Sunday, July 12, 2026

Today's Worship Service - Sunday, July 12, 2026

 

Worship Service for July 12, 2026

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      We have been called to walk the faithful road and to choose the way of God’s justice.

P:      We are here because we believe strongly that God is good, and that we live in that goodness.  We are here to proclaim our faith and to seek direction.

L:      Come together then, to be God’s people.  Follow Christ and listen for the good things that God has done.  Rise up in praise and thanksgiving!

P:      We will share with others the goodness that we have found in God.  May our lives be an expression of that goodness.

 

Opening Hymn –        Come, Christians, Join to Sing    #150/225

 

Prayer of Confession

You have called us by name, O Lord, and made us into Your family.  Yet we do not always live as one body in Christ.  We neglect to care for Your creation; we forget that our neighbor is also our brother, our sister; we ignore suffering children in lands far away.  Forgive us, we pray.    Loosen the chains we place on our lives – chains of burden and busyness, chains of ignorance and stress.  Free us to care for Your family, that there might one day be true peace on earth and that we all might dance, sing, and praise Your glorious name.  (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      We belong to the King of Glory who joyfully sets us free.  In Christ’s healing, we find forgiveness.

P:      Glory be to God!  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

Lord of the dance of life, You have breathed into us Your creative, joyful Spirit.  You have lifted us from the dust into the swirling joy of Your presence.  We are so grateful for all that You have done for us.  Each day reminds us in many ways of Your mercy and Your love.  Yet there are times in our lives when we have felt lost and alone with little or no peace.  We have been hurt and frightened and wondered where You were.  Remind us again of Your peaceful presence in our lives.  Place Your hands of healing on us.  Comfort us when we become afraid, lost, lonely, and fearful.   Prepare us to serve You faithfully all our days.  (PAUSE)

Gracious God, as the world continues to escalate in hatred and war, we find it difficult to justify reckless shootings here at home, as well.  There is no peace on earth, yet we yearn for it.  We yearn for that same peace in our own very souls.  Sometimes, we are at war within, too, O God.  Bring us that peace that passes all understanding when we are afraid, when we feel lost or alone, when life’s tragedies seem to overwhelm us. 

Holy Lord, hear our cries of humility and heal us.  Help us find a way forward that is absent of violence and hatred against those we do not like, against those with whom we disagree, and frankly against ourselves, You and all of Your creation.  Watch over our thoughts, that we think positively towards one another, carefully measured so that our thoughts don’t lead to hateful words.  Watch over the words that come out of our mouths, that they be respectful of people even when we disagree, so that our words do not lead to bad actions.  Watch over our actions, that they may be in service always to one another, that our swords indeed become plowshares. 

We have lifted the name of dear ones to You who are in need of Your healing love.  We especially pray for…

Lord, allow us a moment to also reflect on our own needs for Your love, joy, and peace in our dedicated service to You in these moments of silence…

The earth burst forth at Your word, O Lord, and we respond to that creative voice, praying... 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 – Christ is Made the Sure Foundation         #417/403

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – Isaiah 55:10-13

Second Scripture Reading – Matthew 13:1-9, 18-23

Sermon –  

The Seeds We Never See Grow

Matthew 13:1-9, 18-23

 

There are few images in Scripture that are as familiar as Jesus' Parable of the Sower.  Even people who have spent very little time in church have heard something about seeds falling on different kinds of soil. We usually hear this parable as a lesson about the condition of our own hearts.  Are we the hard path that refuses to receive God's Word?  Are we the rocky soil that responds with enthusiasm until life becomes difficult?  Are we so surrounded by the worries of life and the pursuit of success that God's voice is crowded out by everything else competing for our attention? Or, by God's grace, have our hearts become good soil where the gospel can take root and produce a harvest beyond anything we could imagine?

Those are important questions, and Jesus certainly intends us to ask them.  Yet the parable begins somewhere else.  Before Jesus ever describes the different kinds of soil, He invites us to notice the farmer who walks into the field with a bag of seed hanging from his shoulder.  He does not stop to inspect every square foot of ground before he begins sowing. He does not ration the seed, carefully calculating where it might produce the greatest return.  Instead, he scatters it generously and almost recklessly, allowing it to fall wherever it may.  Some of it lands on the path, some among rocks, some among thorns, and some on fertile ground.  The farmer's responsibility is not to determine the outcome.  His responsibility is simply to keep sowing.

The more I have reflected on this parable over the years, the more convinced I have become that this is also a picture of the Christian life.  We spend a great deal of time worrying about results.  We wonder whether our efforts matter, whether our conversations make a difference, whether our prayers accomplish anything, or whether the small acts of kindness we offer are quickly forgotten.  Jesus reminds us that those questions are ultimately God's to answer.  Our calling is much simpler, though no less demanding.  We are called to keep scattering the seeds of God's kingdom wherever He has placed us, trusting that He alone knows what is happening beneath the surface of another person's heart.

That truth came to mind as I recently read Allen Levi's beautiful novel Theo of Golden.  If you have not read the book, it tells the story of Theo who is a quiet, mysterious older gentleman who suddenly appears in the Southern city of Golden.  After visiting a local coffee shop, he becomes captivated by a collection of pencil portraits of the townspeople drawn by a local artist.  Theo embarks on a campaign of anonymous generosity, purchasing the portraits to gift them back to their rightful owners.  In exchange for the portraits, he asks only for their life stories.  Theo is not a celebrity, a famous preacher, or someone who draws attention to himself.  In fact, if you met him, you might wonder why anyone would even notice him.  He repairs things, listens carefully, remembers people's stories, and seems to have an endless capacity for making others feel seen.  At first glance, nothing he does appears extraordinary.  Yet by the end of the novel, we discover that nearly every life in the town has somehow been touched by his quiet faithfulness.

What struck me most was that Theo rarely sets out to change anyone.  He simply chooses, day after day, to scatter kindness with the same generosity that the sower in our text from Matthew scatters seed.  Every conversation becomes an opportunity to encourage someone.  Every stranger is treated as though they matter.  Every broken object he repairs becomes a reminder that broken people can also be restored.  He has no idea which moments will matter most, so he treats every moment as though it carries eternal significance.

Although the story centers on this 86 year old man from Portugal who shares kindness, the most memorable characters in the novel are the many people whose lives intersect with his.  Some arrive carrying grief that has hardened their hearts after years of disappointment.  Others are burdened by regrets they cannot seem to escape.  Still others have become isolated by loneliness or bitterness, convinced that no one really notices them anymore.  If we were standing outside the story, we might easily assume that these are people beyond hope, that nothing good could ever grow in lives that appear so neglected.  Theo never makes that assumption.  He refuses to judge the condition of another person's soil because he understands something we often forget: only God knows what is happening beneath the surface.

That, I think, is where this novel beautifully echoes Jesus' parable.  We are often tempted to decide in advance who is worth our time and energy.  We look at someone who has rejected faith for years, or someone whose life seems hopelessly tangled, and quietly conclude that our efforts would be wasted.  Jesus never gives us permission to make those judgments.  The farmer in the parable scatters seed everywhere because he understands that the power is not in his ability to predict the harvest but in the life contained within the seed itself.  Likewise, we never know when one word of encouragement, one unexpected act of generosity, or one patient conversation may become the very thing God uses to awaken faith in another person.

Perhaps that is why Theo's influence grows so quietly throughout the novel.  The people whose lives he touches gradually become people who begin touching the lives of others.  Kindness multiplies.  Compassion spreads.  Hope becomes contagious.  By the end of the story, it is difficult to trace where the transformation actually began because one act of grace has led to another, which has led to another still. 

Isn't that precisely how the Kingdom of God works?  Rarely through dramatic spectacles, but almost always through ordinary people who faithfully plant seeds they may never live to see grow.

As pastors, parents, teachers, grandparents, neighbors, and friends, we often become discouraged because we expect immediate results.  We want to see lives changed after one conversation or one sermon.  Yet anyone who has ever planted a garden knows that growth is one of God's quiet miracles.  The seed disappears before it ever becomes visible again.  For weeks it seems as though nothing at all is happening, when in reality roots are stretching deeper into the soil where no one can see them.  The kingdom of God often grows in exactly the same way.  Long before we witness changed behavior, restored relationships, or renewed faith, God is already at work beneath the surface.

I suspect every one of us can look back over our lives and identify people who were sowers in just this way.  Perhaps it was a Sunday school teacher who faithfully told Bible stories year after year without ever knowing how deeply they would shape your faith.  Perhaps it was a grandparent whose quiet prayers sustained an entire family, or a neighbor whose kindness taught you something about Christ before you ever understood the gospel.  They probably never imagined the harvest their lives would produce.  They simply kept sowing.

Jesus concludes the parable by saying that the seed which falls on good soil bears fruit—some thirtyfold, some sixtyfold, some a hundredfold.  That extraordinary harvest is not ultimately a reward for the farmer's skill but a testimony to God's power working through ordinary faithfulness.  The same is true for us.  We are not called to manufacture spiritual growth or to guarantee results.  We are called to scatter grace generously, to love people patiently, and to trust that God is always doing far more than we can see.

Perhaps that is the greatest lesson both Jesus and Theo have to teach us.  The most significant things we ever do may never seem significant at the time.  A conversation over coffee, a handwritten note, a visit to someone who is lonely, a word of forgiveness, an unexpected kindness offered to someone who least expects it—these are the seeds of the Kingdom.  We release them into the world without knowing where they will land, believing that the God who gives life to every seed is still capable of bringing forth a harvest beyond our imagining.

So, as we leave this sacred space today and go back into the world that we a part of, perhaps the question is not whether we can change the world by ourselves.  We cannot.  The better question is whether we are willing to become faithful sowers, scattering the seeds of Christ's love with open hands and generous hearts wherever God leads us.  For the miracle has never depended on the sower.  It has always depended on the God who gives the growth.  And because of that, no act of love offered in the name of Christ is ever wasted.

Thanks be to God.

Amen.

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

         Creator of all things, we give back to You in praise of Your glory.  We do not wish to simply praise You with our song and our words and our hands; we wish to praise You by loving our brothers and sisters in Christ.  Take and use our gifts, that they may serve Your holy kingdom.  AMEN.

Closing Hymn –  O Love That Will Let Me Go        #384/606

Benediction

         Children of God, go forth in peace – in your heart and spirit and then out into the world, sharing God’s message of love, joy, and peace.  AMEN.

Postlude

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