doing in her and in others. Hers was not a life tuned to accomplishing things – it was a life tuned to waiting on God for God’s promise to be revealed, not just to her, but to the world.  Sixty-five years or so of waiting is incredible patience to wait for anything – much less a baby to mark the redemption.

We need to remember that God is in no hurry!  We won’t experience instant depth, instant passion, instant deep praise.  It just doesn’t happen that way.  Genuine change of heart takes time.  Genuine waiting on God with expectation takes patience. 

Have you ever been trusting in God patiently waiting for Him to work, and it seems like nothing happens. Then… nothing happens. Then more waiting and suddenly… nothing happens.

Catchy words and platitudes won’t help much in times like those. The battle isn’t just keeping words, it is about keeping hope.  Urgency floods in… and time seems like it is running out.  Waves of panic strike.

         How often do we forget that God is the Master of time?  We don’t get blessings from God because we are deserving of it.  We get blessings simply because God chooses to offer them, when and how God wishes.  We often miss them in our journeys because we aren’t prepared to find them.  We miss them when they aren’t what we expect them to be.

Often, the most dramatic display of God takes place in the lives of people when they are seasoned by God in a stew of “waiting for it”.  God enables us to see Him most clearly when we are attuned to God’s timing and patience.

Thanks be to God.  AMEN

Doxology

Prayer of Dedication

         Heavenly Lord, we know that the gifts of our hands are no substitute for the loyalty of our lives.  In giving back these blessings, we pledge ourselves to Your service.  In Christ’s name, AMEN.

Closing Hymn –  Go, Tell It on the Mountain         #29/258

Benediction

Just as people of faith from past generations sought to honor and obey God, seeking moments of truth and clarity for their own destiny, God invites you into the story as well.  Go, find your own path, and serve the Lord.

Postlude

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