Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Jeremiah's Call



Jeremiah’s Call is our worship theme for the fourth Sunday after Epiphany, February 3, 2013. Our focus scripture is Jeremiah 1:4-10.

It is not easy to be a prophet. For that matter, it is not easy to follow God’s will in this world where all people are continually tempted to substitute their personal immediate advantage for God’s eternal purpose. When Jeremiah hears God’s call, he knows this instinctively and reacts in fear. Like Moses and Isaiah, he feels inadequate to do what he knows God will ask of him. Jeremiah knows that his beloved people will treat him as the hometown folks in this week's passage from Luke treat Jesus. They will try to run him out of town. They will try to silence him. And, indeed, Jeremiah is made a laughing stock. At one point he is literally put into the stocks because of the things he is compelled by God to say.

The truth is that it is hard for us to hear God’s voice in the words of a real prophet. Our motives are mixed because it is hard for us to believe that what benefits all really benefits us as individuals. Often we see our security and well-being as diverging from the well-being of the world. It feels like a sacrifice for us to act on behalf of the whole.

In a “perfect world” we would all get along. There would be no hunger because the resources of the world would be shared equally. There would be no denigration of people based on age, intelligence, education, race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, nationality, connections or the lack of them, handicapping conditions, marital status, etc. There would be no exploitation of the world of nature. No global warming, no mass destruction of species, no killing other species just for the thrill of it.

But that is not our world. Passively and actively we compete for a larger share of resources than we really need. Wants become needs. Where we inherit positions of privilege because of being born an American, or coming from a family of material wealth, or being born white, or male, or straight, we are generally happy to claim those privileges and feel that we need them. Life is scary and there is a real sense that it is hard to have too much. Yet all kinds of violence support these lifestyles. The violence of destroying other species’ habitats. The violence of strip mining and burning too much fossil fuel. The violence of exploiting third world workers to produce cheap goods. The violence of the men expecting women to “automatically” do more than their true share of the housework or work in businesses for less pay. The violence of competition at work, so that in order for me to advance, I might undercut a fellow employee. The violence of one company cutting corners to out-compete another company for a larger share of business. The violence of nations fighting wars over turf or natural resources or the right to rule.

The problem with the violence is that when we passively accept it or actively perform it, it messes with the state of our souls. And this is where the prophets come in. We are meant to live with each other in harmony and peace. There is something in each of us that knows when we are in balance and when we are out of balance. We know God loves us and forgives us. But we also know that it is not that easy to get off God’s divine hook. So Jeremiah and Jesus speak words that penetrate our hearts and souls and re-orient us to God’s will.

The question before us this week is whether we will choose to listen to them amid the temptations life presents. And even more, whether we will choose to join them in speaking God’s truth to the powers of this world.

Here is a Call to Worship based on Psalm 71:1-8. Please use or adapt anything in this post that is helpful to you.

Call to Worship     From Psalm 71:1-8

L: God, I run to you for protection! Don’t let me be put to shame.
P: Save me and guard me. Get me out of this mess!
L: You are my rock and my fortress. You always do what is right.
P: Rescue me from the clasp of the crooked and the clutch of the cruel.
L: O God, you are my single hope. I’ve trusted you from my youth.
P: From birth, you’ve cared for me. I will always sing your praise!
L: You call me to speak truth to power, yet you always make me strong.
All: That’s why I always praise you, God, speak your glory all day long.

Monday, January 21, 2013

Hearing the Word



Hearing the Word is our worship theme for the third Sunday after Epiphany, January 27, 2013. Our focus scripture is Luke 4:14-21.

Jesus is baptized. As he prays he hears God’s voice claim him as beloved son. The sky tears open and the dove of God’s Spirit soars down from heaven and alights on him. Spirit fills him, then drives him deeper into the wilderness. He prays and fasts for forty days. He wrestles with his call. Discerning God’s will from Satan’s he goes to Galilee to begin ministry. Things go well. He comes to Nazareth, his hometown. He’s guest preacher. Isaiah is given to him. He finds chapter 61 and reads:
          God’s Spirit is upon me.
          God anointed me to preach good news to the poor.
          God sent me to release captives, give sight to the blind,
liberate the oppressed, and proclaim the year when God will save the people.

Then Jesus sits. Everyone watches him. He says:
Today this Word of God is accomplished as you hear it.

What can Jesus mean? The kingdom doesn’t dawn. Quite the opposite, his townspeople soon chase him out of town. None of this comes literally true on a grand scale, even after Jesus works and provokes miracles. Yet, he says, this Word of God is accomplished. Accomplished by the people in his hometown hearing it read by him.

Perhaps Jesus is contagious with the Word of God. Perhaps the Word is like a spiritual virus, infecting those who hear it. Perhaps once it settles into our brains it reproduces so that even the inoculations of “the way things are supposed to be” that we hear from the day of our birth can’t suppress it. Perhaps once we hear it, the Word creates a vision that lives within and between us; that drives us like the Spirit drove Jesus. Perhaps once we hear it we are convicted by the realization that the reign of God is the “pearl of great price” that is worth giving everything to attain it.

Here is a call to worship based on Luke 4:18-19. Please use or adapt anything helpful to you.

Call to Worship    Luke 4:18-19

L: Sisters and brothers, let us recall Jesus’ inaugural sermon:
    "God’s Spirit fills me. For God anoints me to tell Good News to the poor.
P: God sends me to announce release to prisoners,
L: sight to the blind,
P: liberation to the oppressed,
L: and that the time has come when God will save God’s people."
All: May it be so today! Let us worship God.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Life of the Party



Life of the Party is our worship theme for the second Sunday after Epiphany, January 20, 2013. Our focus scripture is John 2:1-11.

This famous story is the first of “seven signs” of Jesus’ identity as God’s Son that appear in the Gospel of John. Some scholars believe that John had access to both a “signs document” and a “discourses document” and wove them together in his Gospel. In any case it is not incidental that the scene of the first sign would be a wedding feast, for spiritually Jesus is the bridegroom come to the party of life to woo and marry his church. Other stories make this clear. The ten bridesmaids, five of whom are prepared and five who are unprepared and thus miss out on the wedding. The great banquet thrown by the king but missed by the first and most obvious on the guest list. And the great celebration when the lost son comes home. The Gospel writers’ most powerful image for heaven is a great celebration, like a wedding feast, with singing and dancing and plenty of good food and wine. And recognizing who Jesus is and how he brings God's reign to life even within this life is key.

So in this setting of a wedding feast, Jesus ends up saving the day. The wine has run out. The party is about to end. The hosts will be embarrassed. But there are six empty stone jars used for ritual washing. Each holds twenty or thirty gallons! Servants fill these jars with water. Jesus says the word and behold, the best wine is there in abundance. Is John suggesting that the rituals of the law are transformed by grace? Yes! Is he suggesting that the life at its heart is not drudgery but dancing? Yes! Is he suggesting that the wine is a symbol for the Spirit of God’s love which Jesus offers to a world in need? Yes!

Here is a Call to Worship from Isaiah 62:1-5. Please use or adapt anything that is helpful to you.

Call to Worship   From Isaiah 62:1-5

L: Friends, let us recall the words of Isaiah in the time of Israel’s captivity:
P: I love my people, and I cannot hold my tongue!
L: I will not stop praying for you until your goodness shines like the sun
     and your salvation blazes like a flaming torch!
P: The nations will be blinded by your glory.
    God will hold you up for all to see.
L: God will give you a new name.
P: No more “Forsaken.” Now you are “God’s bliss.”
L: No more “Desolate.” Now you are “God’s soul mate.”
P: For the Lord delights in you and claims you as God’s bride.
L: God rejoices over you as a bridegroom is wildly in love with his bride.
All: Let us rejoice in God’s everlasting love. Let us worship God!

Monday, January 7, 2013

You Are Mine



You Are Mine is our worship theme for the Baptism of Christ Sunday, January 13, 2013. Our focus scriptures are Isaiah 43:1-7 and Luke 3:15-22.

Hearing God say, “Do not be afraid, you are mine,” is really the foundation of the ministry to which Christ calls all his followers. “If any want to follow me,” Jesus says, “let them deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me. For those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake will save it.” Scary stuff. We’d much rather just stay home, eat drink and be merry, and keep our noses out of trouble. But if we do, then the world will just keep rolling along toward the terrible destiny of more violence, more greed, and more suffering for the next generations.

Throughout human history God has called believers and given them strength and courage beyond what we could ever expect. God’s promises are summarized so nicely in our passage from Isaiah: “Do not be afraid for I have redeemed you. I have called you by name. You are mine. When you pass through deep rivers, you will not drown. When you walk through fire, you shall not be burned. … You are precious in my sight and I love you. … I will bring you home.” With these promises we can live as citizens of heaven even as we live as citizens of earth. With these promises we can do Christ’s ministry.

Here is the complete liturgy we will use this Sunday as well as an opening liturgy based on Psalm 29. Please use or adapt anything that is helpful to you.

We Gather to Worship on Baptism of Christ Sunday

Our Worship Theme Is: You Are Mine

Music for a Time of Reflection

Thought for Meditation

God speaks, through Isaiah, to the people: “Do not be afraid, you are mine.”
At his baptism, Jesus hears God say to him, “You are my beloved Son.”
Overwhelmed by death threats, Dr. King hears God say, “Do not be afraid, you are mine.” To each of us, in all circumstances, God says, “Do not be afraid. You are precious to me. I love you. You are mine.”

Welcome and Opportunities in the Life of the Church

Prelude 
                                       
We Praise God

**Processional Hymn  #182   “What Was Your Vow and Vision?”                             
                                                                                                             Genevan
**Call to Worship    from Isaiah 43:1-7

L: God says: “Do not be afraid, for I have redeemed you.
     I have called you by name. You are mine.
P: When you cross deep rivers, you will not drown.
     When you walk through fire, you shall not be burned.
L: For I am your God, the Holy One, your Savior.
     You are precious in my sight and I love you.
P: So do not fear, for I am with you.
    No matter where you are scattered, I will bring you home.
All: I created you for my glory. I made each one of you. You are mine.”
        Thanks be to God! Let us worship God.
                                                                                               Please be seated.

We Turn Our Hearts to God in Prayer

A Litany for the Celebration of Dr. King’s Birthday

L:  As we celebrate the birthday of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., let us recall his words:
P: Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.
L:  We must learn to live together as brothers, or perish together as fools.
P: We will have to repent not only for the hateful words and actions of bad people, but for the appalling silence of good people.
L:  If a man hasn’t discovered something he will die for, he isn’t fit to live.
P: Love is the only force that can change an enemy into a friend.
L:  Humans must meet human conflict with a method that rejects revenge, aggression and retaliation. The foundation of such a method is love.
P: I refuse to believe that humanity is so tragically bound to the starless midnight of racism and war, that the bright daybreak of peace and brotherhood can never become a reality.
L:  I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word.
P: I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.
All: As we reflect on these words let us, with Dr. King, affirm our faith in the saving love of Almighty God!

Pastoral Prayer and Lord’s Prayer         

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.
And forgive us our sins, as we forgive those who sin against us.
And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.
For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever. Amen.

We Hear and Reflect on God’s Living Word

Bible Reading                         Luke 3:15-22       Christian Scriptures, Pg. 60        

**Sermon Hymn      “Beloved Child, Beloved Community”       See Insert          
                 
Sermon                                 “You Are Mine”

We Dedicate Our Gifts and Lives to God

Call to Stewardship
                                                                   
Offertory                

Unison Prayer of Dedication

          Life-giving God, we praise you this morning for your unbreakable love. You call each of us by name. You claim us as your own. May the strength of your love that shines in the ministry of Jesus, and of Dr. King, empower us as well. May all our actions, words and gifts create Christ’s love, justice and peace. In his powerful name we pray. Amen.
         
We Renew Our Baptismal Vows

Introduction

Litany

L:  In the beginning, God’s Spirit hovered over the face of chaotic waters and birthed the universe.
P: At the Red Sea God led the people through the waters of death and birthed a new nation.
L:  In the wilderness God gave life to the people with water from the rock.
P: In the waters of Mary’s womb God’s Spirit birthed a Savior.
L:  From the waters of the Jordan God’s Spirit raised up the Messiah.
P: On the Sea of Galilee Jesus walked upon the water.
L:  To a woman at a well Jesus promised living water.
All: And in our baptisms, God’s Spirit births new creations!
Under the water of baptism our old selves are drowned.
       Up from the waters of baptism our new selves are born.
       Praise God!

Reaffirmation of Faith        UCC Statement of Faith   (inside back cover)

We Come to the Font           “You Are Mine”              Song by David Haas
                                                                                          Video by (unchosen)
Closing Prayer

We Go Forth To Do Christ’s Ministry

**Recessional Hymn #515          “Out of Deep, Unordered Water”                   
                                                                                                         Balgemann
**Benediction   

Postlude  



Opening liturgy for Baptism of Christ Sunday

Introit                                “Wade in the Water”                         Traditional   
Soloist sings chorus first; then the Chancel Choir; Cong. stands and joins 3rd time

Wade in the water. Wade in the water, children.
Wade in the water. The Lord’s gonna trouble the water.

**Call to Worship   (from Psalm 29)

L:  Angels shout, “Hallelujah!”
P: Earth replies, “Hallelujah!”
L:  Let all stand in awe before the glory of God!
P: God thunders across the waters,
God’s voice echoes over the floods.
L:  God’s voice is powerful, majestic.
P: God thunders, the cedars reel.
L:  God thunders, the mountains quake.
P: God thunders, lightning rains.
L:  God thunders, the desert shakes.
P: Let all God’s people say, “Glory!”
L: God’s throne is above the waters, God’s rule is eternal.
All: God makes us strong! God gives us peace!
       Hallelujah! Let us worship God.

**Hymn of Praise #392        “O Holy Dove of God Descending”         Lois
                                                                                                Please be seated.