Sunday, August 31, 2025

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, Aug 31, 2025

 Next Sunday, Sept 7, we will worship together at Olivet Presbyterian Church in West Elizabeth at 9:45am.  A service of Holy Communion will be incorporated into the weekly worship service and a time of fellowship will follow.

Worship Service for August 31, 2025

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      Jesus said, “Love one another, even as I have loved you.”

P:      Love is more powerful than fear; it is mightier than hatred.

L:      Let the love which God has lavished upon us be poured out to those in need.

P:      Help us, O Lord, to witness to You by the ways in which we care for others.  Let the Holy Spirit’s discipline in our lives be rewarded by Your grace.

L:      Remind us, Lord, that we are called to be Your disciples.

P:      As we worship this morning, heal our hearts and spirits and prepare us for service.  AMEN

 

Opening Hymn –        Jesus, Thy Boundless Love to Me         #366 Blue

Prayer of Confession

We confess, O Lord, that we love attention.  We are pleased when people single us out for something good that we have done, for some outstanding act or trait of kindness that we exhibit.  We revel in the light; but the seductive light too often captures us and we seek its brightness and glory and turn our backs on others in need.  We have been given many gifts, but have failed to use them to help others and to serve You.  Forgive us our vanity and greed.  Heal our wounded and aching souls.  Place us again on the pathway of peace and hope that is Your way to true life.  For we ask these things in the name of Jesus Christ.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      You have lifted us and dusted us off, O Lord.  You have claimed us as your own.                                                                             

P:        Let us celebrate Your love for us in lives of service to others, for You are with us always.  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

For some of us here today, Lord, we wish the summer would never end.  We have enjoyed opportunities to travel, to relax, to break away from schedules and hectic calendars.  For others, there is the thrill of entering the new season; looking forward to the challenges ahead.  On this Labor Day Sunday we gather to receive Your blessings once again, that we may recognize Your presence in our lives and use the gifts that You have given to us in service to others, in the work that we do both everyday and on special occasions.  Bless each day, O Lord.

As we think about the fall and the fall calendar, we are reminded that our own children will be back at school.  We pray for them, for their families and their teachers.  But what weighs heavily on our hearts today, O God, are the lives of the children lost and injured in the recent shooting incident in Minnesota.  Gracious and merciful God, we lift up to you the souls of the two children who were killed, Fletcher and Harper.  We ask that you comfort their parents and families, who now face an unimaginable emptiness.  Pour out your peace that surpasses all understanding upon every grieving heart, and cradle them in your compassion.  We also pray that you continue to be with all those who were injured, send them your healing touch, both in body and in spirit.   Although this tragedy occurred many miles away in a far away state, we are shaken and disturbed by the darkness that entered a sanctuary, a place of worship and refuge.  We confess our confusion and anger in the face of such hatred.  Help us hold onto the promise that the light shines in the darkness, and the darkness will not overcome it.  Call us to be instruments of peace, to bear witness to life in the valley of loss, and love in the face of hate.

As we have offered names and situations to You in prayer for Your compassionate healing love, we especially pray for….

And as you hear our spoken words of prayer, also hear the unspoken prayers of our hearts in this time of silence.

Lord, Enable us to be strong in our commitment to You by serving others in need.  Keep us open always to Your abiding love.  We ask this in Jesus’ Name who taught us to pray together saying….

…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 –     I’m Gonna’ Live So God Can Use Me                     #329 Blue

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – Psalm 141:1-4, Proverbs 25:15-28

Second Scripture Reading – 2 Timothy 1:1-10, 1 Corinthians 9:24-27

Sermon –  Fruit of the Spirit: Self-Control

(based on Psalm 141:1-4, Proverbs 25:15-28, 2 Timothy 1:1-10, 1 Corinthians 9:24-27)

 

Self-Control; our last Fruit of the Spirit.  It sounds so simple and straightforward.  And yet….  It can be as deceptively and seemingly small as saying no to another Oreo, more French fries, or a milkshake — or another half hour on Netflix, or Facebook, or computer games — or it can feel as significant and difficult as living out a resounding yes to sobriety and the refraining from all other kinds of addictions.  It is at the height of Christian virtue in today’s complex world, and its exercise is quite simply one of the most difficult things you can ever learn to do.

Self-control — our hyphenated English word is frank and functional. There’s no cloak of imagery or pretense.  There are no punches pulled here, no poetic twist, no endearing irony in any of it.  Self-control is simply the important, impressive, and nearly impossible practice of learning to maintain control of the beast of one’s own indulgent passions.  It means remaining master of your own domain; your body, mind, and spirit, not only in the practice of our everyday lives, but also when faced with trial or temptation.  Self-control may be the epitome of the euphemism, it’s “easier said than done.”

Walter Mischel was a Stanford professor known for his experiments in self-control.   He was often referred to as “The Marshmallow Man”.  About 60 years ago, he created a test to see how various five-year-olds would respond to being left alone with a marshmallow for 15 minutes with instructions not to eat it — and with the promises that if they didn’t, they would be given two.  The New York Times reported his findings.

Preschoolers who waited longest for the marshmallow and didn’t eat it went on to have higher SAT scores than the ones who couldn’t wait.  In later years they were thinner, earned more advanced degrees, used less drugs, and coped better with stress.  However, a follow-up study, 50 years later, done in 2015, showed that many of the “couldn’t wait” kids, now adults, were just as successful in later life.  Mischel and his colleagues came to the conclusion that although self-control might be an inherent gift exercised in one’s youth, it can also be a learned behavior.  

However, from a non-science background and having a more spiritual leaning about such things, I would say that this self-control isn’t just learned, but rather it’s a gift that some of us can’t tap into until we are older and learn to trust and rely more heavily on the Holy Spirit or God to control and direct our lives.

Self-Control is the climactic end of the list of the “Fruits of the Spirit” and I think Paul was consciously aware of its place holding in the list, knowing that this gift is one that is the most difficult to tap into.  I think that for those of us who do not have an inherent sense of self-control it doesn’t feel like a gift that comes from the Holy Spirit but rather something that relies solely on the first part of the hyphenated word – self; that our ability to exact some sort of control in our lives relies solely on self.  It is solely up to us.  We must find the strength inside of us, we must be internally capable of resisting, saying “no”, refraining, and in control.  We must find the power within us to control ourselves.

Let’s go back for a moment to Mischel’s Marshmallow experiment.  The children who succeeded in refraining from eating the marshmallow used a technique known as distraction or distancing.  Watching the five year olds, Professor Mischel and his colleagues noted that the children turned their backs on the cookie, pushed it away from themselves, pretended that it was something nonedible like a piece of wood, or they invented a song to sing.

Those who couldn’t resist the marshmallow, stared at it and wondered what it would taste like, they counted the minutes, and fidgeted.  One of Professor Mischel’s conclusions is that if you change how you think about something, its impact on what you feel and do changes.

In various translations the word self-control is often translated as self-discipline.  So, I did some internet searching for the differences between these two words.  Are they interchangeable or not?

Here’s what I found: Self-control is the immediate ability to say “no” to short-term temptations and stop unwanted behaviors, while self-discipline is the long-term commitment to a plan or goal, involving routines and habits that make positive actions automatic, ultimately requiring less active willpower.

Self-control acts as a short-term “stop”, whereas self-discipline is the proactive “go” towards a sustained objective, with self-discipline building the foundation for consistent good behavior over time.

Examples would be for self-control resisting that second doughnut on your plate or stopping yourself from hitting the snooze button on your morning alarm.  For self-discipline it would be consistently following a workout plan, waking up early as part of a routine, or working towards a long-term goal.

In other words, perhaps, self-control stops you from doing something wrong; while self-discipline makes you do something you know is right.

This may be a good place to start, but the Bible has more to teach than raw renunciation.  Turn your eyes and attention, yes, but not to a mere diversion, but rather to the source of true change and real power that is outside yourself, where you can lawfully indulge.  The key to self-control and self-discipline isn’t inward, but upward.

Today’s scripture readings from Proverbs and from 1 Corinthians give us to very specific examples of self-control or self-discipline.  In our Proverbs passage, King Solomon writes that a person without self-control is like a city that has no walls and is easily broken into.  Rather than using the translation of self-control, the Hebrew translation is closer to; “a person who has no control over their spirit is like a city without walls and easily broken into.”

The meaning King Solomon was trying to convey was that the person without control of their spirit is defeated and defenseless when it comes to temptation.  If you use the imagery of the city in its opposite form, a person with self-control or with control over their spirit would be like a city with strong defenses, with high walls surrounding the city so that any enemy would not be able to get in.

In another sermon about this Proverb, Pastor Bryce Morgan, put it this way, if you are not in control of your spirit, then something else is.  I think that is a significant comment to think about.  If you are not in control of yourself, then something else is.  What is it, then, that is in control of you?

In our 1 Corinthians passage Paul takes it a step further.  If you were sitting in the congregation when this letter was being read, you would have been immediately reminded of the Isthmian Games, similar to the Olympics, that were held in that region every two years.  Members of the Corinthian Church had somehow gotten the idea that Christianity or rather baptism into Christianity was something that happened to you.  That their salvation had nothing to do with their own efforts.  Yes that is somewhat true, but, Paul writes, you have to participate.  You have to be IN the race.  You can’t just enter the race and not run.  You can’t just sign-up and not show up.  You’ve got to train and work hard.

Self-control and self-discipline is not a gift we receive passively, but we receive it actively.  We are not the source, but we are intimately involved.  We open the gift of the Spirit and we live it, we train for it, we work hard at it.  True self-control is not about bringing our selves under our own control, but rather under the power of Christ.

True self-control is a gift from above, produced in and through us by the Holy Spirit.  Until we own that it is received from outside ourselves, rather than whipped up from within, the effort we give to control our own selves will ring hollow and eventually will fail.  Because we aren’t strong enough.  We need to rely on God.

You may be able to trick yourself into some semblance of self-control. You may be able to drum up the willpower to just say no.  But you alone aren’t enough.  As Christians, we admit the inadequacy, and emptiness of trying to do it on our own.  Instead we pray for the Spirit’s help, secure accountability in Christ, and craft specific strategies to resist in saying “no” for self-control and learning how to say “yes” for self-discipline.

Thanks be to God.  AMEN.

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

         Lord, today we lay before you gifts that you have given to us, and we ask that in the giving, we might be transformed into generous and disciplined servants; we ask that in the receiving all will be blessed and multiplied.  We ask this in the name that is above every name, Your son Jesus the Christ.  AMEN

Closing Hymn –      Lord, I want to Be a Christian          #372 Blue

Benediction

         Friends, may the Holy Spirit strengthen the walls of your city and prepare you for the race ahead by giving you the gift of self-control and self-discipline to say no to temptations and yes to new healthy habits.  Go in peace to serve the Lord.

         AMEN

Postlude

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