Sunday service for 19 December 2021, fourth Sunday of Advent
19 December 2021, 4th Sunday of Advent
Gourock St. John’s Church of Scotland
Service prepared by the Rev. Teri Peterson
Manse phone: 632143
Email: tpeterson (at) churchofscotland.org.uk
To hear the audio recording of this service, please phone 01475 270037. It’s a local landline number so minutes should be included in your phone plan.
Prelude Music
Welcome and Announcements
Lighting the Fourth Advent Candle
1: In the depths of night, God’s grace lights the way.
2: In the shadows before dawn, God’s life lights the way.
3: In the confusion and chaos, God’s truth lights the way.
4: In the longing and waiting, God’s Word lights the way.
All: God is coming, and the world will never be the same!
~candle is lit~
O come, thou Wisdom from on high,
who orderest all things mightily:
to us the path of knowledge show;
and teach us in her ways to go.
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel
shall come to thee, O Israel.
Prayer
Your glory shines, Holy One, yet we confess that we find it easier to live in the kingdoms of this world than in yours. We understand how the systems work, and we admit that though the price the powers and principalities demand is high, still we choose them. We confess that we have fallen into the trap of speaking one way and living another — we claim the truth of your word and at the same time live as if the empires of this world have ultimate power and sway. They obscure your grace and love, and we admit that in the fog and shadows we have gotten turned around, so we find ourselves serving the death-dealing powers rather than your life and light. Forgive us and turn us again to your way, enlightened by your truth and grace. We ask in the name of the one who forever bound word and action together, your Word become Flesh among us, Jesus the Christ. Amen.
Online Hymn 274: Comfort, Comfort, Now My People
Children’s Time (in person only)
Reading: John 1.1-18
For several weeks, we have been reading from the prophets, with their concerns and promises for the people in exile, looking for God’s presence and call in unfamiliar territory. Today we transition from the Hebrew Bible to the New Testament. From now through Easter we will be reading from the Gospel According to John, which was written between 90-100 CE to a community struggling with how to differentiate themselves in an increasingly hostile environment, as they no longer fit into synagogue life but were also threatening to the Roman Empire. Each of the four gospels has a unique perspective as they tell the story of Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection. We might think of John as looking at Jesus from above, from a cosmic perspective, seeing a big picture rather than small immediate details. We’ll hear this from the very beginning, as the gospel opens with an overture that, just like a musical overture, hints at the themes that are to come. I am reading from chapter 1, beginning at verse 1, from the New Revised Standard Version.
~~~~~
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. (John testified to him and cried out, ‘This was he of whom I said, “He who comes after me ranks ahead of me because he was before me.” ’) From his fullness we have all received, grace upon grace. The law indeed was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. No one has ever seen God. It is God the only Son, who is close to the Father’s heart, who has made him known.
~~~
For the word of God in scripture,
For the word of God among us,
For the word of God within us,
Thanks be to God.
Sermon: The Word Became Flesh
This time of year means that everything I read or see calls a song to mind…this week I’ve been non-stop humming
God of God,
Light of light,
Lo! he abhors not the Virgin’s womb;
very God,
begotten not created;
O come, let us adore him,
O come, let us adore him,
O come, let us adore him, Christ the Lord!
In just a few sparse lines of poetry filled mainly with words we rarely use anymore, the carol gives us a summary of John 1: the Word was God…light shines in the darkness…the Word became flesh, loving and blessing this human body…and when we see, we will orient our lives around praise.
A few weeks ago, when we read from Isaiah 9 about “the people walking in darkness have seen a great light,” I said that the shining of the light doesn’t change the path on which we walk or the obstacles in our way, it changes us and our ability to navigate the journey to which God calls us.
John’s understanding of the light is the same. The Word, who is the light of all people, became flesh and lived among us, moved right into our neighbourhood and set up home and shop in our community…and we have seen his glory. That glory, that light, illuminates the world around us, showing us things we might not have seen before. Just the same way that a stream of sunshine through the window can highlight the dust floating in the air or the fingerprints on the windows, the light of the world highlights the things we live with everyday without even noticing. Things that the empires of this world want us to not see.
The Word became flesh and lived among us, and in the light of his glory we can see that we are children of God — our ancestry is not the determiner of our status in God’s family. The empires of this world want us to believe that where we’re born, or what we look like, or who our parents are, determines our value, and our place in the world, and how we ought to relate to other people. They have even used this ancient poetry to claim that dark skin is inferior to light skin, so we have to be careful when we use these powerful metaphors. Because the truth is that being a child of God, made in God’s image, has nothing to do with any of that. When we see that truth, we can live differently, walking in the light of life for all people.
The Word became flesh and lived among us, and in the light of his glory we can see that there is power in humility. John the baptiser recognised that though his role was important, he was not the light. He saw his job was to point the way toward the coming Christ, rather than trying to gather fame and power and wealth for himself. And even Jesus did not try to elevate himself or take equality with God for granted, but humbled himself. Which reminds me of another carol:
Hail, the heaven-born Prince of Peace!
Hail, the Sun of Righteousness!
Light and life to all he brings,
risen with healing in his wings.
Mild he lays his glory by,
born that man no more may die,
born to raise the sons of earth,
born to give them second birth:
Hark! the herald angels sing,
‘Glory to the new-born King.’
The empires of this world want us to focus attention on ourselves, and on what we can gain or earn, how we can get ahead, not on God himself laying his glory by the wayside. But when we see the truth of our place in God’s story, we can live differently, pointing the way to the one who is greater than we are.
The Word became flesh and lived among us, and in the light of his glory we can see that even those seemingly small roles matter. John was certain that his task was small and temporary — he wasn’t the light, he was a witness, and he wasn’t the first or the last. But he still went about his ministry faithfully, doing what God needed him to do, and it mattered. It made a difference to the people he baptised, the people who heard his teaching, the disciples he sent to follow Jesus, and even the religious and political leaders who were so disturbed by him. The empires of this world want us to think that small efforts make no difference, that if we can’t solve everything in one go, we should simply give up and let them carry on with their destructive ways. But when we see the truth of our place in God’s story, we can live differently, confidently doing even the smallest thing God asks of us, trusting it matters to God’s kingdom or else God wouldn’t call us to do it!
The Word became flesh and lived among us, and in the light of his glory we can see that flesh and blood matter, these bodies matter. Surely God could have sent the Word in any number of intellectual or spiritual ways, but God chose to take on a body, to live with the pains and joys and limitations and senses of a human body. Our bodies are not incidental to God’s story, they are a gift, a blessing, and it’s through a human body that God blesses the world. The empires of this world want us to separate mind, body, and spirit, and to believe none of them are good enough, to measure ourselves against some impossible standard so they can sell us more things. But when we see the truth of God’s emBodiment, we can live differently, treasuring the gift of physical presence and honouring and taking care of this body God gave us for a purpose.
The Word became flesh and lived among us, and in the light of his glory we can see that the darkness itself is already past, despite what the empires of this world think about themselves. This reading uses only past-tense words to say “the darkness did not overcome it” while the light shines in ongoing present tense verbs. The powers of this world, which do not have grace and truth at heart and are not serving God’s kingdom, want us to think they are the ultimate reality. I’m reminded of that old quip about “he’s a self-made man, and he worships his creator” — that’s what the ways of the world are like. They think they are the self-evidently correct, ordained since the beginning of time, or even only possible way things could be. And people uphold them because we can’t see any other way, so we assume it’s true that this is just the way things are, nothing to see here, nothing we can do about it. But ultimately that’s idolatry — the empire worshipping itself as if it’s the only way.
In the light of God’s Word, we see that they are past tense, holding on only by keeping us in the dark. When we see the truth of God’s ongoing life, we can recognise what is truly ultimate reality…and then we can live our lives in light of that reality instead of the one the world so desperately wants us to believe. Some do not see, despite the light shining. Some don’t accept the vision the light reveals. Some choose the shadows, because it’s easier and more profitable. But the light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it. The light overcomes the confusion and obfuscation, offering clarity we can only describe as grace upon grace.
In which kingdom would we prefer to live? Christ was born to shine the light of truth, not from far off but from right here, as close as God could get — pitching a tent in the back garden, moving in to the kitchen, meeting us at the front door — so that we could see God’s glory, up close and personal. This Christmas, and beyond, may we see, and walk, in the light.
Amen.
Online Hymn: Emmanuel – Living Word (by David MacGregor)
In Person Hymn 308: Behold the great Creator makes (vv. 1, 2, 3, 5)
Prayer and Lord’s Prayer
We take a deep breath and feel your spirit in our lungs, O God.
We feel your breath expanding, filling, stretching us, bringing us to new life.
We give thanks for these bodies you have gifted us.
As we place our hands on our legs,
we are grateful for muscles and joints,
and for assistive devices like sticks and chairs,
that bear heavy loads,
that move us from place to place.
We pray this day for those who feel trapped, unable to move.
We lift up those who are confined to home or hospital,
those who are self-isolating,
those who live with pain in their joints or muscles,
those who mourn the loss of freedom or mobility.
May they be upheld and moved by your strength.
As we place our hands on our stomachs,
we are grateful for all that goes on inside of us, out of sight.
We thank you for all the organs that keep us going,
for the way you have knit us together
and created a body that cares for itself.
We are fearfully and wonderfully made!
We pray this day for those who do not have enough to eat,
whose tummies rumble and whose systems suffer from lack.
We lift up our neighbours who are ill and awaiting tests or treatment,
whose stomachs are full of butterflies and nerves as they wonder what the future holds.
May they be fed and healed by your power.
As we place our hands on our arms, wrapping ourselves in your gift,
we give thanks for the ability to feel, to know you through our senses.
We are grateful for wonder and tenderness, compassion and joy,
there for us to experience in every way.
We pray this day for those who are starved for touch,
who are lonely and longing for a hug.
We lift up those whose senses show them only pain,
who are surrounded by fear or shadows or abuse.
May they be cared for by your love.
Your word is the foundation of reality,
your grace pre-dates history,
and still you choose to reveal yourself to us,
still you call us your children.
We come, longing to see your glory,
praying you will once again speak life into being, O God,
and call us to walk by your light.
We ask in the name of the Word made Flesh, Jesus the Christ,
the light and life of the world, who taught us to pray together:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.
Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.
For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours, now and forever. Amen.
In Person Hymn 313: See! in yonder manger low (vv. 1, 2, 5)
Benediction
May you walk in the light of grace and truth this Christmas. And as you go, may the Spirit of God go above you to watch over you. May the Spirit of God go beside you to be your companion. May the Spirit of God go before you to show you the way, and behind you to push you into places you might not go alone. And may the Spirit of God go within you to remind you that you are loved more deeply than you can possibly imagine. May the fire of God’s love burn brightly in you, and through you into the world. Go in peace. Amen.
Sung Benediction Response (John L Bell, tune Gourock St John’s)
Now may the Lord of all be blessed,
Now may Christ’s gospel be confessed,
Now may the Spirit when we meet
Bless sanctuary and street.
Postlude Music
Announcements
* This Advent our theme is “EmBodied” — encountering the Word Made Flesh, in our own bodies and in our own places where God has planted us.
* Follow your St John’s Embodied Advent Calendar! There’ll be a Facebook Live for some of the St John’s Advent Calendar too.
* Bring your Reverse Advent Calendar donations to church or to the manse and we will get them delivered.
* Christmas worship Schedule:
Longest Night (a quieter Christmas service recognising the darkness in which the Light shines) on 21 December at 7:30pm
Joint services for Christmas Eve at 7:30pm at St. John’s and 11:30pm at Old Gourock and Ashton
Christmas Day, 11am, on ZOOM with all of Connect
Sunday 26 December, 10:30am, joint service with St Ninian’s Larkfield and OGA, at Old Gourock.
* All worship is online (or on the phone at 01475 270037, or in print) and we also meet in person, subject to the usual protocols for distancing, hand hygiene, mask wearing. We can now welcome up to 85-100 people for worship with 1m distancing between households. No booking is required. Masks are required at all times inside the building, including while singing. If you are able, please enter by the front door in Bath street, and only those who need step-free access should use the back door.
* Tonight we will gather with Christians across the nation for evening prayer on the Connect Facebook Page, led tonight by Teri. Log on at 6:58pm to join in.
* The Kirk now has online giving! If you have not already set up a standing order in order to facilitate your spiritual discipline of giving, or if you would like to make an extra gift to support the ministry St. John’s does in our parish, you can give online by clicking here. If you would like to set up a standing order, please contact Peter Bennett, our treasurer, or Teri and she can give you his details. You can also send your envelopes to the church or the manse by post and we will ensure they are received. Remember: no one is coming to your door to collect your envelopes, so please stay safe!
* Don’t forget to follow us on Facebook and Youtube, and to sign up for our email devotions! Midweek you can watch Wine and the Word on Youtube, pray with video devotions on Facebook, and consider a new angle on something with a devotional email. Feel free to share with your friends, too!
Sunday Service for 12 December 2021, third Sunday of Advent
12 December 2021, 3rd Sunday of Advent
Gourock St. John’s Church of Scotland
Service prepared by the Rev. Teri Peterson
Manse phone: 632143
Email: tpeterson (at) churchofscotland.org.uk
To hear the audio recording of this service, please phone 01475 270037. It’s a local landline number so minutes should be included in your phone plan.
Prelude Music
Welcome and Announcements
Lighting the Third Advent Candle
1: Listen carefully — God’s word does what God intends it to do,
and all creation jumps for joy.
2: Seek faithfully — God’s mercy is beyond our understanding,
giving us abundant reason to rejoice.
1: Taste and see — God’s feast has room for us all,
offering delight that can’t be bought.
2: Feel the rain and sun, cold and warmth — God’s world reveals God’s way,
calling us to join the celebration.
All: God is coming, and the world will never be the same!
~candle is lit~
O come, thou Key of David, come,
and open wide our heavenly home;
make safe the way that leads on high,
and close the path to misery:
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel
shall come to thee, O Israel.
Prayer
You are a God who sustains us when we faint from thirst,
who feeds us when we have spent our last penny.
Your table is full of good things we could never earn, and by your grace you invite us all.
As you nourish the earth and so it bears fruit,
we pray this day you would nourish us that we too may bear fruit.
For we confess that amidst the many voices of the world calling for our attention,
demanding for our time and energy, offering opportunities to spend and acquire.
we aren’t always sure which voice is yours,
so we often simply choose the one that’s easiest or most fun in the moment and call it you.
Forgive us when we have lost touch with your word, and so cannot recognise your voice.
Forgive us when we spend ourselves for things that can never satisfy.
Forgive us when we choose unsustainable ways that leave some starving and thirsty
while others gorge themselves yet feel empty.
In your abundant mercy, incline our ears to you, and turn us toward your better way,
that we may join all creation in accomplishing your purpose.
We ask in the name of your Word made flesh, Jesus the Christ. Amen.
Music
Online: Praise the God of Grace and Glory (Resound Worship)
In person: organ by Philip
Children’s Time (in person only)
Reading: Isaiah 55.1-13
Last week we heard from the prophet Ezekiel, who was a priest who was taken into exile with the leaders and elites of Jerusalem soon after Babylon defeated them. Today we hear from the second prophet Isaiah, who lived nearly a hundred years after the first Isaiah we heard a few weeks ago, and around 60 years after the exile began. This prophet was speaking to the people just before they were about to be allowed to return home. These were the children and grandchildren, or even great-grandchildren, of those who had originally been removed from Jerusalem, people who had grown up in Babylon and other cities of the empire. They had never personally known their homeland, but had heard their parents and grandparents speak of it often, and of the promise that God would rescue them and restore them…but it was a promise that felt far away, as they went about their lives in the only home they’d ever known. I am reading today from Isaiah chapter 55, in the New Revised Standard Version.
~~~~~
Ho, everyone who thirsts,
come to the waters;
and you that have no money,
come, buy and eat!
Come, buy wine and milk
without money and without price.
Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread,
and your labour for that which does not satisfy?
Listen carefully to me, and eat what is good,
and delight yourselves in rich food.
Incline your ear, and come to me;
listen, so that you may live.
I will make with you an everlasting covenant,
my steadfast, sure love for David.
See, I made him a witness to the peoples,
a leader and commander for the peoples.
See, you shall call nations that you do not know,
and nations that do not know you shall run to you,
because of the Lord your God, the Holy One of Israel,
for he has glorified you.
Seek the Lord while he may be found,
call upon him while he is near;
let the wicked forsake their way,
and the unrighteous their thoughts;
let them return to the Lord, that he may have mercy on them,
and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon.
For my thoughts are not your thoughts,
nor are your ways my ways, says the Lord.
For as the heavens are higher than the earth,
so are my ways higher than your ways
and my thoughts than your thoughts.
For as the rain and the snow come down from heaven,
and do not return there until they have watered the earth,
making it bring forth and sprout,
giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater,
so shall my word be that goes out from my mouth;
it shall not return to me empty,
but it shall accomplish that which I purpose,
and succeed in the thing for which I sent it.
For you shall go out in joy,
and be led back in peace;
the mountains and the hills before you
shall burst into song,
and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands.
Instead of the thorn shall come up the cypress;
instead of the brier shall come up the myrtle;
and it shall be to the Lord for a memorial,
for an everlasting sign that shall not be cut off.
For the word of God in scripture,
For the word of God among us,
For the word of God within us,
Thanks be to God.
Sermon: From Heaven to Earth
For you shall go out in joy,
and be led back in peace;
the mountains and the hills before you
shall burst into song,
and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands.
Is anyone else imagining a hospital corridor, lined with nurses, doctors, and staff, all applauding and cheering as a patient walks or is wheeled through toward the door — clapping them out as they are discharged after a long stay and arduous treatment? Most of us have probably seen the videos, or perhaps even been the patient or a family member coming down the hall after a life-changing illness or injury, heading out into new life after such a difficult journey through trauma and anxiety and hard work. Or maybe we’ve been the hospital staff who have witnessed the whole thing, assisted with even the most private of daily tasks, cared through thick and thin, applied every bit of knowledge and imagination and compassion to get the person to this moment, when they walk back out into the world. There’s so much joy that no one can help themselves, they clap their hands and burst into song.
God says the whole creation will be like that when the people come out of exile and into the place and plan God has for them. The trees and mountains will line the corridor and clap and sing and cheer as God’s people finally, after they’ve been through so much, step out into new life. The joy will be uncontainable and irrepressible, literally just bursting out all over with excitement and wonder and glee.
I’ve talked before about this being my favourite chapter of scripture, and how much I love the picture Isaiah paints of the new life God is calling us out to. That everyone is invited to be nourished and nurtured without first buying or earning anything — not a transaction to be seen, it’s God’s grace upon grace, pulling up a chair at the table and feeding us in body, mind, and spirit. That this extends even to nations we do not know, all the peoples coming together across the various borders and walls we have built, because God wants one community together at this table where we can delight in God’s goodness. That when God calls the sinner, it isn’t for punishment but for mercy. And that every single bit of this is God’s gift to us, not something we can get for ourselves…and in fact what we have tried to get for ourselves is a pale imitation that costs us a lot but leaves us hollow and malnourished. The only way to truly be nourished and sustained and satisfied is to sit at the table God lays out for us and enjoy the feast together with all the others God has called out to new life, knowing that not a single one of us deserves to be there and yet God wants us all and calls us all.
We have a million arguments with this vision, of course. We claim it’s impossible, it’s naive, it’s silly to think that food and drink are a human right, or that everyone — even those people — should have a seat at the table. Or we think we, for some reason, don’t belong at the table. We hear this and think it’s about heaven, or maybe even like end-of-the-world heaven, what happens after the book of Revelation is done, perhaps. Or sometimes we decide it can’t be about actual physical food and bodies and nations and creation, so it has to just be a spiritual meaning. But ultimately all those arguments are like noise that make it hard to hear the message God is trying to give us, drowning out God’s voice. There’s no evidence in the actual scripture for any of them, they’re thoughts we’ve had but not thoughts God is having.
And so God says “incline your ear and come to me.” Like when you’re in a noisy room and you need to lean in a little to hear what your friend is saying across the table — incline your ear. Focus. Lean in and tilt your good ear and try to mentally block out all the chatter…listen carefully, so that you may live.
That’s what God wants for us — to come out down that long corridor into new life, even after everything we’ve been through. And the first thing we’ll see is a giant table with enough for everyone, even us.
For my thoughts are not your thoughts, says the Lord. God is literally thinking about different things than we are. While our minds are full of reasons why this vision can’t be true, God is busy making it happen, turning word into action, even word into flesh, to make the impossible possible.
How, exactly?
Isaiah invites us to picture the heavens and the earth. The skies are far above us, just as God’s ways are far above ours…yet they are not disconnected, remaining far away and inaccessible. The rain and the snow come down and water the earth, so that it will bear fruit, as it is created to do — fruit that in turn feeds others in the creation. The heavens reach down to earth, and nourish it. And God’s word, too, reaches down, comes down, and feeds us, so that we will bear fruit, as we are created to do — fruit that in turn feeds others. It’s never only for us, it’s always continuing the cycle, expanding the welcome, ensuring no one is hungry or thirsty — for food or for justice or for love.
The earth can’t bear fruit that feeds others if it isn’t first fed by the rain. We don’t bear fruit that serves others if we aren’t first fed by the word and the table. And God promises that the word always bears fruit.
What celebration there will be, when we finally follow the voice that is calling us out to new life…the mountains and the trees will line the way, clapping and cheering and singing for joy. And God is persistent and insistent that the word will accomplish God’s purposes…so insistent that the Word will even take on flesh and live among us, to cut through the chatter and chaos to call us more directly, more clearly, to this table of plenty where, in accordance with God’s will, there is a seat for everyone at the joyful feast.
May it be so. Amen.
Online Hymn 316: Love came down at Christmas
Love came down at Christmas,
Love all lovely, Love Divine;
Love was born at Christmas,
star and angels gave the sign.
Worship we the Godhead,
Love incarnate, Love Divine;
worship we our Jesus:
but wherewith for sacred sign?
Love shall be our token,
love be yours and love be mine,
love to God and all men,
love for plea and gift and sign.
in-person Hymn 277: Hark the glad sound!
Hark the glad sound! the Saviour comes,
the Saviour promised long:
let every heart exult with joy,
and every voice with song!
He comes, the prisoners to relieve,
in Satan’s bondage held;
the gates of brass before him burst,
the iron fetters yield.
He comes the broken hearts to bind,
the bleeding souls to cure;
and with the treasures of his grace
to enrich the humble poor.
The sacred year has now revolved,
accepted of the Lord,
when heaven’s high promise is fulfilled,
and Israel is restored.
Our glad hosannas, Prince of Peace,
thy welcome shall proclaim;
and heaven’s exalted arches ring
with thy most honoured name.
Invitation to a Generous Advent
During the season of Advent, many people traditionally open a door of an Advent calendar to find a treat of some kind. This year we are invited to a different kind of advent calendar, in which each day we do something. Connect is gathering together for a Reverse Advent Calendar in which we put something into a box each day, and then those things are donated to the food bank and starter packs — these will be collected at our family film night on Saturday the 18th at 4pm at the Lyle Kirk, or you can bring them to church or the manse that weekend so we can get them to the right people — a tangible way to put Jeremiah’s instruction into practice. St John’s also has an advent calendar to help us explore the them of an EmBodied Advent, and each activity will help us go deeper into living out what we hear in scripture on Sundays. These advent calendars are available in print and online.
As this is also a season of gift giving and generosity, I also encourage us all to consider our spiritual practice of generosity and perhaps to make a special gift to the ministry of the church in this place and time, as we seek to serve our community in new ways that put Jeremiah’s words into practice. You can give a one time gift, change your regular offering, or create a new standing order either by talking to Peter, giving online, or arranging things with your bank. Or if you use envelopes or prefer cash/cheque donations but are not able to join in-person worship at this time, please let us know and we can arrange a collection. Thank you for your generosity, at this time and every time of year, as we try to be faithful to God’s mission for us.
Prayer and Lord’s Prayer
Your word always bears fruit, O God,
and we give you thanks that even now you are working toward your purposes in the world.
In the beginning you spoke and all things came into being.
Throughout time and in every place your grace falls like rain on your creation,
bringing forth your goodness and nurturing all that you have made.
In Christ you came to live among us, that we might see your glory,
full of grace and truth.
(Hymn 315 v. 2)
He came down to earth from heaven
who is God and Lord of all,
and his shelter was a stable,
and his cradle was a stall.
With the poor and meek and lowly
lived on earth our Saviour holy.
Draw near to us, Holy One,
as we come seeking your light in the shadows of this season.
We carry with us our neighbours
whose cupboards and tables are bare,
whose water is contaminated,
who hide their poverty behind a facade,
who live in food deserts or rely on the generosity of others.
May they experience the joy of plenty.
In your kingdom, there is enough for everyone,
so we pray for the will to participate in your reality, even now.
We carry with us our neighbours
who languish in loneliness,
whose spirits are parched,
whose energy is depleted with no source of renewal in sight,
who live with addictions that numb or fill them with empty promises.
May they experience the joy of connection.
In your kingdom, your grace calls together stranger and friend,
so we pray for the compassion to reach out in love.
We carry with us our neighbours
who suffer from a ravaged creation,
for whom rain and snow and harvest have become disconnected,
who long for the sound of trees clapping their hands
yet hear only the groans of an earth under strain.
May they experience the fruitful beauty of your world.
In your kingdom, the cycles of creation nourish us all in turn,
so we pray for the wisdom to live lightly in our rightful place in your world.
(Hymn 295 v. 1)
Who would think that what was needed
to transform and save the earth
might not be a plan or army,
proud in purpose, proved in worth?
Who would think, despite derision,
that a child should lead the way?
God surprises earth with heaven,
coming here on Christmas Day.
Restore your people, O God.
Send your word again to dwell among us,
to fulfil your purpose and create the world anew.
We ask in the name of Jesus the coming Christ,
who taught us to pray together:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.
Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.
For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours, now and forever. Amen.
In-Person Hymn 316: Love came down at Christmas
Love came down at Christmas,
Love all lovely, Love Divine;
Love was born at Christmas,
star and angels gave the sign.
Worship we the Godhead,
Love incarnate, Love Divine;
worship we our Jesus:
but wherewith for sacred sign?
Love shall be our token,
love be yours and love be mine,
love to God and all men,
love for plea and gift and sign.
Benediction
Having been nourished by God’s word and table, go and bear fruit that feeds others. And as you go, may the Spirit of God go above you to watch over you. May the Spirit of God go beside you to be your companion. May the Spirit of God go before you to show you the way, and behind you to push you into places you might not go alone. And may the Spirit of God go within you to remind you that you are loved more deeply than you can possibly imagine. May the fire of God’s love burn brightly in you, and through you into the world. Go in peace. Amen.
Sung Benediction Response (John L Bell, tune Gourock St John’s)
Now may the Lord of all be blessed,
Now may Christ’s gospel be confessed,
Now may the Spirit when we meet
Bless sanctuary and street.
Postlude Music (in person only)
Announcements
* This Advent our theme is “EmBodied” — encountering the Word Made Flesh, in our own bodies and in our own places where God has planted us.
* Follow your St John’s Embodied Advent and your Connect Reverse Advent Calendars! There’ll be a Facebook Live for most of the St John’s Advent Calendar too.
* The Youth Organisations are again running the Christmas Post — drop cards in at the church by today, th e12th of December, for delivery by the 19th to addresses in Gourock and Greenock West End, 30p per card with all proceeds going to youth ministry. If you can’t get to the church, let us know and we may be able to make arrangements to collect!
* Connect is hosting a family film night on 18 December at 4pm at the Lyle Kirk (Union Street). Bring your Reverse Advent Calendar with you so we can take the donations to the Foodbank and Starter Packs!
* Mark your calendars for Christmas worship: Longest Night (a quieter Christmas service recognising the darkness in which the Light shines) on 21 December at 7:30pm Joint services for Christmas Eve at 7:30pm at St. John’s and 11:30pm at Old Gourock and Ashton Christmas Day, 11am, on ZOOM with all of Connect Sunday 26 December, 10:30am, joint service with St Ninian’s Larkfield and OGA, at Old Gourock.
* All worship is online (or on the phone at 01475 270037, or in print) and we also meet in person, subject to the usual protocols for distancing, hand hygiene, mask wearing. We can now welcome up to 85-100 people for worship with 1m distancing between households. No booking is required. Masks are required at all times inside the building, including while singing. If you are able, please enter by the front door in Bath street, and only those who need step-free access should use the back door.
* Tonight we will gather with Christians across the nation for evening prayer on the Connect Facebook Page, led tonight by David. Log on at 6:58pm to join in.
* The Kirk now has online giving! If you have not already set up a standing order in order to facilitate your spiritual discipline of giving, or if you would like to make an extra gift to support the ministry St. John’s does in our parish, you can give online by clicking here. If you would like to set up a standing order, please contact Peter Bennett, our treasurer, or Teri and she can give you his details. You can also send your envelopes to the church or the manse by post and we will ensure they are received. Remember: no one is coming to your door to collect your envelopes, so please stay safe!
* Don’t forget to follow us on Facebook and Youtube, and to sign up for our email devotions! Midweek you can watch Wine and the Word on Youtube, pray with video devotions on Facebook, and consider a new angle on something with a devotional email. Feel free to share with your friends, too!
Sunday Service for 5 December 2021, the second Sunday of Advent
5 December 2021, 2nd Sunday of Advent
Gourock St. John’s Church of Scotland
Service prepared by the Rev. Teri Peterson
Manse phone: 632143
Email: tpeterson (at) churchofscotland.org.uk
To hear the audio recording of this service, please phone 01475 270037. It’s a local landline number so minutes should be included in your phone plan.
~~~
Prelude Music
Welcome and Announcements
Lighting the Second Advent Candle
Teri: In a time when breath has been short, or dangerous, or obstructed,
we call on the breath of God to fill us and bring us to life.
1: Breathe in the hope that God offers to those who don’t quite know how to hope.
(deep breath)
2: Breathe in the peace that passes all understanding.
(deep breath)
3: Breathe in the winds of the world, the creation itself.
(deep breath)
4: Breathe in the promise of the restoration of community.
(deep breath)
All: God is coming, and the world will never be the same!
~candle is lit~
O come, thou Dayspring, come and cheer
our spirits by thine advent here;
disperse the gloomy clouds of night,
and death’s dark shadows put to flight:
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel
shall come to thee, O Israel.
Prayer
Come, O Breath, come and breathe upon us, that we may live.
When we are feeling disconnected —
from traditions that we have had to lay aside for now,
from people we long to see,
from the creation itself —
reach out and re-member us by your powerful hand.
You are a God who creates and re-creates,
who gets your hands dirty and who puts pieces together
and who takes on flesh and lives in a human body.
You are Holy, yet not far off…
you care about this physical world, your creation,
and you choose to dwell among us in this place.
We confess that we are prone to separating our bodies and spirits,
this world and your kingdom.
We admit that we think of ourselves as different from the rest of your created world,
and that sometimes all that thinking keeps us from being fully present with you in this place. Forgive us when we forget that this life, in all its mess and beauty,
is your gift, blessed by your breath.
Forgive us when we become so separated in mind and body
that we end up numb to your presence among us.
Re-integrate us, that we may know your grace in our very bones.
Bring us up from the dry valley
and set us firmly on your path toward hope and peace,
following the One who was, and is, and is to come.
Amen.
Hymn: O Come, Divine Messiah, Come
Children’s Time (in person only)
Invitation to a Generous Advent
During the season of Advent, many people traditionally open a door of an Advent calendar to find a treat of some kind. This year we are invited to a different kind of advent calendar, in which each day we do something. Connect is gathering together for a Reverse Advent Calendar in which we put something into a box each day, and then those things are donated to the food bank and starter packs — these will be collected at our family film night on Saturday the 18th at 4pm at the Lyle Kirk, or you can bring them to church or the manse that weekend so we can get them to the right people — a tangible way to put Jeremiah’s instruction into practice. St John’s also has an advent calendar to help us explore the them of an EmBodied Advent, and each activity will help us go deeper into living out what we hear in scripture on Sundays. These advent calendars are available in print and online.
As this is also a season of gift giving and generosity, I also encourage us all to consider our spiritual practice of generosity and perhaps to make a special gift to the ministry of the church in this place and time, as we seek to serve our community in new ways that put Jeremiah’s words into practice. You can give a one time gift, change your regular offering, or create a new standing order either by talking to Peter, giving online, or arranging things with your bank. Or if you use envelopes or prefer cash/cheque donations but are not able to join in-person worship at this time, please let us know and we can arrange a collection. Thank you for your generosity, at this time and every time of year, as we try to be faithful to God’s mission for us.
Reading: Ezekiel 37.1-14
Last week we heard from the prophet Jeremiah’s letter to the people who had been exiled from Jerusalem to Babylon. That first wave of exile involved the royal family, the nobility, the priests, the artisans and merchants, and other cultural influencers and power people. Included in that group was a priest named Ezekiel. A few years into their exile in Babylon, God showed Ezekiel some very striking visions, and asked him to do some symbolic actions to get the attention of the people who were beginning to lose hope and forget God’s way. Ezekiel’s visions and prophecies are often confusing, full of images that are hard to imagine and sometimes even a bit scary to picture. Remember that a prophet is not someone who sees the future, a prophet is someone who sees with God’s vision…and sometimes that’s hard for us to understand! Today we hear about a conversation between God and Ezekiel that takes place in an unusual location. I am reading from Ezekiel chapter 37, in the New Revised Standard Version.
~~~~
The hand of the Lord came upon me, and he brought me out by the spirit of the Lord and set me down in the middle of a valley; it was full of bones. He led me all round them; there were very many lying in the valley, and they were very dry. He said to me, ‘Mortal, can these bones live?’ I answered, ‘O Lord God, you know.’ Then he said to me, ‘Prophesy to these bones, and say to them: O dry bones, hear the word of the Lord. Thus says the Lord God to these bones: I will cause breath to enter you, and you shall live. I will lay sinews on you, and will cause flesh to come upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and you shall live; and you shall know that I am the Lord.’
So I prophesied as I had been commanded; and as I prophesied, suddenly there was a noise, a rattling, and the bones came together, bone to its bone. I looked, and there were sinews on them, and flesh had come upon them, and skin had covered them; but there was no breath in them. Then he said to me, ‘Prophesy to the breath, prophesy, mortal, and say to the breath: Thus says the Lord God: Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live.’ I prophesied as he commanded me, and the breath came into them, and they lived, and stood on their feet, a vast multitude.
Then he said to me, ‘Mortal, these bones are the whole house of Israel. They say, “Our bones are dried up, and our hope is lost; we are cut off completely.” Therefore prophesy, and say to them, Thus says the Lord God: I am going to open your graves, and bring you up from your graves, O my people; and I will bring you back to the land of Israel. And you shall know that I am the Lord, when I open your graves, and bring you up from your graves, O my people. I will put my spirit within you, and you shall live, and I will place you on your own soil; then you shall know that I, the Lord, have spoken and will act, says the Lord.’
For the word of God in scripture,
For the word of God among us,
For the word of God within us,
Thanks be to God.
Sermon: Not Another Zombie Movie
For a while, a few years ago, it felt like zombies were everywhere in pop culture — zombie movies, the Walking Dead television show, and constant social media memes about the coming zombie apocalypse and who among your friends was most likely to be useful, or get eaten, or whatever.
I have to confess that zombies have never really been my thing…I’m more of the vampire type myself.
Zombies and vampires do have something in common, though: they’re both dead. Or rather, undead. They walk, talk, and have survival instincts, and in many ways act much like normal people, with feelings, thoughts, and even relationships.
On first glance, today’s story seems a bit like a zombie story. God tells Ezekiel to prophesy and bring to life a mass grave full of bones…these bones have been there for so long they’re completely dried up and disconnected, basically just a jumble of bleached bones in a valley, with no sense of who they were or what happened to them, or what their lives had been like.
Remember that Ezekiel was talking to his fellow exiles — people who had been taken from everything they knew, whose homes and Temple and lives had been destroyed, people who were certain that they were alone, abandoned, hopeless. These are the people who gave us the lament “how can we sing the Lord’s song in a foreign land?” The light had gone out from their eyes, the songs had fled from their lips, and they may as well have been dried up and dead. Ezekiel’s vision begins in a mass grave, the bones jumbled together and dried out, not even a possibility of hope.
Sometimes life feels like that, doesn’t it? Like we just have nothing left to give, or like nothing is turning out how we imagined. Our dreams seem shattered, our expectations have not been met, and all we can think about is what was, or what should have been…and in comparison, what is and what might be are just not worth singing about.
Or sometimes maybe we feel like Ezekiel — God asked him to prophesy to the bones, even though it seems like bones wouldn’t be able to hear a word he said. They’re just piles of dried up old bones, after all. And Ezekiel found that he didn’t exactly feel hopeful himself…but he wasn’t so hopeless that he just laughed in God’s face either. He said “Oh God, you’re the one who knows what’s possible…” and somehow that tiny smidge of not-hopeful-but-not-completely-hopeless-either was enough for him to speak into that silence where it seemed nothing would make a difference.
When Ezekiel speaks God’s word to the valley full of bones, several things happen. The first step is that God pulls this jumbled mess of bones together, bone to its bone, in the right order so they can be whole. But just a complete skeleton is still not a body. Sure, we might have all the right pieces, but that doesn’t make us ready.
The second step is God putting flesh and sinews—holding together the bones with tendons and ligaments, muscles and fat, organs and tissues. Bones by themselves aren’t much use, really. They only stick together if they’re immobilized, like in a museum. This second step makes movement possible, so we’re not a museum piece, but still not a whole body either—though it’s starting to look familiar!
The third step is God covering the bodies with skin. The largest organ in the body, skin not only holds everything in, but protects too. We may want to get moving, but without skin the body is susceptible to injury, infection, and falling apart. This step may be uncomfortable, because we don’t like boundaries. But without them, bacteria multiply and pieces fall out.
At this point, stuck together with all the right pieces, we’re chomping at the bit, ready to go! This is the moment most of us as both individuals and churches get to, and then we’re off. We look like the body, feel like the body, and feel perfectly put together and prepared. Three steps is just right for our attention span and for our capacity for waiting for God to get to work already.
So we walk around, doing things, trying our best, and still can’t figure out why people aren’t flocking to churches or why there’s a budget deficit or where the families are going. We listened when God called us together, so how come things still aren’t the way they used to be, when children always grew up to be better off than their parents, when we had a strong community with lots of opportunity, when pews and classrooms and offering plates overflowed? God promised to restore us, so why aren’t we reliving the good old days yet?
At this point in the process, we’re not jumbled up skeletons, but not full of life either. That’s still exile. Yes, we go about our daily lives, we do what we’ve always done, we get by…but there’s nothing transformative happening. It’s just day in and day out. We don’t experience life, we’re not touched or changed, we just…are. Just exist. The Israelites in exile seem to have swung between these two positions—dried up and hopeless, and just waiting out life without expectation.
Because at just three steps, that valley is full of zombies. And zombies are, by definition, living in the past. All the undead can do is try to re-live the lives they once had, over and over again.
And the undead are different from the living in one major way:
They don’t breathe.
Scripture tells us over and over, God is a God of the living, not the dead, and not the undead — and God’s word of life points us forward, not backward. God’s promise is not just that we’ll walk through life, but that we’ll breathe life. God’s promise is not just that the bones will organise into skeletons and be covered with flesh and skin, but that they will be filled with breath, coming from the four winds, blowing into their bodies and hearts and minds and souls so that they can love God and love their neighbour with everything they’ve got. God’s promise is not that we’ll be undead, God’s promise is Everlasting Life Abundant, even when we can’t see how it could be possible.
And God keeps promises. Every time. Even impossible ones. Even ones we hesitated to speak, even ones we weren’t sure we could stand to hear. If my options are to go through the motions like a zombie or to feel the stretch and burn of God’s breath in my lungs, I’ll take the breath of life every time.
The Hebrew word for breath is ruach, the same word that’s translated as wind and spirit. When the wind blows, that’s the breath of God. When we breathe, that’s the Spirit of God filling our bodies. The very air we breathe, in other words, is God’s presence, God’s promise, God’s hope, entering our lungs. When God tells Ezekiel to call the breath from the four winds, that’s the Spirit that comes rushing in, from every corner of creation, bringing life and hope and possibility and love — and setting us in motion to live for the future God has planned, rather than simply re-living the past that’s dead and gone.
The first sentence God gives to Ezekiel is “I will cause breath to enter you” and the last is “I will put my Spirit within you.” This entire story is literally filled with the ruach, the breath of God blowing everywhere, in and around and through the people who thought there was no hope, the prophet who spoke even though there was no point, the place that was dead and then undead and then alive. No longer a jumble of bones, no longer zombies, but life in all its fullness — for everyone.
May it be so. Amen.
Hymn 291: When Out of Poverty is Born
When out of poverty is born
a dream that will not die
and landless, weary folk find strength
to stand with heads held high,
it’s then we learn from those who wait
to greet the promised day:
‘The Lord is coming; don’t lose heart.
Be blest: prepare the way!’
When people wander far from God,
forget to share their bread,
they find their wealth an empty thing,
their spirits are not fed.
For only just and tender love
the hungry soul will stay.
And so God’s prophets echo still:
‘Be blest: prepare the way!’
When God took flesh and came to earth,
the world turned upside down,
and in the strength of woman’s faith
the Word of Life was born.
She knew that God would raise the low,
it pleased her to obey.
Rejoice with Mary in the call,
‘Be blest: prepare the way!
Prayer and Lord’s Prayer
You promise peace,
not merely the peace of the grave but the peace of resurrection life.
You restore your people, O God,
and we give you thanks for knitting us together,
piece by piece, thread by thread, bone by bone.
We pray this day for those whose hope is lost,
those who feel cut off,
those who have been left behind or left out,
those whose lives have dried up from the inside out.
Lift them in your hand, hold them close, and bring them to your heart.
We pray this day for those who speak words of encouragement they do not yet feel,
those who share good news they can’t allow themselves to hope,
those who look through half-open eyes at the future you are creating, even now.
Put your breath in them, and your word in their hearts, and give them a glimpse of your vision.
We pray this day for those who can’t get a deep breath,
whose anxiety or grief or illness makes it impossible to fill their lungs,
who live in danger or uncertainty that makes it safer to hold their breath.
Set them free from constraint and fear, heal them in body, soul, and situation.
Hymn 303 verse 4
And you, beneath life’s crushing load
whose forms are bending low,
who toil along the climbing way
with painful steps and slow,
look now! for glad and golden hours
come swiftly on the wing;
oh, rest beside the weary road,
and hear the angels sing.
We pray this day for your creation,
winds and waters and mountains and valleys,
for the gifts it gives in supporting us,
and for the burden it bears under our weight.
May your breath revive your earth as well as your people.
When we don’t know how to hope, you lead us.
When we can’t see our way to peace, you lead us.
When we feel dismembered and alone, you lead us.
We give you thanks for you always keep your promise.
Hymn 303 verse 5
For lo! the days are hastening on,
by prophet bards foretold,
when, with the ever-rolling years,
still dawns the Age of Gold,
when peace shall over all the earth
its ancient splendours fling,
and all the world give back the song
which now the angels sing.
We bring our gratitude and longing to you,
in the name of the One who embodies your truth, Jesus the Christ,
who taught us to pray together:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.
Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.
For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours, now and forever. Amen.
Benediction
Take a deep breath, and feel the Holy Spirit bringing you to fullness of life, setting you in motion to move forward into God’s future. Take a deep breath, and get ready to speak God’s word even into the most hopeless of situations. And as you go, may the Spirit of God go above you to watch over you. May the Spirit of God go beside you to be your companion. May the Spirit of God go before you to show you the way, and behind you to push you into places you might not go alone. And may the Spirit of God go within you to remind you that you are loved more deeply than you can possibly imagine. May the fire of God’s love burn brightly in you, and through you into the world. Go in peace. Amen.
Sung Benediction Response (John L Bell, tune Gourock St John’s)
Now may the Lord of all be blessed,
Now may Christ’s gospel be confessed,
Now may the Spirit when we meet
Bless sanctuary and street.
Postlude Music
Announcements
* This Advent our theme is “EmBodied” — encountering the Word Made Flesh, in our own bodies and in our own places where God has planted us.
* Follow your St John’s Embodied Advent and your Connect Reverse Advent Calendars! There’ll be a Facebook Live for most of the St John’s Advent Calendar too.
* The Youth Organisations are again running the Christmas Post — drop cards in at the church on the 5th or 12th of December for delivery by the 19th to addresses in Gourock and Greenock West End, 30p per card with all proceeds going to youth ministry. If you can’t get to the church, let us know and we may be able to make arrangements to collect!
* Connect is hosting a family film night on 18 December at 4pm at the Lyle Kirk (Union Street). Bring your Reverse Advent Calendar with you so we can take the donations to the Foodbank and Starter Packs!
* Mark your calendars for Christmas worship: Longest Night (a quieter Christmas service recognising the darkness in which the Light shines) on 21 December at 7:30pm Joint services for Christmas Eve at 7:30pm at St. John’s and 11:30pm at Old Gourock and Ashton Christmas Day, 11am, on ZOOM with all of Connect Sunday 26 December, 10:30am, joint service with St Ninian’s Larkfield and OGA, at Old Gourock.
* All worship is online (or on the phone at 01475 270037, or in print) and we also meet in person, subject to the usual protocols for distancing, hand hygiene, mask wearing. We can now welcome up to 85-100 people for worship with 1m distancing between households. No booking is required. Masks are required at all times inside the building, including while singing. If you are able, please enter by the front door in Bath street, and only those who need step-free access should use the back door.
* Tonight we will gather with Christians across the nation for evening prayer on the Connect Facebook Page, led tonight by David. Log on at 6:58pm to join in.
* The Kirk now has online giving! If you have not already set up a standing order in order to facilitate your spiritual discipline of giving, or if you would like to make an extra gift to support the ministry St. John’s does in our parish, you can give online by clicking here. If you would like to set up a standing order, please contact Peter Bennett, our treasurer, or Teri and she can give you his details. You can also send your envelopes to the church or the manse by post and we will ensure they are received. Remember: no one is coming to your door to collect your envelopes, so please stay safe!
* Don’t forget to follow us on Facebook and Youtube, and to sign up for our email devotions! Midweek you can watch Wine and the Word on Youtube, pray with video devotions on Facebook, and consider a new angle on something with a devotional email. Feel free to share with your friends, too!
Sunday Service for 28 November 2021, first Sunday of Advent
28 November 2021, 1st Sunday of Advent
Gourock St. John’s Church of Scotland
Service prepared by the Rev. Teri Peterson
Manse phone: 632143
Email: tpeterson (at) churchofscotland.org.uk
To hear the audio recording of this service, please phone 01475 270037. It’s a local landline number so minutes should be included in your phone plan.
~~~
Prelude Music
Welcome and Announcements
Lighting the First Advent Candle
1: To those who are far from home:
2: A word of hope.
2: To those who have been left behind:
1: A word of hope.
1: To those uncertain of the next steps:
2: A word of hope.
2: To those counting down the days:
1: A word of hope.
All: God is coming, and the world will never be the same!
~candle is lit~
O come, O come, Emmanuel,
and ransom captive Israel,
that mourns in lonely exile here
until the Son of God appear.
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel
shall come to thee, O Israel.
Prayer
You are a God who takes the long view yet never loses sight of the now,
and you have set us here, calling us to live life to the full.
We confess that sometimes we get caught up in looking ahead, missing you in this moment.
Bring our attention to your call for us today, and show us how to live in your presence,
wherever we find ourselves.
We confess that sometimes we get so comfortable here in our own ways,
we don’t want to step out to follow your lead.
We forget that your coming will change this world and the next,
and what we know, or think we know, is not your norm.
May we not save up hope for the future, but embody it now,
for ourselves, for this community, and for generations still to come.
Forgive us, and plant in us your hope,
that we may grow into the new beginning you have planned.
We ask in the name of the One who was, and is, and is to come. Amen.
Online Hymn: Lift Up Your Eyes (Resound Worship)
Children’s Time (in person only)
Reading: Jeremiah 29.1, 4-14
Last week we heard from the first prophet Isaiah, who spoke to the northern kingdom of Israel in the time leading up to their destruction by the Assyrian empire. Over the next hundred years, the southern kingdom of Judah alternated between anxiety that something similar would happen to them, and hope for a restored united kingdom. Ultimately the northern kingdom was consigned to history as the “ten lost tribes” of Israel. The rise of the Babylonian empire brought new threats to Judah, and God called the prophet Jeremiah, when he was still a young person, to speak out about how the unfaithfulness of the leaders and people meant they were vulnerable. Jeremiah was unpopular as he criticised the moral, religious, and political compromises that were being made, and he was often imprisoned or threatened. About 25 years into his turbulent career as a prophet, in the year 597 BCE, the Babylonian empire won the first round and took many of the ruling class, merchants, and artisans into exile. One of the royal court prophets claimed it would last only two years, but Jeremiah knew he was just saying what people wanted to hear, not what was true. Today we read the letter Jeremiah sent from his home in a changed Jerusalem to those who had been taken to Babylon in this first round of exile, which can be found in chapter 29. I am reading from the New Revised Standard Version.
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These are the words of the letter that the prophet Jeremiah sent from Jerusalem to the remaining elders among the exiles, and to the priests, the prophets, and all the people, whom Nebuchadnezzar had taken into exile from Jerusalem to Babylon. Thus says the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, to all the exiles whom I have sent into exile from Jerusalem to Babylon: Build houses and live in them; plant gardens and eat what they produce. Take wives and have sons and daughters; take wives for your sons, and give your daughters in marriage, that they may bear sons and daughters; multiply there, and do not decrease. But seek the welfare of the city where I have sent you into exile, and pray to the Lord on its behalf, for in its welfare you will find your welfare. For thus says the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel: Do not let the prophets and the diviners who are among you deceive you, and do not listen to the dreams that they dream, for it is a lie that they are prophesying to you in my name; I did not send them, says the Lord.
For thus says the Lord: Only when Babylon’s seventy years are completed will I visit you, and I will fulfil to you my promise and bring you back to this place. For surely I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord, plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a future with hope. Then when you call upon me and come and pray to me, I will hear you. When you search for me, you will find me; if you seek me with all your heart, I will let you find me, says the Lord, and I will restore your fortunes and gather you from all the nations and all the places where I have driven you, says the Lord, and I will bring you back to the place from which I sent you into exile.
For the word of God in scripture,
For the word of God among us,
For the word of God within us,
Thanks be to God.
Sermon: Get On With It
I think I have finally found the biblical basis for what may be the most common Scottish phrase: “you’ve just got to get on with it.” Almost no matter what happens, it’s what people say. It could be a tragedy or a massive achievement to celebrate, or anything in between, and I’ll hear “well, you’ve just got to get on with it, haven’t you?” Sometimes I think we use it as a way to bury feelings in activity, just doing doing doing without ever processing our emotional lives. But sometimes it really is all you can do in the face of an overwhelming situation, is just get on with one thing, and then the next.
Jeremiah was writing to people who were in the early stages of a great trauma. It was ongoing, and it was so awful it didn’t really bear thinking about. It would have been unbelievable if it hadn’t happened to them. The Babylonian army had won, and overrun Jerusalem. The royal family, the leaders, the cultural influencers, and the artisans and merchants had all been marched away to Babylon so they couldn’t gather up support or make weapons to resist. A puppet king had been installed in the royal palace. And there were puppet prophets, too, telling them to just sit back and wait because God was going to get them out of this soon, don’t worry about anything, don’t even bother to unpack in Babylon, this will all be over in a year or two.
Jeremiah’s letter wasn’t so chipper or full of false promises. He knew this was a big disaster, and that the people who were deported were never coming back…maybe their children, hopefully their grandchildren, yes, but these families were going to be away from their homeland for a long time. So rather than sitting on their boxes and wailing and gnashing their teeth, Jeremiah tells them: get on with it.
It actually sounds a little like crazy advice, at first. They’ve been removed from their homes, from everything comfortable and familiar. They’re surrounded by people who speak a different language. The weather patterns are different, the food is different, the culture is different, the religion is different. They’re grieving the loss of everything they’ve ever known. And Jeremiah tells them to build houses and plant gardens and get married and have families.
In other words, Jeremiah tells them to use this ending as a new beginning. Jeremiah’s first words are “live where you are.” LIVE. This is a time for a new creation story, just like the first: plant gardens. Be fruitful and multiply. Live your life to the full, right where you are. However much this feels like a disaster, like the end times, like everything has changed around you and there’s no way forward because there’s no way back…live. Don’t wait for rescue, or for something to change. Don’t defer everything and live in a holding pattern. Just get on with it. Live where you are, in these bodies, in this community, with all these new customs, in this new reality.
Given how easily we say “just get on with it,” this might feel like easy advice from the prophet. But I’m not sure it is. While most of us have not been displaced from our homes, sometimes for the church it feels like our home has been displaced from us. Some among our community remember times when the culture and customs were different, when church was more central to our lives, when nothing else happened on a Sunday, when school children began each day with the Lord’s Prayer and sang hymns at assemblies. Sometimes we might even feel like we are the church in exile, like we long for the things we remember and teach our children that we’re just waiting to go back. As the world around us has changed, sometimes we have followed the puppet prophets in believing things could get back to the way they used to be, or that people would come back to us when they had kids, or that if we just kept doing the same things we did in the old world, it would eventually work in the new world. But that isn’t the case, and our holding pattern is not the same as living life to the full in the here and now, where God has sent us.
Jeremiah’s second words are even harder. He says to seek the welfare of the community where you are, and pray for it, because the only way to prosper is together. If the community where you’re living flounders, then so do you…if it does well, then so do you.
Jeremiah tells his people to work for the good of the city where they are living in exile — to pray for the very people who had defeated them in battle and brought them out to this unfamiliar place. They were to seek the welfare of their enemies, and to work together to create a thriving community — nearly 600 years before Jesus would teach “love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.” It was a hard message in the 590s BCE, a hard message in the first century, and a hard message today. But it is as true now as it was then — that we rise or fall together. Perhaps when we are tempted to moan about all those Sunday activities or other changes to the culture while we hold fast to what was meaningful to us about the way things used to be, Jeremiah is speaking to us, too…pray for the community in which you live, the people who surround you, the very people who have done this terrible thing to you. Pray for them, and also seek their good. Work for the welfare of the whole town, not just yourselves. Don’t just live in this place, but live fully here with these people, because God’s blessing comes to us together.
Then Jeremiah says that when they’ve done this, when they’ve learned to live faithfully in the place where they are, to be grounded both in the earth, planting gardens, and in the community, putting down roots, then God will reveal himself to them and they will know the new life that God has planned for them. They have to learn in exile what they didn’t manage to learn in their old comfortable land where they took God’s blessing for granted. If they follow Jeremiah’s call, they will learn connection to God’s creation by participating in a new creation. They will learn faithfulness in prayer. They will learn how to serve others, not only to be served. They will learn to be flexible and resilient, to follow God’s call in unfamiliar territory, adapting to the reality around them as they didn’t have the Temple or any of their traditional worship options available. They will learn to trust God’s promise rather than simply relying on their own ways. And a future of hope will open before them, and God will restore them, gather them, listen to them, and fulfil God’s plans for them.
But first they have to learn to live where they are. They have to learn to care about the community that they’re pretty sure doesn’t care about them. They have to get on with it, rather than simply waiting for something around them to change so they can continue on as they always have. And when they do — when we do — we’ll be a sign, a foretaste of what God’s kingdom can be like on earth.
This Advent, while we await the coming of Christ once again, of God with us, in the flesh, living where we are, seeking the welfare of the community who cares little for his message and is sometimes actively hostile, may we too wait like this. Not sitting around passively waiting for God to fix everything, but following Jeremiah’s call to live where we are, to be embedded in our community, to pray for those around us, and to seek the welfare of the place where God has sent us — even if they aren’t interested. God knows the plans for a future with hope, so we too look forward with expectation even as we live life to the full here and now. Let’s get on with it.
May it be so. Amen.
Hymn: O God, who gives us life and breath (words: Carl P Daw Jr; tune: NOEL)
Invitation to a Generous Advent
During the season of Advent, many people traditionally open a door of an Advent calendar to find a treat of some kind. This year we are invited to a different kind of advent calendar, in which each day we do something. Connect is gathering together for a Reverse Advent Calendar in which we put something into a box each day, and then those things are donated to the food bank and starter packs — these will be collected at our family film night on Saturday the 18th at 4pm at the Lyle Kirk, or you can bring them to church or the manse that weekend so we can get them to the right people — a tangible way to put Jeremiah’s instruction into practice. St John’s also has an advent calendar to help us explore the them of an EmBodied Advent, and each activity will help us go deeper into living out what we hear in scripture on Sundays. These advent calendars are available in print and online.
As this is also a season of gift giving and generosity, I also encourage us all to consider our spiritual practice of generosity and perhaps to make a special gift to the ministry of the church in this place and time, as we seek to serve our community in new ways that put Jeremiah’s words into practice. You can give a one time gift, change your regular offering, or create a new standing order either by talking to Peter, giving online, or arranging things with your bank. Or if you use envelopes or prefer cash/cheque donations but are not able to join in-person worship at this time, please let us know and we can arrange a collection. Thank you for your generosity, at this time and every time of year, as we try to be faithful to God’s mission for us.
Prayer and Lord’s Prayer
Loving God, we come with thanks for your care.
You have placed us in community,
and we share our gratitude around table and hearth,
across miles and through the miracle of technology.
Hear our praise for your gift of togetherness,
in all its many forms.
Where community is complicated, O God,
we ask for the grace to embody your way.
We offer our prayers for those among
our families, friends, neighbours, and community who have hurt us,
and ask for your healing for their hearts, and ours.
Transform us all ever more into your likeness.
Where people are suffering in body, mind, or spirit,
we ask for the grace of your wholeness.
We offer our prayers for those whose fullness of life is restricted by illness or treatment,
and for those who care for them.
We lift up our neighbours near and far who long for healing, freedom, and peace.
Reveal your loving kindness among us and through us.
We especially pray for those who have left their homes,
seeking refuge, seeking hope, seeking peace.
We ask your protection on their journeys,
that they may encounter welcome and help, solidarity and support.
We ask your comfort for those who grieve —
lost homes, lost familiarity, lost families, lost loved ones, lost livelihoods.
And we ask for your compassion to infuse us, that we may be a haven,
a community that makes space for all to live life to the fullest
where you have planted us together.
We trust your promise, Living God,
that when we seek you, you will be found.
We offer our prayers for all who are desperate for your new thing to be revealed,
for this world is not yet in alignment with your will.
Give us the courage to live expectantly,
and to act hopefully,
carrying on the good work you have begun in us.
We ask these and all things in the name of the One
who lived your hope in the flesh, Jesus the Christ, who taught us to pray together:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.
Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.
For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours, now and forever. Amen.
(in-person hymn 479: View the Present Through the Promise)
Benediction
Friends, go into this Advent season with expectation, to live as the Body of Christ in this place, seeking God’s future of hope for the whole community. And as you go, may the Spirit of God go above you to watch over you. May the Spirit of God go beside you to be your companion. May the Spirit of God go before you to show you the way, and behind you to push you into places you might not go alone. And may the Spirit of God go within you to remind you that you are loved more deeply than you can possibly imagine. May the fire of God’s love burn brightly in you, and through you into the world. Go in peace. Amen.
Sung Benediction Response (John L Bell, tune Gourock St John’s)
Now may the Lord of all be blessed,
Now may Christ’s gospel be confessed,
Now may the Spirit when we meet
Bless sanctuary and street.
Postlude Music
Announcements
* This Advent our theme is “EmBodied” — encountering the Word Made Flesh, in our own bodies and in our own places where God has planted us.
* Follow your St John’s Embodied Advent and your Connect Reverse Advent Calendars! There’ll be a Facebook Live for most of the St John’s Advent Calendar too.
* Connect is hosting a family film night on 18 December at 4pm at the Lyle Kirk (Union Street). Bring your Reverse Advent Calendar with you so we can take the donations to the Foodbank and Starter Packs!
* Mark your calendars for Christmas worship: Longest Night (a quieter Christmas service recognising the darkness in which the Light shines) on 21 December at 7:30pm Joint services for Christmas Eve at 7:30pm at St. John’s and 11:30pm at Old Gourock and Ashton Christmas Day, 11am, on ZOOM with all of Connect Sunday 26 December, 10:30am, joint service with St Ninian’s Larkfield and OGA, at Old Gourock
* All worship is online (or on the phone at 01475 270037, or in print) and we also meet in person, subject to the usual protocols for distancing, hand hygiene, mask wearing. We can now welcome up to 85-100 people for worship with 1m distancing between households. No booking is required. Masks are required at all times inside the building, including while singing. If you are able, please enter by the front door in Bath street, and only those who need step-free access should use the back door.
* Tonight we will gather with Christians across the nation for evening prayer on the Connect Facebook Page, led tonight by David. Log on at 6:58pm to join in.
* The Kirk now has online giving! If you have not already set up a standing order in order to facilitate your spiritual discipline of giving, or if you would like to make an extra gift to support the ministry St. John’s does in our parish, you can give online by clicking here. If you would like to set up a standing order, please contact Peter Bennett, our treasurer, or Teri and she can give you his details. You can also send your envelopes to the church or the manse by post and we will ensure they are received. Remember: no one is coming to your door to collect your envelopes, so please stay safe!
* Don’t forget to follow us on Facebook and Youtube, and to sign up for our email devotions! Midweek you can watch Wine and the Word on Youtube, pray with video devotions on Facebook, and consider a new angle on something with a devotional email. Feel free to share with your friends, too!