Friday, February 5, 2021

February 7, 2021 Worship

 

PIONEER PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Worship via Blog          5th Sunday after Epiphany     February 7, 2021    

 

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WELCOME AND ANNOUNCEMENTS

Welcome to Pioneer’s blog worship service. Though we are accessing this remotely and unable to look each other in the eye, we are still the Pioneer faith community, gathered as children of God to worship, to be spiritually fed, and to be equipped to go out to serve in Christ’s name—though we do it differently during this pandemic.

 

Pioneer offers worship in several modes:

a)    The blog.

b)   The blog service mailed through US Postal service.

c)    Sermons only, mailed to those who so request.

d)   Zoom services at 10:00 Sunday mornings.

e)    Live worship with masks and social distancing has plenty of room for additional worshipers.

 

We will share the Lord’s Supper as part of this worship service. So please pause and gather your choice of bread and beverage. While the bread and grape juice served in community and led by the pastor in person is our tradition, we are facing times that call for us to do worship in new ways rather than being tied to rigid tradition—much like the early church.

 

-         Session meets Tuesday night at 6:00 p.m.

-         Men’s Prayer Group Thursday 8:30 a.m.

-         Next Sunday M&M meets following worship

 

Now allow yourself a brief time of silence as you open your hearts and feel God’s presence with you, right where you are.

 

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BAPTISM:         Friends, remember your baptism … and be thankful.

 

CALL TO WORSHIP

Worship God who is from everlasting to everlasting!

The God of creation does not faint or grow weary.

How good it is to sing praises to our God!

How expansive is God’s understanding of us!

The whole universe is subject to God’s power.

Creation continues as the universe expands.

God rules all time and space, yet cares about us.

God is pleased with all who reflect steadfast love.

Sing to God with great thanksgiving.

Praise God with the best you have to offer.

We lift up our eyes to see God’s wonders.

We open our ears to receive God’s message.

 

PRAYER OF THE DAY

Light of lights, shine into our gloom, granting knowledge of your glory in the face of Christ Jesus. In many ways, we are afflicted but not crushed; perplexed but not driven to despair, struck down but not destroyed—for we are confident of your presence wherever we go. Reassure us now that you are with us. Feed our hungers, heal our brokenness, melt away our conflicts, renew our strength and restore our hope so that we may faithfully continue the work of Jesus in our world today.

 

OPENING SONG:      “Resting in You”                                      LU#93          

 


CALL TO CONFESSION

We hold the treasures of heaven in clay jars. The gifts of God are defaced by our poor choices, by our self-serving desires, by our willful disobedience. We become enslaved to habits that destroy. We become addicted to activities that waste our time and energies. We need to seek forgiveness and a better way.

 

PRAYER OF CONFESSION

Holy God, help us to know ourselves as we are and set before us a vision of what life could be if we followed your way. We act in ways that seem to meet our immediate interests without considering the long term results. We let our appetites rule us. We squander the gift of time in frivolous pursuits. We ignore your Word as if it were unimportant. O God, we cannot escape the truth of our lives. We want the life you offer in Jesus Christ. Forgive and help us, we pray. (continue with personal prayers …..) Amen.

 

ASSURANCE OF PARDON

Anyone who is in Christ is a new creation.

          The old life has gone; the new life has begun.

Friends, believe the Good News!

          In Jesus Christ we are forgiven and restored to new life!

 

PASSING THE PEACE

          May the peace of Christ be with you.

                   And also with you.

Let us extend the peace of Christ in heart and prayer to one another.

 

GLORY BE TO THE FATHER

 


SCRIPTURE 1:  Isaiah 40:21-41

          Have you not known? Have you not heard? Has it not been told you from the beginning? Have you not understood from the foundations of the earth? It is he who sits above the circle of the earth, and its inhabitants are like grasshoppers; who stretches out the heavens like a curtain, and spreads them like a tent to dwell in; who brings princes to naught, and makes the rulers of the earth as nothing. Scarcely are they planted, scarcely sown, scarcely has their stem taken root in the earth, when he blows upon them, and they wither, and the tempest carries them off like stubble.

          To whom then will you compare me, that I should be like him? says the Holy One. Lift up your eyes on high and see: who created these? He who brings out their host by number, calling them all by name; by the greatness of his might, and because he is strong in power not one is missing. Why do you say, O Jacob, and speak, O Israel, "My way is hid from the Lord, and my right is disregarded by my God"?

          Have you not known? Have you not heard? The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth. He does not faint or grow weary, his understanding is unsearchable. He gives power to the faint, and to him who has no might he increases strength. Even youths shall faint and be weary, and young men shall fall exhausted; but they who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength, they shall mount up with wings like eagles, they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint.

 

SCRIPTURE 2:  Mark 2:1-12

And when he returned to Capernaum after some days, it was reported that he was at home. And many were gathered together, so that there was no longer room for them, not even about the door; and he was preaching the word to them. And they came, bringing to him a paralytic carried by four men. And when they could not get near him because of the crowd, they removed the roof above him; and when they had made an opening, they let down the pallet on which the paralytic lay. And when Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, "My son, your sins are forgiven." Now some of the scribes were sitting there, questioning in their hearts, "Why does this man speak thus? It is blasphemy! Who can forgive sins but God alone?" And immediately Jesus, perceiving in his spirit that they thus questioned within themselves, said to them, "Why do you question thus in your hearts? Which is easier, to say to the paralytic, `Your sins are forgiven,' or to say, `Rise, take up your pallet and walk'? But that you may know that the Son of man has authority on earth to forgive sins" -- he said to the paralytic -- "I say to you, rise, take up your pallet and go home." And he rose, and immediately took up the pallet and went out before them all; so that they were all amazed and glorified God, saying, "We never saw anything like this!"

 

SERMON:           “Raising the Roof”                          Rev. Jean Hurst

          Picture Jesus sitting in a small home teaching the people who have squeezed in to be near him and those craning their necks from outside trying to get a glimpse and hear what’s being said. Suddenly, dust starts sifting down on the heads of those gathered. Noise above them has everyone, looking up. Suddenly dirt pours down on them as the ceiling is torn open right over Jesus’ head! He’s got dirt in his hair and beard and face. His clothes are covered in dirt.

          With dirt still drifting down, they see a litter being lowered by four people on the roof. Those sitting near Jesus probably had to scramble out of the way. On the litter lay a paralyzed man. Jesus, though a rabbi deserving respect, is covered with the debris of these intruders’ determination. Rather than being irritated, I can picture him smiling as he watches the paralytic being lowered in front of him.

          Let your attention move from the man on the mat to the rooftop. Four guys are lowering their friend with ropes into the room below. Think about that. Four friends cared enough to haul this man either from his home or from where he would be begging for alms so that he might be healed by Jesus.

Travel is slower when you’re carrying a grown man on a pallet. They are too late. They can’t even get close enough to the door to hear what is going on inside. Perhaps the paralytic said, ‘forget it’ and ‘thanks anyway.’ But the friends are not to be stopped. They haul their buddy up the ladder to the roof. 

          Roofs were used as additional living space. The homes in Palestine were flat roofed with just enough slant to let the rain run off.  People slept there on hot nights.  They dried food on the roofs. The roofs were constructed with wooden beams about three feet apart. The space between was filled in with packed brushwood and mud. It was easy to tear it out and easy to repair.

          The four friends set their paralyzed comrade aside and proceed to tear a hole in the roof big enough to lower their friend through. Why? They believed. Whether or not their paralyzed friend believed, they did. They loved their friend enough and believed enough that they were willing to go to extremes to help him. Jesus saw their faith and was moved by it. So Jesus healed their friend.

          I wonder about these friends of his. Here is this great rabbi who has done such incredible things both with his teachings and with his healings. I imagine that anyone would have something they would want from this holy man. These guys could have arrived on Jesus’ doorstep plenty early enough to get a good seat, to have their own needs met. Instead, they sacrificed their own desires in order to secure healing for their friend. 

          Do you have friends like that, friends who are willing to raise the roof for you? Has your life ever been touched by someone else’s faith? Are you a friend like that? It’s what we do as Christians. We go beyond what is expected.

          Literally, physically doing for each other is one way we serve. Lending a helping hand is part of being a church family. Another way to serve is to provide emotional support during a crisis--encouraging, caring, being supportive, listening. Just being there, even sitting silently with someone when they’re going through a hard time is a huge gift. 

          In her book, My Grandfather’s Blessings, Dr. Rachel Naomi Remen tells of the experience of a colleague, a psychologist, who attended a professional workshop based on the work of the great Jungian dream analyst, Marie-Louise von Franz. As part of this workshop there was a panel of heads of two Jungian training centers and Carl Jung’s own grandson. The panel would receive and respond to written questions sent up to the stage on cards. 

          One of the cards told the story of a horrific recurring dream in which the dreamer was stripped of all human dignity and worth through Nazi atrocities. A member of the panel read the dream out loud. As she listened, Remen’s colleague began mentally formulating a dream interpretation preparatory to the panel’s discussion, considering symbolic explanations for the torture and atrocities described in the dream. But when the reading of the dream was finished, Jung’s grandson looked out over the large audience and asked them to stand. He said, “We will stand together in a moment of silence in response to this dream.” Remen’s colleague impatiently waited for the discussion she was sure would follow. But after they sat, the panel went on to the next question. 

          Not understanding, the woman later asked one of her teachers, also a Jungian analyst, about it. He told her, “There is in life a suffering so unspeakable, a vulnerability so extreme that it goes far beyond words, beyond explanations and even beyond healing. In the face of such suffering all we can do is bear witness so no one need suffer alone.”

          There is yet another way we serve each other during times of need--spiritually. Certainly prayer is an important part of that. We have the prayer chain which is activated in times of crisis. We lift each other up during prayers of the people. We pray for each other in our private devotions.  

          Sometimes the spiritual need goes much deeper. We all have times when our faith falters, when we feel we have lost connection with God; times, even, when we question the existence of God. We may feel that God has turned his back on us or abandoned us.  We may carry the burden of feeling that something we have done or left undone has alienated us from God. We may be in a state of depression where there is such bleakness, such darkness, that even God feels irrelevant. 

          Those dark nights of the soul, as they are often called, come to most of us sooner or later, even to those of the deepest faith. Mother Theresa of Calcutta, the renown Roman Catholic nun who dedicated her life to the poor, the leprous, the untouchables of India, had those times. In one of her letters she said, “I am told God lives in me--and yet the reality of darkness and coldness and emptiness is so great that nothing touches my soul.” And in another, “Where I try to raise my thoughts to heaven, there is such convicting emptiness that those very thoughts return like sharp knives and hurt my very soul.  Love--the word--it brings nothing.”  

          During those dark times, Mother Theresa had a faith community that lifted her up.  That is what we can do for each other. When those times of doubt or spiritual emptiness come, what we can do is believe on their behalf. We can assure them that until they are able to resume their own belief, their own faith, that we will believe for them.

          Of the paralytic in our scripture reading today, we don’t know how long he’d been paralyzed. It may have been long enough that he’d given up hope of things ever being different. We don’t know if he lacked faith in what Jesus could do. We do know that his friends believed. Their faith carried him to the roof top. Their faith raised the roof for him. Their faith carried him to the source of all faith and because of that he walked out of there in his own faith.

          The paralytic relied on his friends. For many people, the most difficult part of a life crisis is the helplessness that goes with it, needing to rely on others. For some, it is the hardest thing they can ever do. Many of us have an aversion to asking for help--and even resist help that is offered. The truth is, we all have times when we need help in one form or another. When we allow others to help us we enable them to do as Jesus taught--to love one another and to be servants to one another. Jesus demonstrated that in washing the disciples feet at the last supper, despite Peter’s protestations. 

          I think of those four friends on the roof. I believe that they, too, walked away with greater faith. When we give, we receive just as surely as those being served. Those four were touched by the presence of the divine. They could not help but be changed. That is our gift as well. Thanks be to God.        

 

HYMN:     “I Will Come to You”                                                           #177

 


PRAYERS OF THE PEOPLE AND THE LORD’S PRAYER

          O Generous God, your gifts abound and, at times, overwhelm us with the weight of their love. How often, O Lord, we have come to you with our empty cups that have been poured out to others or that have been drained in the demands of our own lives, and you fill them to overflowing with compassion, renewed strength, continuous courage, healthy hope, and the will to go on.

          Help us to trust you, to trust that you are always going to be faithful. For we know, Lord, though we do not always receive what we want, you continually supply what we need. And for that we are thankful! We celebrate the joy you place in our hearts as we participate in the divine act of giving a cup of cool water to the thirsty.

          It is with that intent that we lift up those who need your loving presence and healing touch:       It is with that intent that we lift up those who need your loving presence and healing touch:  Tasha Sizemore … Stephen Meinzinger … Phyllis Bauer … Beverly Patterson … Lois White …  John Matthews … Jacob Cunningham … Dena … Virginia … Cherry … Darlene … Margaret … Trisha … Dave … George … Joyce … Jennifer … Chuck … Courtney … Ethel … Helen. (Additional prayers …………)

          Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.

 

CALL TO OFFERING

Stretch out your hands. They are gifts from God. With them, you have been able to do your work. Open your minds. With them, you have been able to solve problems. Rejoice that God has so richly blessed you and now offers you the opportunity to extend blessings to others. Consider how you will give.

 

DOXOLOGY

 


PRAYER OF DEDICATION

Thank you, God, for the privilege of giving. We have received so much! Now it is a joy to share. All we have belongs to you. You empower our use of the blessings you have given us. May we use those gifts as an offering of thankfulness to you. Amen.

 

THE LORD’S SUPPER

 

   Song of Preparation: “Let Us Break Bread Together”         #525

 


          Invitation to the Table

          The Lord’s table is not a piece of wood with clay dishes, but a place in our hearts that connects us to our Lord Jesus. It is a place to which we come as we remember his sacrifice, as we seek to experience his presence, as we are nourished to continue his work, as we recognize our community in him despite whatever distance or disease or obstacle that might separate us. It is the place we come to renew our commitment to continue his ministry and mission. Our Lord invites us to the table without condition, simply because we are loved. Come with grateful hearts. Come with joyful hearts.

 

The Great Thanksgiving

          The Lord be with you.         

                   And also with you.

          Lift up your hearts.              

                   We lift them up to the Lord.

          Let us give thanks to the Lord our God.         

                   It is right to give our thanks and praise.

          It is indeed right, O Holy God, to give thanks for your amazing grace, to praise you for who you are, for who you created us to be. We marvel at the truth that you are with us wherever we may be. Though we worship from home, separated and for some, isolated, it is still in you that we find life and purpose. We are children of grace and nothing can separate us from your love.

          You have given us the gift of your Holy Spirit who unites us, binding us together as one body across the miles. By your Spirit of grace transform our social isolation and distance into a holy community, connecting us to each other by your sacred presence.

          Bless the elements we each have gathered, elements common to our ordinary lives. Let them represent for us the body and blood of our Savior who gave himself for us. Amen.

Words of Institution

          As we share these symbols of bread and cup across the distance, we remember the story of Jesus with the disciples that last night before he was arrested. He took the bread and blessed it and broke it and gave it to them saying “Take, eat, this is my body, given for you.” And with the cup he said, “This cup is the new covenant, my blood poured out for you for the forgiveness of sins. Whenever you drink of it, remember me.”

          And so we do. As we lift up many pieces in scattered places rather than sharing the same loaf and as we drink from separate cups instead of one, we do so remembering that throughout history God’s people have often been scattered and in exile. Through the power and mystery of the Holy Spirit, we are made one in Christ Jesus. These are the gifts of God for us the children of God.*

          The Bread of Life……………..

          The Cup of Salvation …………….

 

*portions of prayer adapted from prayer by Rev. Steve Kliewer, Interim General Presbyter, EOP

 

Unison Prayer of Thanks

          Gracious God, you have made us one with all your people in heaven and on earth. You have fed us with the bread of life, and renewed us for your service. Help us who have shared Christ’s body and received his cup, to be his faithful disciples so that our daily living may be part of the life of your kingdom, and our love be your love reaching out into the life of the world; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

 

CLOSING HYMN:     “How Can I Keep from Singing”                    #821


 

CHARGE AND BENEDICTION

          In our current realities, life takes a lot out of us. Your charge for the week is to trust the God of love who recognizes all that you are going through and wants the best for you.

          As you do the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit is with you now and always. Amen.

 

CHORAL RESPONSE

May the Lord, Mighty God, bless and keep you forever. Grant you peace, perfect peace, courage in every endeavor. Lift up your eyes and see his face and his grace forever. May the Lord, Mighty God, bless and keep you forever.

 

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LOOKING AHEAD

February 9                    6:00 p.m.                      Session meets

February 11                  8:30 a.m.                       Men’s Prayer Group

February 14                  following worship       M&M meets      

February 16                  10:30 a.m.                    Women’s Spirituality meets

February 17                  7:00 p.m.                      Ash Wednesday Service

February 21                  following worship       Worship & Music meets

February 23                  noon                             PPW lunch meeting

February 25                  8:30 a.m.                       Men’s Prayer Group

February 25                  5:30 p.m.                      Soup Supper 1

February 28                  following worship       Deacons meet

 

PRAYER CARE:

Tasha Sizemore (Crohn’s), Stephen Meinzinger (Covid-19), Lois White (lymphoma), John Matthews (cancer), (Jacob Cunningham, Trisha Cagley (health problems), Dave Clark (kidney cancer), Virginia DesIlets (age 99!), Margaret Dunbar (aging issues), Dena Hovey (back surgery), George Sahlberg (infection in knee), Joyce Sahlberg (health issues), Jennifer Schirm (Parkinson’s), Chuck VanHise (leg/walking rehab), Darlene Wingfield (heart valve, pulmonary fibrosis, breast cancer), and Courtney Ziegler (Huntington’s).

 

LECTIONARY FOR 2/14/21

2 Kings 2:1-12; Psalm 50:1-6; 2 Corinthians 4:3-6; Mark 9:2-9

 

 

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Update: May 19, 2020

We will not be posting on this blog anymore. If you would like weekly worship services sent to you, please email your intent to:  pionerpres...