Sunday service for 12 March 2023, third Sunday in Lent
Sunday 12 March 2023, NL1-33, 3rd Sunday in Lent
Gourock St. John’s Church of Scotland
Service prepared by Rev. Teri Peterson
Manse: 632143
Email: tpeterson (at) churchofscotland.org.uk
Prelude Music
Welcome and Announcements
Call to Worship
One: You are invited!
All: God, help us lay aside the things that prevent us from accepting your invitation.
One: You are not just welcomed, but wanted!
All: God, help us let go of our desire to control who else is here with us.
One: You are called!
All: God, help us to live each day according to your word,
so we’ll be dressed and ready when we hear you.
One: Come!
All: We come to worship, to prepare, to listen, and to respond.
Sanctuary Hymn 129: The Lord is King
Prayer
You fling wide the gates, O God,
for all is ready.
You have prepared a place for us,
and offered the best of yourself,
and removed all the barriers we thought were keeping us away.
You continually reach out to us, Holy God,
pouring yourself out to draw us into your love.
We confess that we sometimes think we have more important things to do,
and we bristle at your reminder of what our priorities are meant to be.
Forgive us when we are preoccupied with maintaining the status quo,
and we reject the new thing you are doing.
We confess that much of our energy is taken up with stuff —
material things, and the responsibilities that go with them —
and we don’t have time to turn aside to join you if we can’t see the return on investment.
Forgive us when we take you for granted,
assuming you’re doing nothing special enough to warrant disrupting our routines.
We confess that we’re happy to say “all are welcome”
as long as we get to qualify both the “all” and the “welcome.”
Forgive us when our community is so narrow
we can’t even recognise the box we have built for you and ourselves.
We want to be as ready as you are,
so clothe us this day in compassion and kindness,
in humility and righteousness,
and open our hearts as you have opened the doors to your kingdom,
that all may enter in.
Give us a glimpse of your kingdom feast,
and make us ready not only to respond, not only to come in,
but to participate in your vision.
We ask in the name of Christ,
through whom we are called as your beloved.
Amen.
Online Hymn 623: Here In this Place (Gather Us In)
Sanctuary Children’s Time
Reading: Matthew 22:1-14 (New Revised Standard Version)
Once more Jesus spoke to them in parables, saying: ‘The kingdom of heaven may be compared to a king who gave a wedding banquet for his son. He sent his slaves to call those who had been invited to the wedding banquet, but they would not come. Again he sent other slaves, saying, “Tell those who have been invited: Look, I have prepared my dinner, my oxen and my fat calves have been slaughtered, and everything is ready; come to the wedding banquet.” But they made light of it and went away, one to his farm, another to his business, while the rest seized his slaves, maltreated them, and killed them. The king was enraged. He sent his troops, destroyed those murderers, and burned their city. Then he said to his slaves, “The wedding is ready, but those invited were not worthy. Go therefore into the main streets, and invite everyone you find to the wedding banquet.” Those slaves went out into the streets and gathered all whom they found, both good and bad; so the wedding hall was filled with guests.
‘But when the king came in to see the guests, he noticed a man there who was not wearing a wedding robe, and he said to him, “Friend, how did you get in here without a wedding robe?” And he was speechless. Then the king said to the attendants, “Bind him hand and foot, and throw him into the outer darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.” For many are called, but few are chosen.’
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 Worst Parable Ever
The last time this parable came up in the Narrative Lectionary, four years ago, I cleverly scheduled the annual meeting for during worship and we followed a different order of worship that day, so I didn’t need to read or preach from it. Four years before that, I put the title “The Worst Parable Ever” in the printed order of service, but I never wrote a sermon! I must have turned up at church on Sunday morning and either led a discussion or just talked extemporaneously…or else whatever I said was something I didn’t want to commit to paper! So this time around, I thought I would re-use the title but obviously have to write something that would hopefully be worth saying and that I’d be willing to have out on the internet for eternity…
But the temptation is strong to walk away from it again!
This is another parable where an allegory, where each part corresponds to something else, is tricky. It’s also a story that lays bare the ways in which our idea that the New Testament is somehow warm and fuzzy and gracious while the Old Testament is wrathful is both untrue and unhelpful, in addition to being anti-Jewish. If we think the king in the story is meant to be like God, then this is a God who sound an awful lot like many kings throughout history — petulant and short-tempered, returning evil for evil, a tyrant whose invitations are actually orders that you only disobey on pain of death. That’s not the God the rest of scripture talks about — the Old Testament is full of descriptions that say God is slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love, alongside the places where people understood God to be commanding violence; and other parts of the New Testament, including other sections of Matthew’s gospel!, describe God as loving and full of grace, alongside stories like this one.
So what is Jesus trying to show us by telling us this story? A parable offers a whole field of meaning that revolves around a point without ever just stating it outright, so that we can enter into the story and find different things God wants to say to us at different times. So what is it that we’re meant to learn from this story, in this time in which we live?
The king is hosting a wedding banquet — the party that celebrates a new family forming, the start of something new. Presumably he invited the great and the good, the elites and the important people you would expect to be on any king’s guest list, and they treated this honour as just another ho-hum daily detail like anything else in their home or business, all the stuff of everyday life that they were so caught up in. They then took exception to being reminded of their duty to both respond to the king’s summons and to their duty to celebrate with a new family at a wedding, and responded with anger when they were held accountable for failing to uphold that obligation. The king responded to their anger with anger of his own, and it seemed the cycle could go on forever — as we know it does. We have seen how hitting back prolongs the fight.
Then something fascinating happened. The king sent for literally everyone else. All the people who would never have made the guest list because they weren’t rich or important or interesting, all the people who would normally have been beneath the king’s notice. Everyone is ushered into the banquet hall: good and bad, no distinctions made…just like in the story of the weeds and the wheat when the workers were meant to tend the whole field. The king erased the usual barriers that kept people out or apart, and gathered the whole big community into the feast to celebrate the beginning of this new chapter.
In Luke’s gospel, that’s where the parable ends. It’s a beautiful vision, of God gathering in the least and the last and the lonely, all of us who don’t seem to fit together, regardless of what sort of lives we’d led before or what sort of future might have been mapped out for us by the ways of the world and its restrictions based on skin colour or gender or disability or social class. Everyone is not just invited into the kingdom feast, but ushered in, gathered up from the back alleys and the doorways and the street corners and the random workplaces and the playgrounds and everywhere.
A big part of me wishes that Matthew also ended the story there! I love this vision and it is exactly what I want the kingdom of God to look like. It reminds me of Isaiah and so many other prophets who talk about the abundance of God’s goodness being given freely to everyone without background checks or bank details.
But Matthew keeps going. The king — not the servants, who did their job of bringing in everyone, the king himself — comes to mingle with the guests on this big day and he sees one person who stands out. One man. I think sometimes we overlook that it was one guy because the last line of the story makes it sound like only a handful of people will get to stay at the heavenly banquet, but actually it’s one person who gets singled out, because he isn’t wearing a wedding robe.
My first reaction, of course, is to wonder how on earth everyone else had on a wedding robe, if they were just gathered in from the middle of their daily tasks? How is it that there’s one guy who doesn’t have one?
There have been lots of people who have tried to make the story easier — similar to how they’ve tried to explain away the camel and the eye of the needle — by claiming that the king would have provided the robe at the door, and this guy refused it. But there’s no evidence of that being a common practice of the day, so there must be something else…
I’m reminded of a service I went to many years ago where we were all given a wee paper fish with some words on it. The phrases all came from scripture, mostly from Colossians or Galatians or Romans, and all began with the phrase “clothe yourself with…” — clothe yourself with compassion, clothe yourself with kindness, clothe yourself with humility, clothe yourself with patience, clothe yourself with gentleness, clothe yourself with righteousness, clothe yourself with Christ. My fish has been in my bedside Bible for more than 20 years now, as a reminder. Sometimes it falls out when I turn the pages, almost like those films where a ghost pulls a book off a shelf to try to give a clue: pay attention!
Sometimes we are so preoccupied with our own stuff that we forget to clothe ourselves with compassion for others. Sometimes we are so defensive about being held accountable for our actions that we forget to clothe ourselves with humility. Sometimes we have bought into the rhetoric about us-and-them so we shrug off the clothing of kindness so we can be more comfortable saying things we know we oughtn’t say about another child of God. Sometimes we like our priorities just as they are, thank you very much, so we can’t clothe ourselves with righteousness because we don’t want the shake-up that comes with prioritising loving God and loving our neighbour and loving our enemy. Sometimes the temptation to use what little power we have to put down other people is so great that the clothing of gentleness just doesn’t fit. Sometimes we are too caught up in ourselves to remember that we have been clothed with Christ.
And that could be the moment when God’s call comes to us. The moment when God breaks down the barriers that have kept us from full participation in the kingdom of heaven come on earth…and then the question will be: are we ready? Have we been getting dressed every day with compassion, kindness, righteousness? Or have we dressed ourselves in self-righteousness instead, or in power, or selfishness, or arrogance, or perhaps worst of all: apathy?
Every week when I’m praying through what to preach about, I ask God to show me two things in whatever scripture reading we have for the week: what is the good news in this text? And what is the challenge or call to us in this text? Especially in this worst parable ever?
I think the good news here is that God does break down those barriers and bring everyone into the kingdom, and there is abundance we can barely imagine when we join the feast of all God’s people, good and bad, great and small, expected and unexpected guests. And the challenge here is that we still have a part to play in being ready when the door opens and we see the kingdom finally made visible on earth as in heaven. Regardless of where we are or what we’re doing, we need to clothe ourselves with Christ, with righteousness, with compassion, with humility, with kindness…every day. If we don’t, we can guarantee we won’t see what God is revealing, because we’ll be caught in that outer darkness, the place of the never-ending cycle of anger and retribution and violence. If we do choose our clothes carefully, every single day, there’s a better chance of the world being transformed, person by person, day by day, into the abundant community grace of the feast of God’s kingdom come on earth as it is in heaven.
May it be so. Amen.
Online Hymn: In the Light of Your Mercy (Resound)
Sanctuary Hymn 489: Come Down, O Love Divine
Offering (Sanctuary only)
The ministry we currently do here at St John’s costs over £10,000 per month, which is actually a bit more than our current income. But we believe God is calling us to serve this community, and we can only do that because of your generosity which helps God’s kingdom grow and flourish in this place. Your morning offering will now be received.
Sanctuary Offering Response 680 v. 4 (tune: Picardy)
May the One whose love is broader
than the measure of all space
give us words to sing the story,
move among us in this place.
Christ be known in all our living,
filling all with gifts of love.
Tell Me A Story of Hospitality (Rab & Eileen Gowans)
Prayer and Lord’s Prayer
We give you thanks, O Lord our God,
for the many ways in which you bring together a community
to glorify your name and to work toward your purpose.
You invite, you make room, you gather us in,
even those who never expected to be allowed to join.
We ask your help this day for
those people who have believed they weren’t good enough to belong,
those who have been excluded or rejected,
those who have never experienced a joyful or generous welcome.
May they find themselves in a place made for them at your table.
We ask your help this day for
those who struggle to do what is right,
those who find the clothes of humility or graciousness uncomfortable,
those who have benefitted from the status quo
and so choose to avoid self-reflection or accountability.
May they be encouraged and strengthened to be doers of your word, not only hearers.
We ask your help this day for
those who offer hospitality to others,
those who give of themselves,
those who create places and opportunities for community to be built.
May they be supported and empowered to be truly inclusive and welcoming.
We ask your help this day for
those who live in the midst of violence,
and those who are caught in cycles they see no escape from —
we pray you would break apart cycles of violence, of poverty, of isolation, of addiction,
and bring your people into the abundant life you have prepared.
We ask your help this day for your Church,
to put your word to us into action,
to clothe ourselves with compassion and kindness and righteousness,
to reflect your priorities of justice, grace and peace,
rather than our own fears or desire for comfort.
Fill your world with your grace and peace, O God.
We ask these and all things in the name of Jesus the Christ
who draws us all to himself,
and 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.
Sanctuary Hymn 521: Children of God (tune: Lord of the Years)
Benediction
Every day, put on your wedding robe: clothe yourselves in righteousness, always expecting to meet Jesus in the midst of your daily business. 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.
Sanctuary Postlude Music
Announcements
* We worship in the sanctuary on Sundays at 11am, and all Sunday worship is also online (or on the phone at 01475 270037, or in print). 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. If you feel unwell, please worship online, to protect both yourself and others in our community.
* The choir rehearses in the sanctuary immediately after the service, and finishes before 1pm. All who enjoy singing are welcome!
*We are looking for a new Property Convenor — the role mainly involves keeping track of contracts (ie utilities/works) and contacting and following up with contractors to get works done in accordance with the Kirk Session’s instructions, plans, and budget. The administrative/reporting duties have thus far been done entirely using Microsoft Word, so no particular technological skills required. If you might be interested in volunteering for this role, please speak to Cameron, Donald (the current convenor), or Teri to learn more.
* Did you know that it costs us about £10,500 per month to do the ministry we currently do at St. John’s? That includes heating and lighting the building and keeping it in good repair for church and community groups, programming, events, and pastoral care for people of all ages, our contribution to minister’s stipends, and other ministry costs. 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.
* 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!
* Wednesday Evening Bible Study meets in the manse at 7:30pm. All are welcome as we continue reading through the Bible in somewhat more than a year!
* Young Adult Bible Study meets in the manse on the 2nd and 4th Sundays at 7pm for a meal and discussion of the gospel according to John. Everyone in their 20s is welcome!
* Our Lent study is with all of Connect, meeting in the Lyle Kirk on Thursday evenings. We gather at 7pm for tea and coffee and then start at 7:30pm. We are studying “Another Story Must Begin” based on the musical Les Miserables. All are welcome, no experience necessary.
* The Stated Annual Meeting of the congregation will be held immediately after morning worship on Sunday, 19th March. The minute of last year’s meeting will be available next Sunday. You can download a copy of the Annual Report by clicking here.
* March 2023 marks the 125th anniversary of the 2nd Gourock Boys’ Brigade. Tickets are available now for two anniversary events: the Reunion Dinner Saturday 18th March 6.30 for 7pm in Masonic Hall John Street — this is now sold out but there is a waiting list so please contact Alan for more information. Our anniversary Grand Charity Ball will be Saturday 9th September 6.00 for 6.30pm in Greenock Town Hall. Tickets priced £50 or £500 for a table of 10 will be available soon. The benefitting Charities have been selected and will be announced shortly. We are delighted to announce that every penny raised from ticket sales and our charity auction on the evening will go directly to our chosen charities. This event is open to all so please spread the word, book your table, put the date in your diary and look forward to what we are sure will be a Second To None evening of enjoyment and celebration.
* Free period products are available in the church toilets for anyone who might need them, thanks to Hey Girls and Inverclyde Council.
* Greenock Philharmonic Choir’s Spring Concert will be on Saturday 25th March in Lyle Kirk, Union Street, Greenock at 7-30pm. They will perform ‘Elijah’ by Mendelssohn. The conductor is Andrew McTaggart, and the choir will be accompanied by the Glasgow Chamber Orchestra. Soloists are Catriona Hewitson, Penelope Cousland, William Searle, and Ross Cumming. Tickets, priced £15, including refreshments, are available from Calum Harbison on 07847 250529, or by emailing info@greenockphilharmonic.co.uk.
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The Presbytery of Clyde will meet in Inchinnan Parish Church, Old Greenock Rd, Inchinnan, Renfrew PA4 9PE on Saturday 18th March 2022 at 10.a.m.
At a Special Meeting constituted for the purpose of finalising the Presbytery Mission Plan, Presbytery will discuss the draft Mission Plan proposals for the Cluster in which your congregation is located.
Your congregation sits within Cluster A. Your congregation is cited to attend in its interest and is entitled to respond to the report through the contribution of one person representing the congregation.
Indications of a desire to contribute to the debate should be made to the Presbytery Clerk, Rev Dr Peter McEnhill, by email at clyde@churchofscotland.org.uk prior to the meeting.
Please return a copy of this citation digitally signed indicating that it has been intimated to the congregation at public worship on Sunday 5th and 12th of March respectively. Alternatively table a signed hard copy to the table at the Presbytery meeting itself.
Rev Dr Peter McEnhill
Presbytery Clerk
Sunday Service for 20 March 2022, third Sunday in Lent
20 March 2022, third Sunday in Lent
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
Call to Worship
1: Come into the presence of Christ,
for he is making us ready for holiness.
2: Come into the presence of community,
for together we lift one another into faithfulness.
All: In humility and trust, we come to be made into Christ’s body.
Prayer with Hymn 776: Ukrainian Kyrie
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison.
You love us to the end, and beyond, O God.
You give yourself to us,
beyond our comprehension.
We cannot fathom the depth of your love
nor the cost of your gift,
yet we see the path you walk and the way you choose.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison.
You, Lord, kneel in front of us, and we are uncertain how to respond.
We confess that we do not like the feeling of not being in control of what you’ll do next.
You are the source of all holiness, yet you stoop down to serve all,
and call us to do the same, and we admit it makes us uncomfortable.
We confess that we love to serve, but on our terms,
so that we never have to be vulnerable enough to receive.
Yet you insist that we must experience the fullness of your love,
if we are to share it.
So forgive us for refusing to allow you to work in us, and wash away our self-reliance.
Forgive us for our unwillingness to truly break down the power structures
that make us always the giver and others always the needy,
and wash away our arrogance.
Cleanse us and make us ready to stand in your presence
and to walk your way of love for the world.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison.
You break down dividing walls
and social norms and power structures
with nothing but a basin and a towel,
gathering all your people into your holy presence.
As we are made new this day, make us ready to follow your example,
to create a community of mutual care that transforms the world.
Amen.
Music
Online: The Servant King
In person:
Reading: John 13.1-18 (NRSV) — Annette Holliday
Last week we heard about Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead. The religious leaders saw that as a dangerous act, and from that moment they began looking for a way to get rid of him. Jesus continued to go about the community, teaching and sharing meals. At one such meal, at Lazarus’s house, Lazarus’s sister Mary brought a large amount of expensive perfumed ointment and used it to anoint Jesus’ feet, and Jesus proclaimed that she had anointed him for his death. The next day, he entered Jerusalem while crowds waved branches and shouted Hosanna. Many at all levels of society believed and many others did not, so there was division among the leaders about what to do, but the most vocal were looking for a way to kill him, even though it was just a few days until Passover. And then, after three years of teaching and miraculous signs, he retreated with his disciples to teach them the last things he needed them to know. This section of John’s gospel is called the “farewell discourse” and today I am reading from the very beginning of that discourse, in chapter 13, beginning at verse 1. I am reading from the New Revised Standard Version.
~~~~
Now before the festival of the Passover, Jesus knew that his hour had come to depart from this world and go to the Father. Having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end. The devil had already put it into the heart of Judas son of Simon Iscariot to betray him. And during supper Jesus, knowing that the Father had given all things into his hands, and that he had come from God and was going to God, got up from the table, took off his outer robe, and tied a towel around himself. Then he poured water into a basin and began to wash the disciples’ feet and to wipe them with the towel that was tied around him. He came to Simon Peter, who said to him, ‘Lord, are you going to wash my feet?’ Jesus answered, ‘You do not know now what I am doing, but later you will understand.’ Peter said to him, ‘You will never wash my feet.’ Jesus answered, ‘Unless I wash you, you have no share with me.’ Simon Peter said to him, ‘Lord, not my feet only but also my hands and my head!’ Jesus said to him, ‘One who has bathed does not need to wash, except for the feet, but is entirely clean. And you are clean, though not all of you.’ For he knew who was to betray him; for this reason he said, ‘Not all of you are clean.’
After he had washed their feet, had put on his robe, and had returned to the table, he said to them, ‘Do you know what I have done to you? You call me Teacher and Lord—and you are right, for that is what I am. So if I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet. For I have set you an example, that you also should do as I have done to you. Very truly, I tell you, servants are not greater than their master, nor are messengers greater than the one who sent them. If you know these things, you are blessed if you do them.
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 Voice of Self-Sufficiency
Whenever I say that this is the reading coming up, people get a slightly scared look in their eye, and with much trepidation they ask “are you going to make us wash each others’ feet?” Even as I was preparing the cover slide for this Sunday, I tried to find a picture that wouldn’t make people afraid that I was planning a foot washing ceremony. For some reason, we really really don’t want to do that.
It’s interesting because I think the discomfort is mostly on one side. I suspect that many of us would be perfectly happy — if we could physically get down on the floor, anyway — to be the one doing the washing. After all, Jesus said that we should be like him, serve others. We hear that call to serve and we want to do it. We recognise our privilege and want to help those who have less. We count our blessings and want to give to those whom we think are somehow less blessed. We see that we have more than we need and we want to give some of that extra to people who don’t have enough. Serving others is part of who we are as Christians, what we understand to be our purpose as people who follow Jesus.
Sometimes we forget that when he washed his disciples’ feet, it was a reversal of social status and hierarchy — for the teacher to lower himself literally to the floor in front of his disciples to serve them was a shock. But still, we don’t mind, as long as it isn’t too terribly inconvenient. We will kneel and offer our bit of extra, leftover time or money as a gift of care to people who haven’t experienced much compassion or grace from others.
But when it comes to being the one sitting in the chair, receiving a gift of care, allowing someone else to serve us, we rapidly become like Peter. “You will never wash my feet!” I can’t even count the number of times people have said to me “I don’t want anyone to have to help me.” Especially from people who have spent their lives helping others.
We are far more comfortable serving than being served.
Usually I then invite people to consider that they would be creating opportunities for someone else to fulfil their calling to Christian service…if no one is willing to accept help, to let themselves be served, then how are we supposed to serve one another?
But ultimately I think there’s a bigger issue here. Because in the ancient world, the far and away most common way foot washing happened was that people washed their own feet. The host would provide basins of water, and guests washed themselves. It was only the poshest of homes that an enslaved person might do it for you. It was certainly never the host himself, of course, but in the vast majority of instances, people washed themselves.
And we are so used to the ideal of being self-sufficient, aren’t we? We can do it ourselves. We can take care of ourselves. We don’t need anyone.
Friends I am here to tell you that the voice of self-sufficiency is a liar. All of these ideas are lies, and they draw us away from the way of Christ.
Notice what Jesus said to Peter, when Peter said he would not allow Jesus to wash his feet, meaning that he would wash his own feet, thank you very much — Jesus said “unless I wash you, you have no share with me.”
That’s a pretty harsh assessment. Peter was perfectly capable of washing his own feet. And if Jesus had asked, he probably would have gotten down on the floor and washed Jesus’ feet too. What Jesus actually asks is much harder: to wash each other. Which means both serving and being served, giving and receiving, caring and being cared for.
The thing is, when we wash ourselves, we’re in control. And actually, when we serve someone else, we’re also in control. But when we’re the ones being cared for, we are no longer in control. It’s a vulnerable situation to be in, and we don’t like it. But Jesus says that if all we want is control, and never want to be vulnerable…that’s not a real relationship. It’s a power play. And there’s no room in the Body of Christ for power plays, however well intentioned or subconscious it may be. Heeding the voice of self-sufficiency means that we are not listening to the voice of Christ…and the voice of self-sufficiency is loud and persistent, ingrained in us so we hear it both from outside, in the culture, and from inside ourselves as we replay the ways we were brought up to never be dependent on anyone, because then we might be like “those” people — the people we think are beneath us, the underprivileged, the less. Following the voice of Jesus instead of the lies of self-sufficiency will align us with exactly those people that we subconsciously look down on as we help them.
Just before today’s reading, in chapter 12, Mary anointed Jesus’ feet with very expensive perfumed ointment, and Jesus received that gift of service and love from her. Judas complained the money should have been given to the poor, and Jesus said “the poor you always have with you” — meaning not that there will always be poor people we can give to, serve, or patronise, but rather that literally, Jesus’ disciples will always be with the poor. Not distant from them, giving from afar, but literally with — no them and us, just us — in one community, serving each other. Giving and receiving, with no distinction between who has the privilege of always being the giver and who has the need to always be the recipient.
Having had his own feet washed and anointed, Jesus then turns and washes his disciples. All of them, even Judas who was already preparing his betrayal, perhaps in part because of that teaching about being in community with the poor. This is the example Jesus sets: everyone, including the denier and the betrayer, get washed. Everyone, even Jesus and even Judas, is called to give and to receive. No one is so far above that they never receive, and no one is so far below that they never give. The Body of Christ is a community of interdependence and mutuality. Anything else and we are choosing the voice of self-sufficiency instead, and so we have no share in Christ.
And Jesus says: if you know these things, you are blessed if you do them.
May it be so. Amen.
(Online hymn 694: Brother, Sister, Let Me Serve You)
In person Hymn 484: Great God, your love has called us here
In person: Baptism
Prayer and Lord’s Prayer
Let us pray.
Eternal God,
your essence is love
and you made us in your image.
For your love which surrounds and infuses
all things, O Lord,
we give thanks.
For your love which shines in every face,
we give thanks.
And we pray for the courage to live love,
to be vulnerable and real,
to share and hold confidence and offer peace.
We pray for those places where love seems absent—
where despair grows and shadows threaten.
We long for answers,
or at least a sense of your guiding presence in the confusion.
We lift up those who live daily with violence and fear,
especially in Ukraine, and also so many other places near and far.
We lift up those here in community with us,
holding hurts and hopes in your loving light.
We lift up all those who have been seduced by the voice of self-sufficiency,
and pray that your voice of gracious mutuality and interdependence
would come through loud and clear.
Fill us again with your grace,
that we may know
the cleansing and renewing, calling and empowering
water flowing over us,
until we learn to both give and receive generously,
to love each other as you have loved us,
and to let love grow even beyond these walls
until all are welcomed into your kingdom.
Make us bold to proclaim your grace, your forgiveness, your hope, your way.
Make us ready to receive it.
Make us again into your body, sharing your love with the world.
Remind us of the love poured on us in our baptism,
and bring us once again to new life with you.
Water the seeds that have been planted this day,
and help us bear fruit for your kingdom, living in your love.
We pray in the name of 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
Christ himself has prepared us for the Way, and given us this truth: If you know these things, you are blessed if you do them. So go into your week to be blessed and to be a blessing: follow Jesus’ example, to both lift others and to be lifted by others, that together we may embody beloved 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
* We are now about halfway through the season of Lent, a season of preparing for Easter. During Lent we are invited to be particularly attentive to our spiritual practices, to remove things from our lives that are hindering our relationship with God, and to be diligent in pursuing faithful ways. This season is meant to get us ready to meet the risen Christ on the other side of the tomb, and to follow him wherever he will lead. The theme for worship during this Lenten season will be “Who’s Calling?” — thinking about how we incline our ear to the voice of Jesus through the cacophony of the world around us.
*You are invited to join in reading the Bible in a year for 2022 — immersing ourselves in God’s word throughout the year. Click here to find a reading plan that’s five days a week (leaving a couple of days for catch up each week!). Watch this space for information about a Bible study as we go through the scriptures together!
* 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!
* The Kirk Session will meet today after worship, with a light lunch provided.
* St John’s is hosting the Easter Code for P6 pupils on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday the 21st – 23rd of March, from 9-12 each day. If you would be available to help out on any or all of those mornings, please contact Teri.
* The Spring Church Notes are now available! You can read them by clicking here.
Sunday service for 7 March 2021, third Sunday in Lent
Service for 7 March 2021, Third Sunday in Lent
Prepared by the Rev. Teri C Peterson, Gourock St. John’s
Manse phone: 632143
Email: tpeterson (at) churchofscotland.org.uk
To hear an audio recording of the service, including music, phone 01475 270037.
Coffee hour is on Zoom between 11:45 – 1. Grab a cuppa and come for a chat!
Children’s Time is on Zoom at 11, and Young Adult Bible Study is on Zoom at 1. If you or someone you know would like login details, please contact Teri.
Our Lent Study this year is online as well. Each day throughout the week we are learning about various people of faith through the ages on Lent Madness, and then on Wednesday evenings at 7:30 we will gather on Zoom to go more in depth about them and what we can learn from their faithfulness to help us on our own journeys with Christ. If you’d like to join the Zoom study, click here on Wednesday at 7:30. If you know someone who needs the details to join by audio only (by phone) please contact Teri for the details.
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Call to Recognition
Sometimes we are the ones who search,
and sometimes we are the ones who are lost,
sometimes we are the ones behind the scenes,
and sometimes we are the ones who didn’t notice anything.
God calls us together to make the Body whole,
so let us seek one another,
make room for all,
and celebrate together in worship and in life,
recognising the truth and call of God’s grace.
To Recognise—
To see or understand something we have known before
A place we have been
A person we have met
A word we have heard
Sometimes we forget, sometimes we’ve been away for a while,
sometimes it was crowded out, sometimes we didn’t want to recall
but when the moment of recognition comes, it is just that:
Re – cognition. Knowing again.
In the beginning, God made humankind in God’s image.
In the beginning, God breathed into dust and ashes, and we came to life.
Along the way, God spoke, filling our ears with promise.
Along the way, God wrote the word on our hearts.
Yet we have forgotten, we’ve turned away for a while, we got busy, we didn’t want to recall.
We went our own way —
the way of the to-do list that can’t be set aside
the way of easy judgmental answers that put some out while we’re in
the way of accepting that wholeness, shalom, is an impossible, naive dream
The whole time, God, You have been here.
The whole time, You have been speaking, calling to us.
In the word, in the flesh, in our neighbour, in the stranger, in our hearts, in our communities,
you have been here all along,
and we have not recognised you.
Show us your way again, Lord.
Remind us of what we have forgotten, turned away from, crowded out, ignored.
Give us hearts and minds to recognise you,
wherever you reveal yourself today.
Amen.
Hymn 623: Gather Us In
Reading: Luke 15.1-32 (Common English Bible)
Since we left off last week at the end of Luke 13, Jesus has been at a dinner party, and teaching about hospitality and who is invited to feast in the kingdom of God. He reminded people that those who are lowly will be lifted up, and those who lift themselves up will be brought low. He taught that we are to invite people to share our bounty, especially if they cannot repay us or invite us in return—undoing the system of reciprocity and quid-pro-quo, insisting that hospitality is a blessing we are to share. Jesus speaks of the cost and demands of being his disciples, and calls us to be fully committed to following him. That’s where we pick up the story today in Luke 15.
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All the tax collectors and sinners were gathering around Jesus to listen to him. The Pharisees and legal experts were grumbling, saying, “This man welcomes sinners and eats with them.”
Jesus told them this parable: “Suppose someone among you had one hundred sheep and lost one of them. Wouldn’t he leave the other ninety-nine in the pasture and search for the lost one until he finds it? And when he finds it, he is thrilled and places it on his shoulders. When he arrives home, he calls together his friends and neighbours, saying to them, ‘Celebrate with me because I’ve found my lost sheep.’ In the same way, I tell you, there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who changes both heart and life than over ninety-nine righteous people who have no need to change their hearts and lives.
“Or what woman, if she owns ten silver coins and loses one of them, won’t light a lamp and sweep the house, searching her home carefully until she finds it? When she finds it, she calls together her friends and neighbours, saying, ‘Celebrate with me because I’ve found my lost coin.’ In the same way, I tell you, joy breaks out in the presence of God’s angels over one sinner who changes both heart and life.”
Jesus said, “A certain man had two sons. The younger son said to his father, ‘Father, give me my share of the inheritance.’ Then the father divided his estate between them. Soon afterward, the younger son gathered everything together and took a trip to a land far away. There, he wasted his wealth through extravagant living.
“When he had used up his resources, a severe food shortage arose in that country and he began to be in need. He hired himself out to one of the citizens of that country, who sent him into his fields to feed pigs. He longed to eat his fill from what the pigs ate, but no one gave him anything. When he came to his senses, he said, ‘How many of my father’s hired hands have more than enough food, but I’m starving to death! I will get up and go to my father, and say to him, “Father, I have sinned against heaven and against you. I no longer deserve to be called your son. Take me on as one of your hired hands.” ’ So he got up and went to his father.
“While he was still a long way off, his father saw him and was moved with compassion. His father ran to him, hugged him, and kissed him. Then his son said, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven and against you. I no longer deserve to be called your son.’ But the father said to his servants, ‘Quickly, bring out the best robe and put it on him! Put a ring on his finger and sandals on his feet! Fetch the fattened calf and slaughter it. We must celebrate with feasting because this son of mine was dead and has come back to life! He was lost and is found!’ And they began to celebrate.
“Now his older son was in the field. Coming in from the field, he approached the house and heard music and dancing. He called one of the servants and asked what was going on. The servant replied, ‘Your brother has arrived, and your father has slaughtered the fattened calf because he received his son back safe and sound.’ Then the older son was furious and didn’t want to enter in, but his father came out and begged him. He answered his father, ‘Look, I’ve served you all these years, and I never disobeyed your instruction. Yet you’ve never given me as much as a young goat so I could celebrate with my friends. But when this son of yours returned, after gobbling up your estate on prostitutes, you slaughtered the fattened calf for him.’ Then his father said, ‘Son, you are always with me, and everything I have is yours. But we had to celebrate and be glad because this brother of yours was dead and is alive. He was lost and is found.’”
Hymn: I Will Arise by John L Bell
Sermon: The One Matters
These stories may already be familiar to many of us — whether we’ve heard them from the Bible or not, they’ve entered into the public consciousness, like the story of being a neighbour from a couple of weeks ago. We use phrases like “prodigal son” or “lost sheep” even if we don’t know the specifics of the full story that Jesus told.
Some of you know what I’m about to say next, I suspect! — that the popularity of those phrases and the things we think they refer to might be obscuring what Jesus was actually talking about. Remember that a parable is a story that is intentionally open-ended — like a parabola in maths is an open-ended shape — so that we can continue to learn about the kingdom of God from many angles within the story.
One of the things that has happened over the centuries is that we have conflated these stories Jesus tells in Luke’s gospel with one of his sayings from John’s gospel, where he says, “I am the good shepherd”…and so we assume that this story is the same as the one John is telling. But that means we have to ignore the set-up of today’s parables, which suggest something quite different!
Jesus is speaking to the people who are grumbling about his choice of companionship — in this case, some leaders in the community. To those leaders, he said, “Suppose someone among you had 100 sheep, and lost one…”
Now, we have been conditioned by the conflation of this story with the one about Jesus being the good shepherd to assume that this is a story about God seeking out the lost. But listen carefully to the start of the story. To the Pharisees and scripture experts, Jesus said, “Suppose someone among you had 100 sheep and lost one.” From the very first sentence, Jesus is letting the listener know that they are supposed to see themselves as the shepherd! Except the things he then says are things that no shepherd would do. First of all, what shepherd can just glance at a hundred sheep on a hillside and notice that there are only 99? Second, what shepherd would leave the whole flock on that hillside and go searching for one…especially since that probably means when he came back, he’d have a flock of just one?!? One lost sheep out of a hundred would not be a terribly big deal, though it does suggest some carelessness on the part of the shepherd, a bit of a failure at his job.
The second story ups the stakes a little bit, with the coin being lost — that coin is a whole day’s wages. To lose an entire day’s wages would be a pretty significant problem!
The shepherd and the woman then search, thoroughly and tirelessly, until they find what they have lost. Then they rejoice, calling together their community to celebrate with them — maybe even spending more than they had originally lost and found on the party!
The third story increases the stakes even more. Many of us have used phrases like “family is most important”…well, here’s a story about a family that doesn’t quite go according to plan. The younger son demanded his inheritance while his father was still alive, and he ran off and spent it. When he came home, the father welcomed him with open arms and again there’s a big party, what was lost has been found! But when we read all three of these stories together the way they were intended, we see something unusual:
No one went looking for the younger son who wandered off.
And when he returned, no one went looking for the older son to tell him the news and invite him to come in from work early and join the party.
The shepherd recognised that he had lost a sheep, and went looking. The woman recognised that she had lost a coin, and went looking. The father doesn’t seem to have recognised what he was losing, and he did not go looking. Yes, he welcomed the younger son, and pleaded with the older one, but only when they turned back up of their own accord.
Perhaps by now you can see the problem with the way we have often understood these parables. The shepherd is responsible for his sheep and loses one. The woman is responsible for her coins and loses one. The father is responsible for his sons and loses…one and then the other. But of course we know that God does not lose us. God never loses track of a sheep. There is nowhere we can go that would be out of God’s sight. God does not simply forget about us, toiling away in the fields.
And when we hear the interpretation Jesus gives, that there is rejoicing when someone changes their heart and life, when they repent — we see further how bizarre that interpretation really is, though we have been used to it for a long time. A sheep doesn’t need to repent for doing what sheep do — wandering around looking for better grass. And a coin can’t repent because it’s an inanimate object. Sheep and coins don’t lose themselves, they are lost by their owners.
Which means it must actually be the owner that is changing their heart and life in this story! It’s the shepherd who recognises his error, and works to put it right, to bring the flock back to wholeness, even at great risk to his livelihood. It’s the woman who recognises her error, and works to put it right, bringing her savings back to wholeness, even if it means staying up all night tearing the house apart and putting it back together. But the father — who is tasked with caring for something far more valuable than sheep or coins — doesn’t seem to recognise his error until it’s too late and the family is coming apart at the seams, wholeness out of reach.
And Jesus has addressed the religious leaders as if they are the shepherd…the woman…the father. Telling them what they are supposed to be like: not to complain about another leader who goes looking for the lost, but rather to recognise their faults and failings and change their ways. That means seeing who’s missing and taking some risks to restore the wholeness of the community, because that is what causes rejoicing in heaven: restoring wholeness.
All of which leads me to wonder: have we noticed who is missing from our community? And what effort are we willing to put in, what risks are we willing to take, for the one? So often we are focused on what the majority wants or needs…what about the one who doesn’t feel they fit in, or who hasn’t been able to access, or has been left out and feels unloved or taken for granted? Are we willing to make changes to the way we do things so that the one, or the few, can be included at the same level as the 99? Or do we either assume they’re fine out in the field without an invitation to the party, or that they’ll be perfectly fine just out on the edges of the community where there’s no trouble to us?
Perhaps the most obvious connection is disabled access — how do people feel entering our church buildings and other buildings in our community? — like a valued regular part of the family, or different and causing trouble to get in and navigate around the space and participate fully in activities? We might ask the same questions about socio-economic status, or educational experience, or family configuration, or ethnic background, or health needs, or gender identity, or knowledge of our traditions, or traumatic pasts, or facility with technology, or any number of other things that might be keeping people separate. Without them, our community is not whole. So what effort are we willing to put in not just to make the one welcome, but to look for them and rejoice in their presence? It’s so tempting to count the cost of making changes, not to mention the risk to the 99 and their feelings of being left on the hillside for a bit. But what about the cost to the one who has never fit in, or always been made to feel second-class or marginal or have to come through the back door? And what about the cost to the whole community when we are fractured and missing pieces?
The Pharisees and legal experts grumbled about Jesus spending time with the people they thought weren’t worth the effort. Jesus responded with stories of God rejoicing when we recognise the sinfulness of that thought and change our hearts and lives by going to seek the lost…and the consequences to the family if we don’t recognise and don’t try.
May we recognise the missing members of our family, and seek the wholeness God desires for the kingdom of God coming on earth as it is in heaven. Amen.
Hymn: You Say by Lauren Daigle
Prayer
Loving God, no one is beyond or beneath your attention,
no one is outside your love.
We confess that we often prioritise our own comfort or traditions
even if that means some are not truly welcome.
We admit that we don’t always notice
who is missing, or excluded, or overlooked.
And deep down, subconsciously,
we sometimes believe the one is expendable for the sake of the ninety-nine.
Forgive us, God.
Forgive us for allowing the fracturing of your Body for our convenience.
Forgive us for counting the cost to ourselves
but not the hurt of the ones we have made Other.
Forgive us, and lead us into wholeness with all your people.
For you are a God of extravagant welcome,
so we give you thanks for your grace that leads us home,
for your persistence that makes us whole,
for your love beyond measure.
We remember this day those who have been on the outside,
feeling forgotten, pushed aside, left behind.
We pray for the day when no one is considered
collateral damage, expendable, the cost of doing business.
We pray for the day when we can sing “all are welcome” and mean every word.
We ask your comfort to surround those for whom no one is out looking,
and those from whom we turn away our eyes.
May they know true inclusion and hope.
We remember this day those who are so reliable we forget to notice them,
and we give thanks for their steadfast faithfulness.
We pray for strength for all who work behind the scenes, day in and day out,
in church, family, community, business, and government.
May they be encouraged and upheld by the whole community,
and may they know our care for them.
We remember this day those who celebrate —
for large and small joys, we give thanks.
We pray for those who have felt they must rejoice quietly, in the midst of a painful time,
and for those who long for a taste of joy yet find none.
May we truly be your body,
rejoicing with those who rejoice and weeping with those who weep.
We trust in your gracious mercy, O God,
and bring our prayers in hope that we may recognise and follow your way.
We ask these and all things in the name of 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
Friends, go into your week ready to make an effort for the one, because the one matters. 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.
Announcements
* All worship is online (or on the phone at 01475 270037, or in print) until further notice — the building is closed during the government’s lockdown and during level 4 restrictions. We will let you know when in-person worship begins, and whether any new procedures will be in place at that time.
* 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!
* The theme for worship during the season of Lent is “Recognition” — a word which means “understanding something we previously knew/have seen before.” God has written the covenant in our hearts, and we have heard Jesus’ teaching before…where do we recognise him in our daily lives, what lessons is he reminding us about when he tells his parables, and how do we return our way to the way he has faithfully laid out for us, time and again?
* Our Lent Study this year is online as well. Each day throughout the week we are learning about various people of faith through the ages on Lent Madness, and then on Wednesday evenings at 7:30 we will gather on Zoom to go more in depth about them and what we can learn from their faithfulness to help us on our own journeys with Christ. If you’d like to join the Zoom study, click here on Wednesday at 7:30. If you know someone who needs the details to join by audio only (by phone) please contact Teri for the details.
* Each day of Lent — 40 days not including Sundays — I will be posting a video on our Facebook page about “Faith in 40 Objects” — household things that can inform our faith journey, depending on how we look at them!
***The coffee money that we normally send on to the school in Venda has been exhausted. If you would like to contribute to keep our donations to the school going, please contact Rab & Eileen for bank details for donations, phone 634159.
* 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!
* Evening Prayer with Connect will be led by Karen this evening. Join us on the Connect Facebook Page at 6:58pm.