Thursday, December 28, 2023

Prayer of Confession & Words of Assuraunce, for failure to follow God's call

God of our Dreams,
We confess that we have not opened our eyes -
To see the needs around us: the hands outstretched, the aching hearts, the hungry stomachs.
God of Today and Tomorrow,
We confess that we have not opened our ears -
To what you are asking of us, what you are saying to us, how you are leading us.
God of Sowed Seeds,
We confess that we have not opened our hearts -
To go beyond the status quo, to get out of our comfort zones, to be bold and step out in faith.
God who guides us,
Forgive us for our complacency, for our shortgivings, for all that holds us back.
Help us to see the need, hear your voice, and follow where you lead.
God who always hears us,
Listen now to our silent prayers of confession.

(Silence)

Hear the Good News!
God works through us, with us, and despite us!
God is at work in our lives, our church, and our world
And God always invites us into that work.
God forgives and knows the good fruit we will bear.
Amen.

Call to Worship Inspired by "Trust and Obey"

Leader: Today, we dare to ask:
People: That You fill us with dreams.
L: Today, we dare to dream:
P: That You have a plan for us.
L: Today, we dare to trust:
P: And do what You ask of us.
L: Today, we dare to obey:
P: And go where You send us.
L: Holy God, in our daring, our dreaming, our trust
P: May we find the joy you have for us.
All: Amen.

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Affirmation of Faith based on 1 Thessalonians 5:12-24

I believe in a God who is Good.
Who is present in every good thing in my life.
Who is present in every Good thing in God’s Church.
Who is present in every Good thing in God’s world.
And for that, I give thanks.
I believe in a God who is Good.
And even when things aren’t good in my life -
Even when the Church doesn’t get it right,
Even when the world is falling apart.
I believe that God is there.
Guiding me, comforting me, sustaining me.
Guiding us, comforting us, sustaining us.
And for that, I give thanks.
I believe in a God who is Good.
And for that, I give thanks in all circumstances.
I rejoice always.
I pray without ceasing.
For this is the will of my Good God for me.
Amen.

Call to Worship, Spirit of Thanksgiving

Leader: For bringing us together today:
People: We give thanks to God!
L: For all the hardships that God has carried us through:
P: We give thanks to God!
L: For all the triumphs we have shared:
P: We give thanks to God!
L: For all that is, and was, and will be:
P: We give thanks to God!
L: That we are alive this day:
P: We give thanks to God!
L: Let us worship our God in a spirit of thanksgiving.
All: We give thanks to God! Amen!

Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Call to Worship Inspired by "Be Still, My Soul"

Leader: As we come together in worship this morning:
People: Be still, my soul.
L: As we acknowledge the grief we’ve been living with:
P: Be still, my soul.
L: As we trust God through every change, every season of our lives:
P: Be still, my soul.
L: Our God is good. Our God is here. Our God is faithful.
P: Be still, my soul.
All: Let us worship our God. Amen.

Affirmation of Faith based on John 11:35

I believe in a God who wept.
Who knew loss and sadness for himself.
I believe in a God who cries with us.
Who knows intimately our losses and fears
And holds us in them.
I believe in a God who wipes away our tears,
Not because there is any shame in them,
But as an act of comfort,
A way to say: “I see you, I am right here.
I know how much your heart hurts.”
I believe in a God who loves us
And is faithful to us.
In every season of our hearts and lives.
It is in this God of Tears that I believe.
Amen.

"How Does A Weary World Rejoice? We Make Room" a sermon based on Luke 2:1-20

Luke 2:1-20
“How Does A Weary World Rejoice? We Make Room”
Preached Sunday, December 24, 2023 (Christmas Eve) 

There is room for you here.
There is room for all of you here.

These are powerful statements of welcome and inclusion. The Church is at our best when we get it right. They are also part of the foundation of how I view my ministry. And they are also the foundation of the Good News of Great Joy for All the People from the Christmas Story.

And this Advent we have been talking about how our weariness and joy go hand in hand. That even in a weary world, there are reasons to hope, to connect, to sing, to rejoice. We have been using the line from the Christmas carol, “O Holy Night” - the line “a thrill of hope the weary world rejoices” to ask ourselves, “How does a weary world rejoice?” Tonight I’d like to answer that with “we make room.” Let me explain - first, starting with the Christmas story.

The traditional understanding brought to us largely by children’s Christmas pageants is that Jesus was born in a stable because there was no room in the inn but the innkeeper said, let me make some room for you - out back with the animals. Modern Biblical scholarship has talked about how Joseph, traveling to Bethlhem, where he was from, likely had family in town. And he and Mary would have been invited into what was essentially the traditional living room of a peasant family home - where animals too would have been welcomed in the night. Perhaps you noted that the Scripture I read this morning, a translation that came out in the last couple years, said “because there was no place in the guest room” rather than no place in the inn.

Whatever the case may be - in a stable or in a living room with animals… room was made. In those days when the emperor decreed that everyone had to go to their hometowns to be registered - which, to be clear, was a political act of oppression. If everyone was registered then they could tax them more, taxes that kept the poor in poverty and the emperor in riches. Taxes that suppressed revolution because everyone was focused on surviving, on just getting by. In a world that had seen massacres and violence at the hand and in the name of the emperor. In a world that would continue to be witness and victim to extreme violence - I am thinking of the slaughter of the innocents that was ordered when Herod heard of Jesus’s birth where all baby boys under two were ordered to be killed. In a world that was full and busy and hurried and overcrowded and beaten down and oppressed and weary - in that world, God made room.

God made room in this world, in the story of our salvation, in the middle of the narrative, God made room to come to us. To be with us. To be Emmanuel, God-With-Us. Jesus, God incarnate in a babe.

God came to us in Jesus, God came to us a human. Fully divine, yes, and fully human. In this amazing and salvific act, God is signaling to humanity, telling us that all of our messy and weary humanity, all of our sorrow and heartbreak, all of our needs and dreams, all of our joy and love - all that we are are that makes us human - that there is room for all of that, all of us, with the Divine. God in Jesus says to us, “there is room for you here - there is room for all of you with me.” God in Jesus is saying, “Just as I came to you, just as you were, come to me just as you are - I will make room for you here. There is always room for all of you in my divine embrace.”



And then - in the Christmas story, God continues to make more room. God invites more guests.

God invites the Shepherds to come and see! And perhaps even come and see with their sheep too. The Shepherds being invited represents how God makes room for the least expected and the lowly. They also represent the kind of king this baby would become - like a shepherd, leading with care and love. And the sheep - perhaps also representing how God came to save and redeem ALL of creation.

And then, a little later in the Christmas narrative, God invites the magi or the wisemen. These are people of a different religion, a different ethnicity, from a different region and yet God sent a star in the sky to invite them. Because God invites in and makes room for even the outsiders, especially the outsiders. There is room for all in the arms of God.

When we think of the Christmas story, it is often shaped by the phrase, “there was no room in the inn… or guest bed.” What if instead, instead of thinking of the lack of room, instead of starting with a narrative of scarcity, we re-shaped our associations with this story. What if we turned “there was no room” into “in the midst of a crowded, oppressed, and weary world - God made room.”

God made room to become fully human. To be with us and to dwell with us. To know intimately what it means to be human.
God made room for miracles. For Good News of Great Joy in a weary world.
God made room to include all: the last, the least, and the forgotten. The outsiders and the unexpected. The animals and all creation.
God made room on that first Christmas - room in God’s story of Divine salvation and love.

This Christmas, let us make room too.

Room to accept ourselves as the complex human beings we are - who carry sorrow and joy, weariness and hope alongside each other.
Room to accept the last, the least, and the forgotten.
Room to draw our circles wider, pull up chairs, and include the outsiders on the inside.
Room to accept God’s embrace of us - all of us - and room to extend that embrace to others.

This Christmas, let us make room. In our hearts, our homes, our lives.
For weariness and joy.
For each other.
For all.
For God’s good news of great joy for all.
Make room for all the ways that God is acting in our weary world - from that first Christmas when God made room in our world for Jesus, when God made room to be with us, until now - where God is still making room.

There is room for you here.
There is room for all of you here.
There is room for all in God’s divine embrace.
Let us rejoice.

Merry Christmas. Amen.

Tuesday, December 19, 2023

"How Does A Weary World Rejoice? We Sing Stories of Hope" a sermon on Luke 1:46-55

Luke 1:46-55
“How Does A Weary World Rejoice?: We Sing Stories of Hope”
Preached Sunday, December 17, 2023

“A thrill of hope, a weary world rejoices.” That infamous line from the Christmas carol, “O Holy Night” and the focus of our Advent and Christmas worship. We are asking - how does a weary world rejoice?

We are coming to the end of Advent. The end of the four weeks of preparation for Christmas and when we gather next Sunday it will be Christmas Eve, the start of the celebration of Jesus’s birth.

And in the Church we have Advent hymns and we have Christmas hymns. I have always been a fan of Advent hymns. These are all the songs, generally in minor key, that we sing in this season: O Come, O Come Emmanuel, Come Thou Long Expected Jesus, Savior of the Nations Come, and so forth. I was baptized during Advent and I’ve always said I have an Advent soul. It is the season of the Christian year that resonates with me most - because in Advent we not only look backwards, remembering the birth of Christ, when God took on flesh in Jesus, became Emmanuel, God-With-Us, the start of God’s salvific acts for us…but we also look to the present and acknowledge that we are in a weary world, a world that needs saving, that longs for God to come again, return to us and redeem all of creation. And we look toward the future, awaiting that second coming.

And so I used to be fairly strict: In Advent, we only sing Advent hymns. At Christmas, the 12 days of Christmas, that is when we can belt out the Christmas carols.

But you know…I have been slowly changing my mind on that.

Now, don’t get me wrong. I am not yet the kind of person who starts listening to Christmas music on November 1st. And I think I may always prefer Advent hymns over Christmas carols because they resonate with me more personally…and yet, Advent hymns resonate so deeply with me because they bring me hope. I sing them and I remember, I hope, I know…that one day, Christ will return again and redeem all creation.

And that is what singing Christmas carols does too. We sing of Jesus’s birth and we remember, we hope, we know…that this a world with reasons to rejoice. This is a world with love and goodness. This is a world with kindness and cheer. This is a world where even when we are weary, even when there are so many things that try to steal our hope, our peace, our joy, our love for one another…Christmas music gives hope, peace, joy, and love back to us in spades. It is a lifeline, a joyous lifeline in a weary world.

Our Scripture is full of people who burst into songs and sing songs of hope. Today’s Gospel lesson, known as the Magnificat, Mary’s Song: “My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior” - it is a song of praise and hope. It’s a song where Mary praises God, rejoices that God has looked upon her, yes, even her - and then celebrates and hopes for all that God will accomplish through the child now in her womb - righting wrongs, freeing the oppressed, ushering in God’s Kingdom.

Mary, Zechariah, Moses, Miriam, Hannah, King David…there are so many ancestors of our faith who sang songs of hope. Songs of praises of God.

Today, let us lift our voices with them. Let us sing songs of praise to God, songs of hope for our weary world. And we will do that today, we will share in a mini-lessons and carols, giving us a chance for the songs of our choir and the songs we will sing to bolster us - to give us reasons to hope and rejoice in a weary world.

And, beyond today, anytime your heart is weary - may you find a song to sing. A song that fills you with hope. And beyond that, may you find others to sing it with.

I’d like to end my sermon this morning by sharing a poem with you by Meta Herrick Carlson, entitled “For Beloved Christmas Hymns”:

“Advent was brief and flew away
with one, maybe two renditions.

Christmas is for all the verses,
a chorus of people gathered in
by forces of faith unseen, preaching
Joy to the World and Silent Night.

Christmas is for anthems that wait
all year long in the dark depths
of our lungs for a time such as this,
to revive the world with hope that sings.”

Let us sing. Amen.

Monday, December 11, 2023

Wesleyan Covenant Renewal Service with Hymn Sing - Edited for 2023

Wesleyan Covenant Renewal Service with Hymn Sing - Edited for 2023

Call to Worship (Adapted from David Tripp, England, 20th Century, United Methodist Book of Worship)

L: As we begin this time of renewing our covenant before God, let us prepare ourselves for worship with prayer.
P: O God, we are yours! We are your people. We are your children.
L: We come together to recognize you as Lord of our lives and to thank you for your Grace.
P: And we come today to recommit ourselves to our relationship with you.
L: Search us and know us.
P: Remove anything that holds us back from you.
L: May your Spirit be with us now, speak your Word to our very souls.
P: And have mercy on us, today and always.
All: We pray in the name of our Lord, Jesus Christ,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever. Amen.


Intro to a Wesleyan Covenant Renewal Service

Today we will share in a Covenant Renewal Service together. While this type of service predates John Wesley and Methodism as we know it, it was implemented by the Wesleys as an integral part of Methodist Societies. It is a service that has traditionally been held on New Year’s Eve or Day. When held on New Year’s Eve, it will often go by the name Watch Night Service. While a Covenant Renewal Service is apt at any time in the life of a congregation, the end of one year and the start of the next is a natural time to hold it. At the beginning of a new year, we often take time to take stock of our lives, evaluate what is important, and re-commit ourselves to those things. As Christians we recognize that there is nothing more important than our relationship, or covenant, with God.

Covenant is not a term we use very often in our modern society. In the simplest terms, it means agreement. The covenant through most of the Hebrew Bible is this, from Exodus 6:7: “I will take you as my people, and I will be your God.” This covenant still holds true. With the coming of Jesus, Christians add in the covenant made by his cross and resurrection, From Romans 8: “For you did not receive a spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you received a spirit of adoption. When we cry, ‘Abba! Father!’ it is that very Spirit bearing witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then heirs: heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ, if we in fact suffer with him so that we may also be glorified with him.” In both of these senses, our covenant with God can be used as a synonym for our relationship with God.

A Covenant Renewal Service seeks to remind us of the importance of covenant with God, of mutual relationship, and we therefore promise ourselves anew to be God’s people, adopted into the family of God through Christ.

In this service you will notice a mix of modern and traditional language. Much of the wording used today came from Wesley himself. The phrasing may seem odd to our ears but that’s okay - it reminds us that we are participating in an act that followers of God have done throughout the ages - recommitting our whole selves to God.

We will begin our service today by singing “Come, Let Us Use The Grace Divine,” a hymn written by Charles Wesley and traditionally used for Covenant Renewal Services. The hymn is based on Jeremiah 50:5:

“They shall ask the way to Zion, with faces turned toward it, and they shall come and join themselves to the Lord by an everlasting covenant that will never be forgotten.”

Let us sing.

Opening Hymn
Come, Let Us Use The Grace Divine, UMH 606

Children’s Song
This is Where Children Belong

Children’s Moment

Scripture Lesson

2 Chronicles 34:29-32

Gospel Lesson
John 15:1-8

Litany of Thanksgiving (From Covenant Renewal Service, UM Book of Worship, changed response)

Sung Response: “Now thank we all our God, with heart and hands and voices” (Now Thank We All Our God, UMH 102)

Let us give thanks for all of God's mercies.

O God, our Covenant Friend,
you have been gracious to us through all the years of our lives.
We thank you for your loving care,
which has filled our days and brought us to this time and place. R

You have given us life and reason,
and set us in a world filled with your glory.
You have comforted us with family and friends,
and ministered to us through the hands of our sisters and brothers. R

You have filled our hearts with a hunger after you,
and have given us your peace.
You have redeemed us, and called us to a high calling in Christ Jesus.
You have given us a place in the fellowship of your Spirit
and the witness of your Church. R

You have been our light in darkness
and a rock of strength in adversity and temptation.
You have been the very Spirit of joy in our joys
and the all–sufficient reward in all our labors. R

You remembered us when we forgot you.
You followed us even when we tried to flee from you.
You met us with forgiveness when we returned to you.
For all your patience and overflowing grace. Amen.

Hymn of Thanksgiving
Now Thank We All Our God, vs. 3, UMH 102

Proclamation of Covenant Renewal (Adapted from Wesley’s Covenant Renewal Service, United Methodist Book of Worship)

Siblings in Christ,
The Christian life is one that strives to love God and to love neighbor as self.
We recognize that, first and foremost, we belong to God.

We first entered into the Christian life through baptism,
Where we were adopted as children of God and heirs with Christ.

This is the covenant we made with God and
Christ sealed it in his death and resurrection, that it might last forever:

On the one side, God promises to give us new life in Christ,
the Source and Perfecter of our faith.
On the other side, we are pledged
to live no more for ourselves but only for Jesus Christ,
who loved us and gave himself for us.

From time to time we renew our covenant with God,
especially when we celebrate the sacraments.

Today, however, we meet, as the generations before us have met,
to renew the covenant that binds us to God.

Let us make this covenant of God our own.

Baptismal Covenant Remembrance Hymn
Baptized in Water, FWS 2248

Invitation to Renew Your Covenant with God (All from Wesley’s Covenant Renewal Service, United Methodist Book of Worship)

Commit yourselves to Christ as his servants.
Give yourselves to him, that you may belong to him.
Christ has many services to be done.
Some are more easy and honorable,
others are more difficult and disgraceful.
Some are suitable to our inclinations and interests,
others are contrary to both.
In some we may please Christ and please ourselves.
But then there are other works where we cannot please Christ
except by denying ourselves.
It is necessary, therefore,
that we consider what it means to be a servant of Christ.

Let us, therefore, go to Christ, and pray:

Let me be your servant, under your command.
I will no longer be my own.
I will give up myself to your will in all things.


Be satisfied that Christ shall give you your place and work.

Lord, make me what you will.
I put myself fully into your hands:
put me to doing, put me to suffering,
let me be employed for you, or laid aside for you,
let me be full, let me be empty,
let me have all things, let me have nothing.
I freely and with a willing heart
give it all to your pleasure and disposal.


Christ is the Savior of his servants. [edited]
He is the source of all salvation to those who obey.
Christ will have no servants except by consent;
Christ will not accept anything except full consent
to all that he requires.
Christ will be all in all, or he will be nothing.

Confirm this by a holy covenant.

To make this covenant a reality in your life, listen to these admonitions:

Admonition 1:

First, set apart some time, more than once,
to be spent alone before the Lord;
in seeking earnestly God's special assistance
and gracious acceptance of you;
in carefully thinking through all the conditions of the covenant;
in searching your hearts
whether you have already freely given your life to Christ.
Consider what your sins are.
Consider the laws of Christ, how holy, strict, and spiritual they are,
and whether you, after having carefully considered them,
are willing to choose them all.
Be sure you are clear in these matters, see that you do not lie to God.

Covenant Admonition Hymn
Take Time to Be Holy, vs. 1, UMH 395

Admonition 2:

Second, be serious and in a spirit of holy awe and reverence.

Covenant Admonition Hymn
How Great Thou Art, vs. 1, UMH 77

Admonition 3:

Third, claim God's covenant,
rely upon God's promise of giving grace and strength,
so you can keep your promise.
Trust not your own strength and power.

Covenant Admonition Hymn
Standing on the Promises, vs. 1 UMH 374

Admonition 4:

Fourth, resolve to be faithful.
You have given to the Lord your hearts,
you have opened your mouths to the Lord,
and you have dedicated yourself to God.
With God's power, never go back.

Covenant Admonition Hymn
I Surrender All, vs. 1, UMH 354

Admointion 5:

And last, be then prepared to renew your covenant with the Lord.
Fall down on your knees, lift your hands toward heaven,
open your hearts to the Lord, as we pray:

Hymn of Invitation to Covenant
Are Ye Able, vs. 1, UMH 530

Covenant Prayer (At this time, any who are willing and able may come and kneel at the altar as they pray. Others may remain seated as they wish and assume an internal posture of prayer where they are.)

O righteous God, for the sake of your Son Jesus Christ,
see us as we fall down before you.
Forgive our unfaithfulness in not having done your will,
for you have promised mercy to us
if we turn to you with our whole hearts.

L: Almighty God, we come to you with our whole hearts.
P: Have mercy on us.

Here from the bottom of our hearts we renounce all idols,
covenanting with you that no known sin shall be allowed in our lives.
Against your will, we have turned our love toward the world.
In your power
We will watch all temptations that will lead us away from you.
For our own righteousness is riddled with sin,
unable to stand before you.

L: Almighty God, we come to you with our whole hearts.
P: Have mercy on us.

Before all heaven and earth,
We here acknowledge Christ as our Lord and God.
We take you, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, for our portion,
and vow to give up ourselves, body and soul, as your servant,
to serve you in holiness and righteousness all the days of our lives.

L: Almighty God, we come to you with our whole hearts.
P: Have mercy on us.

Jesus, we do here on bended knees accept Christ
as the new and living Way,
and sincerely join ourselves in a covenant with him.
O blessed Jesus, we come to you,
hungry, sinful, miserable, blind, and naked,
unworthy even to wash the feet of your servants.
We do here, with all our power, accept you as our Lord and Head.
We renounce our own worthiness,
and vow that you are the Lord, our righteousness.
We renounce human wisdom, and take you for our only guide.
We renounce our own wills, and take your will as our law.

L: Almighty God, we come to you with our whole hearts.
P: Have mercy on us.

We do here covenant with you, O Christ,
to suffer with you,
to take our lot with you as it may fall.
Through your grace we promise
that neither life nor death shall part us from you.

L: Almighty God, we come to you with our whole hearts.
P: Have mercy on us.

God has given holy laws as the rule of your life.
We do here willingly take your holy laws as our rule of life.
All your laws are holy, just, and good.
We therefore take them as the rule for our words, thoughts, and actions,
promising that we will strive
to order our whole lives according to your direction,
and not allow ourselves to neglect anything we know to be our duty.

L: Almighty God, we come to you with our whole hearts.
P: Have mercy on us.

O God, who knows our hearts,
you know that we make this covenant with you today
without guile or reservation.
If any falsehood should be in it, guide us and help us to set it a right.

L: Almighty God, we come to you with our whole hearts.
P: Have mercy on us.

And now, glory be to you, O God the Father,
whom we from this day forward shall look upon as our God and Father.
Glory be to you, O God the Son,
who have loved us and washed us from my sins,
And now is my Savior and Redeemer.
Glory be to you, O God the Holy Spirit,
who by your almighty power have turned our hearts from sin to God.

L: Almighty God, we come to you with our whole hearts.
P: Have mercy on us.

O mighty God, the Lord Omnipotent, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,
you have now become our Covenant Friend.
And we, through your infinite grace, have become your covenant servants.
So be it.
And let the covenant we have made on earth be ratified in heaven.

Amen.

The Lord’s Prayer

Offertory Prayer

Offertory & Choir Anthem

Doxology

Closing Hymn

Blessed Assurance, UMH 369

Benediction

May we leave from this time of worship today with the assurance that we are God’s children, that God’s love never fails, and God’s covenant is forever and ever. Now go in peace, in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

“How Does A Weary World Rejoice?: We Allow Ourselves to Be Amazed” a sermon on Luke 1:57-66 & Pslam 126

Luke 1:57-66
Psalm 126
“How Does A Weary World Rejoice?: We Allow Ourselves to Be Amazed” preached on Sunday, December 10, 2023

“A thrill of hope, the weary world rejoices.”

This is a line from the Christmas carol, “O Holy Night” and the basis of our Advent & Christmas worship. We are asking, “How does a weary world rejoice?” So far we have talked about acknowledging our weariness and finding joy in connecting with others. Today we will answer “How does a weary world rejoice?” with “We allow ourselves to be amazed.”

Today, I want to invite us to open ourselves up to the connections between awe, amazement, pondering, wondering, dreaming, and rejoicing. All these concepts are connected, inter-related, and essential to how God calls us to live in this world.

So let us start with awe.

Dacher Keltner, a psychologist at the University of California, Berkeley, defines awe as “the feeling of being in the presence of something vast that transcends your understanding of the world.” In 1972, anger, surprise, disgust, enjoyment, fear and sadness were identified as the 6 primary emotions and all other emotions are some form of those. Think of the Pixar movie “Inside Out” that is based on this concept. But recent research on human emotions and awe posits that awe is a primary seventh emotion. Awe has a different effect on our bodies, our nerves, our inner being than any of these other emotions. It slows out hearts, helps with digestion, deepens our breathing - and psychologically, awe quiets the negative and criticizing voices in our heads.

In our weary world, we need more awe. Awe is not only good for our health - mental and physical - awe has the ability to override our weariness, help us see the world anew, help us see the world through the loving eyes of a God that delights in God’s own creation.

And the good news is, we can practice awe. We practice awe by simply paying attention. By noticing things, by being curious, by wondering at the world around us. In her book “World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishments,” author Aimee (and I am probably going to butcher this last name) Nezhukumatathil spends chapter after chapter wondering about plants and animals, strange and incomprehensible, and all endangered. She says wonder takes practice and patience and putting aside distractions. But when we open ourselves up to wonder - we open ourselves up to the whole world. She talks about how wondering at a single firefly - which, if you didn’t know, are an endangered species with 18 varieties on the brink of extinction and significantly less of them for every generation of children - she talks about how wondering at a single firefly, opens herself up tp all the memories in her life that are connected to fireflies, to summer nights, to joy, and all the way our world is interconnected, and all the ways we wonder about the future and want to protect our world for future generations. I quote, “Did you see that? A single firefly... Such a tiny light, for such a considerable task. Its luminescence could very well be the spark that reminds us to make a most necessary turn- a shift and a swing and a switch- toward cherishing this magnificent and wondrous planet…”

When was the last time you were truly in awe? In wonder of something? And being in awe, being in wonder, is vastly different from being shocked, scandalized, or horrified - things that happen to us every day in our weary world as we hear the news and the going-ons that break our hearts. No, not the last time you were shocked but the last time you were in awe - where you noticed something that opened you up to the vastness and wonderfulness of our world, the vastness and wonderfulness of our God?

And what was it that amazed you? Was it the light of a single firefly in your backyward; was it the Grand Canyon or the last time you traveled to a National Park and saw beauty almost too big to comprehend; was it a particularly stunning display of fall foliage; or the quiet and understated beauty of the first flakes of falling snow? Was it when you saw a stranger moved to kindness? Jumping up to hold the door open; taking the hand of an elderly woman, helping her safely to her car; or holding the door ope with a smile and a nod? Was it staring at your child or grandchild, a niece or nephew - hearing their first laugh; falling into a giggle fit together; marveling at how fast they have grown? Or was it marveling at the unabashed wonderment of a child. Children are great models of practicing awe and wonder - the weariness of the world has not yet hindered them from seeing beauty and magic everywhere. How they notice rainbows reflected through glass, the first delicious bite of a cookie, how a snuggle and a kiss can solve almost any problem. This is all awe. This is all wonder. When were you last in awe - and what was it that amazed you?

We are called as children of God to practice awe. To pay attention. To pray to view people and the world through the eyes of God. I have this early memory from middle school when we could give presentations on any topic that excited us. And as I watched my classmates speak on topics they were passionate about, I remember being in awe. I remember thinking how beautiful each of them was. I remember thinking, “I am seeing my classmates, I am seeing them as God sees them - as beautiful, beloved children of God.” It was an experience of awe. I wonder…what would our world be like if we could see each other like this every day and in every interaction?

With a more established understanding of awe and wonder - let us now turn to our Scripture lessons from this morning, searching for awe and wonder in the text.

In our Gospel reading we are finally at the birth and circumcision of John who will come to be known as John the Baptist. Two weeks ago we heard about how Zechariah did not trust that the angel was answering his prayers when he was told that he would have a child and how he was subsequently silenced. Last week we heard how Elizabeth isolated herself for 5 months, maybe fearing to trust that Good thing that God was doing - and how her joy was made complete when her and Mary connected, holding joy for one another. And this week, we are at the birth and circumcision of John. And while the last two weeks we talked about Zechariah and Elizabeth, this week I would like to talk about the crowd, the neighbors, present with them. They were rejoicing at this wonderful child, this amazing thing that God had done - and yet there was a little issue over the naming and when Zechariah confirmed via writing on a tablet - not an iPad - but a tablet, when he confirmed the name they had been given by God - John, his mouth was opened, his tongue was freed, and praises for God poured forth. And all who saw this miracle, who heard Zechariah’s praises of God, they were amazed. They were in awe. And our reading this morning said “all who heard them pondered…” Another translation says “wonder fell upon the whole neighborhood.” They were pondering, wondering, “What will this child become?” It is the question every parent asks in their hearts when holding a newborn child - what will this child become? It reminds us of what Mary will think at the birth of Jesus when Scripture says she pondered all these things in her heart.

The whole community, by being in awe, by wondering and pondering, they were now paying attention to the awesome things that God had done, was doing, will do. Every birth, every newborn, every child, is a thing of awe. But this one - there was something else happening here. Something truly awe-some. How many of these neighbors allowed their wonder to continue through the years as John grew and grew into who God called him to be? How many of them allowed their wonder to draw them to the shore of the Jordan and tp be baptized by John? How many of them then followed Jesus, taking the path that John laid out for them. How many of them continued to be in wonder of how God was acting in the world through this now 8-day-old child?

We have seen awe and wonder and pondering and rejoicing in this text from our Gospel lesson. Let us now turn toward our Psalm, looking for awe, looking for wonder.

“When the Lord restored the fortunes of Zion, we were like those who dream…”

Dreaming is a form of awe, of wonder, and certainly of hope.

I recently saw the new Disney movie, Wish. While critics didn’t universally love it, my family did. In the movie, all the people in the magical kingdom of Rosas give their wishes, their hearts’ deepest desires, their dreams - when they turn 18, they give them to the sorcerer king for safe-keeping. The King will then arbitrarily choose to grant a wish once a month. And in giving their wish away, the people forget what their wish was, they forget what they dreamed of. They say they give it without regret but find that without their wishes, without their dreams - they are less than they were before. They are sad, listless, lost.

Because dreaming, wishing, is so closely related to hope, to wonder, to awe, to joy.

When we allow ourselves to hope, to dream, to imagine, to pray to God for a future that we wish for… we also start paying attention to how God is working, how God is creating a future of hope, our futures, in the here and now.

The Psalmist says that they, the Israelites just coming out of Babylonian captivity, how they were like those who dream again! And in dreaming, they are filled with laughter, with shouts and songs of joy, and they rejoice in all that God has done for them. For many years, they may not have allowed themselves to dream. The weariness of the world, of their captivity, they were reluctant to allow themselves to hope, to dream - for anything else. And in doing so - they shut themselves off to what God was doing.


The famous line of this Psalm reminds us of their hardship and weariness. “May those who sow in tears…” There is no doubt of the tears that were shed. Shed by the Israelities in the Psalm who had been in exile for so long. And also the tears that are shed here and now, the tears we sow in our weary world…

Yet even in a weary world - we can sow tears, and reap in joy.

The Psalm references “the watercourses of the Negeb.” For most of us, this is a line we quickly brush over. For the liturgist who read our Psalm, maybe it was a stumbling block of pronunciation - but the watercourses in the Negeb were a seasonal river. Dry and then when the rainy season came, filled, overflowing, flooding, and then the lush vegetation growing in its wake, along its shoreline.

When we think of deserts, we often think of life-less, dry, desolate places. But for anyone who has seen enough nature documentaries, or encountered the beauty of a desert after a rain - we know this is not the case. Even in the hottest place on earth, like Death Valley, a small amount of rain can awaken seeds that have been there for decades, creating beautiful desert blooms. And then there is the saguaro cactus and its beautiful flowers, found in the desert of Arizona. The largest cactus in the world that can grow up to 40 feet tall, live 100 to 200 years, and soak up and store 200 gallons of water at a time. Its flowers bloom at night for four weeks out of the year. Take for example the Atacama desert in Chile which is the driest desert in the world. On average, it only has one significant rainfall once a century. So how in the world can life survive and thrive here? The desert’s coast runs parallel to a cold sea that creates a dense, thick fog, that rolls over the desert. Within minutes the landscape and vegetation are drenched in mist, giving life to all, flowers, cacti, birds, and animals of all kinds…

Even in places that we tend to think of as lifeless - there are seeds sown, ready for the smallest amount of rain, to burst forth in blooms of color and life, blooms and life that we can wonder at, be amazed at, be in awe of how our God works.

Even in the driest, weariest places in our world - there is beauty to be found. And I am not talking about ecosystems anymore. I am talking about weary places of our souls, places of conflict and brokenness, places where tears are sown in abundance. Even there, yes, even there - we can practice awe, see goodness and beauty, be amazed, give thanks and praise God.

Even there we can see blooms of joy sprouting up, giving color to our weary world.

Without wonder, we may just see the dry, desert-like, weary places in our world. But when we practice awe, when we practice and pray to see the world through the eyes of God, we see color, flowers, blooms, fireflies, beauty, love, hope - popping up everywhere, yes, even in our weary world.

And in that wonder, in that awe, we give thanks to God - we rejoice: a thrill of hope, the weary world rejoices.

May we all be in awe and rejoice.

Amen.

Monday, December 4, 2023

"How Does a Weary World Rejoice?: We Find Joy in Connection" a sermon based on Luke 1:24-45 and Isaiah 40:1-11

Luke 1:24-45
Isaiah 40:1-11
“How Does a Weary World Rejoice?: We Find Joy in Connection” preached Sunday, December 3, 2023 
“A thrill of hope, the weary world rejoices.”

So goes the line from the Christmas carol, “O Holy Night” that our Advent and Christmas worship is based on. We are asking, HOW does a weary world rejoice? This week we answer with “We find joy in connection.”

Which brings me to the two women in today’s Gospel lesson. Mary and Elizabeth.

First, Mary. She is newly pregnant, and the Scriptures say she made haste to see Elizabeth. For when the angel Gabriel visited her and announced her divine pregnancy, the angel also shared Elizabeth's miraculous conception.

Now, every pregnant woman's experience is different. In January of 2020 I was just weeks pregnant with Agnes and I was absolutely and utterly physically miserable. I was exhausted. I was hungry every 5 minutes. And I was also throwing up what seemed like every hour. At the time I was watching online as colleague’s shared pictures and videos from a trip to the Holy Land and I was giving thanks that I was on my couch, that I wasn’t on that trip.

But Mary, newly pregnant, makes haste to see Elizabeth. The accepted location of the annunciation was in Nazareth and Elizabeth lived in the hill country, Ein Karem, which was about 80 miles from Nazareth. That’s about the distance from here to Cleveland but with no cars and no tunpike. Not an easy journey to take even if your body isn’t going through the slog of early pregnancy.

Why was she rushing to see Elizabeth with such haste?

I can think of perhaps two reasons.

First, Mary needed to talk to someone who would “get it.” Who else could she talk to in her life who would even begin to understand the circumstances around her miraculous pregnancy? I think of how many times a day I pick up my phone to text, to message, to call, or to make plans to meet someone - who gets it. Another young mom. Another young clergy women. That small overlap of young clergy who are moms. A best friend who knows me well. All those people in my life who “get it.” Whatever it is I am going through - I know they will see me, hear me, support me. Having people in our lives who “get it” is so important. Two of the most powerful words in the English language are “me too.” When we say “me too” to someone we are saying, “I see you. You are not alone.”

Who else could this person have been for Mary other than Elizabeth? The angel didn’t have to tell Mary about Elizabeth…but he did. Perhaps because God wanted Mary and Elizabeth to connect, to not be alone, to be there for each other in a way that no one else could. God knew that they would need each other and so God made the connection possible.

Call to mind the people in your life who “get it.” Who support you. Who, when you see them, your soul rejoices. Now give thanks to God for them! Thank you God for putting these people in our lives!

So that’s one reason why Mary could have gone with such haste to see Elizabeth. The second is simply this, perhaps Mary was excited to celebrate with Elizabeth. She couldn’t pick up her phone and facetime with her, she needed to go see her in person to share her joy. We know Mary and Elizabeth were cousins with an age gap between them. But we don’t really know what their relationship was like. They obviously knew each other well and cared about each other. Maybe they were cousins who were like sisters, or because of the age gap, maybe Elizabeth was like a caring aunt for Mary. Maybe, in addition to being relatives, they were friends. Perhaps Mary knew of all the hardship that Elizabeth had faced. Her heart breaking alone with Elizabeth’s, month after month, year after year, when she didn’t have a child. And now, she wanted nothing more than to rejoice with her.

So that’s Mary’s motives for making haste to go see Elizabeth. Now let’s talk about Elizabeth.

Elizabeth found out she was pregnant and then went into seclusion for 5 months. I want to stress that this is not typical. This wasn’t cultural practice. So why did Elizabeth do it? Was she having a difficult pregnancy in her advanced age and was basically on bed rest? Was she uncomfortable in her older pregnant body being seen by her neighbors? Or was she afraid? We just know she experienced many years of infertility - we don’t know if, perhaps in those years, Elizabeth suffered from miscarriages. So many moms who experience pregnancy after a miscarriage have spoken openly about their fear. Their fear to hope. Their reticence to feel joy. Because what if this pregnancy ends in miscarriage too? Keeping themselves from hoping, from rejoicing, they are trying to protect their hearts in the case of another loss. For whatever reason, she was in seclusion for 5 months and remember her husband, Zechariah, was experiencing muteness so she didn’t even have him to talk to.

She is in isolation. That is, until Mary comes to visit. When Mary walks in and greets Elizabeth - Elizabeth is filled with the Holy Spirit, the baby inside her leaps for joy, and her seclusion, her isolation turns into joy for Mary and the child in her womb as well.

Elizabeth is rejoicing for Mary. And Mary is rejoicing for Elizabeth. Together they move from fear, from isolation, from the unknown - and together they move toward rejoicing, gratitude, laughter, blessing.

Through their connection with each other, they cleared the path to rejoicing. They made straight the path through the twists and turns of their lives, so that, together, they could rejoice.

Our other reading this morning from Isaiah contains that well-known line:

“A voice cries out:
‘In the wilderness prepare the way of the Lord;
make straight in the desert a highway for our God.’”

We connect this passage with John and Jesus, those two babies in the wombs of Elizabeth and Mary, that John is that voice in the wilderness that makes the path to Jesus straight.

And, we too can read this passage as a command to us. We are to make a straight path to God for others.

…but how? In our weary world…how?

In Bible Study on Wednesday when talking about this text from Isaiah we talked about the piles of rubble in Gaza. We talked about babies escaping from bombed out hospitals. Although not all of them did. We talked about hostages being returned…and still those who are being held. We talked about cancer diagnoses. We talked about those we love and those we are praying for who are facing non-straight paths, filled with twists and turns, for whom the future is hard and unclear.

The path to God, which is also the path to peace, the path to love, the path to joy…seems anything but straight, doesn’t it? We look out at our weary world and we see mountains and valleys, we see piles of rubble from bombed buildings, we see a whole lot of sin, of atrocities, of violence and heart-break…there is so much in the way of our anything-but-straight paths to the God of Connection, the God of Joy, the God of Peace.

A straight path to God?

It may seem impossible.

And yet, Gabriel’s words to Mary were: “For nothing will be impossible with God.”

Mary and Elizabeth did not have a straight path to get to each other but when they met, when they connected, their weariness was set aside and they rejoiced together.

Any way, any time, we can, within our own lives, our own communities, our own spheres of influence, bring people together, build connection, build community; any way and any time we can say “me too,” say “you’re not alone.”; any way and any time we can rejoice with one another. In those small but powerful acts, we are making straight the way. We are making a path to God.

Think of the child that we baptized this morning - and all children - their paths are unknown and in our weary world, likely anything but straight.

And yet! In Baptism, we say, we promise to this child, to one another, to God:
“I will surround you with love and care.”
“I will show you God’s love with how I live my life.”
“You are part of God’s family and therefore, you will never be alone.”

This is how we make straight the path. We connect with each other, support each other, rejoice with one another. And then we keep on making paths to connect with others, widening our spheres, connecting and rejoicing with more and more people. Until that day when we are all drawn to God and experience more connection and more joy than we’ve ever known in this life.

And until that day…we will keep making paths of connection and paths of joy.

May it be so. Amen.