Sunday, November 30, 2014

11/30/2014 - God is Expectant - Under Wraps Church Wide Study




9am Worship Service
Welcome to Worship 
Prelude                                                                                                                                Alisa Hwang
* Call to Worship & Lighting the First Candle on the Advent Wreath         
Leader:  Advent can feel more like a season of hurry-up-and-get-ready-for-Christmas.   Advent is meant to cause us to slow down, to wait, and seek God – to look for the coming Light.  The prophet Isaiah speaks of a day when all will be saved. 
People: “On this mountain the Lord of Hosts will make for all peoples a feast of rich food, a feast of well-aged wines, of rich food filled with marrow, of well-aged wines strained clear.”… “Then the Lord God will wipe away the tears from all faces and the disgrace of his people he will take away from all the earth for the Lord has spoken.  It will be said on that day, Lo, this is our God; we have waited for him, so that he might save us.  This is the Lord for who we have waited; let us be glad and rejoice in his salvation. (Isaiah 25.6, 8-9)
 (The first Advent Candle is lit)
Leader:  We light this candle to remind us to be expectantly waiting, just as the prophet Isaiah declares, for the coming of the Christ child.
People:  This is the Lord for who we have waited; let us be glad and rejoice in his salvation.
 *Opening Song    Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus”     UMH 196
Kid’s Time
Invocation  
Pastor:  O Lord, open our lips
People:  and our mouth shall show forth thy praise
Pastor:  Praise the Lord
People:  The Lord’s name be praised.
Pastor:   Loving God, you step down into our time and space to show us that you are love and light and hope and joy and peace.  Fill us with your presence as we immerse ourselves back into your amazing, world changing story.  Give us hearts to expect that you will work and move in us this holy season. In Jesus name. Amen.
Prayer of Confession
God who is expectant, we thank you that you judge us not by the perfection of our actions, but by our readiness to live boldly by faith.  Help us, as individuals and as a congregation to trust you and follow where you will lead us during this Advent season, that in Christ your name may be glorified in all the world.  Amen
* Statement of Faith                                                Isaiah 9:6-7 - On Screen
For to us a child is born, to us a son is given,
    and the government will be on his shoulders.
And he will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
    Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.
Of the greatness of his government and peace there will be no end.
He will reign on David’s throne and over his kingdom, establishing and upholding it    with justice and righteousness from that time on and forever.
The zeal of the Lord Almighty will accomplish this.
* Hymn                                 Gloria Patri                                  UMH 70
Introductions / Sharing our Concerns
    Community Prayer/Lord’s Prayer
    Choral Response     “Emmanuel, Emmanuel”      Chancel Choir
Celebrating our Joys
Scripture Lesson                                                                 Luke 1:39-45
At that time Mary got ready and hurried to a town in the hill country of Judea, where she entered Zechariah’s home and greeted Elizabeth. When Elizabeth heard Mary’s greeting, the baby leaped in her womb, and Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit.  In a loud voice she exclaimed: “Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the child you will bear! But why am I so favored, that the mother of my Lord should come to me? As soon as the sound of your greeting reached my ears, the baby in my womb leaped for joy. Blessed is she who has believed that the Lord would fulfill his promises to her!”
Message               “God is Expectant”        Rev Malcolm Stranathan
Sacrament of Holy Communion
   You are invited to bring your tithes and offering forward as your come receive communion this morning.  We will also be receiving a special offering on behalf of the General church for Student Sunday.  This funds go toward grants and scholarships to help defray the financial burden to seminarians and students in United Methodist Universities and colleges at both home and abroad.
   Communion Anthem                                                Chancel Choir    
  *Doxology
*Hymn (Release S.S.) Lift Up Your Heads, Ye Mighty Gates”  UMH 213
Touching Lives for Jesus Christ – Announcements  
*Sending Forth
Postlude                                                                              Alisa Hwang  
Enter to worship God, Leave to serve God’s people


This Sunday – 11/30
Next Sunday – 12/07
Acolyte
9:00
Phoebe Island
Julia Baskett
Children’s Time
9:00
11:00
Wendy Singer
Wendy Singer
Pastor Malcolm
Pastor Malcolm
Counters


Andrea Smolen, Rob Messerly
Greeters
9:00
11:00

Mark Coffin
Lynn Jacobson & Jackie Derr
Mark Coffin
Liturgist

Betty Cashmark
Dave Ball
Power Point
9:00
11:00
Susan Kalbach
Sharon Waligora
Lori Stewart
Sharon Waligora
Projection
9:00
11:00
Bonnie Luepkes
Sam Hergert
Sam Hergert
Sam Hergert
Sound
9:00
11:00
Help Needed!!
Bill Ray
Help Needed!!
Bill Ray
Ushers
Captains
9:00
11:00
Chuck & Sue Strickland
Gary & Patricia Heinz
Steve Reyda
Gary & Patricia Heinz




Sermon 
 Prayer: Loving God, we are so grateful for your extravagant gift of love, your only Son, coming into our lives.  We are grateful that you expected to change the world and to break through to even the hardest of hearts, including our own.  Help us to expect life change.  Help us to expect peace.  Help us to expect joy.  Help us to expect hope.  We seek you and wait this Advent. Amen. 
Under Wraps - Leaders Guide 
There is something very precious about waiting.  In a culture that wants everything in the here and now, we have lost the excitement of anticipation.”  I mean four week of “childlike balled up excitement   when they see a Christmas Tree surrounded by gifts on Christmas morning” excitement!   We have lost the “it is worth the wait” anticipation! There is something very precious about a couple that goes through a courtship and waits to consummate their love after the covenant of marriage.  Lost the “satisfaction of anticipation” There is great satisfaction when saving over time and purchasing something for cash rather than burdening oneself with debt. Lost the “intentionality of anticipation” It takes great intentionality to seek and find that extra special gift and wait until the day for a loved one to open it and see their expression of joy.  Indeed, there is something precious and perhaps even greater for us as we wait for that special moment when all things come together, perhaps, just as God has prepare for us to experience.    
A friend of mine is one of those people who starts purchasing gifts early for the Christmas Holiday.  I don’t know how they do it but they are constantly on the lookout for what they believe will be the perfect item for any particular family member.   Last year, I was somewhat surprised, maybe a little jealous, when they boldly they declared that they were all done with the Christmas shopping before Thanksgiving.    Everything was wrapped and ready to go.  Wow!  I could only imagine the anticipation that they benefitted from during the weeks of Advent to Christmas morning when surrounded by their loved ones they would celebrate and open those perfect gifts, specially chosen for each of them. 
Ultimately, the most precious gift of Christmas is the celebration of God’s Son.  God is the ultimate gift giver prepared the most perfect gift for humanity, to be delivered at the most perfect moment.  
The Gift?  Hand pick by God, in truth is God, and God expects that this gift will be the biggest game changer of all times.  God is expecting that this gift …which is surprisingly a one gift fits all … is still as exciting, precious, satisfying and intentionally perfect and unique to every person on the face of the planet. As it always was!   
God is expectant … from the very beginning it was God’s nature to be expectant.
God wants for us to be in relationship with God.  The stories in Genesis establish this fact.  Told we are created in the image of God, created male and female, God blessed the human beings to be fruitful, told them they had dominion over creation. (Gen 1.27-28)  God expects to be in a relationship with humanity.
            Even when Adam and Eve turned away from God, God clothed them sent them out of the garden,
God expected them to continue on with their commission   
God made a covenant with Abraham and Sarah that they would be God’s people and they would one day have descendants more numerous than the stars and when they said yes,
God expected them to remain faithful to the covenant. 
When the Abrahams descendants grew too numerous in the land of Egypt, and were enslaved by Pharaoh, God sent Moses to rescue them and who brought them out by multiple displays of God’s power and might and …
God gave them the law and expected them to follow it. 
God is expectant! 
            For millennia, God expected the people to remain faithful but with feet of clay and hearts equally so, the hearts of the people were easily led astray by poor decisions on the part of their leadership, their priests, and if not for the prophets of old, they in their exile years would have little to hope for. In the midst of one such exile the people heard a word from the Prophet Isaiah:
     A young woman, will conceive and she will have a son and he will be named Immanuel “God with us” (Isa 7.14)
This “God with us” this promised one Immanuel will be called: Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.  (And who) of the greatness of his government and peace there will be no end.  He will reign on David’s throne (the promise of Messiah) and over his kingdom, establishing and upholding it with justice and righteousness”  (Isa 9:6ff) 
In our Luke passage we learn about Mary and Elizabeth; each woman found herself preparing for a baby that neither had expected.  Listen how God wraps the coming of the God’s greatest gift in the stories in woman “a beyond her child bearing years” named Elizabeth and “a young, unmarried, chaste” woman named Mary.   
Indeed, this God who is Expectant, expects Elizabeth’s son to be the one who will call the Israelite people to repentance and he will be like the one who is the precursor to the Messiah, pointing the way to the child that Mary will bear who we are told in in Matthew’s Gospel is to be named Jesus (God saves).   
            God expects his Son, Jesus, to be born and to grow into adulthood.   And God expects his Son to teach people (first twelve) who will listen to him and be changed.  God even has a plan for the redemption of the human race.  Redemption that comes at great personal sacrifice, even to death on a cross, but as we said last week, even the grave was not sufficient to contain him.   God expects us to receive this gift of salvation …
Now you are thinking to yourself, you’ve got this whole thing figured out.  When we read the Isaiah passage that we used for our affirmation of faith with the knowledge of the Luke passage. We already know what God has done? What about what God is doing?
(The prophet Isaiah declares God words) “See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland (Isa 43:19)
Have you ever been surprised by God?  What new thing is God doing? Do you suppose that God is expecting our response to this year’s gift presentation to be different from other years? 
The Psalmist “Let us sing to the Lord a new song” (Ps 96:1)
How will you sing a new song to God during this Season of preparing?    
Before we tear apart the wrapping paper from God’s gift, let’s live with the hope that God “who is Expectant,” is expecting something greater for us this season … 
God is expecting us to respond, share and prepare:
·         God expects us to respond to the great gift of Jesus.  And not in the old tired ways that we have in the past but with the excitement of this gift that is being presented to us anew, first balled up excitement of a child, Christmas morning, ANEW! 
·         God expects us to share the story of Jesus, a story we never get tired of telling or hearing.
·         God expects us to prepare by being watchful and waiting. Perhaps there is a spiritual discipline you might want to practice during Advent this year …
God expects us to respond, to share and to prepare
                        Because … God is expectant !



Celebration and Praise
  Worship with a Beat! - 11:00 am








Welcome
Announcements
Advent Candle Lighting
“Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus’
Song Celebration
‘Everlasting God’
‘He is With Us’
Prayerful Conversations
Kids Time
Luke 1:39-45
“God is Expectant”
Rev Malcolm Stranathan
Sacrament of Holy Communion
 ‘Hope of The Nations’
Announcements
Sending Forth
‘Sing to The King’

Songs sung during the service are used by permission with License No. 1415942.
Movie clips are used by permission with License No. 501045180


Bulletin cover and MS PowerPoint art and graphics designed by Lori Stewart, 2014


Sunday, November 23, 2014

11/23/2014 - "How Bold is Our Story" - Deuteronomy 8:7-18


9:00am - Worship Service
                                      Welcome to Worship
Prelude                      “Elegy” – Wagner                    Deb Papavizas
* Call to Worship                                                        Matthew 5:14-16
Leader:  We have encountered the Word, calling us into communion with God and with each other,  
People:  And calling us into discipleship to carry on Christ’s work in our world.
Leader:  So we come together here, joining hands in the great quest:
People: To worship God, to love each other, and to serve the world
 *Opening Song               We Gather Together”                 UMH 131
Passing the Peace
Kid’s Time
Invocation  
Pastor:  O Lord, open our lips
People:  and our mouth shall show forth thy praise
Pastor:  Praise the Lord
People:  The Lord’s name be praised.
Pastor:   God, you are the source of our life.  Gather us now together, we pray.  Form us into a holy community of your own people.  Mold us by the breath of your holy spirit.  Reveal in this corporate body the face of your anointed Christ.  Amen.
Prayer of Confession/Assurance of Grace                         UMH 893
* Statement of Faith of the United Church of Canada      UMH883  
* Hymn                                 Gloria Patri                                  UMH 70
Psalter                      Psalm 65 (with Sung Response)       UMH 789
Welcoming New Members
Introductions / Sharing our Concerns
    Community Prayer/Lord’s Prayer
    Choral Response  “Now Thank We All Our God” Chancel Choir
Celebrating our Joys
Scripture Lesson                                                 Deuteronomy 8:7-18
. . . because the LORD your God is bringing you to a wonderful land, a land with streams of water, springs, and wells that gush up in the valleys and on the hills; a land of wheat and barley, vines, fig trees, and pomegranates; a land of olive oil and honey; a land where you will eat food without any shortage— you won’t lack a thing there— a land where stone is hard as iron and where you will mine copper from the hills. You will eat, you will be satisfied, and you will bless the LORD your God in the wonderful land that he’s given you. But watch yourself! Don’t forget the LORD your God by not keeping his commands or his case laws or his regulations that I am commanding you right now. When you eat, get full, build nice houses, and settle down, and when your herds and your flocks are growing large, your silver and gold are multiplying, and everything you have is thriving, don’t become arrogant, forgetting the LORD your God: the one who rescued you from Egypt, from the house of slavery; the one who led you through this vast and terrifying desert of poisonous snakes and scorpions, of cracked ground with no water; the one who made water flow for you out of a hard rock; the one who fed you manna in the wilderness, which your ancestors had never experienced, in order to humble and test you, but in order to do good to you in the end. Don’t think to yourself, My own strength and abilities have produced all this prosperity for me. Remember the LORD your God! He’s the one who gives you the strength to be prosperous in order to establish the covenant he made with your ancestors —and that’s how things stand right now.
Message    “Let Us All Give Thanks”       Rev Malcolm Stranathan
Receiving God’s Tithe and our Offering
(Today we are taking a special collection for Imagine No Malaria.
If you would like to make a contribution, please note Imagine No Malaria #3021190 in the memo section of your check.)
  Offertory Anthem     “We Thank You Lord”          Chancel Choir    
  *Doxology
*Hymn               “Come Ye Thankful People Come”           UMH 694
Touching Lives for Jesus Christ – Announcements 
*Sending Forth
Postlude   “Praise My Soul, the King of Heaven” – Smith    Deb P.  
Enter to worship God, Leave to serve God’s people
* You are invited to stand in heart or posture
Announcements:  UMW Thanksgiving Bake Sale: Today,


This Sunday – 11/23
Next Sunday – 11/30
Acolyte
9:00
Valerie Stanford
Phoebe Island
Children’s Time
9:00
11:00
Brian Cornell
Brian Cornell
Wendy Singer
Wendy Singer
Counters

Larry Murdoch, Will Scott,
Sam Hergert

Greeters
9:00
11:00
Ken & Alice Ellis
Mark Coffin

Mark Coffin
Liturgist

Ellen McKinzie
Betty Cashmark
Power Point
9:00
11:00
Carolyn Powers
Sharon Waligora
Susan Kalbach
Sharon Waligora
Projection
9:00
11:00
Adam Johnson
Sam Hergert
Bonnie Luepkes
Sam Hergert
Sound
9:00
11:00
Scott Johnson
Bill Ray
Help Needed!!
Bill Ray
Ushers
Captains
9:00
11:00
Help Needed!!
Gary & Patricia Heinz
Chuck & Sue Strickland
Gary & Patricia Heinz



        New Small Group Advent Study UnderWraps
starts Next Sunday, November 30.  Sign up now. 

How Bold Is Our Story?
Several weeks back I was on my facebook account I came across an advertisement that was by a church consultant who asked the question, “How Bold is your story?” In a matter of sixty seconds, he posited that, an individual church’s survival is going to be connected to “How Bold a story” that they will have to share.   That question has haunted me these last couple of weeks.  How Bold is our story?

Today’s scripture text refers to “A Bold-Enough story” of a people who back in Exodus 13 were told never to forget that once they were slaves in Egypt.   It is a story of promise, it is a story of a chosen people, and it is a story of the unlimited possibilities especially because of the inexhaustible resources availed to the people when they put their trust in the promise keeper.   

One of the five scrolls of the Torah, the book of a Deuteronomy is a long discourse as Moses prepares to pass the reigns of leadership to his successor Joshua.  The people are standing on the banks of the river Jordan the soon to be no longer nomadic Israelite people are listening as Moses who reminds them of the promise from God that once they were slaves in Egypt. 
-         Before they were slaves in Egypt,
o   a promise was made by God to their ancestor the elderly and once barren Abraham and Sarah were promised that if they left their homeland they would be taken to a new land where their descendants would be greater than the stars of the heavens.
o   In saying Yes to God, Abraham and Sarah became the chosen people who God established a covenant.  God was their God; they God’s people.
o   It took the reality of this promise many generations, not all easy, even enduring hundreds of years of slavery in Egypt and once released they spent forty years in the wilderness but now the chosen people of the nation of Israel looked across the river to the unlimited possibilities that awaited them. 
    The charge … do not forget … all that awaits you is by God’s providence, God rescued you from Egypt, brought you to this land
     Let’s listen as today’s scripture is read by Ellen this morning …
When I hear this story, humility seems to be the manner in which the people were to enter into the new land.  And yet there had to be such enthusiasm as they looked across the river Jordan … (yeah, yeah .. Moses what ever you say! --- he had 20 chap to go)
      All they had to do was rely on God from this time onward. 
       From this point on, and all through the rest of the Old Testament Scriptures, the Israelites would now be reminded of this Bold Story.  Their festival’s like the Passover (celebration how God brought the people our of Egypt) and the Festival of Booths (in which the family would live in tents for a time as a reminder of the humble roots as a nomadic people during the wilderness years) would become annual reminders of God’s promises.
       When their passion for the bold story was replaced with arrogance or unfaithfulness (and there are plenty of examples in the writing of the prophets) and they would be sent into exile or become occupied by foreign powers … it was the recalling of the Bold Story that reminded the people from where they came and often became the re-centering cry which led the people to forgiveness and restoration. 
A Bold Story can indeed bolster a people … it has worked well for the Jewish people  

How bold is our story?

No doubt, the Churches story is intricately woven together in the Bold Story of the Jewish faith.  We too are a people with a promise from God, The Apostle Paul tells us we are grafted into the covenantal promise made by God to the Jewish people but we are also called a chosen priesthood and we are a people with unlimited possibilities,   Not because of our own merit but because of who we are in Christ Jesus and God the Father and yet.
We have dropped a lot of language that is rich in the promises of that we have in Jesus Christ.  We The People, who in this land of liberty do not like to talk about how we were once slaves in the land of Egypt.  We don’t like to acknowledge how some of us are descendants from slaves and others slave owners even for many of us our ancestors were indentured servants, infact, anything slavery has been so cleaned up from our language that we have also dropped the language about how we were once slaves to sin and death. 
 We have dropped the language of atonement instead we talk about God’s love and God’s grace both of which are expressed in the atonement of sin that only comes through another things that we have dropped from our language which is the blood that was poured out.  (Recollect some of the hymns …”There is power, power, wonder working power in the … blood … of the lamb”)
We have turned Jesus into a kind teacher and moral guide and we have dropped language about him being Savior and Lord.  Our Savior in that he frees us from sin and death because of his blood poured out on the cross and despite the fact that the cross took his life the grave was insufficient to contain him for on the third day, the stone was rolled away and he was discovered first by the women and then by Peter and John and then by his disciples and we are told by many more… and because of this action accomplished by God, we are told that despite the fact that we too may one day die, death has no eternal bounds on us.  “Because he lives we also shall live.”
 And we think that because we live in the land of the free and the brave, that we are not called to call anyone Lord over us but because Jesus is God’s son, because we were freed from sin and death, we owe everything to Jesus. 
(Oh to Jesus, we surrender, All to him we freely give)

How bold is our story?
When we remove the language of how far Jesus saved us from ourselves, when we have watered down the story and washed out the blood, when we have emasculated Jesus into a moralist philosophy … is it any wonder why we can’t get other non-believers let alone ourselves excited about being followers of the way? 
      Lord have mercy, Christ have mercy, Lord have mercy 

How bold is our story … it means coming to the throne of grace once again.  The Israelites time and time again had to seek God’s forgiveness.  Perhap it is time for us to do the same … As we head into a time of reflection, I’m going to invite you to turn in your hymnal to the hymn “Just as I am …”
            The altar rail is ready, If you came here today, seeking a message for all things that we should be thankful for, let’s start at the most important thing.  God’s love and forgiveness for us expressed in Jesus Christ …

Well there is an old song that starts with these words
         We’ve a story to tell to the nations …   


Celebration and Praise
                          Worship with a Beat! - 11:00 am


Welcome
 ‘Beautiful Day’
‘Your Grace is Enough’
‘Forever’
Prayerful Conversations
Kids Time
Deuteronomy 8:7-18
“Let Us All Give Thanks”
Rev Malcolm Stranathan
Reflection
‘How Great is Our God/Give Thanks’
Announcements
Sending Forth
‘You Never Let Go’

Songs sung during the service are used by permission with License No. 1415942.
Movie clips are used by permission with License No. 501045180



Bulletin cover and MS PowerPoint art and graphics designed by Lori Stewart, 2014