Sunday, January 19, 2025

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, January 19, 2025

Worship Service for January 19, 2025

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      No matter how far we wander from You, O God,

P:      Your steadfast love finds us.

L:      No matter how unjust the world seems to us, O God,

P:      Your steadfast righteousness sustains us.

L:      No matter how vulnerable our lives seem to us, O God,

P:      Your steadfast presence gives us hope.

L:      No matter how unloved and uncared for we feel, O God,

P:      You hear our cries and answer our prayers.  Be present now in our worship service today.

 

Opening Hymn –  All Creatures of Our God and King          #455/63

 

Prayer of Confession

Lord, how we must try Your patience! We often doubt, when we should place our faith in Your abiding presence.  We think that we have to have all the answers, and judge others who fail to live up to our expectations.  We think that we are the one thing that matters most in life. So, we place ourselves at the center of our own universe.  Forgive us when we show how shallow our faith is.  Help us to really understand the miraculous ways in which You have already worked in our lives and will continue to work as we journey in faith. Bring to us the Light of Joy, and let it flood through our whole beings, that we may be transformed into people of joyful service and faith.  In Jesus' Name, we pray.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      God’s love is continually poured out for us.  We are forgiven and redeemed by the Holy One of Israel.

P:      For this we give our thanks and praise.  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

 

Sacrament of Baptism

Pastoral Prayer and Lord’s Prayer

Precious and Holy Lord, allow us to recognize Christ present in this place.  Let us recognize Christ in one another.  And more importantly, let us recognize Christ in the face of strangers we meet each day.  We are members of your body and you have called us to do your work in the world.  You have called us to show your love, your mercy, and your graciousness to a world in pain, to a world full of anger, and to those who are lost and alone.  Let that work begin in us today.  Enable us to carry out your work in our communities, in our neighborhoods, in our places of work, school, homes, and among our friends and acquaintances. 

Lord, open our eyes of faith to see you in all the peoples of the earth.  By the power of your Holy Spirit, enable us to be your instruments of peace, of grace, and of redemption.

Be with the leaders of our churches, our communities, our states, our nation, and the countries of the world.  Light a fire of compassion and care within them for the people they govern, a fire of passion for the needs of their own communities and peoples.  Lord, bring peace to the corners of the world that have not known peace in a long time.  Bring harmony to those who have fought, disagreed with one another, have said hurtful things against one another, and have held hatred in their hearts.

Dear God, we also pray for people in our church, our own family members and friends – those who have undergone surgeries, procedures, rounds of curative medicine.  We pray for those who have broken bones, broken hearts, and broken spirits.  We pray for those who have lost loved ones.  Show your presence in times of need and heal us of our afflictions.

We especially pray for….

 

And now in this time of silence, we lift up to you, the burden of our own hearts….

 

Most excellent Lord, we give you thanks for hearing us this morning.  Continue to watch over us as pray 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 –  Here I Am, Lord                               #525/589

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – Psalm 36:5-10

Second Scripture Reading –  Matthew 2:19-23

Sermon –  “Going Home”

For Advent and the Christmas Season of 2024 and stretching into this year, we’ve been going over all the parts of the Christmas story as found in gospels of Matthew and Luke, especially as the passages relate to various journeys.  Recalling the journey of their ancestors in the wilderness after freedom from slavery in Egypt, all the way until last Sunday’s reading about the flight of Mary and Joseph with baby Jesus back to Egypt because of Herod’s massacre of baby boys due to the birth of Jesus.

Well, in due time Herod died, and when Herod died the whole kingdom over which he had ruled was split up.  The Romans had trusted Herod, and they had allowed him to reign over a very considerable territory, but Herod well knew that none of his sons would be allowed a like power. So, he divided his kingdom into three.  He left a part to each of three of his sons.  He had left Judaea to Archelaus; Galilee to Herod Antipas; and the region away to the northeast and beyond Jordan to Philip.

But the death of Herod didn’t solve the problem for Mary and Joseph despite the angel’s dream message.  Archelaus was a bad king.  In fact, he was much like his father, he had opened his rule with the deliberate slaughter of three thousand of the most influential people in the country. Clearly, even now that Herod was dead, it was still unsafe to return to Judaea with the savage and reckless Archelaus on the throne.  So, Joseph was guided to go to Galilee where Herod Antipas, a much better king, reigned.

It was in Nazareth that Joseph settled, and it was in Nazareth that Jesus was brought up.  But this morning I want us to take a closer look at Joseph rather than Jesus or even Mary.  We don’t spend nearly enough time learning anything about him.  This morning, I want us to imagine or maybe re-imagine this extremely important man in Christ’s life. 

Tradition tells us that Joseph was perhaps an older man, at least significantly older than Mary.  We don’t know that for sure.  There is nothing in scripture that gives us any indication at all that this is true.  We know that he’s a carpenter by trade, so he is beyond being an apprentice which is usually several years after the age of 10-13.  And we know that from scripture he has maybe some decency and moral standing which usually comes with age.  Because, after he found out that she was pregnant, and not by him, he sought ways to dismiss his betrothal to her “in private” so that she wouldn’t be publicly shamed.  Now, to be perfectly honest, I’m not exactly sure how he thought that would have been accomplished.  She still would have had a child without a husband.  And perhaps that gives us some indication that he may not have been as wise as older age would give him.  When you read the scripture closely, it looks more like he was trying to get out of the marriage, not so much for her sake, but for his own.

         So, here’s the picture I have of Joseph.  He has recently finished his apprenticeship years and has struck out on his own to become a tradesman, a carpenter.  In Biblical times, during the first Century AD, that would put him perhaps somewhere between 16-20 years old.  Now, he is looking to settle down with a wife.  His betrothed wife turns out to be pregnant.  I think, if he was an older man, as tradition might suggest, this might have come as good news because who knows if he would be able to father a child in an advanced stage of life.  So, because of his actions, I’m imagining that he is just a bit older than Mary herself.  So, I’m going to put both of them between the ages of 14-17.

         Joseph is visited by an angel who tells him to not be afraid and to take Mary as his wife, that the child she carries is from the Holy Spirit and that the child will be God’s son, sent to redeem his people.  Matthew loves to make parallels to the Old Testament, so I’m going to make some parallels as well.  When angels came to Abraham and Sarah in their advanced years to tell them that they would have children and become the ancestors to many generations, what did Sarah do?  Anybody remember?  Yup, she laughed.  I think the older you get, the more cynical you get about the realities of life.  You’ve seen a lot, you know a lot, you know that people who are 100 years old, don’t have children.  But what did Mary and Joseph do when an angel came to them to give them this news?  Okey-Dokey.  No big deal.  Whatever the Lord says.  I think when you are young and not so cynical about life, miracles are easier to believe.

         I’m saying all this because I think it’s important to characterize Joseph appropriately.  Like Mary, Joseph was willing to be guided by an angel to do all that was necessary for the safety and well-being of his family.  Experience alone wouldn’t have done it, in fact, perhaps the exact opposite.  He may have needed more signs and wonders to believe.  He may have needed more proof, more coaxing, more prodding to do what was necessary.

         Now that we have perhaps a different picture of Joseph, let’s skip to last week’s passage when, again an angel appeared to Joseph and warned him about Herod’s revenge.  He takes Mary and the infant/baby Jesus and flees to Egypt.

         Here’s a young family in a foreign land.  None of scripture give us any indication of how they fair in Egypt.  But think about it.  Here is a young couple of Jewish origin returning to the land where the Jews had been enslaved for five hundred years.  Where do you think they’ll rank in the class system of Egypt?  Your ancestors were slaves in this land, and you are foreigners, who don’t even belong there.  And yet, an angel of the Lord tells them to flee to this country.  Why?  I think because God knows that an enterprising young man will do whatever it takes to make a living for his family.  Joseph worked his trade and thrived in Egypt.  But he is not the same man that lain in bed one night worried about dismissing Mary quietly.  He traveled to Bethlehem to sign up for the census, the first one ever taken, as a citizen of Rome while his wife was nearly due in pregnancy.  He found no place for them to stay but managed to find shelter in a stable just so they might be out of the elements when the time came for her to deliver.  Shepherds came to witness the birth who told about an angel chorus.  Joseph eventually finds better housing for them to stay in Bethlehem for a time and magi from distant lands come to pay his child homage, giving the family strange gifts.  The reigning king of the Israel then comes in search of his child to kill him and he flees to Egypt.  There he remains somewhat undercover so as not to be detected and sent back to Israel, burdened with the stigma of being a foreigner and the offspring of slaves from a distant past.  There is no way that this Joseph is the same Joseph that lain in bed wondering what to do about Mary.

         He’s grown up, he’s a changed man.  He is the guardian of God’s son, the physical shelter to a woman who found favor with God, and the young man that God entrusted with a purpose.  He has endured threats from the king of his own country and who knows what else in the hands of a people who would rather spit on him than offer him grace.

         One night an angel appears once more and tells him it’s time to go home.  How do you go home when you aren’t the man you were just a few short years ago?

         I remember leaving for college.  I was 17.  I couldn’t wait to get there.  I was finally on my own, away from home and yet close enough for things to be familiar.  I saw my family every Sunday when we met for worship, sometimes joining them for brunch afterwards.  Nearly two years went by, I stayed on campus during holidays and found a summer job at the college so I could continue living there.  I made new friends, changed my major – a dream of being a music teacher, gone.  I found a decent job that paid well, travelled alone, went away on my own vacations, all while going to school and trying to find my own way in the world.  A lot about me had changed, too.

I think it was a last-ditch effort to save their marriage, but my mom and dad asked me to come home to look after the house while they went away on vacation.  I agreed, although I hadn’t set foot in the house I grew up in for two years.  I remember going up to my old bedroom.  It was still a bright yellow, the color I had chosen to repaint it when I was 15.  That color now shouted at me.  My old wooden dresser looked worn, the curtains looked…eh, dated.  The bifold doors on the closet no longer felt like they held monsters at bay.  This room that had been my sanctuary from the world growing up felt so…unimportant and small.

I walked through the house, remembering both good times and bad, memories flooding me like ancient dreams of someone else.  I sat at the kitchen table thinking about the questions mom would ask us about our day and the discussions we had at dinner.  I thought about how different my answers to those questions would be now.  I was no longer that naïve little boy.  I had seen things, witnessed life outside those protective walls, been a part of the world.  I was not the same person anymore.

When I read today’s passage, I thought about Joseph going home.  I thought about all that he’d been through and how he was no longer the same man.  God had prepared him for whatever he’d need to do.  God prepared him for teaching his child well, for instilling in him the necessary lessons of life, the gifts of both home and the world.

You may not have left home and gone off to a foreign country, but you aren’t the same today as you were two years ago, last year, or even yesterday.  So, my questions for you this morning are what lessons are you learning on your own journey, what is God teaching you to fulfill God’s purpose in your life?

Thanks be to God.  AMEN.

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

These gifts, Lord, represent our lives, our possessions, all that we are and have.  We offer them now to you as symbols of ourselves, so that you may take us and bless us and, through the power of your Spirit, shape us into the true body of your Son.  Amen

Closing Hymn –  Be Thou My Vision             #562  Blue (3 verses)

Benediction

Friends, as the disciples walked with Christ so long ago, may you go from this place and walk with Christ as well.  Feel the power of the Holy Spirit guiding your path.  Know that the love of God is poured out for you and rejoice.  Go in peace.  AMEN.        

Postlude


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