The First Sunday in Advent
Read Isaiah 64:1-9 and Mark 13:24-37
Psalm 80:1-7; 17-19
1 Corinthians 1:3-9
“But about that day or hour no one knows, neither the angels
in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father… And what I say to you I say to
all: Keep awake.”
(Mark 13:32, 37)
The Season of Advent
begins with prophetic words of warning and exhortation: Beware!
Keep alert! Keep awake! The Lord would “tear open the heavens and
come down so that the mountains would quake…”
(Isaiah 64:1) Watch for signs of
the Lord’s coming in power and glory.
The message is clear: God’s
intervention is not subtle or hidden to those with eyes to see and ears to
hear.
I don’t know about
you, but this message is not an easy one for me. It has always been a little unsettling for me
that Advent always starts with words of prophetic warning, dire warning even. How am I supposed to feel when I read these
passages? Fear? Hope?
Anxiety? Am I alert enough? Will I be awake to the signs? What if I’m not? I much prefer the “nicer” themes of
Advent: peace, love, and hope.
I guess these
passages are also hard because as Christians, we want to see God’s kingdom fully come on earth. We want
to see an end to injustice, prejudice, racism, hunger, war, hate, and abuse of
power. We’re tired of vesting our hopes
and dreams in the leaders and powers of this world only to be let down
repeatedly. We wonder if we might be the generation that will
finally see the master return to the household.
I also know, however,
that this is the tension we are meant to wrestle with during this season of
preparation. It is not ours to know the
day or the hour, nor do I believe God wants us to busy ourselves with worrying
about that. Instead, God’s kingdom and
peace is brought forth in hearts that make room for him to be born again and
again through his Spirit. God wants us
to be moved to be active kingdom builders and not to sit passively waiting –
unaware and disconnected.
This is the message
of Good News in this holy season, that despite our sin and unrighteousness, God
is the potter, and we are the clay – the work of God’s hand – and God chooses
to use us to bring the kingdom to the world around us.
Prayer: Lord, give us eyes to see, ears to hear, and
willing hearts to serve you in ways that bring your kingdom here on earth to
those around us. Help us to keep awake
to your call in our lives and hearts so that we are not caught unaware by those
opportunities and blessings that surround us.
Amen.
David
Schalekamp
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A Letter From a
Skeptic, Getting Ready
December 1, 2014
Psalm
79
Micah
4:1-5
Revelation
15:1-8
Oh My Dear God,
We’re getting ready again, for the two
thousand and fourteenth time. We are waiting.
How long, oh LORD? Micah is
dead and gone the way of the Psalmist, and Your man John is seeing things. Yes it’s trouble, trouble, trouble. In a world where war doesn’t stop for the
harvest, how can we spare the spear for the plow? Sure, I’ll beat my sword into a ploughshare,
but you should ask the other guy first.
You see, it’s winter, and the ground is frozen anyway, and I hear the
war is still on. The folks next door are
deriding me, and have been for some time.
How long, oh LORD? I am indeed
brought very low. The job isn’t what I
thought it would be, the stock market is down, and I fear the vine and fig tree
are iced through. Yes, it’s winter in
the Northeast in this, Your Advent. We
are afraid, and cold, and still Greatly Recessing.
I guess if we’re waiting on Your son
anyway, You may as well send a few of those seven plagues our way. Let’s get them out of the way and let that wrath
of Yours get ended. Then maybe we can
turn this winter of our discontent into glorious summer by this son of
Yours. We’ll have Easter, and swim
outside, plow our warm fields, and listen to Shakespeare in the park.
On second thought, maybe I’m not so ready
yet. Maybe Your judgment forestalled and
Your promise delayed are necessary. Have
the iniquities of my ancestors been remembered?
Have mine? Then give me time, oh Lord. For it‘s a big promise to get ready for and
there’s work for me to do before I sit under the trees, unafraid. So I’ll wait, and reflect, sing our songs,
and pray our prayers. For I know that
from this wintery Advent, this time of promises frozen, comes a branch from the
roots. How beautiful that Your son grows
first in winter when all else is quiet and dead, the first fruit from the last days
of the year.
How long, oh LORD? Will you be angry forever? No, You’ll
send a son, an arbitrator, a ploughshare and pruning-hook maker, for whom I am
not yet prepared.
It’s December the first, the second day
of Advent. It’s cold, and the war is
still on, but I’m getting ready.
John Hoffman
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Swaying with the Storm
December
2, 2014
Micah
4:6-13
Micah 4:6-13 “The time is coming,” says
the Lord, “when I will gather together the people I punished, those who have
suffered in exile. They are crippled and
far from home, but I will make a new beginning with those who are left, and
they will become a great nation. I will
rule over them on Mount Zion from that time on and forever. And you Jerusalem,
where God like a shepherd from his lookout tower, watches over his people, will
once again be the capital of the kingdom that was yours. “ (Good News Bible
TEV)
Revelation 18:1-10 (*strong
language present)
The
Promise
To give
up and fall, a choice to refuse remorse
To sit
and add weight against the wind
Heavy
No care
to stand, no burden realized
No peace
wanted
Sin
To love
and climb, a choice to seek goodness
To stand and
trust the movements of the necessary storm
Light
Much hope
to rebuild, lessons align
Peace in
sight
Savior
As we begin the Advent
season, think about how you can create more positive experiences in the
world. How can you be a part of the
light and reject the darkness? God gives us the gift of his son to help us
rebuild, trust, create a new kingdom. You are part of this new kingdom of
peace. Share your light, focus on the
light, be the light in the storm.
Kristin Bodden
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A White-Knuckled Hope
December
3, 2014
Micah 5:1-5
Luke 21:34-38
Sometimes joy comes easily. Sometimes life is so full and bursting
with beauty and goodness that the only natural response is an outpouring of
love. Sometimes it feels as if the moment you’re in now is the best one yet,
and you want every day to continue in that ease, on and on and on, while you
soak up the joy and let the excess pour out onto the people in your world.
You’ve
been there. And it’s wonderful.
But sometimes, joy is hard. Sometimes the
pressures of a single day are enough to send you stumbling to bed in the
evening, praying or crying or cussing, hoping so hard that tomorrow will be different, only to wake and find
yourself still stuck in the same place. Sometimes, the things that kept us from
that easy joy yesterday are still here today… and we can’t see ahead, or
imagine a time when they won’t be dragging on our souls.
You’ve
been there, too.
We usually think of Advent as a time of
hope: a kind of glowing, positive waiting. Four weeks of twinkling, silvery
expectation, capped off by the bright celebration of Christmas. Even putting
aside the secular excitement of parties and presents, of silver bells and city
sidewalks (which, don’t get me wrong- I love!) it’s hard to imagine the weeks
leading up to Christmas as anything but a happy time. Yes, the busyness gets
stressful, but as a whole, most of us are not Scrooges who hate every bit of
Christmas.
But I wonder if this isn’t the wrong idea
of what this excitement, this hope, is: a pastel, Precious Moments sentiment, a
surface-level feeling that doesn’t go any deeper than a “Merry Christmas” to a
stranger. And I wonder too if we use this shallow hope —and the whole season of
Advent— as a mask, sometimes. We put on our best smiles, fill our church with
special Christmas decorations, and ignore whatever it is that’s been dragging
on us.
Push it away. Hide it. Pretend it never
existed.
But this is fundamentally the wrong
response to Advent. The people of Israel were not waiting in a blind bubble of
mistletoe and fa-la-las for God’s promise to be fulfilled; they were waiting in
captivity, in agony, for a Savior. And they had been stuck in that waiting
period, in the darkness of sin, for generations.
Joy was probably not something that came
easily to them.
But that was okay. It was okay because
Christ came to bring light to that dark, waiting world. And when Jesus came as
the light, he gave human beings a reason for joy, whatever else is going on in
the world at large or in our own immediate worlds.
Advent is a time of hope, but it is not a
bubbly, jolly hope. It’s a time of waiting, but it’s not all-breathless
excitement. It’s a white-knuckled hope; grit-your-teeth, hold-on-for-dear-life
hope, because without Jesus, without Christmas, we are lost to the dark: to an
endless waiting, to a joyless existence, and to all the things about these
lives of ours that drag on our souls.
The joy that Christ brings to us, both in
this season of waiting and always, isn’t an easy thing to choose, especially
when we are caught in days that make us want to scoff cynically at the hope of
Advent. But the joy of Christmas walks hand in hand with peace, and it is so
much more than just happiness.
So much more.
Praise God for this. Praise him for the
times of waiting we have experienced and are experiencing, for the times of
easy joy and for those days when joy is a choice we make through gritted teeth.
Praise him for this, the season of Advent… the season of white-knuckled hope.
Kate Dulmes
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December
4, 2014
Psalm 85: 1-2, 8-13
Hosea 6: 1-6
1 Thessalonians 1: 2-10
I sit,
head bowed in prayer asking
For
forgiveness,
For
understanding,
For
mercy,
And,
God’s rain pours down.
I sit,
head bowed in prayer hoping
For
peace,
For
strength,
For
courage,
And,
God’s rain pours down.
I sit,
head bowed in prayer receiving
Refreshment,
Spiritual
wings,
Hope,
And,
God’s rain pours down.
Cheryl MacNeil
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Out of the mouths of babes…
December 5, 2014
Psalm
85: 1-2,8-12
Jeremiah
1:4-10
Acts
11:19-26
For me advent reminds me that it is the time of year when we
should all return home, in more ways than just physically. While coming home to visit family is of great
importance, I feel that Christmas is a time when we should all revert back to
our sense of childlike joy. We should
truly come home both in our minds and our hearts. Watching young children during this time of
year can help remind us in this time of ever expanding turmoil that it is
sometimes necessary to step back and experience the world with a childlike
innocence.
Children are not born knowing how to judge others; they are
not born prejudiced against those who are different. They are taught these things as they
age. The Lord tells us in Jeremiah 1:9, “I
have put my words in your mouth. See, today I appoint you over nations and
kingdoms…” Jeremiah is further instructed to tear down before rebuilding. Perhaps we should take those words to heart
and to allow ourselves to be torn down to our youthful innocence before
rebuilding ourselves in the image that God has designed for us. This can help us to enter the advent season
with an open heart and mind. And as in
Psalm 85, allow love and faithfulness to meet together, righteousness and peace
to kiss each other, faithfulness to spring from the earth and righteousness to
look down from heaven.
Michael
and Wendy Carpenter
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Santa at Jesus'
Cradle
December 6, 2014
Ezekiel
36:24-28
Mark
11:27-33
Our Catholic brethren
hold up the lives of many Saints as examples for our Christian living. St.
Nicholas' death on December 6, AD343 is one such day of remembrance. St.
Nicholas, or the “real” Santa Claus, lived in the early centuries of the church
in an area we now know as Turkey. He was born to wealthy parents who both died
when he was young. Devoted to the poor, he used his inheritance to serve the
needy his entire life.
The most memorable
story of St. Nicholas, and that which continues today in many faith traditions,
is of the three daughters of a poor man. Without proper dowries, each would
likely never marry or worse, be sold into slavery. “Mysteriously, on three
different occasions, a bag of gold appeared in their home, providing the needed
dowries. The bags of gold, tossed through an open window, are said to have
landed in stockings or shoes left before the fire to dry.” (from www.stnicholascenter.org) Hence, children the world over still remember St. Nicholas
and either hang stockings or leave shoes out eager to see what gifts they will
be given in the morning.
As a parent of young
children, I am always torn this time and season of the year. We are trying to
prepare the children for the arrival of God in the form of a baby. The one who
comes to save us. The truest and best gift that
could ever be given. Yet, we live in a culture of “stuff”, of “I want”, of “If
I do this, can I have that?”, and the worst “But she has that, why can't I have
it too?”
The struggle to
parent through the omnipresent culture of "things," and to get to the
point and heart of the nature of God and therefore the true meaning of the
season is at times overwhelming. I am grateful for the story of St. Nicholas
and the fact that he used his gold, his “things,” to help others. He gave so
that others could live. This is what I strive to teach the children. The reason
for the season is Jesus. To give is far more rewarding than to
receive.
So, I ask myself
today and each day this Advent, how will I reflect the life of St. Nicholas'
example for my children? How will I encourage their giving? How will I manage
their wants? And finally, how will we prepare to do better this year than we
did last year as we give of our time and "things"?
Lynn Reynolds Makrin
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To anticipate celebrating the
birth of Jesus is to be reminded of God’s promise to us… The promise of Jesus is
the everlasting comfort of God’s love.
GOD’S GIFTS AND PROMISES
December
7, 2014
Isaiah 40:1-11; 2 Peter 3:8-15a
Mark 1:1-8
Christmas is indeed a time of
celebration, and Advent is a time of preparation. It is also a time of challenge. We are busy decorating and shopping,
preparing meals and gathering together.
The earthly demands are real and important because they symbolize love;
love for one another and God’s love for each of us.
In this season, as we prepare
to celebrate the birth of Jesus, we are called to reflect on our Lord’s promise
to us. By sending His son to us, God
provides a living example of how He wants His people to live and use the gifts
He has bestowed. As we struggle with our
personal challenges and consider the world’s conflicts, we are sometimes
overwhelmed. The gift of Jesus’ life is
God’s promise of the everlasting comfort of His love and the reassurance of his
presence in our lives. “Let every heart
prepare Him room!”
Ellen Schultz
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Thankful Hearts for a
Special Gift
December 8, 2014
Psalm 27
Isaiah 26:7-15
Acts 2:37-42
As we celebrate the
season of Advent, our first thoughts are that of thankfulness. God sent his only son to us, so that we may
have eternal life. He provides us each
day with his abundant love and protects us with the Holy Spirit.
As children of God,
we wait with anticipation for the coming of the Lord. When we were young, we waited for Christmas
in expectation of receiving material gifts.
Now that we are older, we remember God’s promise for all of us, both
near and far, realizing that the real gift of Christmas is Jesus, God’s only
son. It is also a time of relationships
with family and friends to share the love of God’s special gift.
On this ninth day of
Advent, may we pray to God, and thank him for all that He has given us.
Thank you, God.
Russ and Claudia Garrison
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The Big Tent
December 9, 2014
Isaiah 4:2-6
Acts 11:1-18
“God’s own glory
will be like a huge tent that covers everything.” Isaiah
4:5
This depends upon what we each view as
our community. Glenville has about
29,000 people. Our church community has
about 300 people. My own neighborhood
probably numbers about 150. The
population of Schenectady County tops 155,000.
Each community has its own
diversity: ethnicity, age, education,
income, social beliefs, religion. Such
diversity adds great value to our community.
Regretfully, many people are judged, segmented, even discriminated
against due to their differences.
The early Christians were guilty of
this. Following Christ’s resurrection,
the disciples ventured out to spread the story of Christ. But they initially harbored the belief that a
follower of Christ could only take the first step by being a Jew. They could not fathom the notion that a
Samaritan, a Judean, or – God forbid – a Roman could become a Christian.
Peter broke this barrier. He tells of a dream in which he had a vision
of a multitude of animals, and a voice from heaven told him that they were fit
to eat – regardless of the Jewish law about eating anything unclean. Peter stayed in the home of Gentiles and ate
with them. He spoke with them about Jesus’
power to save through the Holy Spirit.
He convinced other disciples that the message of Christ could be brought
to all people.
Peter said very simply, “Now I am certain
that God treats all people alike.” (Acts
10:34)
Peter and the early Christians broke
social and religious barriers. They did
so because Christ offers peace to all.
It’s a big tent.
Prayer:
God, be with me as I live in my neighborhood. Help me to break down barriers, to refrain
from judging, and to be your presence of peace. Amen.
David Walsh
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God, Found in the
Crises
December 10, 2014
Psalm 27
Malachi 2:10-3:1
Luke 1:5-17
“Most of life is not
lived in crisis – which is a good thing.
Not many of us would be able to sustain a life of perpetual pain or loss
or ecstasy or challenge. But crisis has
this to say for it: in time of crisis
everything, absolutely everything, is important and significant. Life itself is on the line. No word is casual, no action marginal, and
almost always, God and our relationship with God is on the front page.”
The above is from
‘The Message’ by Eugene Peterson as an introduction to Malachi.
This was one of those
crisis-filled weeks. A huge sycamore
tree across the street blocked the drive for two days. Five craftsmen worked for 3 full days to make
a bathroom and laundry facility on the first floor so that Myron could come
home after 2 months of medical crisis. A
niece and her 3 sons were being evicted from their home by her former
father-in-law. A granddaughter was
wished “Happy Birthday” by her fiancé who added, “I don’t want to get married”
– 10 days before the wedding.
Any one of these
events was enough for the psyche. Where
was God in all these ‘crises’?
Ah – in the
resolutions!
The tree was safely
removed. The bathroom was ready 2 days
before the homecoming. The laundry had
power and water. The niece found a
suitable motel that included 2 meals a day.
The granddaughter and family decided to go to the Hawaiian resort anyway
to restore their sanity. Myron came home
– something we did not think would be possible.
And then we were
quietly informed that another great-grandchild is coming in the spring!
Advent is a time of
preparation. Most important to remember
in all the times of stress is that THE CHILD is coming, showing God’s love to
all. Let us prepare our hearts for the
coming and help us find God in every aspect of our lives, particularly during
the crises!
Alicia Hermance
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Readings: Psalm 126
Habakkuk 2:1-5
Philippians 3: 7-11
Advent Psalm
Praise be to God!
LORD of
Lords, King of Kings, Creator of heaven and earth.
We give thanks and rejoice for
soon it will be Christmas;
The
time that we sing, Joy to the World, the LORD has come!
But for now, the season of
Advent is here;
The
season when the sun bids us good bye,
The darkness surrounds us more
each day;
Often
it seems that only the stars and moon are there to guide us on our way.
As each day leads us closer to
winter, the rivers cease to flow.
The
animals huddle together to find warmth.
The leaves, which were once
glorious, have fallen and faded to a dull, muddy brown;
The
flowers bow their heads to the ground, dropping their seeds of hope.
All the universe is whispering,
Be still and know that I am God…
Be still and know that I am…
Be still and know that…
Be still and know…
Be still…
Be.
This Advent let us be still and
find the hope that bears your name.
Then we
will truly rejoice when it is Christmas.
We will rejoice and sing Joy to
the World, the LORD has come!
Praise
be to God! LORD of Lords, King of Kings. Creator of heaven and earth!
Prayer:
Dear Lord, Help us during this
season of Advent to be still and listen. Quiet our souls and hands when we
become so busy with holiday preparations and activities. Create in us a quiet
heart so we can hear the hope you have given us. Amen.
Sunny Baldwin
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I Press On
December 12, 2014
Psalm
126
Habakkuk 3:2-6
Philippians 3:12-16
Habakkuk 3:2-6
Philippians 3:12-16
I must admit, when I
first read my passages I thought I was in trouble. What did any of these passages have to do
with Advent and getting ready for Christmas? After rereading and rereading and thinking and
praying, some thoughts did come to mind. "Forgetting what is behind and straining
toward what is ahead I press on toward what is ahead. I press on toward a goal to win the prize for
which God has called me." (Philippians 3:13-14) Advent is the beginning of the Christian
calendar, a time to forget what is past and look forward to a clean start for a
new year in the glory of the new baby Jesus who came to take away our sins. God sent his son so we could see, in the
flesh, how to live and what was expected of us, so we could more clearly see
what God has called us to do. "The
Lord has done great things for us and we are filled with joy" Psalm 126:3.
Indeed we should be filled with great
joy for Jesus came to save you and me.
That is what
Christmas is all about. Jesus is the greatest gift!
Prayer:
Dear Lord, "I stand in awe of your deeds. The ancient mountains crumbled and the age old hills collapsed - but you march on." (Habakkuk 3:2,6) We thank you for your great gift of your son, Jesus Christ. Help us forget our sins of the past and renew ourselves in the year to come. Help us see what you have called us to do and trust in your almighty power. Let us always remember that you are by our side and let us feel your love. In your name we pray.
Amen
Diana Ackner
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Hard Labor
December 13, 2014
Psalm 126
Habakkuk 3:13-19
Matthew 21:28-32
December 13, 2014
Psalm 126
Habakkuk 3:13-19
Matthew 21:28-32
We work differently
today than people did many, many years ago. Work was hard and much more
physical. Hard labor often came with suffering, sweat and tears.That hard labor may also have brought great joy---gratitude for the harvest, a greater connection to the land, a greater connection to oneself and a greater connection to God.
We remember Mary’s labor this Advent season. Think about Mary riding a donkey a long distance, about to give birth. Hard labor. But what joyful labor knowing she was carrying Jesus.
Think about Joseph, mentally laboring in preparation for Jesus’ birth. How does one parent the Son of God?
Hard
labor. But such joyful labor.
In Biblical times, people labored over stone tablets with a hammer and a chisel. Important messages were inscribed. Hard labor.
Today, we labor over a very different kind of tablet. What messages do we take away from that tablet today? What messages do we impart?
Do we connect with the land the way our ancestors did? Do we read and reflect on God’s word?
Do we celebrate the miracle of Christ’s birth? (Or do we really celebrate the “Holiday Season”?)
Do we live our faith by example so that others may know God?
Hard labor.
But such joyful labor.
Tee Munson
In Biblical times, people labored over stone tablets with a hammer and a chisel. Important messages were inscribed. Hard labor.
Today, we labor over a very different kind of tablet. What messages do we take away from that tablet today? What messages do we impart?
Do we connect with the land the way our ancestors did? Do we read and reflect on God’s word?
Do we celebrate the miracle of Christ’s birth? (Or do we really celebrate the “Holiday Season”?)
Do we live our faith by example so that others may know God?
Hard labor.
But such joyful labor.
Tee Munson
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Here Comes the Christ
December 14, 2014
Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11
Luke 1:46b-55
1 Thessalonians 5:16-24
John 1: 6-8, 19-28
As is so often the
case, the prophets in the Old Testament, such as Isaiah, prophesy or foretell
what is to come in the New Testament.
Such is the case with this passage from Isaiah. In verses 1 to 4, we read:
“He has sent me to bring good news to the oppressed…
to proclaim liberty to the captives…
to proclaim the year of the LORD’S favor…
the planning of the LORD, to display his glory.”
All of these words
from the first four verses may be easily read as a prediction of the coming of
the birth of Jesus. Now read verses 8-11
and compare with the Magnificat in
Luke.
The verses from Luke
make up Mary’s Song of Praise, usually referred to as the Magnificat. While this song
has to do with Mary, in a deeper and larger way it has even more to do with
Mary’s son, Jesus. There is rejoicing
[verse 47], but not the rejoicing which she herself might do, but which might
be done by him who was to be born. God
will bring salvation through Jesus, but the “great ones” of the earth will not
welcome this kind of salvation. This
salvation was to challenge the selfish powers of the earth and exalt those of
low degree.
The Magnificat speaks of three of the
revolutions of God:
(1)
He scatters the proud in the
imagination or thoughts of their hearts [verse 51].
Christianity is the death of pride, because if a person sets their life
beside the life of Christ, it tears the last vestiges of pride from them.
(2)
He has brought down the powerful from
their thrones and lifted up the lowly
[verse52]. Christianity puts an end to
the world’s labels and prestige. When
one thinks about what Christ did for all, it becomes impossible to speak about
a common man or woman. The social ranks are gone.
(3)
He has filled the hungry with good
things, and sent the rich away empty [verse
53]. With a Christian society, no one
dares to have too much while others have too little.
On December 14, the
Sanctuary Choir will sing a version of The
Magnificat. I hope as you listen, that you will think about some of these
points above.
Ken Nelson
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The
Armor of God
December 15, 2014
I Kings 18:1-18
Ephesians 6:10-17
I have
been studying The Armor of God from a preacher-woman named Joyce Meyer,
so Ephesians really spoke to me. What
struck me is all the ACTIONS we must take in order to be strong in the
Lord: put on, prepare, stand
your ground, stand firm, take up! The Greater One lives on the inside of us…God
has equipped us with what we need to fight the enemy, but we must retrieve it,
and DO it. Satan will attempt to disrupt
our lives and mess with our feelings, but we can’t live by our feelings…they
are too fickle. We may not always FEEL
strong or courageous, but by putting on the armor of God, we can access His
strength.
If we are
not prepared, we open the door for the enemy.
It’s not a matter of IF evil will come…it will! So we must be prepared
for attack by putting on the FULL armor: from the helmet down to our feet,
along with the shield and the sword. II
Corinthians 6: 7 says, “in truthful speech and in the power of God; with
weapons of righteousness in the right hand and in the left...”
Jesus wore the armor of righteousness...and peace was His spiritual warfare. God sees us as righteous since we believe in his Son. Therefore we ARE righteous even though we don't do everything right. But from that, we learn to do the right things. We have the robe of righteousness, but we must put it on (and the Bible never tells us to take it off). The robe is a weapon against the enemy, not just a garment that covers us. When the evil one stirs up our souls we may feel guilt, condemnation, fear, worry, jealousy, depression, and so on. We must make a decision to take action! We can't get it from anybody else, but thank goodness it is already IN us. In Job 29:14 it says, "I put on righteousness as my clothing; justice was my robe and my turban." Deciding to forgive, deciding to stop feeling sorry for ourselves, or deciding to make our mess into something good are examples that help us to defeat evil and move on to the next spiritual level. As Christians, we know how prayer can also be a weapon: James 5:16 says, "The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective." Prayer and studying the word of God helps us to be strong! I Corinthians 16:13 states, "Be on your guard; stand firm in the faith; be courageous; be strong." We cannot afford to be wimpy children of God! Since we are already righteous, we have the power to CHOOSE to put on the armor. It's not always easy, but we MUST do it if we want to have the life Jesus died for us to have.
Joanna Desilva Clark
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Blessed to be a Blessing
December 16, 2014
Psalm 125
2 Kings 2: 9-22
Acts 3:17-Acts 4:4
Friends,
My name is Bill, I am 41-years-old, and I rely too heavily
on hydrocarbons and other consumptive and pollutive practices. I don’t know if it is midlife wisdom or if I
am just tuned into environmental harp chords, but I am really worried about how
climate change, resource depletion, economic disparities, and our pollutive
consumption are changing the world we know.
I think about climate change, how a stable temperature window, one which
we have had for tens of thousands of years, is closing with great rapidity and
at great cost: species depletion and extinction, for evolution takes time to
adapt; severe “acts of nature” such as floods, storms, hurricanes, and
droughts; suffering and loss of life; wars.
I am worried about the pain, the injustices, the loss that has occurred
and will even more greatly occur as we are forced to change.
Today’s scripture encourages me. In 2 Kings 2:9, I hear a call to action when
Elijah says to Elisha, “Tell me what I may do for you, before I am taken from
you.” We all have a limited time; what
will we do for one another in that time?
What positive legacy will we leave for those who are yet to come?
“And now, friends, I know that you acted in ignorance, as
did your rulers . . . repent, therefore, and turn to God,” (Acts 3:17) reminds
me how God gives us the chance to change and to turn from paths we have
ignorantly and destructively taken and to turn onto paths of grace in order to
have a life-affirming, personal, inclusive embrace of God.
“And in your descendants, all the families of the earth
shall be blessed,” (Acts 3:25) brings me to wonder - how will we bless one
another and the stranger? And since this
is a continually forward-looking statement, how can we insure that our future
generations will have an opportunity, a place to play their part in God’s
unfolding plans?
In Psalm 125:1, with faith, we can be strong and steadfast
like a mountain. Psalm 125:4 makes me
reflect on what it generally means to be good and upright but also how it
applies directly to the injustices and challenges, like climate change, that
blatantly confront us now.
We have big challenges to face, but, with faith,
determination and action, for our time to act and our time on earth are
limited, we can positively engage and change the world. We are blessed to be a blessing, which is
even more poignant as we anticipate the birth of the Christ Child.
What a hope. What a
gift.
May the Peace of Christ be with You,
Bill Faulkner II
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Threats, Fire, and Brimstone
December 17, 2014
Psalm 125
Malachi 3:16-4:6
Mark 9:9-13
Malachi is the last
book of the Old Testament, a letter to the people of Israel. It begins simply: “I am Malachi. And this is the message that
the Lord gave me for Israel.”
He then goes off on a
full-throated fire and brimstone rant to those people of Israel. He quotes ‘The
Lord All Powerful’ who condemns them for witchcraft, infidelity in marriage,
lies in court, stealing from workers, mistreating widows and orphan. According
to Malachi, the whole country is under a curse!
Yikes! It would seem the Old Testament winds down
with a red flag of the Lord waving over the land of those who have cheated God! Malachi wags his finger, warns his audience
that judgment will come, that the Lord has ‘their names written as a reminder
in his book.’
And yet…and yet. Malachi’s last word promises that the Lord
will send Elijah ‘before that great and terrible day comes’ and brings ‘doom to
the land.’ A coda of hope ends the first
testament.
Fast-forward to a few
generations later. Jesus has revealed
himself to three of his disciples on the mountaintop, and the voice of God has
said, “This is my Son” – a direct designation if ever there was one. But Jesus orders the disciples to tell no one
of what they have seen until after he has risen from the dead. The disciples remember the words of Malachi,
instructing Israel that Elijah must come first to restore all things. They don’t understand why secrets must be
kept and why the Son of Man must suffer before that happens.
The hope of the world
is standing among them, the coming of Elijah.
They have not put it together yet. Peter, James, and John weren’t ready
yet. They don’t know yet.
We know. We have read the words, heard the
stories. We are able to celebrate the beginning
of the story, the birth of that hope, because we know the message, the lessons
the Christ brings for all of us.
David Walsh
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Preparation for Worship
December 18, 2014
Habakkuk 2:20
2 Samuel 6:1-11
Hebrews 1:1-4
How do you prepare to offer worship unto God? Advent is a time of preparation, but we all prepare in different ways. Reading a cookbook helps to provide you knowledge of how to make a meal, but if you don't have the right equipment or ingredients the results are harder to achieve or less than stellar. As we heard not too long ago, the bridesmaids trimmed their wick and filled their lamps with oil, though some did not and were found to be unrecognizable to the bridegroom. In the same way, our worship of and to God should be made as an act of preparation as much as an act of proclaiming the blessings and glory of our Lord.
Every Lord's Day, I am privileged
to lead worship in a way that requires much preparation and sensitivity to not
only the lectionary, but also the life and events surrounding our congregation.
Singing the Psalms, reading the lessons, and conversations with the members of
First Reformed help me to plan and practice accordingly; but the biggest guide
to leading worship is knowing that I need to help to prepare those who need to
listen, who are listening intently, and those who may not be able to hear God
at five to ten minutes before worship begins get to a point where they can hear
the message that God has for them. The prelude is part of my worship to God, as
it helps to prepare his people to offer their praises as well.
So, as an exercise, consider some
of the following as you drive to, walk to, or sit preparing for worship: What
is going on in my life that I need to listen closer to God? How can I better
help my neighbor prepare for worship? Am I ready to offer my best to God?
The Lord is
in his Holy Temple; Let all the earth keep silence before him...so that our
praise and adoration may be the best because we have prepared our minds and
hearts to hear and respond to God's living word.
Soli Deo Gloria,
Soli Deo Gloria,
Justan Foster
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Listening with New
and Receptive Ears
December 19, 2014
Psalm 89: 1-4, 19-26
2 Samuel 6:12-19
Hebrews 1:5-14
Scripture provides
many foreshadowing and predictions of the birth of God’s son. In addition, the psalmist says, “I will sing
of the great Lord’s great love forever.”
We are told of David’s dancing and the sound of shouting and trumpets.
The events described
in these scripture readings occurred over two thousand years ago, and we
approach the birth of Jesus and all that implies yet again. All the distractions, the trees, the
decorations, the presents, the hearty greetings, the parties, and the messages
of Peace on Earth – Good Will to Men – all this, unless we guard against it,
becomes ritual, an exercise that, when all is said and done, has little real
emotional or intellectual impact on our lives.
This year let us
listen to the Christmas story with fresh and receptive ears. Let us sing “Hark the Angels Sing” and “O
Come All Ye Faithful,” for the hundredth time, but let us listen to the words
as if we had never heard them before.
When King George III
stood up during the first performance of the “Hallelujah Chorus” it was not
tradition that made him stand – custom and tradition had nothing to do with
it. He stood because he was so awed and
moved by music and text that he had to respond.
As we celebrate the
arrival of the birth of our Lord this year, may all of us reach inside to feel
and express all the awe and wonder that the birth of Jesus brought more than
two thousand years ago.
Bob Atwood
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WATCH
December 20, 2014
Judges13:2-24
John 7:40-52
Have you noticed how often stories
about miraculous births appear in the Bible?
Take Abraham and Sarah, our grandparents in faith, for example. God promised them that a great nation would
come from their offspring, and that through them the world would be
blessed. But they grew old and children
never came. The Bible delicately puts it
like this: “It had ceased to be with Sarah after the manner of women.” (Genesis
18:11) God’s promise grew old along with
Abraham and Sarah; it appeared empty.
But God said, “Trust me,” and God was faithful. Sarah gave birth to a son and named him
Isaac, which is like the Hebrew word for “Laughter.” Sarah’s tears of doubt became the laughter of
faith.
There are others. The prophet Samuel anointed Israel’s first
two kings, King Saul and King David. He
was born to Elkanah and Hannah in their old age (1 Samuel 1). And in today’s lesson from Judges 13 we learn
about the birth of Samson, the son born to Manoah and his wife who had waited a
long, long time. (It’s interesting to
note that even though the ancients considered Manoah’s wife one of 23 righteous
women in the Bible, she is nowhere given a name.) In my day, Samson was a favorite character
for young boys. After all, the Bible
says that he killed a lion with his bare hands, and, in a grand heroic dying
act, he pulled an entire temple down upon himself and his people’s enemies.
But five days before Christmas, when we
read accounts of miraculous births it’s hard not to think about the miraculous
birth of Jesus to Mary. Mary was not
old, but she was a virgin. So Jesus’
birth was likewise surprising and unexpected.
There is a certain pattern to these stories of our faith. God enters the lives of his people in
unexpected ways. People don’t see it
coming. Think of all the expressions of
surprise in the scriptures:
“Surely God was in this place and I
didn’t know it,” says Jacob in Genesis 28:16.
“Can anything good come out of Nazareth?”
wonders Nathaniel in John 1:46 upon hearing about Jesus of Nazareth. Then Nathaniel met him and became his
disciple.
“What good are five loaves and two
fish?” think Jesus’ disciples in Matthew 14:17 when faced with a hungry crowd
and Jesus’ command to feed them.
So here’s the Advent message for the
day. Don’t lose hope. God breaks into human life, and often in
unexpected ways. God breaks into your
life, very likely in ways and in circumstances you’d never guess. Watch.
Craig
Hoffman
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December 21, 2014
2 Samuel 7:1-11
Luke 1:46b-55
Luke 1:26-38
Today is the Winter
Solstice. In my house, this is the day that we hold a great open house with
people traveling from near and far to see each other, eat good food and drink
homemade liquids and howl around a campfire in the yard. It’s an old pagan
tradition and one that our early Christian ancestors co-opted pretty early on.
We do it because it
allows us to bypass the presents and glitter and jingle bells of Christmas to
stand together on the darkest day of the year to remind each other that the
darkness has not won. Whatever has happened throughout the year has not been
able to break the world or those of us dwelling therein. We all need reminders
at this time of year.
Mary stands at such a
time: unwed, teenaged, pregnant and she sings a powerful song of hope to all
those for whom life has been hard. Mary’s song in her time of darkness is one
of the most powerful recorded in Scripture. It still echoes in a world where
the darkness seems to be growing daily.
Step outside tonight.
Howl at the moon (though you won’t be able to see it). Remember Mary, the
Christ bearer. If life is hard, hold on. Dawn will come. If life is good, lean
into the song of Mary and help make her vision a reality.
Kent Busman
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Verses
December 22, 2014
1 Samuel 1:1-18
Hebrews 9:1-14
Samuel 1:1-18
When we
call out to You, O Lord,
And wait for answers to our prayer,
Give us the patience that we need
And help us sense Your love and care. Sper
And wait for answers to our prayer,
Give us the patience that we need
And help us sense Your love and care. Sper
Hebrews 9:1-14
1 Glory be to Jesus,
Who in bitter pains
Poured for me the lifeblood
From His sacred veins!
2 Grace and life eternal
In that blood I find;
Blest be His compassion,
Infinitely kind!
3 Blest through endless ages
Be the precious stream
Which from endless torments
Doth the world redeem!
4 Abel’s blood for vengeance
Pleaded to the skies;
But the blood of Jesus
For our pardon cries.
5 Oft as earth exulting
Wafts its praise on high,
Angel hosts rejoicing,
Make their glad reply.
6 Lift we, then, our voices,
Swell the mighty flood;
Louder still and louder
Praise the precious blood!
Glory be to Jesus, Who in Bitter Pains
Translator:
Edward Caswall (1857)
Bill Monaghan
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Are You Ready?
December 23, 2014
1 Samuel:19-28
Hebrews 8:1-13
Romans 13:11-14
While awaiting the
birth of our first child, a lot needed to be done: new room prepared, freshly painted, furnished
and decorated in excited anticipation of the arrival of our new baby. We were anxious as well that all the baby’s
needs would be met. Like Mary over 2000
years ago, expecting her first child, I think many of our feelings, anxieties,
hopes and joys were the same.
Do I have enough
clothes, diapers, a safe crib, toys to stimulate as well as delight, was it a
safe comfortable space? The baby’s
entire well-being and future was in our hands – a daunting thought and reality.
Excited over this new
addition to our family, I wanted everything ready. I had to get a pediatrician to care for the
health of the baby. I had read books and
more books, talked to other mothers on how to care for a baby’s basic needs –
physical, social and emotional development.
How would I know if something was wrong?
Am I doing everything right? Because of my preparations, I did feel
ready and confident that I would be successful.
Are you ready for the
coming of Christ? Have you made all your
preparations? Can you meet that day with
confidence? The Lord “told us all
things” in that we may prepare for that glorious day when He will return to
gather up his children. The time is
near, the time to prepare is now. Like
expecting a baby, you never know the exact time when they will arrive, and when
they do, I know you will want all to be ready.
Be knowledgeable of God’s word and promises, emblaze it into your heart,
incorporate it into your life. Stand in
confidence that all is ready.
Linda Willoughby
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Quiet
December 24, 2014
Psalm 96
Ecclesiastes 3:1-8
James 1:17-18
I love
this time of year. The festivities, the laughter, the singing – even as it gets
colder and darker outside, we get warmer and brighter inside. It’s a bright,
loud, colorful, fabulous whirlwind, and I adore it. However, sometimes it can
all be a bit much. I’m a self-proclaimed introvert – I like my books, my solo
runs, my alone time. Don’t get me wrong, I also love being around people, but
in order for me to not lose my mind, I need to balance it with some space. And
space is something that’s hard to come by during this season.
So I
like to go skiing. There’s this plot of woods by my parent’s house. It’s not
big, and there are no hills, but it suits me just fine. Skiing for me is less
about the rush, the speed; to me, it’s about seeing the woods in a way I don’t
get to during the summer. So I’ll drive to my parents, grab my skis and the
dog, and head out. It’s so quiet in the winter. The only sounds are the hissing
of my skis, the panting of the dog and the occasional chickadee or blue jay.
The quiet lets me reflect, lets me appreciate more the wonderful gifts that I
have, the warmth, joy, laughter, and love that’s waiting for me when I return
home.
It’s so
easy to get caught up in the season, to only see the lights and colors, to hear
only the noise, and forget why we are celebrating. The silence among the trees
helps me remember. There’s a different type of celebration happening in the
woods, one that isn’t showy or loud. It’s the quiet peace of a place that has
lived for decades, and will continue on, grateful for the little things, like
chickadees, blue jays, and snow-covered spaniels.
Maggie White
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GLORY
TO GOD
December
25, 2014
Isaiah 62:6-12
Psalm 97
Titus 3:4-7
Luke 2:1-20
I wonder how many of us will actually read this on December
25! We’ve been so busy planning,
shopping, wrapping, cooking, cleaning, traveling, finishing up school work,
singing or playing in concerts, acting in pageants, baking, entertaining and so
much more. I wonder how many of us would
rather sleep all day!
How different this day is from that day long ago when a baby
was born in the backyard shed – the Green Shed?
Animals, noisy and smelly, were right there. A baby was born to a scared unwed teenaged
girl far away from home. Her tears are
not part of the Luke account but I imagine they were a prominent part of her
experience.
Her planning for this day, unlike our stressful countdown to
December 25, may have included fear, panic, and anxiety about being so far away
from home and the women who would have attended her and comforted her. She may have been in pain, tired from a long
uncomfortable trip. How different her
day from mine; how different the birth of her firstborn from the birth of my
firstborn.
When I come to this day, I think about how disappointed Mary
and Joseph must have been when there was no room at the bed and breakfast in
that faraway town they were visiting, visiting not for pleasure but because
their government said they had to be counted in the census for taxation
purposes. I think about how hard her
delivery was, how scary those first visitors were, and I know this day isn’t
about a perfect baby lying clean and quiet in a beautiful girl’s arms. But this day is about a mighty God who comes
close to us and to our world and a mighty God who has promised to come
again. We who need a second chance and
forgiveness are blessed with a Savior. I who am sinful this day, am forgiven,
by the child in the backyard, God’s child!
Our Advent readings have been dark and foreboding. While a Psalm may have reminded us of hope in
God or God’s light in a dark world, reminded us that God is our rock and refuge
and strength, by and large there has not been much joy that we have read
about! Today’s Psalm, though, calls us
to rejoice, let all the earth rejoice.
And we sing, “Joy to the world, the Lord is come.”
But the traditional familiar words of the Luke Christmas
story are NOT full of joy. Did you read
about the fearful shepherds, the scary angels, government census and taxation,
and a manger for a brand new baby?
Hardly a calm, holy night. This
has become the beloved Christmas story only in retrospect, thousands of years
in the telling. We long again and again
for the Son of God to come, to be real, to save us, and to bless us.
As we rejoice with the earth this day, whether in quiet
solitude or in noisy commotion, take time to give thanks, and to rest, trusting
in a new way the hope that is given to us and all of creation in this blessed
Christmastide.
Jan L. Hoffman
















