Sunday, June 14, 2026

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, June 14, 2026

 

Worship Service for June 14, 2026

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      Make a joyful noise to the Lord, all the earth!

P:      We come to worship the Lord with gladness.

L:      Know that the Lord is God.

P:      It is God who made us and we belong to God.

L:      Enter God’s gates with thanksgiving, and God’s courts with praise.

P:      We give thanks and bless God’s holy name.

L:      For the Lord is good, his steadfast love endures forever.

P:      Let us worship God together.

 

Opening Hymn –  For the Beauty of the Earth  Hymn #473/182

Prayer of Confession

Holy and Truine God, You created the heavens and the earth and crowned humanity with honor, yet we have failed to honor you as our Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer.  You call us to walk in wisdom, but we often choose the path of self-interest and pride.  We have trusted our own understanding rather than seeking Your truth.  We have ignored Your voice and neglected Your will.  Though You have justified us through Christ and poured Your love into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, we confess that we do not always live as people of hope.  We grow inpatient in suffering, fearful in uncertainty, and reluctant to trust Your promises.  Forgive us, O Lord.  Renew our minds with your wisdom, strengthen our faith through Your grace, and guide us by Your Spirit into all truth.  Restore us to joyful obedience, that our lives may reflect Your glory and proclaim Your goodness to the world.  We pray in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.   (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      Hear the good news: God proves his love for us in that while we were sinners, Christ died for us.  Through is life, death, and resurrection, we are reconciled to God and welcomed into the family of faith.

P:      In Jesus Christ, we are forgiven, restored, and sent forth to serve the Lord.  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

Gracious and loving God,

We come before You this morning grateful for the gift of Your presence and the assurance of Your grace.  We thank You that through our Lord Jesus Christ we have peace with You and that nothing can separate us from Your love.  We thank You for the countless ways You sustain us each day, for Your faithfulness in every season, and for the hope we have because of Your promises. 

As we worship today, we acknowledge that many among us carry burdens and concerns.  Some come with grateful hearts and songs of praise, while others arrive weary from the struggles of life.  Yet wherever we find ourselves today, we are thankful that You welcome us into Your presence and invite us to cast all our cares upon You.

We thank You for Your promise that You are present even in the valleys, working in ways we cannot always see, producing endurance, shaping our character, and leading us toward a hope that will never disappoint us.

We pray for those who are ill in body, mind, or spirit.  Bring healing where healing is needed, comfort where there is pain, and strength where there is weakness.  Give wisdom to physicians, nurses, caregivers, and all who minister to those who suffer.  We especially pray for…

 

We pray for Your Church throughout the world.  Strengthen believers who face persecution, hardship, and opposition because of their faith.  Help Your people everywhere bear witness to the hope of the gospel through lives marked by faithfulness, compassion, and love. 

We pray for our nation and its leaders.  Grant wisdom where there is confusion, justice where there is inequity, and understanding where there is division.  Guide those entrusted with authority to seek the welfare of all people and to serve with humility and wisdom.

We pray for our world, where so many continue to experience violence, conflict, poverty, disaster, and fear.  Bring peace where there is war, comfort where there is suffering, and hope where there is despair.  Raise up peacemakers and servants of mercy, and let Your light shine in every dark place.

And now, O Lord, hear the prayers that we offer in the silence of our hearts….

Lord, in Your mercy, receive these prayers and those too deep for words. By Your Holy Spirit, sustain us through every trial, strengthen us in every challenge, and remind us daily that Your love has been poured into our hearts through Jesus Christ our Savior.  We ask all these things in the name of Jesus Christ, who taught us to 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 – How Great Thou Art                         Hymn #467/147

 

Scripture Reading(s): 

         Psalm 100

         Romans 5:1-8

Sermon –

Through the Storm to Hope

Romans 5:3-5

There are some passages of Scripture that make perfect sense when everything in life is going well, but become much more difficult to understand when we are sitting in a doctor's office waiting for test results, standing beside a graveside, watching a relationship fall apart, or wondering how we’re going to make it through another week.  Romans 5 is one of those passages.  Paul writes, "We boast in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope."  Most of us hear those words and wonder if Paul is describing real life, because suffering is not something we naturally celebrate.  We spend most of our lives trying to avoid it, praying for relief from it, or asking God to explain why it comes to us in the first place.

Yet these words come from a man who knew suffering intimately. Paul was not writing from the comfort of a quiet study or reflecting on hardships he had only observed from a distance.  He had been beaten, imprisoned, rejected, misunderstood, and persecuted.  He knew what it meant to hurt physically, emotionally, and spiritually.  And yet, looking back on his life and looking forward through the eyes of faith, he could say that suffering was not meaningless.  It was not pleasant, and it was certainly not something he sought out, but it was something that God used.  Paul had discovered that God often accomplishes some of His most important work in us during the very seasons we would never choose for ourselves.

One of the things I appreciate about this passage is that Paul does not tell us that suffering itself is good.  There are Christians who sometimes talk as though pain is a blessing in itself, but Scripture never says that. Disease is not good.  Grief is not good.  Loneliness is not good.  Death is not good.  These are all reminders that we live in a broken world that is still groaning for redemption.  The Christian faith does not require us to pretend otherwise.  When Jesus stood at the tomb of Lazarus, even knowing that He was about to raise him from the dead, He still wept.  Yes?  The pain of this world is real.  And Paul isn’t trying to tell us otherwise.

What Paul does tell us, however, is that God is able to do something remarkable with our suffering.  He is able to take experiences that seem only destructive and use them as instruments of God’s own grace.  In God's hands, suffering becomes a tool that can shape us, refine us, and prepare us for something greater than we can see in the moment.

A friend of mine has done multiple marathons, which has made absolutely no sense to me.  I’m not a marathoner, I’m not even a runner.  Some days, I’m barely a walker.  One day I asked him why he runs.  What makes you like to do marathons?  This is what he told me.

When I was in my early twenties, I decided I wanted to run a marathon.  At first, it sounded exciting.  I bought new shoes, mapped out a training plan, and imagined myself crossing the finish line.  But I quickly discovered that marathons are not won on race day.  They are won in the countless ordinary days beforehand.  A few weeks into training, I developed pain in my knee.  Every run hurt.  Some mornings I wanted to stay in bed.  Other days it rained, or I was exhausted from work, or I simply lost motivation.  More than once I thought about quitting altogether.  But I kept going.  I learned how to run through discomfort.  I learned patience when progress seemed slow.  I learned discipline when enthusiasm disappeared.  Little by little, the struggle changed me.  I wasn't just becoming a better runner; I was becoming a different person.  Months later, I stood at the starting line of the marathon.  As I looked around, I realized something.  The confidence I felt was not based on wishful thinking.  It was based on what I had already endured.  Every early morning, every sore muscle, every difficult mile had proven something.  It had shown me that I could keep going.  When I finally crossed the finish line, the greatest victory was not the medal around my neck.  It was the hope I carried within me.  I knew that future challenges could be faced because I had already seen what perseverance could produce.

That is what Paul is describing in Romans 5.  Suffering is like those painful training days.  But hope is not just optimism.  It’s the assurance that comes from seeing God's faithfulness through every difficult mile of the journey.  Paul describes this process almost like a chain reaction.  One thing leads to another.  Suffering produces endurance.  Endurance produces proven character.  Character produces hope.  And when we step back and look at the whole progression, we begin to see that Paul is describing not merely what happens to us during difficult times but what God is doing within us through those difficult times.

The first thing suffering produces is endurance.  Now endurance is not a particularly exciting word.  We admire achievement, success, and accomplishment, but endurance sounds much less impressive.  Endurance simply means continuing to move forward when stopping would be easier. It means remaining faithful when circumstances would tempt us to quit.  It means getting up one more day and trusting God one more time when we feel as though we have nothing left to give.

Most of us would never volunteer for the experiences that build endurance.  We would prefer to learn patience without waiting, courage without fear, and trust without uncertainty.  Yet life simply does not work that way.  The qualities we admire most in other people are almost always forged through difficulty.  When we meet someone whose faith seems deep and steady, whose confidence in God remains unshaken through adversity, we are usually meeting someone who has walked through valleys we know nothing about.  Their faith did not become strong overnight.  It was shaped through years of trusting God when the path ahead was unclear.

Think about the people in your own life whose faith has inspired you. Perhaps it was a parent, a grandparent, a teacher, or a friend.  Chances are their faith became compelling not because they had an easy life but because they remained faithful through a difficult one.  They learned something in suffering that could not have been learned any other way. They discovered that God's grace was sufficient not because they read it in a book but because they experienced it in their own lives.

And that endurance, Paul says, begins to produce something else.  It produces character.  It is the language of precious metals that have passed through the fire and emerged purified.  Character is not simply what we claim to believe.  Character is what remains after life has tested those beliefs.

One of the things suffering does is strip away our illusions.  It reveals what we are truly trusting.  As long as life is comfortable, it is easy to imagine that we are self-sufficient.  We begin to think that our plans, our abilities, and our resources are enough to carry us through.  Then a crisis arrives, and suddenly we discover how fragile many of those assumptions really were.  Yet even that discovery can become a gift, because it teaches us once again that our hope was never meant to rest upon ourselves in the first place.

The remarkable thing is that as God sustains us through those moments, we begin to develop a character marked by humility, patience, compassion, and trust.  We become people who know not only that God is faithful but why we believe He is faithful.  We have seen His faithfulness firsthand.  And it is precisely that proven character that leads to hope.

That may seem a little backwards to us because we often think hope comes first.  We hope that things will get better.  We hope that God will answer our prayers.  We hope that the future will somehow work out.  But Paul says that real Christian hope grows out of experience.  It grows out of seeing God's faithfulness over and over again, even when circumstances would suggest that we have every reason to despair.

You have probably experienced this yourself. You can look back over your life and remember situations that seemed overwhelming at the time. Perhaps there were financial struggles that kept you awake at night. Perhaps there were health concerns that filled you with fear.  Perhaps there were family crises that left you wondering how things would ever be made right.  In those moments, you could not see what God was doing.  You could not see the end of the story.  You could only take the next step and trust Him. 

Looking back, you can see the evidence of God’s presence all along the way.  You can see doors that God opened.  You can see strength that God provided.  You can see comfort that arrived just when it was needed.  You can see people God placed in your path. You can see how God sustained you when you were convinced you couldn’t go on.  But let me tell you, if you are in the midst of that right now, you can’t.  One day, you will be able to look back.  Not now.  Maybe not even tomorrow or next month or even a year from now, but you will be able to do that one day.

If you have seen God’s faithfulness in the past, you can find yourself able to trust Him more deeply in the present.  That is hope.

Hope is not pretending everything is fine when it is not.  Hope is not ignoring reality.  Hope is not wishful thinking or positive thinking.  Christian hope is confidence that God is who He says He is and that God will do what God has promised to do, even when we cannot yet see now.

God is actively at work in the lives of His people.  The suffering does not produce endurance by itself.  The endurance does not produce character by itself.  The character does not produce hope by itself.  Underneath all of it is the gracious hand of God shaping and molding God’s own children.

The image that comes to mind is that of a potter working with clay.  As the clay spins on the wheel, it may not understand why the potter's hands press here and reshape there.  If the clay could speak, it might object to the pressure.  It might resist the process.  Yet the potter sees what the clay cannot see.  The potter knows what he is creating.  In much the same way, God often sees what we cannot see. 

When we are in the middle of suffering, we usually want explanations.  We want answers.  We want to know why this happened and why it happened now.  Yet God gives us something better than explanations.  He gives us Himself.  He gives us His presence.  He gives us His promises.  He gives us the assurance that He has not abandoned us and that His purposes are still being accomplished even when they remain hidden from our sight.

That is why Paul can make such an astonishing statement in verse 5: "Hope does not disappoint us."  Think about how many hopes disappoint us in this life.  We hope for success and encounter failure.  We hope for health and face illness.  We hope relationships will last forever and sometimes discover that they do not.  We hope our plans will unfold exactly as we imagined, only to find ourselves on an entirely different path.  Human hopes disappoint us because they are tied to circumstances that are constantly changing.  But our hope as Christians rests upon something far more secure.  It rests upon the character of God who does not change.

Paul says, "Hope does not disappoint us, because God's love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us."  Notice where Paul ends.  He does not end with our endurance.  He doesn’t end with our character.  He doesn’t even end with our hope.  Paul ends this section of scripture with God's love.

The ultimate proof of God's love is not that He keeps us from every hardship.  The ultimate proof of God's love is that He entered our hardship.  In Jesus Christ, God stepped into our broken world.  He experienced rejection, suffering, sorrow, and death itself.  He carried it all upon the cross and rose again in victory so that nothing—not suffering, not loss, not pain, not even death—could separate us from the love of God.

That means when we suffer, we do not suffer alone.  Christ walks with us.  When we struggle, Christ sustains us.  When we cannot see the future, Christ holds the future in His hands.  And because He does, we can keep moving forward, even when the road is difficult.

The wonderful truth of Romans 5 is that God is doing more than helping us survive our suffering.  He is using it to shape us.  He is producing endurance.  He is forming proven character.  He is building hope.  And through it all, He is teaching us to trust more deeply in the love that He has already shown us in Jesus Christ.

So, if you find yourself in a season of suffering today, remember that the story is not finished.  What feels like an ending may actually be part of God's process of forming something beautiful within you.  The pain is real, but it is not pointless.  The struggle is difficult, but it is not wasted.  For the God who began a good work in you has not abandoned that work.  God is still shaping you.  God is still sustaining you.  God is still leading you forward.  And one day, when we stand in God’s presence and see clearly what we can now only glimpse through faith, we’ll discover that even the darkest valleys were held securely within God’s loving hands.

Thanks be to God. Amen.

 

Offertory – (Call for the Offering) 

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

Gracious God, All that we have comes from Your generous hand, and so we return to You a portion of what You have entrusted to us.  Receive these gifts and use them for the work of Your kingdom, that lives may be touched, needs may be met, and the good news of Jesus Christ may be proclaimed.  And as we dedicate these offerings, we dedicate ourselves anew to Your service.  Use our hands, our hearts, and our lives for Your glory.  Through Christ our Lord we pray. Amen.

Closing Hymn – Jesus, the very Thought of Thee        Hymn #310/89

Benediction

Go now in peace, trusting in the God who meets you in every circumstance. When trials come, may He give you endurance; through endurance, may He strengthen your character; and through character, may He fill you with a hope that does not disappoint.

And may the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you now and always.  Amen.

Postlude

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