Sunday, November 30, 2025

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, November 30, 2025 - 1st Sunday of Advent

 

Worship Service for November 30, 2025

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      Christ is coming!

P:      We see the signs.

L:      Christ is coming!

P:      We will be ready!

L:      Christ is coming!  Raise your heads because your redemption is near!

P:      Praise be to God!  We will worship and prepare.

 

Lighting of the Advent Candles

L:      The prophet Isaiah calls to us from the past to imagine the future when God’s reign will be fully realized and recognized throughout creation.  When that time comes, God “shall judge between the nations and shall arbitrate for many peoples; they shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation; neither shall they learn war anymore.”

P:      Today, we choose to live in hope, believing that the time of God’s reign has come and is coming among us.

L:      We call this first candle – Hope.

(Light the candle.)

P:      We light this candle of hope as a sign of our promise to follow the Light as we answer God’s call to transform our hope into reality today and in the days to come.

 

Opening Hymn –  O Come, O Come, Emmanuel            #9/245

 

Prayer of Confession

Prince of Peace, the wars and rumors of wars betray our addiction to violence, our destructive and dehumanizing ways.  We deserve Your judgment and condemnation.  Yet, You remain faithful, a steadfast source of peace in the midst of our warring madness.  Holy God, turn us from evil.  Return us to Christ and His path of peace.  Forgive us our sins against You and against our neighbor.  Forgive us, merciful God, when we spend so much time looking for the scary things in life.  Focus our attention on ways in which we can be of service with whatever time we have.  Forgive us when we seek the darkness of anger and fear and turn our backs on the light of possibilities and peace.  Open our hearts once again to your redeeming love and transforming peace, for we ask these things in Jesus’ name.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      Anyone who is in Christ is a new creation.  The old life has gone; a new life has begun.  Know that you are forgiven and be at peace.

P:      You call us Your people, O God, and we are eternally grateful.

 

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

Almighty and merciful God we believe, despite all the strange coming and goings of humanity, that our history belongs to you.  We give thanks that your eternal purpose is weaving its way through the events of time and space.  Sometimes, O Lord, it’s a challenge to hold on to this belief, but our confidence is in Christ, your Son and our Savior.  We believe his birth, life, death and resurrection are our confirmation that even though we can’t understand the big picture of things, we can know history’s final outcome.  Gracious God, we watch with eager expectation for the return of Christ.  Our souls buzz with anticipation of seeing the One, face to face, who authored and sustains the universe, the One in whom and through whom all things hold together, the One who will one day sit in judgment.  We believe that on that last and great day all of history’s scoffers will drop to their knees in recognition of your Son.

         In this season when the darkness is banished and the light has come, we look to You for comfort and strength.  We hand over to You the concerns of our hearts and pray for….

 

         Not only these do we pray for, but we also pray for the burdens that are too difficult to share…hear us, Lord, in this time of silence.

 

         With hearts of endless joy we pray to You this morning, the prayer that your Son taught us to pray together 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 –  Lift Up Your Heads, Ye Might Gates         Hymn #8 Blue

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – Isaiah 6:1-8

Second Scripture Reading – Matthew 24:36-44

Sermon –  Angels and Advent

Angels and Advent

(based on Isaiah 6:1-8 and Matthew 24:36-44)

 

         Every year, I try to find a theme to preach about during Advent.  This year as I reread the Christmas story, I found a thread that I haven’t really explored before.  Angels.  Angels are so prominent throughout the gospel accounts of Jesus’ birth, told both by Matthew and Luke and oddly so because unlike all other mentions of angels in the Bible, they are present throughout the whole story.  Of course, angels are mentioned in both the old and new testaments, but not to the extent that they are mentioned in the gospel accounts of Christ’s birth.  They appear at least 5 times in the story about Jesus’ birth and then again as he is about to begin his ministry when he was tempted in the wilderness. 

As a group angels are mentioned in nearly every main Old Testament story we have – they are mentioned several times in Genesis; guarding the Garden of Eden and the Tree of Life after Adam and Eve were expelled, appearing to Hagar in the wilderness to strengthen her, rescuing Lot and his family from Sodom.  They interacted with the Patriarchs, stopped Abraham from killing his son Isaac, appeared to Jacob in his dreams, also to Moses within the burning bush, and led the Israelites to the Promised Land.  But angels also executed justice; killing all the firstborns in Egypt during the Passover, killing 185,000 Assyrians soldiers, bringing a plague upon Israel for David’s sin of numbering the people.  They ministered to the Prophets, giving strength to Elijah with food and water when he was in despair, and shutting the mouths of lions in the den with Daniel.  Angels are described as part of the “host of heaven” who worship God.  They are called malak in Hebrew, which means messenger, or “the angel of the Lord.”  They are called the seraphim and cherubim.   They have been called in Genesis and in Job, “Sons of God”, bene ha Elohim.   As named angels; Michael and Gabriel.  In general, all the angels are considered guardians and messengers for God.

In the New Testament, aside from the gospel account of Christ’s birth and appearing again to minister to him after his ordeal in the wilderness, they appear at the tomb to announce his resurrection and at the ascension to tell the disciples he would return one day.  The only book that lists angels more is in the book of Revelation which is filled with angelic activity, where they pour out God's wrath, lead armies in spiritual warfare, and reveal end-times prophecies to the Apostle John.   In other books of the New Testament, they are simply worshippers of God.

But how much do we really know about angels?

         Let’s go through some artists’ rendering of some of these creatures based on their descriptions in the Bible.

         First, we have the Seraphim, described in Isaiah and Daniel as fiery, six-winged beings who attend God’s throne and are involved with proclaiming God’s holiness.  However, in Ezekiel (next slide) they are described more like a being of all wings with intertwining spheres that spin.  It is unclear whether the spinning sphere is part of the creature or separate from it that simply moves with it at all times.  The Seraphim are also described as having many eyes (next slide).  Now the cherubim, described in Ezekiel 10, are different (next slide).  No, they are not the cute little baby looking things with wings, but rather (next slide) fearsome, composite creatures with four faces (something like that of a bull, an eagle, a lion, and a man) with four wings, known as the protectors of sacred space.

         Michael, the Archangel or principal angel, (next slide) mentioned in Daniel, Jude, and Revelation is nearly always depicted as a majestic angel with a flaming sword and shield who carries out justice and protects the innocent.  Then there is Gabriel who visits Zechariah and Mary, also mentioned in Daniel, often depicted holding a stem of lilies.  There are other angels mentioned by name in other Apocryphal books of the Bible that the Catholics include, but we don’t.  Such as Raphael who is listed in the book of Tobit and Enoch.

         And finally, angels appear in the likeness of humans.  In the Bible, angels frequently appear as humans.  For example, they visited Abraham and ate a meal with him, and the disciples at Jesus's ascension saw two men dressed in white.   When angels appear in human form, it is typically for a specific mission, such as delivering a message, warning, or guidance from God.  At times, their human guise is so convincing that people do not realize they have encountered an angel.  Therefore scripture advises us to show hospitality to strangers, as some have unknowingly entertained angels.

         So, seeing some images of artists’ rendering of what the descriptions might look like – particularly of Seraphim and Cherubim, no wonder the common refrain when seeing an angel was for the angel to say, “Fear Not.” 

A radio show had a Christmas special one year where an angel showed up to tell the shepherds about the birth of Christ and the conversation in heaven that followed.  The comical conversations went something like this:

Angel:  “Fear Not”

Shepherds:  *screaming*

Angel:  “I said, Fear Not.”

Shepherds:  *screaming LOUDER*

Angel:  “What part of Fear Not are you not understanding?”

 

Narrator:  “Maybe that’s why so many Christians see visions of Saints or the Virgin Mary instead.”

Jesus:  “No, no, see, being human made me realize sending angels might not be the best idea.  I don’t know if humans can handle it.  So, I’m just gonna’ send mom.  It’s either Mom or the thousand eyed flaming wheel.  Dad, do you really think humans are gonna be chill with that when they’re terrified of spiders already?”

God:  “Hey now, some of those spiders eat birds.”

Jesus:  “DAD!”

God:  “ Well to be fair, Australian wildlife was my dark creation phase.”

 

We can’t relate the Christmas story, watch a Christmas pageant, or even walk city streets or the aisles of otherwise secular department stores during the Christmas season without encountering images of angels – however, unlike they are to the angels described in the Bible.  Some of our most enduringly popular Christmas movies, such as It’s a Wonderful Life and The Bishop’s Wife, have angels in central roles.  They appear not with wings but as everyday human beings sent to earth to teach the meaning of Christmas and offer hope to distracted, misguided individuals who have lost their way – to bring hope and light into the bleakness of their lives.

         As mentioned earlier, angels are not unique to the Christmas story.  They appear throughout the Bible during significant moments in the history of God’s people.  However, their role as God’s messengers of hope, peace, salvation, direction, warning, and especially of Jesus’s identity, make their words in the birth narratives of Jesus messages we need to hear, heed, and claim today in this season of Advent.

         The word Advent actually comes not from Greek or Hebrew, but from Latin adventus, which means “coming.”  Specifically, it referred to a visitation by the emperor – an event that required people to make special preparations.  During Advent, as Christians have done for centuries, we prepare and wait expectantly for the coming of our King; for the birth of the Christ Child in the midst of our lives and hearts once again, for the return of Christ, whose arrival was announced even in Elizabeth’s womb by John the Baptist, inaugurated at Jesus’ birth, and evidenced in his life on earth; and for the consummation of His kingdom.

         The angels in the stories of Jesus’s birth are significant to our time of waiting and preparation in Advent.  They are not just beautiful decorations for our trees.  They are more than the coolest costumes for the Christmas pageant.  But it’s dangerously easy to reduce them to such roles, even in our formal church celebrations.  The about the Christmas hymns we know well.  Notice how many of them include, or even begin with, the angels:

“Hark the herald angels sing, ‘Glory to the newborn King.”

“Angels we have heard on high, sweetly singing o’er the plain.”

“It came upon a midnight clear, that glorious song of old, from angels bending near the earth to touch their harps of gold.”

These and more, we’ll sing during this Advent season, take note of the angels and what they tell us.

         The one role angels have in each of these hymns – singing – is not mentioned at all in the Gospel stories.  I don’t want to burst your bubbles here, but in the Gospel accounts, angels don’t sing.  They speak.  Of all the most familiar Christmas hymns, the only one I can recall that makes this key distinction begins like this, “The first noel the angels did say was to certain poor shepherds in fields where they lay.”  I’m sure a bunch of you want to open up your Bibles right now and head to Luke and the story of the angels visiting the shepherds and how the one angel was joined by a host of others singing, “Glory to God in the Highest and on earth peace to all.”  But I’ll tell you right now, it’s not in there and we’ll talk about that specific story later.

         But the word noel is borrowed from the French referring both to news and to a birth.  In the Middle Ages it came to mean specifically the news of the birth of Jesus.  The angels in the birth narratives of Jesus aren’t actually depicted as singing.  Yet, we refer to the words of praise that Jesus’ mother, Mary and Zechariah offered at the announcements of their sons’ births as “songs” due to their beautiful poetic nature.  The words of the angelic host have similarly captured our imaginations and those of the writers of our favorite Christmas hymns – as a song of the good news of Christ’s birth.

         Our concentration on the angels of Advent and Christmas will bring our focus back to the central role of angels as bringers of news, not members of a heavenly chorus.  They came to deliver important messages to people who were hoping for God to intervene in a mighty way, both in the fears and darkness of their personal lives and in their world.  One of those angels reminded the doubt-plagued recipient of his message, “I am Gabriel.  I stand in the presence of God” – implying that the message the angels bring are to be heeded as carefully, and met with the same awe and wonder, as messages that come straight from God.  More than that: messages from God through the angels demand a response from us, by word or action.

         As we prepare for our own Advent, we will look at the messages delivered by the angels regarding the birth of Jesus.  We will carefully read, sing, hear the stories told anew, and hopefully ponder them in our hearts, as Mary did, not just for the four weeks of the Advent season and into Christmas, but far beyond.  We will examine how these human recipients responded to the messages from God.  And I hope ask ourselves not just how we would have responded had we encountered the same angels in these gospel stories, but how we recognize and respond to the angels that I believe are still making their appearance in our own everyday lives, for they still bring “good news of great joy for all the people,” including you and me.

Thanks be to God.  AMEN.

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

Eternal God, how majestic is Your name in all the earth.  The whole earth is full of Your glory.  Please accept our humble offerings of ourselves and our resources.  Please use them to herald Your hope to all persons everywhere who are living in physical, moral, and spiritual poverty.   Bless our gifts this day, O Lord.  AMEN.

Closing Hymn –  Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus       Hymn #2/244

Benediction

         Dance, celebrate, sing, and shout for joy while we wait for Christ’s return.  He already goes before us into this world of fear and pain.  He has called us to bring the Good News of healing and hope, and of redemption. Go in peace, and feel the presence of the Risen Lord with you, now and forever.  AMEN.

Postlude

No comments: