Saturday, December 21, 2019

Welcoming Emmanuel.

Isaiah 7:10-16; Romans 1:1-7; Matthew 1:18-25
December 22, 2019

I.

About 735 years before Jesus, a 20-year-old named Ahaz was crowned as king of Judah, in Jerusalem.  He was faced immediately with a national crisis.  The Assyrian Empire was expanding with an unprecedented level of violence and brutality.  The northern kingdom of Israel and the kingdom of Aram or Syria had formed an alliance against them, and they wanted Judah to join. 

The prophet Isaiah advises Ahaz to stand firm in his trust in the Lord.  But Ahaz instead decided to do the smart, practical thing and make a deal with the Assyrians.  That got Judah off the hook regarding Israel and Aram.  But in return, the Assyrians demanded huge tribute in wealth from Judah, which became a subject, vassal State for generations.  Israel, meanwhile, for fighting against the Assyrians, got completely destroyed, and the 10 northern Hebrew tribes were lost forever. 

So the larger context of this passage is about the political survival of Judah.  Ahaz chooses to rely on pragmatic diplomacy so that the nation is technically preserved, but deeply and permanently weakened and harmed.   

But what if he had taken Isaiah’s advice and chosen to rely on God?  We don’t know.  We never know.  Because almost no one ever does it.  We always imagine that our only choices are to either fight evil with violence, or to make a deal with evil for survival.  It rarely occurs to anyone to say, “Let’s resist this predatory evil empire by trusting in God and keeping God’s commandments, no matter what.”

At the time the Gospel of Matthew was written, Judah, by then called Judea, had also been destroyed because they chose to resist by force the dominant Empire of that time: Rome.  Jerusalem and the Temple were in ruins.  Our using violence against violence doesn’t work in God’s plan.  

The other approach was to make a deal with the Romans, giving them loyalty in return for tolerance.  But as Ahaz learned, the cost of this kind of arrangement is very high.  Compromise with evil makes us complicit in it.  Being a domesticated and loyal part of the Empire only serves to suck all the spiritual integrity from our faith.  This is why the apostle Paul does not want Gentile converts to become officially Jews.  The Jews of his time had compromised and sold-out to Rome.

Unfortunately, the church has historically mostly chosen Ahaz’ option: make a deal, cooperate with the forces of Empire, conquest, colonialism, oppression, and injustice.  Find a political sponsor and protector.  Be patriotic in whatever nation we are in, support the government’s policies, even when questionable or horrible.  

The eventual result of this approach was that Judah was itself completely destroyed by the next Empire to roar down from the north: the Babylonians, 150 years or so after King Ahaz.  The people were marched off on a trail of tears into exile.

In the end, fighting evil with violence doesn’t work, and neither does compromising and making a deal with evil for survival.         

II.

Isaiah, however, has another idea.  He presents his alternative politics to the king in terms of a kind of parable, which a chapter earlier he implied was going to be his main mode of communication.  He talks about a young woman and the child she will bear.  This prophecy is the how he reassures the king.  Trust in God, he says, because “the virgin will conceive and bear a son, and shall name him Immanuel.”

On the one hand he means that this particular imminent threat, from the kings of Aram and Israel, is temporary.  It will be over in the time it takes for a woman to bear and wean a child, about 18 months.  And he uses that imagery, rather than just saying “in about a year and a half,” to emphasize the emergence and development of new life in the form of a living person.  Perhaps he even meant an actual child who would be Ahaz’ successor as king.  

On the other hand he is making a still larger and deeper point that the living Presence of God, which is what the name “Immanu-el” means — God-is-with-us — is on the way to us and our job is to welcome, receive, prepare, and follow.  Maybe he is saying that God’s Presence and salvation, God’s deliverance and protection, come to us precisely when and as we prepare for this.

There is a sense in which Isaiah is telling us to, “Live now in God’s future, and the past and present will take care of themselves.  But caving in and making a deal with evil in order to get by today is not a good or sustainable course of action.  That would be to foreclose on the future.  That would be to sacrifice the future in order to get a higher return now.  That would be like eating your seed-corn.  That would be like poisoning your own environment, depleting resources, and wrecking the climate for a quick profit for a few now.  Who would do such a thing?    

Jesus talks about this a lot.  Grabbing whatever wealth, status, power, fame, or security we can now, only closes us off from those very things in the future.  “Woe to you who are rich now, for you have received your reward,” he says.  He blesses those who don’t have now, because only they are open to God’s coming blessings.  It is the seed that is planted in the earth and figuratively dies that sprouts to become a plant that bears much fruit for all to share.    

Isaiah uses the image of a child because children are inherently an act of faith and trust in the future.  They are a colossal investment in the future.  I mean, let’s face it, on a purely economic level, children are a net drain on the family resources in the short term.  Their value is in the future.

Ahaz is thinking that it is up to him, the anointed king, to protect Jerusalem’s children, and the present threat is these two kings of Israel and Aram who are laying siege to Jerusalem, and that if he just makes a deal with the Assyrians to get those kings off his case he can preserve the future for these children.  But in reality he is by that deal condemning those same children to an existence under the yoke of a powerful, oppressive, extractive Empire.  His “cure” is worse than the disease.

III.  

Isaiah’s message is, Yo, Ahaz, hello?  It’s not up to you.  These are God’s people and God, not any human king, will protect and sustain them.  Your job, Ahaz, is not to worry about the geo-political circumstances.  Your job is to be faithful and to inspire the people to be faithful.  Your job is to let God be God and not get in God’s way.                     

I love the way that Sojourner Truth, the great African-American liberator of slaves, deals with this in the 19th century.  She correctly notices that in the Virgin Birth story in the gospels, there are no men, that is no male humans, no members of the privileged, dominant gender, certainly no kings or emperors, involved in the actual conception and delivery of God into the world in Jesus Christ.  The only men in the story play mere secondary, supporting or adversarial roles.  But it is a matter of God — specifically God’s Holy Spirit — the Hebrew word for which is Ruach, which is feminine — cooperating with Mary, a teenaged, Jewish woman.

So when Isaiah uses a term that Matthew understands as “virgin,” he is not only saying that God’s future is coming, but that it is God’s future, that is, it is not dependent on the decisions or agency of any of the powerful people in the world, nearly all of whom were men.  He is saying that God’s future comes about in spite of and in contradiction to the plans and agendas of the powerful humans who think they are in charge.

Isaiah is telling Ahaz that he has to get the normal understanding of what a king is out of his head.  The king of Judah is different from the kings of other places.  The king of Judah is not the big-boss but the chosen vessel, and channel, and instrument of the living God, the God who liberated the people from slavery in Egypt without the need of any assistance from a human king.  Indeed, in that act God humiliates and overpowers the greatest human king of the day: Pharaoh.  The king of Judah is not chosen so he can do his own will, according to his own reasoning and judgment, but so he can do God’s will, according to God’s Word.

Most of the problems in the world are a result of people trying to fix things.  Most of what we are trying to fix is a result of people trying to fix things.  Ahaz creates great problems for his people and future generations because he tried to fix what he conceived of as the main problem.

But what Ahab and we do not realize is that there is only one problem in the world ever, and that is that people are not following God’s Word.  People are not living in obedience to Jesus Christ.  People are not living in humility, gratitude, generosity, forgiveness, joy, and peace.  People are not letting go and letting God.  Instead, they are trying to fix things.  And this is where we are.  In a fix.

IV.

But God’s salvation is already embedded and encoded in the very heart of creation itself.  It was all spoken into being by God, and it has God’s imprint all over it.  God will bring it all home.  God’s redemption will happen — is happening — quite naturally.  And we will be able to see and participate in that if we simply let it go, and let ourselves follow Jesus.

Ahaz is not considered a good king.  He gets very bad reviews in 2 Kings 16 and 2 Chronicles 28.  Yet he still shows up in the genealogy of the Lord Jesus in Matthew 1:9.  Because even the bad kings get redeemed.  Even they play a part in the chain of events that bring God into the world.  

None of the decisions of dopey politicians are going to stop God’s salvation.  They might make it more difficult; they might do a lot of harm to many people but they can’t stop God’s will.

As far as the decisions we have to make, we need to make them in obedience to Jesus Christ, reflecting and expressing in our own lives his justice and love, his acceptance and welcome, his healing and his goodness.  That’s the way to be in tune with what God is doing in the world.  That is the way we welcome Emmanu-El, God with us.

+++++++  

Saturday, December 14, 2019

Crocuses.

Isaiah 35:1-10; James 5:7-10; Matthew 11:2-11
December 15, 2019

I.

In the center of Isaiah’s vision of the coming salvation are these words about healing.  “Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped; then the lame shall leap like a deer, and the tongue of the speechless sing for joy.”  It is these very categories that the Lord Jesus has in mind when he offers his work as a healer of these specific maladies as proof of the validity of his ministry. 

It is healing that is the witness, the evidence, the validation and proof of God’s living and saving Presence in the world.  To put it bluntly, if we are not a healing place, then we are not an anticipation of, or a testimony to, the Kingdom of God.  

Jesus is known among his contemporaries as a healer and exorcist.  Healing is what justice looks like when it is applied to an individual body: it restores us to our created, intended condition.  It brings us back to a wholeness and integrity that God blesses us and all creation with at the beginning.  It banishes the evil that breaks us, degrades us, depletes our energy, and makes us less than complete, full, whole human beings.

What Jesus demonstrates in his healing ministry towards individuals, Isaiah reminds us is a metaphor or a sign of what God intends for the whole creation, as we see in the opening lines of Isaiah’s prophecy about the wilderness and the dry land being glad.  “The desert shall rejoice and blossom; like the crocus it shall blossom abundantly, and rejoice with joy and singing.”  

For us, the crocus is one of the first indications of the coming of spring.  We still have two months to wait for the first crocus.  And crocuses are very hardy; they survive blizzards in March.  Springtime is what justice looks like for creation: the forces of death retreat and life starts to take over again.

Isaiah finds in the oscillation of the seasons an image for what God is doing in his time politically.  The people have been languishing in exile in the city of Babylon for around 70 years, two or three generations.  Jerusalem is a dusty ruin.  Only a few old people still even remember Solomon’s Temple.  It has been what we would call a long winter for them.

Crocuses also produce saffron, which, at nearly $2000 a pound, is the most expensive spice in the world.  So there is this overlay of immense value in Isaiah’s image of the crocus blossoming abundantly.  Even from what is today a desiccated moonscape, God provides.

God is going to turn the wasteland into a thriving, fecund, busy, buzzing, life-filled swamp!  Isaiah knows that a swamp is a place of incredible blessing.  It is humans who see them as full of pests, a nuisance only to be drained.


The point for Isaiah is reversal.  The corrupt, barren, disordered, diseased, dysfunctional situation in which we find ourselves, what we consider to be normalcy, whether it be manifest in crippled bodies, imprisoned nations, or an abused creation, is what God comes into the world to change.

II.

And God is about nothing if not change.  Healing is change.  If we imagine that God is about keeping things stable and the same, or even about making things the way they used to be, we haven’t read much of the Bible.  The whole story starts with, and is summed up by, the miraculous deliverance of God’s people from slavery in Egypt.  That is a massive and political change that overturns the normal order of things in which Emperors and Empires and armies and conquerors rule.  God’s power overturns that whole system and replaces it with the new egalitarian community described in the Torah.

Jesus is proclaiming and enacting the same thing.  “The blind receive their sight, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have good news brought to them,” he says, describing his own ministry.  This is the same change, the same transformation and liberation, applied on the most personal and physical level.  

Jesus starts with healing individuals to show that God is not going to change and renew just one area of life.  God’s salvation is a comprehensive transformation of everything, from within people out to the whole creation. 

This focus on healing and transformation is unfortunately not evident in very many Christian churches.  Last week the news in church circles was yet another damning poll, this one from Five-Thirty-Eight, showing that “Millennials Are Leaving Religion and They’re Not Coming Back.”  One interviewed couple talks about how they “came to see all of this negativity from people who were highly religious and increasingly didn’t want a part in it.”  This is what young people think of us.  Fifty-seven percent of millennials say that religious people are generally less tolerant of others.

Along with being a healer, the other thing Jesus is known for in his own time is his ridiculous and even alarming, offensive, and dangerous tolerance.  He was famous for hanging out with “prostitutes and tax collectors.”  That even became a common epithet that his enemies used to describe his work.  He also made a point to engage with sick people, even lepers.  He would heal anyone who showed up.  He had no means-test or qualifying exam.  All you had to be was sick, and he would heal you.

The church has managed to degrade from being disciples of Jesus Christ, the most welcoming and positive human in history, to a place with a reputation for negativity and intolerance.  We need to lose that reputation and fast.  And the fact that some of the most prominent Christian leaders today are preaching bigotry, fear, and anger towards immigrants, Gays, Muslims, and generally anyone they don’t like, while spouting a toxic nostalgia, and aligning themselves to godless and inhumane figures and political policies, isn’t helping.

III.

I am not saying we have to accommodate to whatever a particular generational group wants us to be.  That would be crazy.  Accommodating to this or that dominant social cohort is how we got into this mess.  We accommodated to a comfortable existence in Babylon.  We became apologists for Babylonian atrocities.  And we were well-compensated for it.  But now we are paying.

I am saying that the church needs to accommodate only and always to the teachings and life of Jesus Christ.  If we’re going to be rejected we should at least be rejected for our trust in him, our hope in his life, and our love in imitation of him.  If we’re going to be rejected it should be for the same reasons he was rejected and crucified, which was that he associated with the “wrong” people and he threatened the privilege and status of the “right” people.  If we’re going to be rejected it should be because people are finding healing among us, and healed people are less apt to be exploited, manipulated, conned, or enslaved by the powerful.

Do the "blind" receive their sight here?  Do we banish the darkness of ignorance and bring people into contact with the Light which is Jesus Christ and his message of love?  Or are we content to leave people in the blindness of self-serving lies and conspiracy theories?

Do the “lame” walk here?  Do we empower people and give them the ability and the room to change and grow and transform into Christ’s likeness?  Or are we content to leave people paralyzed by old habits, roles, fears, desires, and regrets? 

Are “lepers” cleansed here?  Do we welcome the outcast?  Do we respect and enact healthy boundaries?  Do we cherish what is inside people more than their appearance?  Do we help them wash away the corrosive thoughts eating away at them?  Or are we content to leave them lost and alone?

Do we help the “deaf” to hear?  Do we develop skills of listening and attentiveness to others?  Or are we content to hear only our own personal stories and agendas?     

Are the “dead” raised here?  Do people find new life and energy, new meaning, purpose, and direction to their lives by following the Risen Lord?  Or are we content to leave people forgotten in isolation and despair?

Do the “poor” have good news brought to them here?  Are we a place of generosity?  Do we advocate for policies that feed the hungry, house the homeless, pay workers fairly, and provide medical care for all?  Or are we content to blame and punish people for their poverty? 

And I do believe that being a place where individuals and relationships find healing and wholeness will be instrumental in creating change in society and even renewing the whole creation.  Healed people heal the world.  My favorite quote from the Russian Saint Seraphim of Sarov is: “Acquire a peaceful spirit and thousands around you will be saved.”  Just being with people who know healing, heals people.

IV.

For in Jesus Christ, people who say “I once was blind but now I see” will not let others languish in ignorance and bigotry.  When we who know we were once powerless, or excluded, or not listening, or even spiritually dead, we will relate to, empathize with, and so heal those who suffer from these inner disabilities.  We can be agents of healing because we have been there.  We can bring Jesus’ new life to others.  We who know we were poor but are now rich can communicate how we all benefit together from the culture of sharing, gratitude, and abundance that Jesus Christ announces.

These are the people who are “the ransomed of the Lord.”  Isaiah says these are the ones who “shall return, and come to Zion with singing… they shall obtain joy and gladness, and sorrow and sighing shall flee away.”

Their joy is infectious, and they… that is, we... shall be the means by which God changes the whole world, one soul at a time.  That is our calling.  We are crocuses, resisting the persistent winter in steadfast hope, trusting in the Light that is both coming and within us.
+++++++

Thursday, December 12, 2019

Liturgy for the Eve of the Nativity of the Lord.2019

The Eve of the Nativity of the Lord
December 24, 2019

The House of Bread

An empty wooden manger waits at the front of the Sanctuary.

Congregational Music:                                            Presbyterian Hymnal/Glory to God

Prelude:

Gathering Song: “Of the Father’s Love Begotten” 309/108

Words of Welcome

Lighting the Christ Candle

Call to Worship

People will come from east and west
   and from north and south,
   and will eat in the Kingdom of God.
Indeed, some who are last will be first,
   and some who are first will be last. Luke 13:29-30
We are celebrating the feast of the Eternal Birth 
   which God has borne 
   and never ceases to bear in all eternity... 
But if it does not also happen in us, what good is it? 
   Everything depends on this, 
   that it should take place in each of us.
As we listen again to the story of Christ’s birth in Bethlehem,
   may he be born as well in our own hearts.
May the Light of God’s life shine in our darkness!

*Processional: “Once in Royal David’s City”         49/140

The choir processes into the Sanctuary.

In those days a decree went out from Emperor Augustus 
that all the world should be registered.  
This was the first registration 
and was taken while Quirinius was governor of Syria.  
All went to their own towns to be registered. 
Luke 2:1-3

This story begins with an imperial edict.  
   The strong man in Rome thought he was in charge.  
   He gave orders to soldiers and bureaucrats, 
   who carried out his will.
Little did he know.
The future emerges not from the wealthy and powerful, 
   not from the armed and affluent, 
   not from the bullies and the buyers.
   not from the connected and the confident. 
But from the rest of us: 
   the homeless, the refugees, the victims, 
   the poor, the broken, the outcast, and the lost.
Little did he know.
“The people who walked in darkness
   have seen a great light;
   those who lived in a land of deep darkness— 
   on them light has shined.”   Isaiah 9:2
May the Light of God shine this night
   into the controlled and restricted darkness of our world.
May the Light of God shine this night.

Song: “In the Bleak Midwinter” 36/144

Joseph also went from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea, 
to the city of David called Bethlehem, 
because he was descended from the house and family of David.
Luke 2:4

Bethlehem.  The name means, “house of bread,” in Hebrew.
“I am the Bread of Life.
   Whoever comes to me will never be hungry,
   and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.” John 6:35
“I am the living bread that came down from heaven.  
   Whoever eats of this bread will live forever; 
   the bread that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh.” John 6:51
“And the Word became flesh and lived among us.” John 1:14

Song: “O Little Town of Bethlehem” 44/121

He went to be registered with Mary, 
to whom he was engaged and who was expecting a child.
Luke 2:5 

Mary is the young woman to whom God’s Messenger comes, saying:
“Greetings, favored one!  
   The Lord is with you!” Luke 1:28
When the messenger shares with her the good,
   but very disturbing, news, 
   that she will bring the Son of God into the world, she says:
“Here am I, the servant of the Lord; 
   let it be with me according to your word.” Luke 1:38
May it be with all of us 
   according to the saving, liberating, healing Word of the Lord.
May God’s saving presence be born in us.
May we not fear the reactions of those who do not see what God is doing.
May God’s saving presence be born in us.
May we live in joyful expectation, as goodness grows within us.
May God’s saving presence be born in us.

*Song:  “See Amid the Winter’s Snow” 51/——

While they were there, 
the time came for her to deliver her child. 
And she gave birth to her firstborn son 
and wrapped him in bands of cloth, 
and laid him in a manger, 
because there was no place for them in the inn.
Luke 2:6-7

Song: “Still, Still, Still” 47/124

During the song, a girl/young woman carries a loaf of bread wrapped in white cloth and places it in the manger.

To add insult to injury,
he is born in a barn,
laid in a feed-trough for animals.
He is unnoticed and unwelcomed by humans, at first.
He feels our vulnerability,
   the cold air, the hunger, the utter dependence.
He breathes the aromas of life in a barn.
He tastes the milk of human nourishment.
He hears the sounds of animals and wind,
   and his parents’ tired, hopeful, relieved words,
   soft and low.
He feels the texture of cloth and straw, and cold air on new skin.
He sees in the dim light the glistening face of his mother.
All this he takes on,
   draping over himself to inhabit like a tent,
   from which to know the world…
Even though it is he through whom God creates the world,
   breathing it into being at the beginning,
   saying, “Let there be!”
   and, “It is very good!” From Genesis 1:1-31
For a child has been born for us,
   a son given to us;
authority rests upon his shoulders;
   and he is named
Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God,
   Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. 
His authority shall grow continually,
   and there shall be endless peace
for the throne of David and his kingdom.
   He will establish and uphold it
with justice and with righteousness
   from this time onwards and for evermore.
The zeal of the Lord of hosts will do this. Isaiah 9:6-7

Song: “While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks “ 59/118

During the song, a child processes with the Christ Candle, placing it on the Communion Table.

In that region there were shepherds living in the fields, 
keeping watch over their flock by night.
Luke 2:8 

Shepherds on the night shift,
   workers in the field,
   shivering in the star-light,
   imagining a better life,
   wanting to go home.
   Forgotten, invisible, taken-for-granted;
   doing a job no one else wanted.
We give thanks for the servers and the watchers, 
   the caregivers and the waiters;
   the stockers and the loaders,
   the cashiers and the clerks,
   the drivers and the cleaners,
   the mechanics and the secretaries.
We give thanks for those who prepare the soil,
   plant the seeds, watch over the plants as they grow, 
   then harvest and process the produce. 
We give thanks for those who care for animals,
   and for the animals, who give us many benefits.
On those same hills a boy named David also watched over sheep.
   He was God’s unlikely chosen king.
Now God’s new unlikely chosen king,
   a descendant of David by adoption,
   is born in the same town:
   the Bread of Life emerges from Bethlehem, 
   which means “House of Bread”.

*Song: “Angels, From the Realms of Glory” 22/143

We carry the loaf of bread from the manger to the Table.

Then an angel of the Lord stood before them, 
and the glory of the Lord shone around them, 
and they were terrified. 
But the angel said to them, 
“Do not be afraid; 
for see—I am bringing you good news of great joy 
for all the people: 
to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, 
who is the Messiah, the Lord. 
This will be a sign for you: 
you will find a child wrapped in bands of cloth 
and lying in a manger.”
And suddenly there was with the angel 
a multitude of the heavenly host, 
praising God and saying, 
“Glory to God in the highest heaven,
   and on earth peace among those whom he favors!”
Luke 2:9-14

Song:  “Before the World Began” John L. Bell  
Before the world began one Word was there;             
Grounded in God he was, rooted in care;            
by him all things were made, in him was love displayed, 
through him God spoke and said, “I am for you.”

Life found in him its Source, death found its end;               
Light  found in him its course, death found its end;           
for neither death nor doubt nor dark-ness can put out         
the glow of God, the shout, “I am for you.”

The Word was in the world which from him came;            
Unrecognized he was un-known by name;        
one with all humankind with the unloved aligned,  
convincing sight and mind, “I am for you.”

All who received the Word by God were blessed,         
Sisters and brothers they of Earth’s fond guest.        
So did the Word of grace proclaim in time and space,  
and with a human face, “I am for you.” 

When the angels had left them 
and gone into heaven, 
the shepherds said to one another, 
“Let us go now to Bethlehem 
and see this thing that has taken place, 
which the Lord has made known to us.”
So they went with haste 
and found Mary and Joseph, 
and the child lying in the manger. 
When they saw this, 
they made known what had been told them about this child; 
and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds told them. 
But Mary treasured all these words 
and pondered them in her heart. 
The shepherds returned, 
glorifying and praising God 
for all they had heard and seen, 
as it had been told them.
Luke 2:15-20

Mary’s Treasure Box

Children gather at the chancel to hear the story.

Song: “Love Has Come” —/110 

God of grace and wonder:
   may our leaders be gentler,
   and our hospitality far warmer,
   than what we offered you
   on that night long ago,
   coming into our world.
Open our hearts and our homes
   to the refugees, the undocumented, and the homeless today.
   May we remember that we were aliens too,
   whom you welcomed into the household of peace.
By your grace and your Spirit
   let us inhabit the good creation,
   under your order of peace, justice, and liberation.
Remove our fear
   that sours into violence.
Remove our hatred 
   that closes our hearts to the cries of others.
Remove our resentment
   that darkly dwells on what we think we have lost.
Turn our faces to your Light,
   shining in the face of Jesus,
   revealing to us the truth, goodness, beauty, and grace
   you have poured so generously into our hearts.
Let us see him in the face of everyone.
   Amen.
  
Offering

The Earth and everything on it,
the world and all its people,
they all belong to God.   Psalm 24:1

Offertory Music: 

*Doxology: “O Come, All Ye Faithful” 41/133 

A young disciple processes with the pitcher of juice.

Thanksgiving

On the night when Jesus was born,
   in Bethlehem, the House of Bread,
   his parents prayed and the angels sang,
   and the shepherds came to visit him.
On the night before he gave his life 
   for the life of the world,
   the Lord Jesus took bread.
On the night when he was born,
   the Creator became a creature,
   the Infinite was placed in a manger, 
   the Word became flesh,
   the Spirit became matter,
   Wisdom came into time, 
   and the Presence became present.
He gave thanks to God,
   and broke the bread,
   and gave it to his disciples, saying:
   “Take and eat.  This is my body, given for you;
   do this in remembrance of me.”

The celebrant breaks the bread in two pieces.

On the night when he was born,
   humanity was raised to heaven,
   people were united to God,
   the Creator emerged within creation,
   sinners were saved,
   the lost were found,
   the blind were given their sight,
   the lame were empowered,
   the captives were freed,
   debts were remitted,
   and the dead received life.
He took the cup, saying:
   “This cup is the new covenant in my blood,
shed for all people for the forgiveness of sins.
   Whenever you drink it, 
   do this in remembrance of me.”

The celebrant fills the cup.

On the night when he was born,
   the light began to shine
   on those who lived in a land of deep darkness.
“The light shines in the darkness
   and the darkness did not overcome it.” John 1:5
Receive the Body of Christ!
   Taste the fountain of immortality!
   Alleluia!  Alleluia!  Alleluia!

The logistics of communion distribution will have to be worked out relative to considerations of space and the number of participants.

Communion Music: 

Candlelighting Ceremony

We light our candles from the Christ Candles.
Please be careful….

*Song: “Silent Night, Holy Night” 60/122

In the beginning was the Word, 
and the Word was with God, 
and the Word was God. 
He was in the beginning with God. 
All things came into being through him, 
and without him not one thing came into being. 
What has come into being in him was life, 
and the life was the light of all people. 
The light shines in the darkness, 
and the darkness did not overcome it.
 And the Word became flesh and lived among us, 
full of grace and truth. 
From John 1:1-14

*Recessional Song: “Go, Tell It on the Mountain!” 29/136

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