Sunday Service for 10 April 2022, Passion Sunday
10 April 2022, sixth Sunday in Lent / Passion Sunday
Gourock St. John’s Church of Scotland
Service prepared by the Rev. Teri Peterson
Manse phone: 632143
Email: tpeterson (at) churchofscotland.org.uk
Prelude Music
Welcome
Call to Worship
All: We come out to meet him —
1: The one we have high hopes for!
2: The one we are a little bit afraid of…
3: The one we have been praying will come?
All: Hosanna! Save us!
Teri: Outside, loud demands and chaos.
Inside, questions and confusion,
fear and cruel instinct,
desire for calm, imposed through power.
Outside, accusations and increasing tension,
desire for security, imposed through power.
Around us and within us,
the swirling forces of this world
compete with the power of Truth and Life,
to which we cling.
All: Save us and set us free —
1: free from our oppressors,
2: free from our too-narrow expectations,
3: free from the status quo.
All: Hosanna! Save us!
Prayer with Hymn 776: Ukrainian Kyrie:
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison
You have the situation in hand, Lord Jesus,
walking into the city, and out of it again, on your terms.
With every step, you show us the truth of your Way.
This isn’t power the way we think of it, O God.
We want your power to be big and flashy and forceful,
and instead you offer us love that carries its own cross.
We confess that our vision of power is coercive,
and yours is self-giving,
and we are not sure how to manage that chasm between your way and ours.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison
Forgive us when we seek positions of advantage
and manipulate our way to a better deal,
while you speak unpopular truth with great love.
Forgive us when we feel hopeless and helpless,
watching you shoulder the weight of the world in search of reconciliation.
Forgive us when we see only failure
while you are on the way to unrecognisable glory.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison
You are indeed the King who saves us,
and we come asking for mercy,
that we may be made ready to walk your way of Life.
While we do not understand, and it all feels so messy,
we pray to recognise the story you are writing,
that we too may take up our part.
Give us the courage — today, even right now —
to follow your way of self-giving love,
even though we know how the empires of this world respond.
Give us the hope — today, even right now —
to withstand this pain and to keep watch for signs of new life.
Give us the faith — today, even right now —
to trust the truth and to live it.
We ask in your holy, loving name. Amen.
Music
Online: What Wondrous Love Is This (piano meditation by Shawn Kirchner)
In person: Andante by J. Fiocco
Children’s Time: Palm Sunday
(Listen to the word that God has spoken) — round
Reading: John 19.1-22 (NRSV)
Last week we left off in the middle of Jesus’ trial before Pilate, with the religious leaders asking for the release of Barabbas, an insurrectionist, as their Passover favour. We pick up today in the next verse, in the gospel according to John, chapter 19, beginning at verse 1. I am reading from the New Revised Standard Version.
Then Pilate took Jesus and had him flogged. And the soldiers wove a crown of thorns and put it on his head, and they dressed him in a purple robe. They kept coming up to him, saying, ‘Hail, King of the Jews!’ and striking him on the face. Pilate went out again and said to them, ‘Look, I am bringing him out to you to let you know that I find no case against him.’ So Jesus came out, wearing the crown of thorns and the purple robe. Pilate said to them, ‘Here is the man!’ When the chief priests and the police saw him, they shouted, ‘Crucify him! Crucify him!’ Pilate said to them, ‘Take him yourselves and crucify him; I find no case against him.’ The chief priests and the police answered him, ‘We have a law, and according to that law he ought to die because he has claimed to be the Son of God.’
Now when Pilate heard this, he was more afraid than ever. He entered his headquarters again and asked Jesus, ‘Where are you from?’ But Jesus gave him no answer. Pilate therefore said to him, ‘Do you refuse to speak to me? Do you not know that I have power to release you, and power to crucify you?’ Jesus answered him, ‘You would have no power over me unless it had been given you from above; therefore the one who handed me over to you is guilty of a greater sin.’ From then on Pilate tried to release him, but the religious leaders cried out, ‘If you release this man, you are no friend of the emperor. Everyone who claims to be a king sets himself against the emperor.’
When Pilate heard these words, he brought Jesus outside and sat on the judge’s bench at a place called The Stone Pavement, or in Hebrew Gabbatha. Now it was the day of Preparation for the Passover; and it was about noon. He said to the Judean leaders, ‘Here is your King!’ They cried out, ‘Away with him! Away with him! Crucify him!’ Pilate asked them, ‘Shall I crucify your King?’ The chief priests answered, ‘We have no king but the emperor.’ Then he handed him over to them to be crucified.
So they took Jesus; and carrying the cross by himself, he went out to what is called The Place of the Skull, which in Hebrew is called Golgotha. There they crucified him, and with him two others, one on either side, with Jesus between them. Pilate also had an inscription written and put on the cross. It read, ‘Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews.’ Many of the Jews read this inscription, because the place where Jesus was crucified was near the city; and it was written in Hebrew, in Latin, and in Greek. Then the chief priests said to Pilate, ‘Do not write, “The King of the Jews”, but, “This man said, I am King of the Jews.” ’ Pilate answered, ‘What I have written I have written.’
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 Power
Years ago there was a television show called Buffy the Vampire Slayer — it was about a young woman who was supernaturally chosen to fight evil in the world, in the form of vampires and demons. She had superhuman strength and recovery powers, and she was constantly in training. The catch is that there’s only one Slayer alive in the world at any given time, but of course the evils of the world seem to multiply faster all the time. Near the end of the series, Buffy decided to train other girls and young women to help to the best of their ability, and she started with her own younger sister. One night they went out and waited for a vampire to rise from a grave, and when he did, Buffy said to her sister Dawn: it’s not about right and wrong, it’s about power, who has it and who wants it. Then she looked at Dawn, who was looking at the vampire, and asked, “who has the power?” And Dawn said, “well, I have the stake.” — because of course the way one kills a vampire is with a wooden stake through the heart!
Buffy’s response was: “the stake is not the power.”
Someone should have told Pilate that, too. He believed himself to have all the power — he said to Jesus, do you not know that I have power to release you and power to crucify you? In Pilate’s mind, the ability to put someone to death was the same thing as having ultimate power. That is, after all, the empire’s only real weapon — and they use it to frighten people into submission.
But the stake is not the power. The ability to nail someone onto a cross is not the same thing as having power. Striking fear into people is not power.
Pilate thought he was the one with the power in this situation. And he used his power over the religious leaders, for sure. They also thought they had some measure of power, perhaps even believed they were forcing Pilate to do their dirty work for them. But in the end, Pilate manipulated them just as he does everyone else, until they, the religious leaders of an occupied people, whose faith is built on there being only One God who is ruler of heaven and earth, ended up having to affirm an idolatry, that they have no king but the emperor who was also considered a god. In getting what they wanted when it came to Jesus, they had to lay aside some of their deepest held beliefs and give up their own autonomy.
Because the kind of power they thought they wanted is a lie. And power built on lies requires us to buy in to the lie in order to project an image we want other people to believe.
But that’s not real power. On the contrary, that’s weakness. We may think all the weapons and all the money and all the status symbols and all the ability to coerce other people into doing our will is power, but it’s actually a mask, something to hide behind, so no one will see just how shallow that all is, so no one will see the lie at the heart of it all.
Meanwhile, Jesus is the truth, the bringer of life. And not just life, but life abundant. While Pilate proclaimed his ability to kill, Jesus demonstrated his ability to overcome death, thus revealing just how weak both the religious and political leaders were. Pilate may hold the stake, ready to drive it into the heart of love and truth embodied in human form…but Jesus is the one who carries his own cross, in control of the situation, giving himself away for the sake of those who cannot fathom that self-giving could be greater than their power of forceful taking.
In his self-giving, Jesus reveals just how weak and broken our power structures are, just how shaky the false foundation is, and how we cling to them despite all that. He holds up a mirror to the systems of this world, to us and our complicity in them — for they are not as different now as we would like to think.
We see how an innocent man can be condemned by the insistence of a few.
We see how inevitably the wheels of the justice system can turn toward a particular outcome, regardless of whether the person caught up in it is guilty or not.
We see how easily we are manipulated by those in positions of power in government or media, to think what they tell us to think even when it isn’t what we actually believe.
We see how quickly things change from seemingly harmless name-calling to dehumanising and brutalising another human being, believing them to be beneath us and deserving of abuse.
We see how easily abuse comes to our lips and then to our hands.
We see the lengths to which we will go to maintain the status quo.
It is not comfortable to look in that mirror, but it’s the one Jesus holds up to the world, to see that though we may feel powerful in the moment we do those things, in the moment we call someone a derogatory name or the moment we force someone else to do something or the moment we decide to abandon our principles for a quick win…that feeling of power is fleeting. And then too often we end up seduced by that tiny taste of power, and we do it again and again, like a drug we can’t let go of. But the truth is that these all-too-common behaviours are rooted in weakness and fear and lies, not in the source of light and life and truth.
And we all do it. There’s no point pretending we don’t. All of us have chosen, at one time or another, to try to tear down someone else and get that feeling of power over them. We’ve looked at people in positions of authority, people we don’t even know, and called them names to our friends. We’ve sat behind our screens and said things we’d never dare to say to someone’s face. We’ve laid aside our faith or our values to get something we wanted for less, pretending we don’t know the effect it has on others. We have all been seduced by the lies of power in one way or another.
The only way to change that is to be honest about it, to tell the truth, to look into that mirror Jesus holds up and admit our complicity in these systems of domination and abuse and exploitation and dehumanisation, to admit we have believed the stake is the power. And to then look to Jesus, who is the way, the truth, and the life, who is love in the flesh, carrying the cross by himself.
On his own shoulders, he bears the weight of all those destructive ways of humankind. The means of his own torture and death are his burden, and he takes it up without a moment’s hesitation — in John’s gospel there’s no pleading in Gethsemane, no sense of struggle, this is his to do, because God so loved the world.
In this is love — not that we loved God, but that while we were yet sinners, unable to recognise the truth, unwilling to look in the mirror and acknowledge reality, God loved us. While we were listening to all those other voices that call — voices of grief, self-sufficiency, fear, competing expectations, and power, and so many others — the voice of truth and love has always been calling us out of those destructive ways and into abundant life. While we were clinging desperately to any shred of control we could find, betraying love to save our own skin, the good shepherd was laying down his life for the sheep.
And that kind of love is true power.
May it be so. Amen.
Online hymn 385: Here Hangs a Man Discarded (tune: Passion Chorale)
(in person Hymn 391: This is Your Coronation, tune passion chorale)
Prayer and the Lord’s Prayer
We give you thanks, O God, for you so love the world —
your love created and is still creating,
your love saved and is still bringing wholeness,
your love sustains us all our days.
We praise you for your goodness
and we ask that we might reflect your image more clearly
into the world where you have placed us to live as your people.
You speak truth to power, Lord Jesus,
and we pray today for the grace to do the same.
As you stood firm,
revealing what is right even to those who could not choose the right,
we pray you would give us the courage to trust your word
and follow your way.
Give us eyes to see the truth,
and to change our ways to walk more closely with you.
And for those in positions of earthly authority, we pray the same:
eyes to see truth, and the will and courage
to align with your kingdom instead of their own power.
May all of us together be makers of peace and justice,
following the voice of the good shepherd who leads us into life.
You, Lord Jesus, are clear who you are, sure of your place in the story,
and we pray today for the grace to be the same.
As you stayed true to your purpose,
even in the midst of so many competing voices,
we pray you would clarify our self-understanding,
that we might recognise your call to be transformed,
and so to transform the ways of this world.
When we are tempted to give in to the voice of false power just this once,
speak your loving truth ever more clearly,
that we may echo your voice and find ourselves in abundant life instead.
We hear your call to reflect on our part in the brokenness
that sees some people as disposable or less than human.
You expose the workings we would rather ignore,
so we don’t have to know the truth of how people are treated in our name.
We pray this day for those who have been caught up in a justice system
that does not recognise their humanity,
and for those who simply write off others as irredeemable.
We pray this day for those whose work requires them to see others as less-than,
and for the harm that does to their own souls.
We pray this day for those who have been victims and still find retribution brings no justice.
May all people know the truth of their belovedness,
and may we all act from love, with love, for love.
Give us the imagination to see another way,
valuing all people and restoring one another to wholeness.
Loving God, this world feels so caught up in the power of death,
the shadow is long and we aren’t sure how to escape it.
We ask your companionship as we walk this valley,
and especially for those who suffer at the hands of another.
For people living in the midst of war or occupation,
for those fleeing for their lives,
for those seeking a future of hope,
for those whose homes are places of violence instead of refuge,
for those who have been taught that love hurts,
for those who have lost sight of possibility and see only despair,
we offer our prayers and our hearts…
and we hear you asking us to be an answer to prayer, too,
with hands and homes and resources open.
May your spirit of healing flow over your world, Lord.
Show us the truth this day,
and give us the steadfast courage to do what is right,
even if the cost is great.
We pray in the name of the Lamb of God
who protects us from the power of death and saves us all for abundant life,
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 385: Here hangs a man discarded (tune: Salley Gardens))
Benediction
Friends go forth under the power and protection of the Lamb of God, to lay aside the lies of power and choose instead the love that is the way of truth and life. 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
* Today is the last Sunday in 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.
We are now entering Holy Week:
10 April:
11am, Passion Sunday service in St. John’s
4pm, CONNECT Palm Sunday event at OGA, with a light dinner served
11 – 15 April: self-guided prayer stations available in the St John’s sanctuary, to experience the Holy Week story in different ways. The Stations will be open on:
Monday, 10:30am – noon
Tuesday, 5-6:30pm
Wednesday, 10am – noon and 6-7:15pm
Thursday, 5-6:30pm,
Friday, 11:30am – 1pm
Saturday, 2-4pm
11-15 April:
7pm, Holy Week Services: Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at OGA; Tuesday and Thursday at St. John’s (Thursday includes Communion)
16 April:
2-3pm, Easter Trail on Tower Hill
8:30pm, Easter Eve service in St. John’s
17 April:
7am, Easter service on Tower Hill
8am, Easter breakfast with communion in St. John’s large hall
11am, Easter service in St John’s sanctuary
*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 one-chair-between-households distancing. 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 for evening prayer on the Connect Facebook Page, led tonight by Karen. 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 Spring Church Notes are now available! You can read them by clicking here.
* The Lower Clyde Mission Group (of which St. John’s is a part) is hosting an Easter Trail on Saturday 16 April, on Tower Hill, from 2-3pm. All are welcome!
*Young Adults Bible Study is on Zoom most Sunday afternoons. Contact Teri for the link to join and for a copy of the book they are using.
Sunday Service for 3 April 2022, fifth Sunday in Lent
3 April 2022, fifth 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
Prelude Music
Welcome
Call to Worship
1: We expect demonstrations of power
All: but Jesus gives us a different vision of authority.
2: We expect to have to fight
All: but Jesus shows us self-giving love.
3: We expect to be afraid
All: but Jesus is the Truth that sets us free.
Prayer with Hymn 776: Ukrainian Kyrie:
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison
You are not the king we expect,
for you rule from love without the violence or coercion
upon which this world relies.
We confess that we have been seduced by the propaganda of the empire.
We have allowed our attention to be captured by power and status,
we have bought the lie that violence will bring us to safety,
we have given airtime to “truth” created to serve the few.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison
And we admit, O God, that we are afraid.
Scared of what others will think,
afraid of being seen as weak,
fearful for our own position and prosperity,
anxious about what allowing your word to be alive would mean
for our comfortable routines.
We confess that we have let fear drive us,
and we do not like where it has taken us.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison
Forgive us, Lord, and change our direction.
May the truth of your love overpower the inertia
upon which this world’s empires depend,
that we may turn again to your way of abundant Life.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison
Whether we are walking the halls of power
or standing just outside
You call just the same:
call us to heed the voice of Truth
cutting through the shadow of death.
You have defeated the one weapon the empire can wield,
so we can live in your kingdom instead.
Empower and encourage us
to work and worship in your way of Life.
We ask in the name of the One
who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life, Jesus the Christ. Amen.
Music
Online: We Come To Hear Your Word (Resound Worship)
In person:
In person Children’s Time
(Listen to the word that God has spoken) — round
Reading: John 18.28-40 (NRSV)
Last week we heard about Jesus being questioned by the religious leaders, while Peter denied being his disciple. Today’s reading picks up just after the rooster has crowed, in the gospel according to John, chapter 18, beginning at verse 28. I am reading from the New Revised Standard Version.
~~~~
Then they took Jesus from Caiaphas to Pilate’s headquarters. It was early in the morning. They themselves did not enter the headquarters, so as to avoid ritual defilement and to be able to eat the Passover. So Pilate went out to them and said, ‘What accusation do you bring against this man?’ They answered, ‘If this man were not a criminal, we would not have handed him over to you.’ Pilate said to them, ‘Take him yourselves and judge him according to your law.’ The religious leaders replied, ‘We are not permitted to put anyone to death.’ (This was to fulfil what Jesus had said when he indicated the kind of death he was to die.)
Then Pilate entered the headquarters again, summoned Jesus, and asked him, ‘Are you the King of the Jews?’ Jesus answered, ‘Do you ask this on your own, or did others tell you about me?’ Pilate replied, ‘I am not a Jew, am I? Your own nation and the chief priests have handed you over to me. What have you done?’ Jesus answered, ‘My kingdom is not from this world. If my kingdom were from this world, my followers would be fighting to keep me from being handed over to the Judean leaders. But as it is, my kingdom is not from here.’ Pilate asked him, ‘So you are a king?’ Jesus answered, ‘You say that I am a king. For this I was born, and for this I came into the world, to testify to the truth. Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my voice.’ Pilate asked him, ‘What is truth?’
After he had said this, he went out to the religious leaders again and told them, ‘I find no case against him. But you have a custom that I release someone for you at the Passover. Do you want me to release for you the King of the Jews?’ They shouted in reply, ‘Not this man, but Barabbas!’ Now Barabbas was a bandit.
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.
(In person Hymn 399 vv. 1-4: My Song is Love Unknown)
Sermon: The Voice of Competing Expectations
What is truth?
It’s strange what a relevant-feeling question that is today. We have access to more information than ever before, right at our fingertips all the time. And that has come with a corresponding increase in our access to disinformation, misinformation, propaganda, and “alternative facts” too. It can be difficult to sort through what’s real and what’s fake news, and to know who to trust. Many people have simply decided that it’s all equal, and every perspective or opinion is equally good enough, there’s no longer a true or false, just a different angle.
And indeed often things look different from other perspectives, and there might be a lot of perfectly valid reasons we see things differently.
For instance, Pilate was the Roman governor whose job was to keep people in this faraway province in line. Remember was nearly Passover, a festival that celebrates God liberating the Israelite people from an oppressive empire, bringing the Israelites to freedom while also destroying the Egyptian army.
It was a time of year that was ripe for revolution, and inside himself Pilate knew his primary task was to keep the peace by whatever means necessary. He was, after all, a Roman official in Caesar’s government. Worse, he was given this assignment at the edge of the empire, ruling over a people who were seen as backwards and difficult, because he needed to prove himself, possibly after a disappointing performance in another role. His own self-interest was roaring loudly in his ears as he went out to listen to the local religious leaders and their expectations. He could not afford a mis-step here. He had a reputation to maintain as well as a job to do. When Jesus was brought in with people claiming he was calling himself a king, Pilate began to get nervous. A pretender to the throne is always dangerous, and even more so during Passover. From Pilate’s perspective, he had to figure out which side of this dispute between two factions of Jews was the right one to side with — which isn’t exactly the same as deciding which is right, but rather which was best for him.
On the other side of the door, Jerusalem’s religious leaders were demanding Pilate do something they themselves were unwilling to do. And they wanted him to do it now. You can tell how urgent they believed this problem to be, because they insisted it be dealt with before Passover began — it could not wait even eight more days until the festival was over. And yet they couldn’t even give Pilate a straight answer when asked what the charge against Jesus was! If it was a religious dispute, they clearly did have the authority to stone someone if they thought it was warranted — there are other examples of people being stoned in Jerusalem in the New Testament. So they couldn’t simply say that…but they hadn’t quite worked out what else to say either, in part because, according to John’s gospel, the reason they found Jesus so problematic is because he raised Lazarus from the dead. But you can’t just go to the Roman governor and say “this guy overcomes the power of death, you should kill him for us!”
As leaders of a religious institution, it threatened their power to have someone break the rules of the universe that way. And as people who were invested in retaining their power, then as now, they needed the empire to back them up…the empire relied primarily on the ability to strike fear into people, to manipulate their fear of death and to wield death as a weapon. It was the way they held the Pax Romana — the peace of the Roman Empire was based entirely on threatening to kill anyone who disrupted it, and on actually massacring all who had the audacity to challenge them.
The Roman Empire was also famous for its dependence on propaganda alongside their violence, and Pilate was responsible for ensuring people believed the messaging from the government. By the time Pilate and Jesus stood face to face, it’s possible Pilate himself was honestly no longer certain exactly what the truth was — that’s one of the dangers of lies, that the more we tell them, and the more we hear them, the more we begin to believe them. It’s why propaganda is effective: because it’s everywhere and it’s constant, and soon the sheer volume overwhelms everything else.
What is truth? Pilate may literally not know. And more to the point, for Pilate, as for many people concerned primarily about their own power, it did not matter. The truth was irrelevant to the problem at hand.
When we’re focused on how to maintain the status quo, keep or improve our position, make money, or to convince other people that we’re right, we are likely to miss other cues and clues, because we don’t want to see them. We get so narrowly invested in our perspective, we ignore that there might be more to the story. And truth requires context, not a narrow focus on one detail.
Jesus says that all who belong to the truth listen to his voice. He is the good shepherd, and all those other voices are thieves and bandits. Whatever other expectations we may have, or hear, his voice calls us to a particular way. His voice calls us to look from his perspective, and to care more about the values of God’s kingdom than the empires of this world.
Those values will look upside down to the people who don’t want to see the full picture or hear the whole story. Because the ways of the world work, or at least appear to work! Threats and violence and manipulation and fear and propaganda do keep people in line and that can sometimes look like “peace”…though all it really does is allow the few at the top to amass wealth and comfort at the expense of everyone else’s wellbeing and thriving. But the way of Jesus sets us free from the fear of death, because he can bring life. And when we are free from the fear of death as the worst and last thing, then it’s much harder to be controlled and manipulated by those who want us to be afraid or outraged so they can do as they please.
Pilate and the religious leaders understood that if people weren’t afraid of them, they wouldn’t be able to hold onto their power. Because their power, like many authorities and even businesses still today, was based on keeping people down…and in the kingdom of God, Jesus’ authority and power is based on setting people free through self-giving love. So the religious and political leaders were right to be concerned about him at Passover, the festival of liberation. Because the freedom that comes from knowing the empire’s greatest weapon is actually impotent in the face of God’s love and life…that freedom could change the world. It would change the way people make choices, the way they live, the way they interact with each other, the way they consume both media and physical stuff, the way they submit (or don’t!) to worldly authority, the way they spend their time and money and energy…it would change everything, if we knew the truth. We would no longer be beholden to the expectations of rulers who lord it over us, no longer bound by the expectations of the economic and political structures built to create inequality, no longer blinded by the expectations of hierarchy or status or fashion. What might we do, if we were free? How might we live and love and build and care and work and spend differently?
What is truth?
Then, as now, many could not recognise it. Because Truth is not merely a fact or a perspective, not a “what” at all. Jesus said “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life.” He is, in the flesh, the Truth. Truth is best known in a person, in all the complexity, relationships, stories, experiences, perspectives, learning and growing, deeds and teachings, the whole being of Jesus. You can’t see that in just one tiny narrow view, it’s a whole person, whole life experience, a perspective that takes in the big picture. To have a relationship with Truth, to belong to the Truth, to follow the way of Truth, is to recognise his voice and to follow his way, to look through the lens of his values and and to prioritise his expectations, to submit only to his authority. And the truth will set you free to live abundantly in the way of love.
May it be so. Amen.
Online hymn 509: Jesus Calls Us
(In person Hymn 399 vv. 5-7: My Song is Love Unknown)
Prayer and the Lord’s Prayer
We give you thanks, O God, that you have shattered the power of death,
that you have set us free from the fear of the grave
and from the illusion that the way things are is the only way they can be.
We are grateful that you have shown us another way,
and given us a glimpse of your kingdom founded on truth and love.
We pray this day for those among us who are tasked with leadership,
that they may have the courage to listen to truth, and to speak truth
even when it is politically inconvenient.
We pray that those in positions of power in this world
might use that power for the good of all,
seeking justice and peace,
refusing to be drawn into false equivalency or to be led by fear.
We pray for ourselves, that we might use our voices to hold leaders to account,
to call for peace,
to insist on truthfulness,
to offer another way when violence seems the only option.
We call to mind and hold in your light
all who suffer due to our silence or complicity,
all who are desperate for peace,
who listen for sirens and explosions
and wonder where their children have gone
and who wait at borders
or stand wondering if they should board that small raft
or who have been pressed into a life they never imagined.
We see the pictures in our minds,
of camps, of hungry people, of destruction, of fearful eyes.
We pray for protection, for hope, for help, and for an end to conflict everywhere.
And, Lord, we are bold today to pray for the grace to keep our eyes open,
to look and not look away, to pay attention,
to remember.
Not only Ukraine, not only Syria, not only Yemen, not only Colombia, not only our own nation and neighbourhood…
the list is longer than we know,
so we beg you to keep our neighbours at the forefront of our minds,
that we may learn to truly love them, in your kingdom way.
We ask in the name of the Prince of Peace,
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 509: Jesus calls us! (Verses 1, 3, 4, 5))
Benediction
Friends go into your week focused on knowing the Truth, for when we know Christ, we will love him, and when we love him, we will serve him, whom to serve is perfect freedom.
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 nearly 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 one-chair-between-households distancing. 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 for evening prayer on the Connect Facebook Page, led tonight by all four Connect Clergy. 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 Spring Church Notes are now available! You can read them by clicking here.
* The Lower Clyde Mission Group (of which St. John’s is a part) is hosting an Easter Trail on Saturday 16 April, on Tower Hill, from 2-3pm. All are welcome!
*Young Adults Bible Study is on Zoom most Sunday afternoons. Contact Teri for the link to join and for a copy of the book they are using.
*Mark your calendars for Holy Week and Easter worship:
10 April:
11am, Passion Sunday service in St. John’s
4pm, CONNECT Palm Sunday event at OGA, with a light dinner served
11 – 15 April: self-guided prayer stations available in the St John’s sanctuary, to experience the Holy Week story in different ways.
11-15 April:
7pm, Holy Week Services: Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at OGA; Tuesday and Thursday at St. John’s
16 April:
2-3pm, Easter Trail on Tower Hill
8:30pm, Easter Eve service in St. John’s
17 April:
7am, Easter service on Tower Hill
8am, Easter breakfast with communion in St. John’s large hall
11am, Easter service in St John’s sanctuary
Sunday service for 27 March 2022, fourth Sunday in Lent
27 March 2022, fourth Sunday in Lent
Gourock St. John’s Church of Scotland
Service prepared by the Rev. Teri Peterson
Manse: 632143
Email: tpeterson@churchofscotland.org.uk
In the sermon, there’s a pause to watch a video that I cannot embed in our worship video, for copyright reasons. You can watch that video on YouTube by clicking here!
Prelude Music
Welcome
Call to Worship
1: When the time is right, Jesus calls us to follow.
And sometimes, he calls us to wait.
2: When the time is right, Jesus calls us to speak.
And sometimes, he calls us to listen.
All: In every time, Jesus gives us what we need to be faithful,
to look past our fear toward Life anew.
Prayer with Hymn 776: Ukrainian Kyrie
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison.
Faithful God, you have made us in your image and called us your own.
We confess that we have not lived up to our potential,
and we admit that the gap between your kingdom way and our daily lives
is larger than we can bridge.
We have tried to do it under our own power,
proving our strength and earning our place,
even as you teach us to rely on your grace in our weakness.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison.
We confess that in our attempts to be worthy,
we have actually lost our way.
Though we know you are near,
we cannot hear you over the voice of fear roaring in our ears and minds,
coursing through our bodies and telling us lies about who we are.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison.
Forgive us for denying who you made us to be,
in favour of projecting an image that makes it easier to get along in this world.
Forgive us for pretending we do not know you,
in order to pursue our own instant gratification.
Forgive us for meeting your “I am” with our own scared “I am not,”
and bridge the gap between our ability and your vision,
that we may hear you clearly and obey your word.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison.
Your word is alive, O God,
out in the open,
moving in hearts and minds and lives.
Your good news cannot be contained or controlled,
and there’s no stopping your revolutionary love
rippling out through the world.
Give us ears to hear your voice, calm and sure,
guiding us through fear to resurrection faith.
We ask in Jesus’ name. Amen.
Music
Online: The Voice of Truth (Casting Crowns)
In person: improvisation on St Columba (by P Norris)
Reading: John 18.12-27 (NRSV)
Last week we heard about Jesus washing the feet of his disciples, and instructing them to do the same: to demonstrate love by serving one another. After the meal ended, Judas went out and met the authorities, and showed them where to find Jesus and the disciples meeting and praying in the garden. Meanwhile, Jesus spoke to the disciples at great length about his upcoming trials and triumphs, and prayed for his disciples to be faithful in following his way, including teaching them that the world will recognise them as his disciples by their love. When the authorities arrived with their lanterns and torches, Judas stood with the soldiers and police who came to arrest Jesus. When they said they were looking for Jesus of Nazareth, Jesus himself stepped forward and said “I am,” and he instructed his disciples to leave, so that none might be lost. Peter drew his sword and cut off the ear of the high priest’s slave, and Jesus told him to put his sword away, it wasn’t the way. We pick up the story in the gospel according to John, chapter 18, beginning at verse 12. I am reading from the New Revised Standard Version.
~~~
So the soldiers, their officer, and the Jewish police arrested Jesus and bound him. First they took him to Annas, who was the father-in-law of Caiaphas, the high priest that year. Caiaphas was the one who had advised the religious leaders that it was better to have one person die for the people.
Simon Peter and another disciple followed Jesus. Since that disciple was known to the high priest, he went with Jesus into the courtyard of the high priest, but Peter was standing outside at the gate. So the other disciple, who was known to the high priest, went out, spoke to the woman who guarded the gate, and brought Peter in. The woman said to Peter, ‘You are not also one of this man’s disciples, are you?’ He said, ‘I am not.’ Now the slaves and the police had made a charcoal fire because it was cold, and they were standing round it and warming themselves. Peter also was standing with them and warming himself.
Then the high priest questioned Jesus about his disciples and about his teaching. Jesus answered, ‘I have spoken openly to the world; I have always taught in synagogues and in the temple, where all the Jews come together. I have said nothing in secret. Why do you ask me? Ask those who heard what I said to them; they know what I said.’ When he had said this, one of the police standing nearby struck Jesus on the face, saying, ‘Is that how you answer the high priest?’ Jesus answered, ‘If I have spoken wrongly, testify to the wrong. But if I have spoken rightly, why do you strike me?’ Then Annas sent him bound to Caiaphas the high priest.
Now Simon Peter was standing and warming himself. They asked him, ‘You are not also one of his disciples, are you?’ He denied it and said, ‘I am not.’ One of the slaves of the high priest, a relative of the man whose ear Peter had cut off, asked, ‘Did I not see you in the garden with him?’ Again Peter denied it, and at that moment the cock crowed.
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 Fear
Sometimes I wonder about how much pressure Peter felt. He was, after all, the one that Jesus re-named “The Rock” the very first time they met. He was one of Jesus’ inner circle of closest friends. He was the one who felt most free to speak up, and he had some spectacular successes…though John’s gospel says someone else is the “beloved” disciple. Peter was a leader among the disciples, and he had been told that he’d be a leader in the community of Jesus followers in years to come. Not to mention that, narratively in the story, he stands in for us a lot of the time, saying and doing things that we might think! Though of course he wouldn’t have known that at the time. But by this point in John, Peter has been with Jesus for three years, learning, absorbing, watching, and being empowered. But that night in the garden, Peter heard Jesus predict his strength would falter. He heard Jesus say “you cannot follow me now, but later you will.” He heard Jesus send his disciples home.
And then a crack appeared in the Rock. He not only pulled out his sword, he brandished it about and he injured someone, and Jesus told him to stop. He had gotten this spectacularly wrong, misunderstanding who Jesus was and what he had to do, and also what it meant to be a disciple of the Prince of Peace.
Once that crack opened, it’s as if the pressure got greater and greater, because the foundation was compromised, and Peter just fell apart.
I think that’s something we can relate to — in fact it’s a common enough experience that there’s a whole song about it in the recent Disney film Encanto.
Luisa’s Song (Surface Pressure): https://youtu.be/tQwVKr8rCYw
Sometimes the pressure comes from outside expectations, things people need or want from us, the things they ask us to carry or handle or hold. And sometimes it’s on the inside — thoughts like “who am I if I don’t have what it takes?” or “I’m pretty sure I’m worthless if I can’t be of service.” Those are the things that, when we say them to ourselves, mean that one little crack feels like the end of it all. One crack, and we fall entirely apart, as Peter did. One mistake in the garden — granted it was a big mistake, but still — and it was as if he’d passed some point of no return, and left behind everything he’d learned, all the transformation and experiences of the past three years becoming a disciple of Jesus.
So there Peter stood in the high priest’s courtyard — not with Jesus, whom he followed there in spite of being told it wasn’t time for him to come yet, but rather with the guards and police, around a fire. The light of the world was a few metres away, but Peter chose the lesser light, almost as if he felt he no longer belonged with Jesus. In Peter’s mind, he’s failed in such a big way that he is no longer able to call himself a disciple of Jesus. One crack and his entire identity fell apart, so when he was asked: are you not also one of this man’s disciples? — which tells us that the other person Peter went there with was already known to be a disciple, and was presumably standing with Jesus during this interrogation — but when Peter was asked, having had this crack open up, he could not say yes. Who was he, if his courage faltered? Well, he certainly couldn’t be a disciple, could he? He was a disciple before, sure…but now?
That’s the voice of fear talking, not the voice of the Shepherd. The voice of fear calls us to forget who we are. It talks round and round in circles until we are trapped by it and all we can imagine is this wee cage that holds us stuck in place.
That’s what the voice of fear wants — for us to forget, or at least hide and deny, who we really are. And even better, to drown out or ignore any other voices that might remind us. That way we will behave entirely in self-serving ways, seeking our own safety without thought for others or for the common good or the bigger picture.
Fear makes us forget ourselves. It takes the truth to set us free.
Perhaps Peter could not see the truth, that he was still a disciple, even though his courage had faltered. He made one mistake and then the voice of fear told him that was it, he was finished, he could never live up to his name. If you don’t keep it together all the time, then there’s no point in trying again. And turning to the other disciple for support was of course out of the question, because the voice of fear and the voice of self-sufficiency are best friends…a friendship made possible by the fact that they are both liars.
The voice of truth says “do not be afraid” — which is easier said than done, of course! With so much pressure both from the outside and the inside, and so many competing voices, it can feel impossible. So perhaps we might listen instead for the voice of truth reminding us who we are.
Fear wants us to forget who we are, or if that’s not quite possible, to at least pretend to be something else. Peter was not the first nor the last to hide his true self out of fear of how others would react to him. We have neighbours, brothers and sisters, children and grandchildren, who are hiding themselves because they are afraid of what others will think of them, or afraid for their safety if they’re honest, or afraid of being alone in the world. Whether they have to hide because of who they love or because of what faith they practice or because of some past trauma or because of some illness that they’re ashamed of, that fear is real and it traps us in that tiny cage that obscures our view of ourselves and the world.
But what if the voice of truth reminds us who we are?
The voice of truth says: you are my beloved.
The voice of truth says: I made you in my image, for my glory.
The voice of truth says: I believe in you.
The voice of truth says: you were never meant to carry this all alone.
The voice of truth says: I know you make mistakes, and I still love you.
The voice of truth might even quote Leonard Cohen and say: it’s okay if you crack now and then — there is a crack in everything, that’s how the light gets in.
The voice of truth says: the worst thing is never the last thing.
The voice of truth says: come, follow me.
Though the voice of fear wants you to forget or deny yourself, remember who you are. When the pressure is overwhelming, remember who you are. When the world is out of control, remember who you are. When everything feels dangers, remember who you are. Even if you can’t manage to let go of fear, instead focus on who you are: you are a child of God, and you belong to God who loves you. Hone in on that truth, and though the other voices will still be there, they won’t be quite so loud. Because the truth will set you free.
May it be so. Amen.
Online hymn 533: Will You Come and Follow Me
(In person Hymn: The Truth That Sets Us Free (words: John L Bell; tune: Courage Brother))
Prayer and Lord’s Prayer: Fiona Webster
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 533: Will You Come and Follow Me (John L Bell, tune Kelvingrove)
Benediction
Go into your week to hear and obey the voice of truth which says you are a beloved child of God, and let that love that is the foundation of all things give you courage to stand firm in who God has made you to be.
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.
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 one-chair-between-households distancing. 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 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!
* The Spring Church Notes are now available! You can read them by clicking here.
* The Lower Clyde Mission Group (of which St. John’s is a part) is hosting an Easter Trail on Saturday 16 April, on Tower Hill, from 2-3pm. All are welcome!
*Young Adults Bible Study is on Zoom most Sunday afternoons. Contact Teri for the link to join and for a copy of the book they are using.
*Mark your calendars for Holy Week and Easter worship:
10 April:
11am, Passion Sunday service in St. John’s
4pm, CONNECT Palm Sunday event at OGA, with a light dinner served
14 and 15 April:
7:30pm, Maundy Thursday and Good Friday services
16 April:
2-3pm, Easter Trail on Tower Hill
8:30pm, Easter Eve service in St. John’s
17 April:
7am, Easter service on Tower Hill
8am, Easter breakfast with communion in St. John’s large hall
11am, Easter service in St John’s sanctuary
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 13 March 2022, second Sunday in Lent
13 March 2022, second 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 (in person)
Welcome
Call to Worship
One: With mingled love and anxiety, we come to Christ, who says:
All: This is for God’s glory.
One: In hope and in grief, we come to Christ, who says:
All: I am the resurrection and the life.
One: With trust and with confusion, we come to Christ, who says:
All: Unbind him and let him go.
Prayer
Hymn 776: Ukrainian Kyrie:
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison.
God of life,
you overcome even the long shadow of death,
that we may live freely and fully in your way.
As Mary and Martha trusted the power of your presence,
we too call on your name and ask to see your face.
As Mary and Martha were honest about their grief and disappointment,
we too come to tell you our truth.
Walk with us to the place we have laid our grief,
and call us out into new life.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison.
We proclaim you all-powerful and sovereign, O God,
and yet we confess that we want you to use your power
for the things we want, when we want them.
We know you can,
and so we can’t comprehend why sometimes it seems you won’t.
We admit that we wish we could control how you answer our prayers.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison.
Forgive us when we think that your seeming silence
is the same as your indifference.
Forgive us when we leave you behind,
assuming you have left us.
Forgive us for our wavering trust
in the face of the difficulties of this world.
Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison, Kyrie Eleison.
Set us free from the shadows that cling so closely,
and make us ready to come out when you call our name. Amen.
Music
Online: You are a Refuge (Resound Worship)
Children’s Time (in person only)
Reading: John 11.1-44 (New Revised Standard Version)
Now a certain man was ill, Lazarus of Bethany, the village of Mary and her sister Martha. Mary was the one who anointed the Lord with perfume and wiped his feet with her hair; her brother Lazarus was ill. So the sisters sent a message to Jesus, ‘Lord, he whom you love is ill.’ But when Jesus heard it, he said, ‘This illness does not lead to death; rather it is for God’s glory, so that the Son of God may be glorified through it.’ Accordingly, though Jesus loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus, after having heard that Lazarus was ill, he stayed two days longer in the place where he was.
Then after this he said to the disciples, ‘Let us go to Judea again.’ The disciples said to him, ‘Rabbi, the Jews were just now trying to stone you, and are you going there again?’ Jesus answered, ‘Are there not twelve hours of daylight? Those who walk during the day do not stumble, because they see the light of this world. But those who walk at night stumble, because the light is not in them.’ After saying this, he told them, ‘Our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep, but I am going there to awaken him.’ The disciples said to him, ‘Lord, if he has fallen asleep, he will be all right.’ Jesus, however, had been speaking about his death, but they thought that he was referring merely to sleep. Then Jesus told them plainly, ‘Lazarus is dead. For your sake I am glad I was not there, so that you may believe. But let us go to him.’ Thomas, who was called the Twin, said to his fellow-disciples, ‘Let us also go, that we may die with him.’
When Jesus arrived, he found that Lazarus had already been in the tomb for four days. Now Bethany was near Jerusalem, some two miles away, and many of the Jews had come to Martha and Mary to console them about their brother. When Martha heard that Jesus was coming, she went and met him, while Mary stayed at home. Martha said to Jesus, ‘Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died. But even now I know that God will give you whatever you ask of him.’ Jesus said to her, ‘Your brother will rise again.’ Martha said to him, ‘I know that he will rise again in the resurrection on the last day.’ Jesus said to her, ‘I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?’ She said to him, ‘Yes, Lord, I believe that you are the Messiah, the Son of God, the one coming into the world.’
When she had said this, she went back and called her sister Mary, and told her privately, ‘The Teacher is here and is calling for you.’ And when she heard it, she got up quickly and went to him. Now Jesus had not yet come to the village, but was still at the place where Martha had met him. The Jews who were with her in the house, consoling her, saw Mary get up quickly and go out. They followed her because they thought that she was going to the tomb to weep there. When Mary came where Jesus was and saw him, she knelt at his feet and said to him, ‘Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.’ When Jesus saw her weeping, and the Jews who came with her also weeping, he was greatly disturbed in spirit and deeply moved. He said, ‘Where have you laid him?’ They said to him, ‘Lord, come and see.’ Jesus began to weep. So the Jews said, ‘See how he loved him!’ But some of them said, ‘Could not he who opened the eyes of the blind man have kept this man from dying?’
Then Jesus, again greatly disturbed, came to the tomb. It was a cave, and a stone was lying against it. Jesus said, ‘Take away the stone.’ Martha, the sister of the dead man, said to him, ‘Lord, already there is a stench because he has been dead for four days.’ Jesus said to her, ‘Did I not tell you that if you believed, you would see the glory of God?’ So they took away the stone. And Jesus looked upwards and said, ‘Father, I thank you for having heard me. I knew that you always hear me, but I have said this for the sake of the crowd standing here, so that they may believe that you sent me.’ When he had said this, he cried with a loud voice, ‘Lazarus, come out!’ The dead man came out, his hands and feet bound with strips of cloth, and his face wrapped in a cloth. Jesus said to them, ‘Unbind him, and let him go.’
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 Grief
Lord, if you had been here…
It’s the kind of thing that really only hits home when the funeral is over. Before that, there are too many details to attend to, things to arrange, tasks to do. But when the paperwork is finished, and everyone is paid, and the last sausage roll is eaten, and the tomb has been closed, we go home and it all suddenly becomes very real. Too real. All the feelings we’d been holding together so we could get through the days come to the surface, and we finally get a chance to say to God what we really think and feel.
The sisters knew that Jesus could have changed this. He was capable of doing something…and he didn’t do it. And when they saw him, they told him point blank: you could, but you wouldn’t. It’s hard to know exactly if they were blaming him for their grief, but it wouldn’t have been the first or the last time that God was questioned for not acting.
Some of us may have spoken to God this way before. Maybe not in exactly these words, but similar ones — where are you, God? Why do you allow these terrible things to happen? Why won’t you do something? The pain is overwhelming and unnecessary and unfair, when you could do something but you don’t.
Those feelings are perfectly normal, and God can handle it us telling the truth about them. It is okay to cry out, to give voice to the grief and frustration and anger and pain, just as we do when we are joyful or grateful or hopeful. Sometimes we may feel like praying this way about our own situations, when we’ve lost someone or gotten bad news or when we’re anxious for ourselves or a loved one. Sometimes it may be more for world events, when we feel helpless as we watch the news and we can’t understand why these terrible things are happening and why everyone seems so powerless to stop it.
Lord, if you had been here…
Martha said it first, having run down the road to meet Jesus before he could even get to the house — a house filled with flowers and food and friends who had come to mourn with them and support them. Mary and Martha weren’t alone, they had a whole community that surrounded them in this time of grief, weeping with them, sharing memories, drying their tears.
Martha didn’t wait until Jesus could join this crowd, she ran out and met him at the edge of the village. There in the middle of the road, we see that Martha is a thinking type of person. She and Jesus had a theological discussion…one which she thought was about some future time, and one which Jesus knew was about the here and now. He is offering abundant life, resurrection life, right this minute, because in him, time is fulfilled. Martha may only have understood eternal life as something that comes later, but Jesus says that with him, it starts today.
When Mary came out to meet Jesus, he hadn’t gotten any closer. He was still standing in the middle of the road. And all her community was with her — unlike Martha who came out alone, Mary was surrounded by the people holding her up in these difficult days. Mary wept as she said, “Lord, if you had been here…” Unlike her sister’s way of coping by intellectualising and anticipating a future, Mary was coping by sitting with the pain, with wave after wave of feelings. She needed her friend, and he wasn’t there. And Jesus wept with her.
He met each of them in exactly their grief place, and walked with them in it in a way they could manage in the moment — whether that was crying together or talking through the big questions. Each of them said the same words: If you had been here… but the voice of grief sounded different for each of them, and Jesus gently joined them and offered another voice — the voice of resurrection life.
And then they said to him the very words he had said to countless disciples, perhaps even words he had said to them before: come and see.
Come and see the closed door of death, the end of hope and possibility, the stone that blocks the way. Jesus followed them to see the reality of fully-human, to experience the depths and the visceral horrible decaying end.
I always wonder at what point Lazarus woke up. I was talking about this with a friend and she said “at what point did the water turn to wine?” Like that miracle, this is another one where we don’t see it happen, or know how it worked, or at exactly what moment. But what if Lazarus was awoken, in the dark, covered in a shroud, to hear the muffled voices outside…what if he too could hear the weeping of his sisters and friends, the shock and disgust at the smell his body would be giving off, the scraping of stone against stone, the rush of fresh air bringing sounds of confusion and the prayer of Jesus: “Father I thank you that you have heard me” — past tense, notice: Jesus thanks God for having heard even though we don’t yet know what he asked, or when. And only then, cutting through the voice of grief, came the voice of Jesus addressed to him, calling him by name as the shepherd calls the sheep: Lazarus, come out.
Imagine how disorienting that would be, not only for Mary and Martha and their friends and neighbours, but for Lazarus. He knew that voice — like the sheep know their shepherd. But what could he possibly be calling Lazarus to? The end was past, the grief was real, there were no more options.
With God, all things are possible. And it turns out that Jesus intends to give abundant life on both sides of the grave.
It’s easy for us to identify with Martha and Mary in this story, to see ourselves in their experience. Great grief is a sign of great love, and we know grief well. We know the helplessness and the fear and the anger. We know how to call out “where are you?” We know that God has the power…and yet we cannot understand why God doesn’t use that power the way we want him to. Why doesn’t Jesus’ offer of abundant life also offer a way to skip over suffering and pain? He takes away the power and finality of death, and changes its meaning…but the human experience still has both heights and depths, and Jesus knows them himself, just as we do.
I wonder, though, if we might imagine ourselves as Lazarus. Disoriented, hearing the grief and disgust and longing and prayers through layers of shroud and stone…catching a whiff of fresh air but totally uncertain how that can work or what to do with it…and then when we hear the voice of the shepherd rise above the voice of grief, we come out like Lazarus, walking hesitantly out of the tomb but still bound by the old reality that had been shattered, still carrying the baggage of grief, still clothed in the past.
And Jesus said: unbind him and let him go.
Unbind him.
Remove that old stuff, for the former things have passed away, and all things are made new.
Unbind him.
Take off the markers of death and walk into new life.
Unbind him.
Lay aside the old ways that muffle our sight and hearing, that hold us back and tie us down, and let go.
What kind of abundant life might we live, if we were unbound?
How might we turn out to be an answer to prayer, if we were unbound?
What other powers we think are so definitive might be shattered, if we were unbound?
The grief of this world is great and is like a thick fog shrouding everything. May the voice of the shepherd cut through it all, and set us free to live, and so to change the world.
Amen.
Online Hymn 727: In the Bulb There Is a Flower
(In person Hymn 721: We Lay Our Broken World)
Prayer and Lord’s Prayer
You, God, know the breadth of human life and death,
the joy and the sorrow mingling throughout this journey.
You have celebrated milestones, and laughed, and wondered.
You have felt grief, and wept alongside your friends.
We give you thanks that even now,
you walk alongside us, sharing the heights and depths,
and reminding us of your abundant life
that transcends the boundaries we think we know.
We bring our joy, for lighter nights and changing seasons, for daffodils peeking through the earth, for new life in our midst and new opportunities to love.
We bring our concern, for those dear to us who are ill, for your creation struggling to survive, for those who are struggling to pay the bills, for those caught in cycles of poverty or substance abuse or trauma, for our leaders who are meant to seek the common good.
We bring our grief, for a world at war, and those who suffer at the hands of another, for the people who must flee their homes and are met with something less than welcome, for all who grieve without the ability to say goodbye.
As your people, following your example,
we rejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who weep.
In all the ups and downs of this human life, you are with us, God,
and you promise that we will know the fullness of your life,
not only on the other side of death, but even now,
so we come to ask your transforming grace to lead us ever onward.
May we be unbound this day,
set free from the trappings of death whose power you have broken,
to walk in the power of your love,
this day and all the days to come.
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.
(in person) Hymn 727: In the Bulb There Is a Flower
Benediction
Friends, whatever the challenges of the week ahead, remember they are not the end of the story: the love of God overcomes even the power of death! The Holy Spirit is even now setting you free from the old ways, and Christ himself calls you by name to come out into new life.
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.
In person Postlude Music
Announcements
* We have now entered 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 Karen. 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 next Sunday, the 20th, 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 6 March 2022, first Sunday in Lent
6 March 2022, first 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.
–YouTube won’t allow me to embed the video we are showing in the online service, so you can pause at that part of the sermon (just when I talk about Adele) and watch it here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQM3XUhiXbQ
Prelude Music
Welcome
Call to Worship
1: The Shepherd calls —
and his sheep know his voice.
2: The Gate opens —
that we may come in, and go out, and find pasture.
3: The Good Shepherd gathers us in —
and leads us to abundant life.
Prayer
Hymn 776: Ukrainian Kyrie
You are the One who cares for us, O God.
You provide, you nurture, you speak tenderly and call us your own.
We give you thanks as you surround us with your protection and offer your very self to us.
We pray “like a shepherd, lead us,” but we confess that we are not always open to being led.
We would prefer to control who else is in the flock with us, and where we are going, and how long we’ll be out.
~Kyrie~
We hear you calling, but we confess we find it difficult to distinguish between your voice and others.
Some of what they say sounds good, flashy and interesting and quick-fix,
and we admit that we have sometimes chosen to follow their way instead of yours.
~Kyrie~
You lead us ever forward into abundant life, even in the face of dust and ashes,
but we confess that we find it comfortable inside the sheepfold,
and we’d rather stay in where it’s safe and separate from the hardship of the world outside.
~Kyrie~
Forgive us, for we are unruly sheep, and we have not been faithful to you, our Good Shepherd.
Remind us this day of our place in your kingdom,
and turn our hearts and our feet to follow you into Abundant Life. Amen.
Online Hymn 716: Come and Find the Quiet Centre
(in person: Children’s Time)
Reading: John 10.1-18 (New Revised Standard Version)
‘Very truly, I tell you, anyone who does not enter the sheepfold by the gate but climbs in by another way is a thief and a bandit. The one who enters by the gate is the shepherd of the sheep. The gatekeeper opens the gate for him, and the sheep hear his voice. He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out. When he has brought out all his own, he goes ahead of them, and the sheep follow him because they know his voice. They will not follow a stranger, but they will run from him because they do not know the voice of strangers.’ Jesus used this figure of speech with them, but they did not understand what he was saying to them.
So again Jesus said to them, ‘Very truly, I tell you, I am the gate for the sheep. All who came before me are thieves and bandits; but the sheep did not listen to them. I am the gate. Whoever enters by me will be saved, and will come in and go out and find pasture. The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.
‘I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep. The hired hand, who is not the shepherd and does not own the sheep, sees the wolf coming and leaves the sheep and runs away—and the wolf snatches them and scatters them. The hired hand runs away because a hired hand does not care for the sheep. I am the good shepherd. I know my own and my own know me, just as the Father knows me and I know the Father. And I lay down my life for the sheep. I have other sheep that do not belong to this fold. I must bring them also, and they will listen to my voice. So there will be one flock, one shepherd. For this reason the Father loves me, because I lay down my life in order to take it up again. No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it up again. I have received this command from my Father.’
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: I’d know that voice anywhere
A few months ago I was visiting our BB sections and we played a game: everyone stood around the room with their eyes closed, and the adults said the names of the boys, at various volumes…and when the boys heard a name, they were supposed to put a hand up…and if they heard their own name, they were to raise both hands. Then we asked them who it was who said their name.
Sometimes they were very certain which adult it was who had whispered their name. Sometimes they weren’t really sure who it had been. Sometimes they didn’t really hear their own names being called, and at least one never put up his hand because he was so surprised by how it had been called!
After this game we talked about how hard it can be to hear when there’s a lot going on… things outside or things inside us can mean it’s difficult to make out the voices. And sometimes we seem more attuned to the voice calling other people, but not very good at hearing our own name.
We also talked about how hard it can be to tell just whose voice it is! Jesus says that “the sheep follow because they know his voice.” How do we get familiar enough with Jesus’ voice to know it’s him, and not someone else?
Whenever I think about that question, I’m reminded of this video from several years ago, where the singer Adele dons a disguise and joins in an audition for Adele impersonators. They give her a prosthetic nose and chin, a wig, and long gloves. She goes by the name Jenny, and she lowers her speaking voice and changes her accent so that when she speaks to the other Adele impersonators, they won’t recognise her. But then when it comes time to sing…
(Video clip)
How do they know it’s her?
Because they’ve spent a lot of time listening to her. They’ve been putting intentional effort into mimicking her. Even the ones who thought it was impossible and so couldn’t see out of their own box ended up convinced as they continued to listen. They knew her voice, and so they joined in — just as they’ve been doing at home for ages, singing along, mirroring her hand movements and her shoe choices and so much more.
I don’t know if you noticed the song chosen for the audition, but it’s about what someone would do to make you feel their love. I know it wasn’t written this way but…it almost could be a song from Jesus. What would he do to make us feel his love?
He’d come down into the sheep pen, where we’ve been hanging out together, milling about and churning up the ground to mud while reminiscing about how it used to be so grassy in here, wallowing a bit in the muck, head-butting each other over our favourite seats…he comes in and calls us by name. And his sheep — we know we’re talking about people now, not literal sheep — know his voice. They’ve been listening. They’ve been practicing it. They’ve been trying to mirror his movements. They recognise him the minute he opens his mouth. The good shepherd calls, and those who know his voice come to him…and he leads them out.
Out of the sheep pen.
Out of the place where they have felt safe and comfortable, out of the place where they know everyone and what they’ll say and how they’ll react and where they like to sit and who they like to talk to. Out…and back in…and out…and back in…and out…and following him, they find pasture. Following him, they find nourishment and life and a good and spacious land in which to live and love and serve.
Now, others have tried to come in and impersonate the shepherd. They’ve practiced his hand movements and tried to mimic his voice, but they don’t have any intention of leading the sheep to pasture, to abundant life. They make big promises, but they don’t have any intention of fulfilling them. Those others want to lead us to places that profit themselves, not us and not the world. Those other voices are trying to steal the sheep and use them, not care for them. Whether it’s the voice offering power, or status, or wealth…or the voice calling toward violence or hate or exclusion…or the voice claiming certainty and perfection and safety…they aren’t the real deal. There is no way to peace or justice through the path of violence or money — no matter what some politicians want us to believe. There is no way to true community through the path of pretend perfection or exclusion — no matter what social media filters come out next. There is no way to full Jesus-like life through the path of safety — despite our desire for security. We know this, because those who have tried to lure us away are the very ones who turn their backs and run away when danger comes, leaving us to fend for ourselves. But Jesus comes right into the middle of it all, and stays by our side while he leads us on.
The voice of the Good Shepherd leads us out of the pen, to the pasture. Out to abundant life, where there may be dangers but also possibility, because he never leaves us alone out there, unlike those impersonators who have only their own interests at heart. There’s nothing Jesus wouldn’t do to make us feel his love — even go to the cross, and beyond to the empty tomb.
During the season of Lent we are invited to practice turning our lives around — the fancy church word for that is “repent” — to follow Jesus more closely. To shut out the other voices that call, and focus on the voice of the Good Shepherd, so that when we arrive at the cross and the tomb, and then when the tomb is open, we are ready to follow him into brand-new, never-before-seen abundant life. Whatever other voices are most tempting to you, I invite you to consider whether there are ways you can turn them off, give them up, shut them out, so there’s more time in your life and more room in your mind and heart listen to him over and over, to practice being like him, and so recognise him as soon as you hear his voice, even in the midst of everything else. Maybe that is, for you, a practice of fasting from something that’s clamouring for your attention, making room for God’s voice to cut through the noise. Maybe it is a practice of adding more time in scripture or prayer or service, to practice recognising his voice. Whatever it may be, I hope you will take time this season to focus in on the voice of the One who would do anything to show us his love, and who calls us all — from this sheepfold and others too — to follow him into Life.
May it be so. Amen.
Online Hymn: The Lord’s My Shepherd (Stuart Townend)
(In person: Baptism of Freya Elizabeth)
Prayer and Lord’s Prayer
God of love,
you have offered yourself to us
and called us to do the same.
Thank you for your gift of life,
for seasons that change in their time,
for sun and rain that nourish your creation,
for friends and family that nourish our hearts.
We thank you for your church,
bringing good news to your world.
And we pray for your Body, the church…
we look around at our fellow sheep in your flock,
and we pray that together we might know the truth of your love for us,
and that we might heed your call to come in and go out and find pasture.
Give us the grace to share the sheepfold with all whom you have gathered,
and give us courage to turn away from the voices of those who do not call us toward abundant life.
We pray this day that you would move among us
enliven our spirits to do your will,
guide us in your way,
and strengthen us to serve you with all our hearts, minds, bodies, and souls.
We pray for those who seek…who seek healing, who seek peace, who seek hope.
We remember today the people of Ukraine…
and of Syria, and Yemen, and Nigeria, and Colombia,
and so many places close to home and across the globe
where the shadows threaten to overtake the light,
where voices of despair or hatred or greed seem to have the upper hand.
Give courage and wholeness to those who suffer.
Give peace to those places where violence reigns.
Share your vision with those who are hopeless.
And open our eyes, our hearts, our hands
to be the answer to others’ prayers.
In the silence, we offer you our prayers, and we listen for yours.
…
Lead us, Good Shepherd, to be your people, sheep of your own flock,
to listen carefully and follow you no matter the cost to our self-interest.
Make us bold to proclaim your grace, your forgiveness, your hope, your way.
Make us again into your body, giving your love to the world.
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.
(In person Hymn 462: The King of Love My Shepherd Is (tune: St. Columba))
Benediction
The shepherd calls, and the sheep know his voice. Go from this time of worship into a holy Lent, turning away from voices that do not lead to abundant life, and turning toward the Good Shepherd who will stop at nothing to show his love for you.
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.
in-person Postlude Music: Ukrainian Anthem
Announcements
* We have now entered 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 Jonathan. 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 and/or Westminster Wednesdays 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!
* Join us tomorrow for a Bowl and a Blether, a chance to just come for a bowl of soup and a chat with others who are looking to deepen community and see friends. All are welcome, between 11:30 and 1:30pm, at the St John’s Road entrance.
* Next Saturday, 12 March, our Local Mission Group (our smaller local portion of Clyde Presbytery) is hosting a Charities Fayre, at the Wellpark Midkirk. There’ll be a chance to find out what’s going on in our area, enjoy some music, and meet people, and even to find out ways to be involved in doing good works in the community. We look forward to seeing you!