Thursday, December 25, 2014

Click here for a "Christmas Hallelujah" sung by Wendy Singer at Mount Zion UMC Highland MD

Christmas Eve Sermon for 9:00pm Service                                12/24/2014

     I heard about this baby boy who comes to earth to
 bring us joy.  I just want to sing this song to you …

The image of a young woman, sitting in a barn-like structure, holding a swaddled newborn baby, swaddled in that cloth is all the divinity of being God’s son and all of the humanity of being Mary’s child, poured into this little baby. 

The Gospel writer declares that
    "And Mary pondered all these things in her heart."  Many months had passed with many events in her life to consider
-         An Angel visits, bearer of God's child,
-         trip to an elder cousin's home,
-         married to Joseph,
-         journey to Bethlehem while being great with child,
-         No room, birth in a stall,
-         shepherds who speak of Angels’ Choirs, “For unto us this night a savior who is Christ the Lord …
and after all these things came to pass we are told that Mary
pondered and kept these things in her heart.

     What new parent, holding their child for the first time isn’t caught up with the wonder and potential that they hold in their arms …
      Mary’s baby boy would grow to be man and … one day  a voice from heaven would affirm in his entrance into public ministry as “My Beloved Son”  He became a wandering rabbi, teacher and master to some and perceived threat to others and yet regardless of their realization of who he was
-         He became just as the angels sang “Savior to all.”
-         He gathered a group of ordinary people around him:  fishermen, tax collectors, and men and women. 
-         He taught people that God wanted them to turn their
life’s priorities toward God. 
-         Scholars marveled as his teaching of the law, 
-         His divinity was realized through the miracles he performed:  healing the sick, raising the dead
and he challenging the religious and political establishments of his day. 
It goes like this the fourth the fifth
 a minor fall, the major lift,
and with every breath I’m singing … Hallelujah.

A minor fall, a major lift! 
Mary’s baby boy would grow to be the Messiah.  As God’s Son he didn’t herald in his Father’s angel’s armies to bring about his kingdom.  Rather he entered Jerusalem on a donkey and marveled at the receptiveness of the people who so wanted a Messiah to usher in God’s kingdom.  He turned over tables in a temple, and he called the people to honor his father’s house as a place of prayer, he cried tears in a garden and gave himself will over to his Father’s
“A minor fall” when human institutions would try him and “a major lift” as he was raised up on a hill.  Or could the “minor fall” be humanity’s fallen state but because of the cross and empty grave the “major lift” was also the life that we now have because of who Mary’s baby boy grew to be.  I think the concluding verse tells it all …  

I know that you came to rescue me,
    this baby boy would come to be
       a man who one day, would die for me and you.
My sin would drive the nails in you
          That rugged cross was my cross too.
And every breath you drew was Hallelujah.

There is so much more to this night and this season
For this Baby Boy come to be the Savior of all creation
For you and for me … for which we sing

            Hallelujah, Hallelujah … Hallelujah, Hallelujah. 

Sunday, December 14, 2014

12/14/2014 - God is Jealous - Isaiah 43 & Select verses from John 13 &14



9:00am - Worship Service
                                      Welcome to Worship
Prelude              “Once in Royal David’s City”       Chancel Ringers
* * Call to Worship & Lighting the 3rd Candle on the Advent Wreath          
Leader:  The wilderness and the dry land shall be glad, the desert shall rejoice and blossom; like the crocus it shall blossom abundantly, and rejoice with joy and singing. The glory of Lebanon shall be given to it, the majesty of Carmel and Sharon.  They shall see the glory of the Lord, the majesty of our God. … And the ransomed of the Lord shall return, and come to Zion with singing; everlasting joy shall be upon their heads; they shall obtain joy and gladness, and sorrow and sighing shall flee away. (Isaiah 35.1-2,9)
People:  O come, let us sing to the Lord; let us make a joyful noise to the rock of our salvation!  (Psalm 95.1)  
 (The 3rd  Advent Candle is lit)
Leader:  We light this candle for the joy of this season.  May its light be a reminder that in all circumstances, that the “joy of the Lord is our strength.”  .
People:  This is the Lord for whom we wait waited; let us be glad and rejoice in his salvation.
 *Opening Song                  Joy to the World”                   UMH 246
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, thank you for loving us so much that you are jealous for our hearts.  May our worship of you be worthy of that same love.  Amen.
Prayer of Confession
Heavenly Father, thank you for fighting for our hearts—for my heart.  I confess that I easily wander away from you and give my heart to things and people and I often love myself more that I love you.  Forgive me and draw me close to you.  Help me to understand the power of your love for me and teach me how to show your love to others.  Be first in my heart, Lord.  Make me ready to receive all that you want to do in and through me.  Amen.  (Under Wraps Study Manual, pg 61.)
* Statement of Faith                                   Isaiah 9:2,6-7 (on screen)                         
* Hymn                                 Gloria Patri                                  UMH 70
Introductions / Sharing our Concerns / Sharing our Joys
    Community Prayer/Lord’s Prayer
    Choral Response                                                         Chancel Choir
Scripture Lesson                                                                Isaiah 43.1-7
But now thus says the Lord, he who created you, O Jacob, he who formed you, O Israel: Do not fear, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by name, you are mine.  When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and through the rivers, they shall not overwhelm you; when you walk through fire you shall not be burned, and the flame shall not consume you. For I am the Lord your God, the Holy One of Israel, your Savior.  I give Egypt as your ransom, Ethiopia and Seba in ex-change for you. Because you are precious in my sight, and honored, and I love you, I give people in return for you, nations in exchange for your life.  Do not fear, for I am with you; I will bring your offspring from the east, and from the west I will gather you; I will say to the north, “Give them up,” and to the south, “Do not withhold; bring my sons from far away and my daughters from the end of the earth—everyone who is called by my name, whom I created for my glory, whom I formed and made.”
John 13.1b, 34;14.6,15
Jesus knew his time had come to depart from this world to go to the Father.  Having loved his own who were in the world, he love them to the end.  … “I give you a new commandment. That you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.” … Jesus said to him, “I am the way, the truth and the life.  No one comes to the Father except through me.  If you know me, you will know my Father also.”    “If you love me, you will keep my commandments.” 
Message               “God is Jealous”            Rev Malcolm Stranathan
Receiving God’s Tithe and our Offering
  Offertory Anthem    “When Will He Come”         Chancel Choir
*Doxology
*Hymn         “O Morning Star, How Fair and Bright”     UMH 247
*Sending Forth
Postlude  “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel” – Hopson           Deb  P.    
Enter to worship God, Leave to serve God’s people

Celebration and Praise Service

Welcome
Advent Candle Lighting
“Open Up The Heavens’
Song Celebration
‘Our God’
‘Love The Lord’
Prayerful Conversations
Isaiah 43.1-7
John 13.1b, 34; 14.6, 15
“God is Jealous”
Rev Malcolm Stranathan
Reflection
 ‘The Power of Your Love’
Sending Forth
‘You Are Holy’

Bulletin cover and MS PowerPoint art and graphics designed by Lori Stewart, 2014
Songs sung during the service are used by permission with License No. 1415942.
Movie clips are used by permission with License No. 501045180






 
A customer comes up counter where a clerk is busy answering the phone and attempting to help customers at the same time.
Customer: “Here, I’ll fix that.” *picks up phone and hangs up*
Clerk: “Sir, you can’t do that. The people calling are customers, too.”
Customer: “I don’t want anyone to come between us.”
(The phone starts ringing again.)
Customer: “I need your undivided attention while you attend to me!”
Clerk: “Sir, I promise not to answer the phone until we’re finished.”
Customer: “I can’t take that chance!” *hangs up the phone again*

God is a “I can’t take that chance” sort of God!  God is jealous for our attention.  But let’s be plain about it though, it has been this way from the very start of God’s relationship with the Israelites. 

Picture it … once enslaved in Egypt, the Israelite are now free from Pharaoh’s oppression, they have escaped through the sea where they saw Pharaoh’s armies swallowed up.  They are now encamped around the base of Mount Sinai while their leader Moses meets with the Lord up on the mountain.   In that meeting, the Lord gives to Moses the Decalogue, Ten Commandments that the people will now be required to follow.  The first commandment makes it very clear that God fully knows God’s intention in this new arrangement.  Picture the words being drawn on tablets of stone as the Lord writes the first commandment. 
 I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery; you shall have no other gods before me.
    You shall not make for yourself an idol, whether in the form of anything that is in heaven above, or that is on the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth.  You shall not bow down to them or worship them; for I the Lord your God am a jealous God, punishing children for the iniquity of parents, to the third and the fourth generation of those who reject me,  but showing steadfast love to the thousandth generation of those who love me and keep my commandments.

One thing we can say about God and that is that God is fully self aware.  God is a jealous God and I have to admit that this topic is a tougher adjective than last week when God was dangerous.  It was easier to get to the point that God was dangerous because of the extent that God would go to redeem humanity.  God would put everything on the line to bring us back into a right relationship.  God would send his son, and that son would redeem the people through a gift of obedience that resulted in his own death, a death that would result in our own salvation.  God was dangerous because God was willing to put it all out there for humanity’s benefit.   BUT WHY?  Because God is jealous!  Because God expects this Child of Christmas to change us and the world, and because God dangerously goes to the brink to redeem us, all because God is jealous that nothing should come better God and ourselves.  Other than the word that is used to describe this emotion is “jealous” and “A wholly unsavory characteristic trait,” complete with the image of the “the Green Eyed monster that lies within us.”  
     Our book study determines that the Hebrew word used to describe this “jealousy” is only ever applied to God.  It is not used to describe human to human jealousy.  Perhaps there is a reason for this. 
     God’s jealousy for us implies God’s best interests for us which are for our best interests.  Perhaps that is why this word is only used to describe God’s jealousy.  Because of the self giving of God’s nature, even God’s own jealousy is the other focused.  Let’s admit it, when we are jealous, we aren’t thinking about the other, we are thinking about ourselves and what we don’t have.  We don’t have the job, the house, the car, the benefits, the spouse or suitor … or if we do they become our sole focus, like a Gollum we rub our hands and coo to that of our hearts desire and call out “my precious, my precious”      In oh so many ways, human jealousy is actually breaking commandment number one.  You shall have no other gods before me, says the Lord God. And when our Green eyed monster pops up in ourselves it says we have to have that which our eyes desire over all others … that sounds like a break with God. 
    The book of Isaiah is a realization of what happens when the Israelites forgot the number one commandment.  I encourage you to read the book of Isaiah during this coming week.  In it you will find, particularly up to this point that the Israelites are sent into exile because they forgot the Lord their God.  They turned to other idols, trusted in their human made contracts and found them lacking the haughtiness of their women, and more unsavory ills and so the indictments against Jacob and Jerusalem are specific, and yet there are tender moments where God is providing hope … from this time of trial will come a remenant.  By chapter 43, the image of the remnant being return is one of great hope.  From those who are left, from the north, south, east and west, God will bring them back to the holy Mount and once again, they will be restored. 
   Because of Jesus Christ God isn’t content on anyone being outside of this covenant.  God is no longer intent on giving up some for others, just one son for everyone.  God’s intention for us aren’t any different than that for Israel.  And while there is no word to specifically describe the jealous nature in Greek like there is in Hebrew, and therefore we have no references in the New Testament that describe God as jealous, let us not forget that on the night before Jesus gave himself up for us, he turned to his followers and told them “that he and his father were one, if they have seen him they have seen the Father.”  Jesus was giving to them a new commandment, one that would intentionally embody the holiness of God’s jealous nature.  Jesus shared this earlier in his account to a scribe … that that moment he said that the greatest commandment was that you shall love the lord your God with all your heart and your soul and your might and your neighbor as yourself.  On the night before Jesus prepares to leave the disciples, he tells them to love each other, just as he has loved them.  For in doing so, people will know you are his followers. 
    What does the life of those who walk in the way, that loves the Lord God before all else.  Well, things seem to fall into place.   Everything flows naturally.  God isn’t intent on our keep our love directed at Gods own self, God redirects it toward the needs that God see apparent.  
    Study book story … Excerpt Love in Action pg 55-57





    How can putting God first in this Advent season change you? 






Upcoming December Events
December 14 - Third Sunday in Advent
ROOM FOR CHRISTMAS
Youth Dinner Theater Presented at 6pm by Trinity Choir & Youth with Live Nativity
Bring a dish to share and join us for dinner and a show. Our potluck theme is Southern Cuisine.  Admission is free and we will open the Secret Santa Shop from 6:45-8pm for children to purchase Christmas gifts.  The cost of each gift is $2 and our elves will help them wrap their gifts for free.
For more info, see the Youth Ministry Announcements page in this bulletin.
December 21 - Fourth Sunday in Advent
Voices of Christmas
A cantata by Joseph M. Martin: presented by the Chancel Choir at 9am and the Praise Band at 11am        
Pot Luck Dinner & Gingerbread House Workshop [5 & 6 pm]
Olde Tyme Service on the Longest Night at 6 pm in the Chapel
Wednesday, Dec. 24 - Christmas Eve Services
4pm Children/Family Service
7pm Christmas Eve and Candlelight – With a Beat
9pm Christmas Eve and Candlelight—Traditional
11pm Candlelight and Communion
December 28 - 9 and 11am Worship; join us for a time of fellowship between services.  (No Sunday School 12/28)

Sunday, December 7, 2014

12/07/2014 - God is Dangerous = John 1.1-14


9:00am - Worship Service
                                      Welcome to Worship
Prelude               “Infant Holy, Infant Lowly”         Trinity Ringers
* Call to Worship & Lighting the 2nd Candle on the Advent Wreath 
Leader:  We come today seeking God’s peace in our lives and for our world.  We are reminded from the prophet Isaiah that “A shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots. And the spirit of the Lord shall rest on him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord. With righteousness he shall judge the poor and decide with equity for the meek of the earth. 
People:  The wolf shall live with the lamb; the leopard shall lie down with the kid, the calf and the lion and the fatling together, and a little child shall lead them.” (Isaiah 11:1-4,6-7)
 (The 2nd Advent Candle is lit)
Leader:  We light this candle for peace to remind us to await the coming of God’s peaceable kingdom in the coming of the Christ child.
People:  This is the Lord for whom we wait waited; let us be glad and rejoice in his salvation.
 *Opening Song        Blessed Be the God of Israel”         UMH 209
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 are dangerous, but you are good.  You don’t call us to safety but to live out your story in the lives with bravery and trust in your faithfulness.  Thank you for stepping down into our world to save us and to love us.  Give us wisdom as we worship you this day. Amen.
Prayer of Confession
Mighty God, we thank you for breaking into our world to bring down systems of injustice and bring your reign of peace, grace and hope.  Help us to boldly follow you and go where you send us to be your hands and feet in this world.  As we waiting in this season, work on our hearts, making your home.  Amen.
* Statement of Faith                                                  Isaiah 9:2-6 - On Screen
* Hymn                                 Gloria Patri                                  UMH 70
Introductions / Sharing our Concerns / Sharing our Joys
    Community Prayer/Lord’s Prayer
    Choral Response                                                         Chancel Choir
Scripture Lesson                                                            John 1:1-14, 16
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.  He was in the beginning with God.  All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being. What has come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of all people. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it.
There was a man sent from God, whose name was John.  He came as a witness to testify to the light, so that all might believe through him. He himself was not the light, but he came to testify to the light. The true light, which enlightens everyone, was coming into the world.
He was in the world, and the world came into being through him; yet the world did not know him.  He came to what was his own, and his own people did not accept him. But to all who received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children of God, who were born, not of blood or of the will of the flesh or of the will of man, but of God.
And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth.
From his fullness we have all received, grace upon grace.
Message               “God is Dangerous”      Rev Malcolm Stranathan
Receiving God’s Tithe and our Offering
  Offertory Anthem      Christmas Medley                                         
Kid Zone & Mt Christian Preschool
*Doxology
*Hymn                “Of The Father’s Love Begotten”            UMH 184
*Sending Forth
Postlude “Then Shall Your Light Break Forth” – Harris    Deb  P.  
Enter to worship God, Leave to serve God’s people
* You are invited to stand in heart or posture.



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

Welcome
Announcements
Advent Candle Lighting
“Here I Am To Worship’
Song Celebration
‘O Come, O Come Emmanuel’
‘Whom Shall I Fear’
Prayerful Conversations
 John 1:1-14, 16
“God is Dangerous”
Rev Malcolm Stranathan
Reflection
 ‘We Won’t Be Shaken’
Announcements
Sending Forth
‘Go Light Your World’


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


THROUGH OUR SERVICE


This Sunday – 12/07
Next Sunday – 12/14
Acolyte
9:00
Julia Baskett
Nellie Squirlock
Kid’s  Time
9:00
Pastor Malcolm
Carol Messerly
Counters

Andrea Smolen,
Rob Messerly
Roz Norman, John & Nancy Coonts
Greeters
9:00
11:00
Lynn Jacobson & Jackie Derr
Mark Coffin
John & Nancy Coonts
Mark Coffin
Liturgist

Dave Ball
Jon Lindberg
Power Point
9:00
11:00
Lori Stewart
Sharon Waligora
John Salmans
Sharon Waligora
Projection
9:00
11:00
Sam Hergert
Sam Hergert
Sam Hergert
Hannah Shrader
Sound
9:00
11:00
Help Needed!!
Bill Ray
Sam Dennis
Bill Ray
Ushers
Captains
9:00
11:00
Steve Reyda
Gary & Patricia Heinz
Steve Reyda
Gary & Patricia Heinz









Sermon
We are on week two of our Church-wide Advent series called Under Wraps. Last we talked about how God is Expectant.  We learned in our worship and the small groups meeting on Sunday morning and throughout the week how in the birth of the Christ child everything changed between us and God.   God expect to change the world through this child.    As Christ’s followers, God expect a change in us and we left asking ourselves what we are expecting in this season of Advent to do in preparation of Christmas day.  How will we prepare for Christ’s coming? 
I have to admit that a sermon title that says, “God is Dangerous” doesn’t sound like a very “Ho, Ho, Ho … Happy” topic for the Advent Season.  And yet look how much God put everything on the line, how God bet the whole house, God wasn’t willing to hold back even his own Son to spare humanity.  John 3:17 states that God sent his son into the world, not to condemn the world but so that the world might have life through him.   God sent his Son into our world, the divine Word, wrapped up in human flesh (this is where the title of “Under Wraps,” comes from, the divinity under the wraps of human flesh.  It is a pretty bold move!     God sends all of God's love and grace in the form of a vulnerable child.  And yet, this child would be a threat to the principalities of this realm and the enemy that is embroiled in a battle against God’s reign.  God the Father and God enfleshed in Jesus of Nazareth didn't lay down his life so that we should live out our lives by playing it safe or being timid rather the God who is dangerous encourages us to trust in God as we step into the places that make us uncomfortable.  The places that if we trust in God and we step out in faith, we ultimately find that God already preceded us. 
But we get ahead of ourselves.  Today reading from John sounds very similar to some other verses found elsewhere in the bible.  Anyone want to guess?  ….   In the opening verse of Genesis 1, we hear how the “earth was a formless void, and how darkness was upon the face of the deep and how suddenly the Spirit of God moved across the deep water and then God spoke, “Let there be light” and there was light. without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. “ to “Let us create human beings in our image, let us create them male and female”   The language is highly liturgical and it said to be from a Priestly set.   
John’s reading is on par with the priestly liturgy of Genesis, …
“in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God and the Word was God … All things came into being through this Word.What has come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of all people. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it.”  
Whereas Genesis is focused on the nature of this God is who and why is creating, John’s gospel is attempting to tell us about who God is wrapped up in Jesus of Nazareth.  First and foremost, this God who comes to us, this is the word, the Logos, of God who predates created order and is eternal with God the father.  God is that is sending his son to us, and prior to being wrapped in human flesh the Word of God was present, from the very moments of creation and even before… 
The moment that God came “under wraps”   was in a little suburb of Jerusalem called Bethlehem.  It was long foretold that from this little town, a great king, the Messiah, would rise up.   We even have a hymn that speaks of this prophecy (perhaps you know it).
O Little town of Bethlehem, how still we see thee lie!
Above thy deep and dreamless sleep, the silent stars go by.
Yet in thy dark streets shineth, the everlasting Light.
The hopes and fears of all the years, are met in thee tonight
“The hopes and fears of all the years” … Few of us will ever know what it is like to live in an oppressive reality, where kings governed ruthlessly, or where foreign emperors with their soldier garrisons and governors would impact our everyday lives.   By the first century C.E. and centuries previously the people of Israel were ruled by bad kings or  were occupied by foreign powers.  People were often on the look out for Messiah, someone who would throw out the occupy force and bring about peaceable kingdom as spoken of in Isaiah 9.    
God expected this child born of Mary in the city of David, also called Bethlehem  … to change everything.  God dangerously placed “ultimate cosmic power, in an itty bitty living space” of a child and in the Gospel of Matthew, we hear what happened when some gentiles from the east, Magi, wisemen, astrologers see a great portent in the heavens which they perceive to be a sign that the new king has been born to the Jews and so they come to investigate and bring gifts and seek out the child in the palace of the current king Herod who fears the news that new king has been born to the Jewish people.   If not for an Angel that warned Joseph to take the mother and child into Egypt until it was safe, they may have met a terrible fate for the child was a treat to the existing king and as we know that when King Herod felt threatened he did ruthless things. 
When that child would grow up, he threated those in authority, religious or political, Jesus taught in a way that threatened “the way things were done” he was not militaristic as some wanted to see in a messiah, but he succeeded to speak against injustices, to challenge the rule of law if it meant to oppress another, and he advocated for the least, last and lost.   We sometimes prefer to think of Jesus a meek and mild but he was also the one who turned over the money changers tables in the temple …
We sing a song on the most holy of nights, we light candles and we take the light from one candle and we pass it to others and then to more until the entire room, while we sing in hushed voices …  
Silent Night, Holy Night, all is calm, all is bright.
Round yon Virgin, Mother and Child.  Holy infant so tender and mild,
Sleep in heavenly peace, Sleep in heavenly peace

Silent night, holy night! Shepherds quake at the sight.
Glories stream from heaven afar Heavenly hosts sing Alleluia,
Christ the Savior is born! Christ the Savior is born!
I’d like to think that verse two really captures the night that it wasn’t really a Silent night anywhere that night.  A woman gives birth in stall, surrounded by the noise of animals mooing, baaing, and bleeting.  Not to mention behind a inn that was full of patrons.  (for there was no room for them in the inn)  Bethlehem and was full of people all there for a census.  Meanwhile out in the country side, shepherds are suddenly scared by a celestial sight of light streaming, an angel declaring “fear, not followed by a proclamation of “for Unto us is born this night” and then chorus’ of angels that I can only picture puts Handel’s Hallelujah choir to shame …    
The reality of “Christ the Savior is born” means that those spiritual forces opposed to God’s reign had to be equally afraid along with a discordant clamor taking place.   We don’t talk about spiritual battles but the author of this chapter writes, “Jesus is dangerous, all right, He is dangerous to the forces of darkness because he came to usher in a new era when sin would lose it grip on humanity and death would no longer have the last word.  Jesus is born into this world to bring light to the darkness.” ( Under Wraps Study Manual, pg 36)  and later on the page…
“Jesus comes not only to thwart the spiritual battles we fight daily but also to turn the battle on its head for Jesus won the battle at Calvary. … and while the last gasp of evil has not yet been heard … Christ continues to make advances for the kingdom and calls us into battle with him.  As we fight for the purposes of God, we need to remember that good is never a lost cause since the battle has already been won on the cross.” 
 Break forth, O beauteous heavenly light, And usher in the morning;
O shepherds, shrink not with afright, But hear the angel’s warning.
This Child, now weak in infancy,Our confidence and joy shall be,
The power of Satan breaking, Our peace eternal making
God is dangerous and being followers and at times we are called out of our comfort zones to take a chance on behalf of God’s kingdom. 
    Were in good company. 
Abraham and Sarai left their homeland and followed God to a new homeland. Lots of dangers along the way.
Joseph spoke the word of God eventhgouth it made him unpopular with his brothers and in the end it was the salvation of Israel.
Hundred of years later when Pharaoh enslaved the Israelites, God called Moses to go in and bring the people of Israel out of slavery.
Jeremiah was too young when he was called to be a prophet for God but God gave him harsh words to preach and he remained faithful his entire long life.
Mary said yes to be the bearer of God’s divine son into this world.
Jesus was obedient, even unto death and yet was raised and now sits at the right hand of God to intercede for us.
Saul persecuted the church, had a radical conversion and became the greatest pastor evangelist expanding the kingdom for gentiles.
BIG than life people whose names we know but each started a very ordinary people in their own right.  Their dangerous faith is a witness for us 
    The author of our study asks us, “Do we have a dangerous faith?” 
Understanding that each of us are gifted by God’s Holy Spirit is God calling you to use your gifts to help another, to serve in our community, to speak against an injustice, to step out in a bold new adventure.   
 Don’t hesitate, in this season of Advent let us cast our worries and care, our timidity and “joyously and triumphantly” give praise to the one who calls us to live our lives to the fullest   for God’s kingdom and call.

O Come All Ye Faithful,  Joyful and triumphant, O come ye, O come ye to Bethlehem.  Come and behold Him,  Born the King of Angels;
O come, let us adore Him, O come, let us adore Him,
O come, let us adore Him, Christ the Lord