Sunday, December 21, 2025

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, December 21, 2025 - 4th Sunday of Advent

 Christmas Eve Service will be held at Bethesda United Presbyterian Church in Elizabeth at 7pm on December 24, 2025

Worship Service for December 21, 2025

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my savior.

P:      With Mary, our spirit rejoice, and we sing God’s praise.

L:      In remembrance of God’s great mercy,

P:      we pray for the day when sorrow and sighing will come to an end and everlasting peace reign in the Kingdom of God.

 

Lighting of the Advent Candles

L:      Today, we come face to face with the scandal of Advent: Mary, the unmarried mother; God Incarnate growing in Mary’s womb as a vulnerable baby; Joseph contemplating leaving Mary because of her pregnancy; God’s love at work in ways that society and propriety could not understand; God calling Mary and Joseph to faithfulness despite the fear of disgrace.

P:      With Mary and Joseph, we choose to wait, watch, and listen for the way of Love instead of responding in fear to the world’s judgment.

L:  We call this candle Love.

(Light the candle.)

L:  We light this candle of Love as a sign of our faithfulness as we seek, find, and follow Emmanuel, God with us.

 

Opening Hymn –  Of the Father’s Love Begotten          #240 Brown

 

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:      Gabriel, the angel, says to Mary, “Greetings, favored one!  The Lord is with you.”  The Lord is also with you and me.  He has shown us the way of truth and given us a gift.

P:      The gift that God offers is forgiveness and redemption.  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, O Come, Emmanuel… come to bring peace to those at war with themselves, their families, their enemies.  May those who govern do so with good will and justice, breaking down barriers, fostering understanding, and drawing our communities and our nation together in peace and love for one another.

Come, Holy Healer, to bring comfort to those in pain, those who grieve, those in need of healing and restoration.  May those who suffer be assured of Your extravagant grace, comforted by the hope that nothing shall separate them from Your love.

Come, Strong Deliverer, to bring compassion to those who are weak and weary, those who stumble through their days unable to recognize the beauty and meaning of life.  May those who are struggling financially, those suffering under the crushing weight of debt, find Your way out of no way.  Grant them options, O God.  Grant them hope.

Come, O Lord and Savior who goes by many names – Key of David, Radiant Dawn, Root of Jesse, Emmanuel, come to us again this Christmas.  Fill the world with Your grace and mercy; with Your hope, peace, joy, and love.

Come, Child of Bethlehem, to those whose names we most adore, our loved ones, our friends and family members struggling this day…We pray for…

 

Come, Gracious God, hear our heart murmurs as we pray in silence for our deep needs and desires that we cannot say aloud…

 

Finally, Lord, with one voice raised to the heavens, we pray,…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 35:1-10

Second Scripture Reading – Luke 1:26-38

Sermon –  Angels and Advent: Gabriel and Mary

Gabriel and Mary

(based on Luke 1:26-38)

 

         It is the sixth month of Elizabeth’s pregnancy, and now Gabriel who visited Zechariah in the Temple, has another mission to complete.  This time Gabriel has been directed to go about ninety miles north of Jerusalem to a small insignificant village called Nazareth, of no more than about four hundred people, about the same size as our own village of West Elizabeth.  Gabriel’s mission is to visit a young peasant girl by the name of Mary with news that will upend this young girl’s life and will change the course of history.  Imagine. for a moment, an event that would change the course of history happening in our little town of West Elizabeth.  Something small; a divine message, given to a young girl in West Elizabeth, that would one day change the course of history.  In fact, to even make that scene even more potent and perhaps parallel for us; Nathaniel, one of Jesus’ disciples, said to Philip, “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?”

         Gabriel visits Zechariah in the Temple in the midst of him doing his work, showing up in the routine of his priestly responsibilities.  I imagine Gabriel came to Mary in the same way; while she was out busy doing her day to day chores; milking the goats, drawing water from the well, mending some clothes, sweeping the floor, or collecting vegetables from the garden.

Gabriel appears to Mary and tells her, in three short verses, that she will conceive and bear a son, she will name him Jesus, he will be great and called the Son of the Most High and the Son of God, He will ascend the throne of his ancestor David and rule over Israel forever and finally, of his kingdom there will be no end.

Wow!  That’s a lot for a young girl to take in, in one brief moment.  No wonder she had a lot to ponder about.  One minute she is just minding her own business; drawing water from the well, weeding the garden, washing dishes, or maybe playing a childhood game, and the next she is told that she is about to become pregnant through God’s Spirit, with the King of Israel!”

In those days, marriage involved a two-stage process.  First was the engagement or betrothal, which worked much as it does today, except that these engagements were legally binding.  You didn’t enter into an engagement with someone casually.  Often, the match was negotiated as a contract between families, often when the bride-to-be and/or the groom-to-be were just children.  In the eyes of the community, a betroth legally bound the couple, but the marriage wasn’t completed until the woman moved from her parent’s home to that of her husband.

         Luke tells us that Mary was a virgin or young woman of marriable age.  The Greek word is parthena.  The Old Testament parallel is from Isaiah 7:14, “Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign.  Look, the young woman is with child and shall bear a son, and she shall name him Emmanuel.”  The Hebrew word for “young woman” or “virgin” is almah, which can be translated as a married or unmarried young woman. 

Besides that, Luke also tells us that she is from the ancestral line of David.  Another significant reminder how Jesus’ story connects to the history of Israel and the promises God made to the people.  Through the prophets, God promises David that from his family line, God will raise up a son whose throne will be established forever.  At this moment in history, when Gabriel comes to Mary, although Israel had seen many kings come and go from the throne, a Davidic line to the throne had not been in place for almost 600 years.  But Isaiah had promised the people of Israel that God would raise up a king from David’s lineage.  Amidst exiles and occupations, this had been the hope and prayer of the people for centuries.

         Now, Gabriel appears to a teenage girl that this prayer of the people is about to be answered, through her.  And that she would fulfill the role of a new king’s mother.

         In order for us to fully grasp the situation and kind of put it into perspective; nearly 600 years have come and gone since King Henry VIII (for example) was king of England and an angel came from heaven to a young girl here in West Elizabeth whose ancestry could be traced all the way back to King Henry VIII although there would be, of course, many branches far removed from one another to get there and then told that she would be the mother of the next King of England and that this kingdom would reign over the world forever.  That is about as absurd as it gets, right?  And yet, that’s about as close as it gets to the story here.

         So, thinking of that scenario, Gabriel startles Mary, in the midst of her everyday life, by appearing to her and declaring, “Greetings, favored one!  The Lord is with you.”  What does it mean to be “favored” by God?  Some theologians suggest that Mary was in some way extraordinary, perhaps because of her upbringing, her upright piety, or her blameless character.  Catholics believe it was her virginity that made her favored.  Their tradition holds that even Mary was of virgin birth through Ann, her mother.  And that although scripture lists brothers and sisters to Jesus that Mary remained a virgin throughout her life.  There is no scriptural basis for this, but it is how some have answered the question about what it means to be “favored” by God.  Other theologians go the opposite route suggesting that what made Mary “favored” was exactly because she is ordinary, of humble circumstances, like most of us.  Because, aren’t we all “favored” by God?  God loves each and every one of us.  God’s love extends even “to the least of these”, as often said in scripture.

         I think that view fits much better with the rest of Luke’s and Matthew’s gospels who focused on how Jesus made a point of reaching out to everyone, even to those who were considered refuse by the rest of society; to the outcasts, to the widow, orphan, and poor.  Mary is a peasant girl in an out-of-the-way village that is regarded within the region of Galilee as unimportant.  Later on in his writing, Luke makes a point of making his readers know that Jesus declared that he had come to bring “good news to the poor”.  That includes lepers whom Jesus encounters and sightless persons who are reduced to begging by the side of the road, and women who are suffering from years of hemorrhaging or being bent over in pain.  But in the wider Roman world, the early church found enormous appeal among women and slaves, two huge groups of people who occupied the lower rungs of their society.  They flocked to the message that their lives were of equal value and importance with those who were rich and powerful – that, within the body of Christ, there were no distinctions between male and female, slave and free, Jew or Greek.  Could that message be part of what Luke is implanting already at the beginning of the Gospel?  Is Mary favored precisely because God’s good news – the radically countercultural news of the gospel – is that the least and the last are to be treated as full members of the beloved community?

         I believe that God’s message to Mary reminds us that we are all bound up, as ordinary as we are, in the mysterious work of God in the world.  God chooses us, and in the choosing makes us favored.  God knows who you are – the good, the bad, and the ugly – and still calls you by name.  You are favored, you are loved, not because of who you are, but because of whose you are?

         There are times of doubt and uncertainty when all of us need to hear that message.  We need to hear God’s messengers tell us, “Don’t be afraid.  You belong to God.  You matter.”

         As the prophet Isaiah wrote; “Do not fear, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by name. you are mine.  When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and through the rivers, they shall not overwhelm you… You are precious in my sight, and honored, and I love you.” (Isaiah 43:1-2a, 4)

         As a well brought up Jewish girl, I’d like to think that Mary also makes the connection between Gabriel’s words to her and Isaiah’s words to Israel.  And, at this time, I’d like you to know that these words are true for you as well.  The One who formed you has called you by name.  You belong to God and you are favored.  You are precious.  You are honored.  You are loved.

 

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

Dear Magnificent Lord, You blessed Joseph and Mary by making them the earthly parents of Your only Son, Jesus Christ.  You bless us, as well, with that same gift – Your Son, and indeed, with the gift of life itself.  Out of all these blessings, we give You back these offerings today.  Knowing that Your promises will be fulfilled, we pledge our lives to You in anticipation of the coming of the One who brings us peace.  AMEN

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

Benediction

         Go with the love of God, who extends grace and mercy to us all.  Go with the light and joy of the Holy Spirit, who prepares us for the coming of our Lord.  Go with the peace of the Christ Child, who comes to partner with us to bring about the kin-dom that will never end.  And go with the hope of all the generations before us that sought the promises of God.  Go in service to the Lord.  AMEN.

Postlude

Sunday, December 7, 2025

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, December 7, 2025 - Second Sunday of Advent

 Joint Worship Service today at Bethesda United Presbyterian Church in Elizabeth - at 11:15am 

Worship Service for December 7, 2025

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      Zechariah sang to his newborn son:

P:      “You, child, will be called a prophet of the Most High, for you will go before the Lord to prepare the way.

L:      You will tell his people how to be saved through the forgiveness of their sins.

P:      Because of our God’s deep compassion, the dawn from heaven will break upon us,

L:      to give light to those who are sitting in darkness and in the shadow of death,

P:      to guide us on the path of peace.”

L:      Let us worship God.

P:      With one accord we His name together.

 

Lighting of the Advent Candles

L:      Advent reminds us that we are people who share a story, the story of Jesus, who enacts peace by judging in favor of the poor and deciding with equity for the meek of the earth.  We long for the day when “the wolf shall live with the lamb, the leopard shall lie down with the kid, the calf and the lion will feed together, and the little child shall lead them.”

P:  Today, we choose to live the story of peace, believing that true peace comes when we seek the flourishing of all God’s creation.

L:  We call this candle Peace.

(Light the candles.)

L:  We light this candle of peace as a sign of our commitment to bring Light to the places the world seeks to hide until that day when all creation lives together in harmony and abundance.

 

Opening Hymn –  Joyful, Joyful, We Adore You            #271 Brown

 

Prayer of Confession

Holy God, we confess we prefer the crooked paths where we think we can hide from You.  We’d rather You didn’t examine us too closely, all we do and fail to do.  Yet, You are coming not to judge, but to save us from our sins and our love of sinning.  So come, Lord, by crooked path or straight, to enter our aching hearts.  In the certainty of Your grace we make our prayer.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      Hear the good news!  Christ is our peace.  Through Him we have forgiveness and new hope.

P:      He comes to break the power of sin and set us free again.  Alleluia.  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

Holy, beloved God, we come before You seeking strength and comfort, someone to help us bear the load or to give us a load worth bearing.  In our praying, give us open ears to hear Your assurances and open hearts to feel Your peace.  We pray for the church, this family of hopeful people persistent in faithfulness and graciousness, marked by a willingness to work in kindness and not count the hours or the cost.  As the world darkens and the days grow short, may Christ’s light in us shine with a steady flame, bringing light, bringing healing, bringing reconciliation, and bringing peace.  We pray for common sense, and the touch of faithful humility that marked the life of Your son, our Savior, that we may determine to live lives of kindness and grace. 

God of faithfulness and truth, we pray for the world around us, for peoples whose names we do not know yet whose hurts fill the news, and whose afflictions touch us not nearly long enough.  We can change a channel, or turn a page, but they endure the long days and months of famine and thirst, of war and feud, of corruption and despair, of hatred and violence.  Solutions may not be easy for all the ills of this world, but in each hurting place send Your Spirit, that those who do have the power to effect the changes needed for justice, peace and honor may use their power for the well-being of all.

In this season of Advent, where many watch and wait, be with those who at this time wait by a hospital bedside, watch anxiously for results in exams and tests, wait for news of health reports, watch for a loved one to return.  May all who wait with anxiety find Your peace, and all who watch with fearfulness be calmed by Your steady hand.

For ourselves, the hopes and hurts, the brightness and gloom that populate our waking and our sleeping hours, help us separate our needs from our wants, that we may discern where priorities in our ordered lives should be.  In a world where consumption rules and many come accustomed to plenty, remind us of the privileges we take for granted, and the bounty we believe is our right, and not Your gift.  Soothe our spirits, and fill us with good things – the things which make for peace.

Lord, we pray for those who lie close to our hearts…

 

In this time of silence, we pray also for the burdens of our hearts…

 

And now, Holy One of Israel, we pray as Jesus 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 –  Angels We Have Heard on High      Hymn #278 Brown

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – Isaiah 11:1-10

Second Scripture Reading – Luke 1:5-24

Sermon –  Angels and Advent: Gabriel and Zechariah

When we ponder the Christmas story, Zechariah is probably not one of the top names that come to mind.  Actually, his name might not come to mind at all.  We are more likely to remember his wife, Elizabeth, whom Luke describes as a relative of Mary, the mother of Jesus.  But Zechariah and Elizabeth both hold an important place in the story of Jesus’s birth.  Zechariah and Elizabeth, like all of the Jews in Judea in that era, lived under the oppression of the Roman Empire and Herod, their puppet king.  Zechariah was a priest from the order of Abijah, and his wife was a descendant of Aaron, Moses’s brother.

At first reading, this might not seem significant, but it’s important to the story.  Part of the law given to Moses on Mount Sinai ordained that Aaron be a priest, along with all of his male descendants from that time forward.  Elizabeth is from Aaron’s line, but so was Zechariah.  The descendants of Aaron were divided into twenty-four divisions, each named after Aaron’s twenty-four sons, and one of those sons was Abijah.  Each division took turns serving at the altar in the Temple.  This assured that there was always a priestly presence at the Temple and that responsibilities were fairly distributed to each division of priests.

Why is this important?  Because Luke, the author of this narrative, wants to underscore for us their righteousness.  These two people aren’t just nobody’s; they have highly regarded credentials.  They lived “blamelessly” concerning matters of piety and upholding the law of Moses.  “But they had no children, because Elizabeth was barren, and both were getting on in years.”  Right now, bells should be ringing in your ears because this sounds like a familiar story, right?  And the same was true of the first century Jewish readers of this story, as well.  Who else had been old and childless?  Abraham and Sarah.  Right!  And what happened to them?  Angels came to visit and promised Abraham that he would be the father of many nations.  So, we have a little foreshadowing here about what might be in store for Zechariah and Elizabeth.

Zechariah is one of the priests whose section was called to be on duty at the Temple.  He and Elizabeth lived in the hill country near Jerusalem, but there would have been accommodations at the Temple to house the priests during their time of service there.  Zechariah is no doubt honored that it is finally his division’s turn to go and serve at the Temple.  He is shocked that out of all of the priests who have traveled to tend to the Temple, his lot was cast to be the priest that would go into the inner sanctum, the holy place, of the Temple, alone to represent the people before God, to pray and to give an incense offering.

Taking his role seriously, Zechariah approaches the altar in the holy place to make his incense offering on behalf of the praying worshipers gathered in the courtyard just outside.  Suddenly, an angel appears on the right side of the altar.  As mentioned last week, angels weren’t always the bearers of good news.  They could be frightening and scary.  They could be there to wield justice.  Not knowing if this was good news or bad, Zechariah’s first impulse is fear.  And then the angels speaks calming words, “Do not be afraid, Zechariah, for your prayer has been heard.”

The angel goes on to declare that he and Elizabeth will have a son. They are to name him John, which means, “God is gracious.”  The angel tells them how much joy this child will bring Zechariah and his wife, and also to many, for he will be great in the sight of the Lord.

The angel’s message that Zechariah’s prayers had been heard were both about his personal prayer for he and Elizabeth to have a son, but also it was about the prayers of all the people.  Zechariah and the people in the crowd, representing the nation of Israel, have prayed for generations for a Messiah to deliver them from the oppression of their enemies.  They sought deliverance from slavery under the Egyptians, and God sent Moses.  Later, they prayed for deliverance from the oppression of the Assyrians, Babylonians, and the Persians.  Now they seek God’s help in delivering them from the crushing oppression of the Romans.

Zechariah and Elizabeth’s deepest prayer will be answered, just as it was for Abraham and Sarah.  Sarah bore a son whose name was Isaac, who later became the father of Jacob who became known as Israel for he became the father of the twelve tribes of Israel through each of his sons.  Another woman in the Biblical story, Hannah, also barren, prayed for a child.  Her husband, Elkanah, adored her, but he had a second wife who had already given him a son and who taunted Hannah mercilessly for her infertility.  God graciously answered Hannah’s prayer for a child.  Her son, Samuel, was the answer not only to Hannah’s prayers, but also of a nation that felt spiritually barren and constantly provoked by its enemies, the Philistines.  As a priest, Samuel turns the hearts of Israel back to their God.  As a judge, he leads them into battle when needed and keeps them safe from their enemies.  As a prophet, he anoints the first two kings of Israel, Saul and David, as God instructs. 

The baby who is about to be born to Zechariah and Elizabeth, like Isaac for Abraham and Sarah, like Samuel for Hannah, is going to be a beacon of God’s grace, turning the hearts of those who are praying toward their God and each other, to ensure that they are ready to recognize and receive God’s greatest gift when it arrives: their Savior and King.  Just as Samuel anoints the heads of the first kings of Israel, John the Baptist will anoint the head of Jesus with water at this baptism, signifying God’s anointing of him with the Holy Spirit for his ministry on earth.

The answered prayer of Zechariah and Elizabeth is a blessing and an answered prayer for others as well.  I imagine that if the parents of Franklin Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, Martin Luther King, Jr, Rosa Parks, or Marie Curie, prayed for them when they were born, they had no idea that their children would later become answered prayers of a world engulfed in war, a country plagued by systemic racism, and countless others desperate for a treatment for cancer.

What prayers have you had answered that wound up being a blessing for others as well?

After Zechariah hears the astounding news that Elizabeth is going to bear a son, it’s not surprising that he, like Abraham and Sarah, might have doubts about how this could happen.  Sarah’s response to the news that she would bear a child in her old age was to laugh.  Was she laughing for joy, or because she found the angel’s news absurd?  I don’t know, but Zechariah doesn’t laugh.  Instead, he asks for a sign.  He ignores the joy of this good news and instead clings to the same doubts that seem to plague our own minds.  “Does God really still care about what’s happening in my life or in the lives of the people of the world?”  “Does God really still answer prayer in such magnificent ways?”  “How could God make something that seems so impossible happen?”  I need proof.

In answer to his doubts, the angel offers this, “I am Gabriel…”  Let that sink in, Zechariah.  The old priest would have known exactly who Gabriel was.  God sent Gabriel to Daniel to help him interpret one of his visions and later as an answer to Daniel’s prayer, to give him insight and understanding, and to shut the mouths of the lions who could have devoured him.

And, as if Zechariah needed a reminder, Gabriel goes on, for emphasis, “I stand in the presence of God, and I have been sent to speak to you and to bring you this good news.”  Because Zechariah disbelieves and needs proof, Gabriel will give him one: Zechariah will be struck mute until John is born.

Zechariah will be unable to speak as long as Elizabeth is pregnant.  Nine months is a long time.  Even the Sunday’s when I’ve been hoarse from a cold or from the effects of my LPR (LaryngoPharyngeal Reflux – which is similar to GERD and sometimes affects my voice), it makes me so angry and upset that my voice is not working at its best.  As a priest not being able to speak…as a pastor not being able to speak; that’s not proof, that’s a curse.  But then it dawned on me that perhaps the sign Gabriel inflicts upon Zechariah is more of a gift than a punishment.  Maybe it will be a gift for him to not be able to speak as he ponders what Gabriel has proclaimed; how God has miraculously worked to bring light and life to the middle of people’s yearning, barrenless, and darkness of the past.  Maybe it will be a gift for him to silently watch his wife’s formerly barren belly swell and move with the life God will provide within.  Maybe it will be a blessing for him to just listen in silence to what God has to say to him.  Perhaps he’ll recall when Elijah was hiding in a cave, afraid for his own life, and the “word of the Lord” comes to him and tells him to stand on the side of the mountain while God passes by.  First, there is a wind strong enough to tumble boulders, then there’s an earthquake, then a fire.  The Lord appears in none of these miraculous, amazing world changing events.  No, God instead waits for the “sound of sheer silence” to speak.  And from that silence God calls Elijah back to his purpose and out of his fear.  Amid the sound of silence, Elijah gains clarity.  He understands his mission, what God is calling him to do – and then goes and does it.  I’d like to think that Zechariah’s forced time of silence, helped prepare him for his role in understanding and carrying out his own mission.  When we are surrounded by silence, we may discover, if we listen, that we are in the presence of a great teacher.

Maybe it could be a gift for us to find some extended time in this Advent season to be speechless, to listen – to God, to friends, to the yearnings of others – and to ponder God’s goodness in our own past.  What if we blocked out some of the noisy clatter in our lives over these Advent weeks to listen to what God may be saying to us?  To ponder what God is calling us to do?

May the visit of Gabriel to Zechariah so long ago hold a lesson for us today.  Thanks be to God.  AMEN.

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

Generous God, we thank You for all our blessings, and offer these gifts back to Your service, that this church might continue to shine Your light into the world.  AMEN.

Sacrament of Holy Communion

Closing Hymn –  How Great Our Joy            Hymn #269  Brown

Benediction

         Go out with the peace of God to change the world.  And as you go may the love of God who made you, the strength of Christ who saved you, and the wisdom of the Spirit who enlivens you, go with you now and always.  AMEN.

Postlude