Friday, October 29, 2021

October 31, 2021 Worship

 PIONEER PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Worship via Blog          23rd Sunday after Pentecost     October 31, 2021 

 

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.

 

-         Women’s Spirituality is Tuesday at 10:30 a.m.

-         Sign up to bring cookies and pies for the PPW Harvest Bazaar

-         There will NOT be a Harvest Festival Dinner this year

 

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

Listen and hear, all you people of the book!

There is one God who created all time and space.

Our hope is in God who made heaven and earth.

All creatures of the land and sea come from God.

You shall love God with all your heart and soul.

You shall honor God with all your mind and strength.

We will praise God as long as we live.

We will sing of God’s glory all through our lives.

A second commandment is like the first:

You shall love your neighbor as yourself.

God watches over strangers and widows and orphans.

We honor God by honoring these, our sisters and brothers.

 

PRAYER OF THE DAY

Reigning God, we have viewed the work of your hands. Where there is justice for the oppressed, we sense your presence. Where the hungry are fed, we know the providers are working with you. You set prisoners free and open the eyes of the blind. You lift up those who are bowed down and sustain the righteous with your love. We worship a God who is living and active. We give thanks that you call us to join the action, to love you and one another more than the rituals of our religion or the satisfaction of our successes. Focus us now on all that is worthy of our praise. Amen.

 

OPENING HYMN:     “Love the Lord Your God”                     LU #96

                              


             

CALL TO CONFESSION

God alone deserves our trust and loyalty. Yet we have not trusted, and our faithfulness is in question. This time of confession offers the opportunity to unburden our conscience, to experience forgiveness, and to renew our covenant with the Eternal One.

 

PRAYER OF CONFESSION

We have not kept faith with you, righteous God. There are so many distractions that occupy our time! There are so many groups to claim our loyalty. There are so many activities that bid for our attention. Even the church involves us in busyness that keeps us from matters of greater importance. In these moments, we seek to know you and to be known by you, that in an honest exchange our relationship with you and with the people around us might be strengthened. In your name, and joining with you, we seek justice for the oppressed, food for the hungry, and healing for all.  (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: Deuteronomy 6:1-9

"Now this is the commandment, the statutes and the ordinances which the Lord your God commanded me to teach you, that you may do them in the land to which you are going over, to possess it; that you may fear the Lord your God, you and your son and your son's son, by keeping all his statutes and his commandments, which I command you, all the days of your life; and that your days may be prolonged. Hear therefore, O Israel, and be careful to do them; that it may go well with you, and that you may multiply greatly, as the Lord, the God of your fathers, has promised you, in a land flowing with milk and honey. "Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is one Lord; and you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might. And these words which I command you this day shall be upon your heart; and you shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise. And you shall bind them as a sign upon your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes. And you shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates.

 

SCRIPTURE 2:  Mark 12:28-34

And one of the scribes came up and heard them disputing with one another, and seeing that he answered them well, asked him, "Which commandment is the first of all?" Jesus answered, "The first is, `Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one; and you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength.' The second is this, `You shall love your neighbor as yourself.' There is no other commandment greater than these." And the scribe said to him, "You are right, Teacher; you have truly said that he is one, and there is no other but he; and to love him with all the heart, and with all the understanding, and with all the strength, and to love one's neighbor as oneself, is much more than all whole burnt offerings and sacrifices." And when Jesus saw that he answered wisely, he said to him, "You are not far from the kingdom of God." And after that no one dared to ask him any question.

 

SERMON           “Love Is Not for Sissies”                         Rev. Jean Hurst

          First things first: Love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind. If you’re there, if you can do that, if you can love God with everything you are—heart, soul, mind, and body—only then can you live into the second greatest commandment, to love your neighbor as yourself. In 1 John 4:19 we are told that we love because God first loved us. God is the author of love. God created us out of love. God created us for love. Our love of God is a response to God’s love for us. From there, it extends out to others. Love your neighbor as yourself.

          Loving God, you may think, is easy. It’s that noisy neighbor that’s the problem. Or it’s that committee member who leaves you to do all the work. Or it’s that relative that’s always hitting you up for money or wanting you to bail them out of the mess they created. Or it’s the immigrant trying to cross our borders. Or it’s that other political party. Or it’s that country that keeps saber rattling and testing missiles. How do we love them? And why should we?

It goes back to that first commandment Jesus quoted. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind. Jesus was quoting the Shema from Deuteronomy—the heart of all the Jewish laws and commandments. According to Jesus, this is the most important of all the 613 commandments in rabbinic tradition. Jesus wasn’t saying to do away with those other commandments. He was saying this is the starting point that provides a guiding principle for being able to keep the rest.

Except that in Deuteronomy 6:5, the list is heart, soul, and might. Jesus added one. He said heart, soul, strength, and mind. We are to also love God with how we think, how we reason and rationalize. How might that impact how we love God? What we think, how we reason, how we justify what we do and say—or don’t do and don’t say—reflects how we love God.

The scribe, in paraphrasing back to Jesus, agreed that those two commandments were more important that all burnt offerings and sacrifices. He was also drawing on their scriptures to support his statement.  In Isaiah 1:11-17 God says, in part, “What to me is the multitude of your sacrifices … learn to do good, seek justice, rescue the oppressed, defend the orphan, plead for the widow.” In other words, love your neighbor.

Biblically, love is not an emotion. Love is the way we act toward others. The Bible lifts up multiple acts of love: Ruth, leaving her home and country to accompany her mother-in-law Naomi back to Israel, knowing she would be viewed as an outsider and foreigner, was an act of love. Rahab, an occupant of the land of Canaan, hiding and protecting the Israelite spies who were their enemy was an act of love. However Rahab might have felt emotionally about them, she chose to act with mercy in protecting them. Jesus told the story of the Samaritan, an ethnic and religious outsider to the Jewish people, who acted from love when he stopped to help the Jewish man who had been assaulted, robbed and left for dead. There are many more, but these are enough to make the point.

In the story of the Good Samaritan, both the priest and the Levite passed by on the other side of the road, having done nothing to render aid to one of their own people. It doesn’t matter what ‘love’ they may have thought or claimed they held for the injured man, their lack of action was a lack of love. In more modern times, when people during the Nazi regime felt sorry for those persecuted and may even have felt affection or friendship for some of them, it was not love if they did nothing to help them.

Can you see that it doesn’t matter how each of these may have felt emotionally, it was about what they did, how they acted, that demonstrated love. We can feel all the warm and fuzzies we like, but if we don’t act, if we don’t do what is right, it means nothing. The same applies to loving God. 1 John 4 tells us that if we hate our brother or sister, whom we have seen then we cannot love God whom we have not seen. 1 John 4:8 says whoever does not love does not know God, for God is love. Jesus said that if we love him we will keep his commandments—and that final commandment was to love one another. 1 John 5:2 tells us, “By this we know that we love the children of God, when we love God and obey his commandments. Scripture makes it clear that to love God means to obey God. The biggest commandment to obey is to love—God and neighbor. So the answer to the question, ‘why should we love those we don’t like?’ is because Jesus tells us to.

Of loving those who are close to us, loving those who already love us, Jesus says big deal, even the worst sinners do that. You don’t get credit for loving those who are easy to love. It’s the ones who are hard to love that measures your stature as a follower of Jesus. Love your enemies. Love those who hate you. Love those who persecute you. Love those who use you spitefully. Love those who speak and look and worship differently than you. Love those whose political beliefs and ideologies and values are different. Love those who gossip about you. Love those who have betrayed or abused you. In Luke 6:35, Jesus says when you love your enemies and do good for them your reward will be great and you will be children of the Most High; for God is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked.

In other words, if God acts lovingly even toward those who don’t deserve it, we should do the same. When we do that, we are obeying God’s commandment to love, which confirms our love for God. It’s worth pointing out that Jesus recognizes that there are those people who are ungrateful and wicked. He’s not asking us to label them any differently. He’s saying love them anyway. If we want to label them, though, I suggest ‘child of God.’ It helps move us out of judgement and helps reduce the chance of our viewing ourselves as better than.

But perhaps we don’t love God with all our heart, soul, mind and strength and we don’t love our neighbors as ourselves because we want what we want more than we want what God wants. After all, isn’t that the mantra of our society--it’s all about me? We are focused on self. And isn’t that exactly what happened in the Garden of Eden that created a wedge between God and humans? Jesus’ mission is to reconcile the world to God. If God is love, that reconciliation is a joining with God through love. That plays out not just as loving God but as loving each other also. Jesus came, taught, suffered, and died to bring us all back together in love.

Commentator Carol Wade puts it this way, “When we practice love of neighbor by participating with God in mending a broken world, Jesus comes near. This mended world is God’s dream for creation and is nothing less than a world rightly ordered according to God’s good purposes. It is a world where all are fed and housed, with access to clean water, health care, adequate education, and meaningful work; where none is excluded for reasons of race, gender, ethnicity, or sexual orientation; and where young and old alike are cherished, as God’s family endeavors to sustain the precious resources of this fragile earth.”1

If you’re there, then you can rest in that love and maybe help others attain it. If you’re not there with one (loving neighbor), you’re not there with either (loving God) and you have some work to do. Who are the neighbors we are called to love? Jesus answered that question posed by a religious leader by using a parable that lifted up a traditional enemy—the Samaritan. Who is your neighbor? Who are you most resistant to loving? Who are you silently saying, “not ……..”? Jesus didn’t say we were off the hook for loving our neighbor if they didn’t deserve being loved, if they didn’t meet our standards. Given our history, behavior, attitudes, and thoughts, who of us really deserves being loved? Yet God still loves us.

Obviously, love is not for sissies. It is a choice. It’s a hard choice. And sometimes we’re just not there. There may be too many obstacles to overcome, not the least of which is our determination to be right. If that’s the case, then when you have trouble loving someone, give it up … to God. Let God’s love for that person flow through you. Let God do through you what you can’t do on your own. You can simply be the instrument. Each time you encounter a person who challenges your ability to love, say a quick prayer: “Lord, I’m having trouble with this one. Please love this person for me until I can do it myself. And then show me how.” God is faithful and God will surely help you with the very thing God asks of you.

If you love God, you’ll want to do what God wills—which is love. Love is one of the fruits of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22) and love is also the greatest of the three theological virtues of faith, hope, and love (1 Corinthians 13:13). Allow yourself to be filled by the Holy Spirit. Allow the Spirit to transform you. Allow yourself to once again become the child of God who was created out of love and for love. Be blessed and be a blessing. Amen.

 

1Carol Wade Feasting on the Gospels, Mark, p. 378, Louisville KY 2014

 

HYMN:     They Will Know We Are Christians by Our Love      Glory #300     


      

PRAYERS OF THE PEOPLE AND THE LORD’S PRAYER

God of all that exists, God far beyond our knowing, we seek to love you with our hearts and our understanding and our strength. Our desire is that our thoughts and motives and energies will be devoted to serving you through the people and circumstances we encounter day by day. Loving you is easy. Loving those others you command us to love is a far different challenge.

It’s so hard when we feel someone doesn’t deserve to be loved, when they haven’t earned that love, when their values and lifestyles contradict what love stands for. God, thank you that you don’t withhold your love for us in the same way. Help us to break through our own hesitations and prejudices and the barriers we have erected to see others as you see us. Teach us to love.

We lift up to your tender care those we are comfortable loving: family of Julia Milleson … RaeJean Newman … … Dave Clark … Tina Bossuot … Verna’s sister … Mary and Ray Swarthout … Sandy Cargill … Elaine LaChapelle … Somer Bauer … Tasha Sizemore … Beverly Patterson … Margaret Dunbar …Virginia  … Darlene … Trisha … Jacob … George and Joyce … Jennifer … Chuck … Courtney … Ethel … and Pastor Jean. (Additional prayers …………)

In the desire to desire your will, we also lift up those we are not comfortable loving—those who are different from us, those we see as a threat, those we would call enemy, those who seem unloving and unlovable. For all those who are hurting and scared, lonely and rejected, for all those who are victims of violence, culture, war, oppression, aging, disease, and hunger. Bless them, we pray and grant us the power and humility to love them and the courage to act in their behalf.

We pray in the name of Jesus who taught us to pray: 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

Our energies and our resources are claimed by whatever is truly most important to us. If God is at the center of our lives, that will be apparent in what we give. From God we have received love so amazing that a lifetime of thanks is inadequate response.

 

DOXOLOGY

 


PRAYER OF DEDICATION

Receive from us, O God, the best we have to give. All we have comes from you. We return a portion with joy to accomplish the work we intend to do together in your name. We bring ourselves as well, to be blessed by you, so that while we are apart our words and deeds will continue to be a significant offering. May our lives praise you! Amen.

CLOSING HYMN:          “Fill My Cup”                                      Glory #699

 


CHARGE AND BENEDICTION

          Love is God’s command. Love toward some people is a piece of cake. Love toward other people is hard work. Your challenge this week is to engage in the hard work of love….starting with yourself.

          As you do, know that 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

-         October 24     following worship       Deacons

-         October 26     noon                            PPW lunch meeting

-         October 27     5:30 p.m.                      Choir practice

-         October 28     8:30 a.m.                      Men’s Prayer Group

-         November 2   10:30 a.m.                    Women’s Spirituality

-         November 6   turn your clocks back

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

-          

PRAYER CARE:

Family of Julia Milleson  Rae Jean Newman (Covid recovery), Tina Bossuot (Alzheimer’s), Verna’s sister (Covid recovery), Mary and Ray Swarthout, Sandy Cargill (breast cancer), Somer Bauer (breast cancer), Tasha Sizemore (Crohn’s), Jacob Cunningham, Trisha Cagley (health problems), Dave Clark (recovery from brain surgery, kidney cancer), Virginia DesIlets (age 99!), Margaret Dunbar (Ashley Manor), George and Joyce Sahlberg (health issues), Jennifer Schirm (Parkinson’s), Chuck VanHise (leg/walking rehab), Darlene Wingfield (pulmonary fibrosis, breast cancer), Courtney Ziegler (Huntington’s), and Pastor Jean Hurst (kidney cancer).

LECTIONARY FOR 11/7/21

1 Kings 17:8-16; Psalm 146; Hebrews 9:24-38; Mark 12:38-44

 

 

 

Friday, October 22, 2021

October 24, 2021 Worship

 PIONEER PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Worship via Blog          22nd Sunday after Pentecost   October 24, 2021    

 

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.

 

-         Deacons meet following worship

-         Tuesday PPW lunch meeting at noon

-         Thursday Men’s Prayer Group at 8:30

 

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

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

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

 

CALL TO WORSHIP

In the midst of life’s storms, God is there.

What have we to fear?

In the darkness and terror, God is with us.

Of whom shall we be afraid?

Rise up, people of God, for you are loved and saved.

Thanks be to God who cares deeply for us. Amen.

 

PRAYER OF THE DAY

All-powerful God, we are grateful for your presence among us, for we need the knowledge and energy you alone can provide.  Your ways are wonderful beyond our understanding.  When our strength is spent, our vision clouded and our hope gone, you reach out to us in ways we often fail to discern. We take heart to think that you are calling us to yourself, opening our eyes to see your wonders as if for the first time.  We want to be a part of your faithful remnant in a world that too often loses sight of the holy.  Help us, we pray.  Amen 

 

OPENING HYMN:     “Be Still and Know”                                LU#82

                                  


         

CALL TO CONFESSION

We, who are called to be a servant people have often forgotten what it means to sacrifice ourselves for others.  Success becomes more attractive than service and so we focus on getting ahead, which often means leaving behind those who cannot keep up.  This is a time to confess selfish motives and hurtful actions.

 

PRAYER OF CONFESSION

We confess, O God, that our lives have made you a distant deity. We have listened to what others say about you, but we have seldom glimpsed for ourselves who you are.  We are dominated by our doubts instead of by our practice of prayer. We are not ready to repent in dust and ashes, but we do ask for mercy as we face up to sins we have not recognized and wrongdoing we have tried to ignore. Instill in us a new appreciation of righteousness, and help us to grow in the way you would have us go. (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: Psalm 107: 23-32

Some went off to sea in ships,

          plying the trade routes of the world.

They, too, observed the Lord’s power in action,

          his impressive works on the deepest seas.

 He spoke, and the winds rose,

          stirring up the waves.

Their ships were tossed to the heavens,

          and plunged again to the depths; the sailors cringed in terror.

They reeled and staggered like drunkards

          and were at their wit’s end.

“Lord, help!” they cried in their trouble,

          and he saved them from their distress.

He calmed the storm to a whisper

          and stilled the waves.

What a blessing was that stillness

          as he brought them safely into harbor!

Let them praise the Lord for his great love

          and for the wonderful things he has done for them.

Let them exalt him publicly before the congregation 

and before the leaders of the nation.

 

SCRIPTURE 2:  Mark 10:46-52

And they came to Jericho; and as he was leaving Jericho with his disciples and a great multitude, Bartimaeus, a blind beggar, the son of Timaeus, was sitting by the roadside. And when he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to cry out and say, "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!" And many rebuked him, telling him to be silent; but he cried out all the more, "Son of David, have mercy on me!" And Jesus stopped and said, "Call him." And they called the blind man, saying to him, "Take heart; rise, he is calling you." And throwing off his mantle he sprang up and came to Jesus. And Jesus said to him, "What do you want me to do for you?" And the blind man said to him, "Master, let me receive my sight." And Jesus said to him, "Go your way; your faith has made you well." And immediately he received his sight and followed him on the way.

 

SERMON           “Calm in the Storm”                       Sheila Cunningham

          We don’t know much about Bartimaeus other than he was the son of Timaeus, and he was a blind beggar.  By his cry, “My teacher, let me see again”, we can understand that he was able to see at one time.  In those days it was believed that a person with a disability or disfigurement was being punished for their own sins or those of their parents.  Since he had once been able to see, it is implied that he is being punished for his own sins and therefore is deserving of his status as an outcast.  All the more reason for the disciples to think he was unworthy of Jesus’ attention. The crowd believes that by telling Bartimaeus to be quiet they are protecting Jesus from being bothered by an irredeemable sinner - someone who has no standing in the community and survives only through the charity of others.  Such a person is not expected to speak, because he has nothing valuable to say. But as usual Jesus reaches out to the marginalized, the outcast, the throwaways - the irredeemable sinner - sometimes I feel like that, but that’s another sermon!

So Jesus responds to Bartimaeus and says,”call him over to me”.  This is very much like when Jesus stopped the disciples and said, “let the children come to me”.  In verse 49 of this passage, Eugene Peterson puts it this way in his interpretation “The Message, “It’s your lucky day!  Get up! He’s calling you to come.” Throwing off his coat, Bartimaeus was on his feet at once and came to Jesus.”  Throwing off his coat was no small deal when we realize that this coat was a significant possession, a precious guard against the elements for one who is a blind beggar along the roadside.  This seems to be a parallel to Jesus’ instructions to the disciples in Mark 8:34, “If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me”  This is followed by Jesus’s promise in 10:29-30,  that they will receive much more in return for their sacrifices.

So Bartimaeus approaches Jesus and Jesus asks him, “What do you want me to do for you?” Bartimaeus has a direct and very plain request, “Rabbi, I want to see again.” Immediately Jesus replies, “On your way.  Your faith has saved and healed you.” 

How would you respond to Jesus if he were to ask, “What do you want me to do for you?”  Almost seems like a loaded question.  What do I want Jesus to do for me?  Many people might answer, I want a job so I am able to pay my bills, I want my husband to be healed from Covid, I want my relationship with my mother to be restored, I want a way to afford to go back to school to get a better job. Ok, so you give your requests to Jesus and then what?

Think about Bartimaeus, he asked to have his sight restored and BAM - he was able to see.  Think about those fishermen on the raging sea in our Old Testament reading, they asked for the waters to be calmed and BAM, the waters were calmed.  So when Jesus asks, “What do you want me to do for you?” and I ask for something, . . . but wait for BAM, it doesn’t happen the way I asked, what am I supposed to think? 

We face so many storms in our lives in the way of struggles and disappointments.  The storm of unemployment and financial distress, the storm of illness and even death, the storm of broken relationships, the storm of a bleak future.  So why aren’t those storms calmed, why aren’t those requests answered?  

Remember when Jesus said to Bartimaeus, “Your faith has saved and healed you.”  So that’s it, not enough faith, that’s why they weren’t answered.  But wait, I don’t think that’s the road God wants us to go down in this passage.  Instead, I see a different perspective.  Yes, faith has everything to do with it, but yet faith has nothing to do with it.  While faith is an anchor for us to hold on to, it doesn’t require faith for our prayers to be answered.  Instead, God gives us everything we need. Paul tells us in Philippians 4: the first part of verse 19, “God will take care of everything you need. Did you get that?  God takes care of everything we need, just not necessarily everything we want.

During our troubling times, God knows that our faith is faltering, that our understanding of how God works is confusing, but even then God knows what we need.  The storm referenced in the Psalms can be said to parallel the storm described in Mark 4: verses 35-41 where the disciples are in a boat with Jesus on the Sea of Galilee and a fierce storm comes up. High waves were breaking into the boat and it began filling with water.  I think most of us are familiar with this passage and know that Jesus was asleep in the boat.  Asleep while their lives were in danger - well according to the disciples!  

So in both these instances the storms are calmed, but then I refer back to times in our lives when it seems that our storms are not calmed - that life is raging out of control around us - boy it really seems like that lately with illness and death at our very doorstep. We experience all kinds of storms in our lives - the inconvenience of a flat tire or getting to work late and being confronted by the boss.  Often it’s much more than a little inconvenience.  It’s more devastating, like a prolonged illness, the death of a loved one, a loss of purpose, a failed marriage, or the loss of financial stability.  We pray for deliverance from these storms, for healing, for relief, for opportunity, for reconciliation - anything that will make the storm pass.  These are the kind of responses we might have if Jesus were to ask us, “What do you want me to do for you?’  

But let’s think for a minute, maybe it’s not about the storm, the difficulties in our lives - but just consider that it’s more about who is with us during these storms, during the hardest and most inconvenient times in our lives.  Storms are frightening, I know, I’ve been through a few - quite a few of them in my life.  I know what it is to feel useless, helpless, and even hopeless and I imagine you have felt those ways too, but it’s during those times that we can feel the presence of the one who is in the storm with us.  He is the one who walks us through the storm to the other side, to a place where we can be transformed, changed, our faith strengthened.  Sometimes God calms the storm . . . but sometimes he lets the storm rage and calms his child. So while we may feel we are drowning in the storms of life, we can be assured that God is right there with us in those storms. How amazing it is to feel a peace come over us when we know the presence of God. We feel his comforting arms of security and support through the duration of our storms.  But oftentimes those comforting arms of security and support are delivered through brothers and sisters who walk alongside us.  Do we feel them, do we acknowledge those comforting arms, do we allow those brothers and sisters to be God beside us in the storms of life?

I am reminded of a fictional, yet timely story of a man caught in a storm. He was stuck on his rooftop in a flood. He was praying to God for help.

Soon a man in a rowboat came by and the fellow shouted to the man on the roof, "Jump in, I can save you." The stranded fellow shouted back, "No, it's OK, I'm praying to God and he is going to save me."

So the rowboat went on.

Then a motorboat came by. "The fellow in the motorboat shouted, "Jump in, I can save you." To this the stranded man said, "No thanks, I'm praying to God and he is going to save me. I have faith."

So the motorboat went on.

Then a helicopter came by and the pilot shouted down, "Grab this rope and I will lift you to safety." To this the stranded man again replied, "No thanks, I'm praying to God and he is going to save me. I have faith."

So the helicopter reluctantly flew away.

Soon the water rose above the rooftop and the man drowned. He went to Heaven. He finally got his chance to discuss this whole situation with God, at which point he exclaimed, "I had faith in you but you didn't save me, you let me drown. I don't understand why!"

To this God replied, "I sent you a rowboat and a motorboat and a helicopter, what more did you expect?"

Do we recognize the rowboat, the motorboat, the helicopter in our lives? Do we allow those helpers that come forth to support us into our lives?  Do we welcome them?  That’s been a hard acceptance for me - accepting that I might need some help.  What might prevent us from receiving an extended hand, an offer of support, believing that we are worthy of that help?  I believe that when we don't allow someone the opportunity to assist us in some way, we are denying that person the chance to give us a gift, we are taking away from them the fulfillment of being a helper. Mr. Rogers reminds us to look for the helpers and allow them to help us through the difficult times in our lives - the storms in our lives.  

But just as we are to look for the helpers, those people God puts into our lives to support us through our storms, we are equally encouraged to be the helpers.  We are reminded in Matthew 25 verse 40 when Jesus said, “I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters, you did for me.”  

In her book, Not Alone, Nell E. Noonan tells of a marble figure of Jesus with hands outstretched that stood in a small French country village during World War II.  The statue graced the courtyard of a quaint little church.  One day a bomb stuck so close that the statue was dismembered.  

When the battle was over and the enemy had passed through, citizens of the village decided to find the pieces of their beloved statue and reconstruct it.  They gathered the broken pieces and reassembled the statue.  To them, the scars on the body added to the sculpture’s beauty.  But there was one problem: they were unable to find the hands.

A sculptor in the town offered to replace the broken hands as a gift to the church.  The church leaders met to consider the offer and, after giving it considerable thought, decided not to accept the gift. 

After further research of this story, it appears that the same situation is claimed to have happened in a church in England, and a cathedral in Germany, and more recently a Catholic church in San Diego.  Though the authenticity of the story may be questioned, the message is still unquestionable, for today a brass plaque attached to the base of the statue reads: “I have no hands but your hands.”

Let us be those hands, let us be the outstretched arms of God welcoming and supporting all God's children through the storms of life.

Thanks be to God.

                  

HYMN:     “Today We Are Called to Be Disciples”     Glory # 757

 


PRAYERS OF THE PEOPLE AND THE LORD’S PRAYER

Lord of wind and water, of calmness and peace, be with us this day. Calm our fears as we face uncertain futures. Help us to relinquish control and to place our trust totally in you. Remind us to continue to faithfully work for good, with gratitude for the many blessings you have poured upon us. When the waves and torrents threaten us, let us again turn to you, remembering your saving mercies and love. Give us courage to become disciples who can calm the seas of doubt and anger, bringing hope and peace. As we have brought before you situations that require help and healing mercies, remind us again that you are with each person and situation, offering your love and mercy. We thank you for the many ways in which you have healed us. For all the goodness you have poured on us, we offer prayers of gratitude and love.

We pray for your children here in Harney and beyond, for we know they, too, struggle with the realities of their lives.  Strengthen them, provide for them, protect them, bless them, we ask.  We lift up to you  RaeJean Newman … Julia Milleson … Dave Clark … Tina Bossuot … Verna’s sister and family … Mary and Ray Swarthout … Sandy Cargill … Elaine LaChapelle …  Linda and Bill Kaesemeyer … Somer Bauer … Tasha Sizemore … Beverly Patterson … Margaret Dunbar …Virginia  … Darlene … Trisha … Jacob … George and Joyce … Jennifer … Chuck … Courtney … Ethel … and Pastor Jean. (Additional prayers …………)

We pray in the name of Jesus, who taught us to pray: 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

Our offerings are to magnify God’s name and to express our deep sense of empathy and concern for sisters and brothers who struggle to find life.  Giving reorients our lives to what is of lasting value and importance.  Let us give as we are able - with joy!

 

DOXOLOGY

 


PRAYER OF DEDICATION

Holy God, hear our prayer for all who may be helped by what we give.  We offer more than money; we offer ourselves.  May what we give and how we commit our lives to your service be useful in your kingdom work.  Amen

 

CLOSING HYMN:  Song of Hope”                                       Glory #765

 


CHARGE AND BENEDICTION

So folks, go out into your week looking for helpers.  May you find one, may you be one. 

 

Go out into the world in peace;
have courage;
hold on to what is good;
return no one evil for evil;
support the weak;
help the suffering;
honor all people;
love and serve the Lord,
rejoicing in the power of the Holy Spirit.  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

-         October 24     following worship       Deacons

-         October 26     noon                              PPW lunch meeting

-         October 27     5:30 p.m.                      Choir practice

-         October 28     8:30 a.m.                       Men’s Prayer Group

 

PRAYER CARE:

Rae Jean Newman (Covid recovery), Julia Milleson (cancer), Tina Bossuot (Alzheimer’s), Verna’s sister and family (Covid), Mary and Ray Swarthout, Sandy Cargill (breast cancer),  Linda and Bill Kaesemeyer (Bill’s heart/breathing issues), Somer Bauer (breast cancer), Tasha Sizemore (Crohn’s), Jacob Cunningham, Trisha Cagley (health problems), Dave Clark (recovery from brain surgery, kidney cancer), Virginia DesIlets (age 99!), Margaret Dunbar (Ashley Manor), George and Joyce Sahlberg (health issues), Jennifer Schirm (Parkinson’s), Chuck VanHise (leg/walking rehab), Darlene Wingfield (pulmonary fibrosis, breast cancer), Courtney Ziegler (Huntington’s), and Pastor Jean Hurst (kidney cancer).

 

LECTIONARY FOR 10/31/21

Deuteronomy 6:1-9; Psalm 119:1-8;

Hebrews 9:11-14; Mark 12:28-34

 

 

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...