Saturday, November 30, 2013

Short liturgies for the lighting of the Advent Candles

First Advent Sunday: Good morning. During this first Season of the Christian Calendar, we are, as part of the world-wide church, reminded of the Advent of Christ, meaning his coming into our world. 

Candle light signifies Christ, the light of the world, who came to us as a Babe more than 2000 ago. 

But it is more than that! We are called to celebrate that Christ comes into our lives, our homes and our churches and that we are to prepare the way for his coming and prepare room for his staying with us. The progressive lighting of the candles every Advent Sunday symbolizes the joy of our anticipation of the Day of the Lord when he comes to complete and perfect the coming of his Kingdom in the new era in heaven and earth we are praying for.

We now light this candle—the Candle of Hope, symbolizing our longing for the Day of the Lord and our hope for the future.
Congregation’s responseCome Lord Jesus and grant us your hope, today and always!  (Candle is lit)

May our gracious God keep us ever ready and hopeful for the coming of Christ to redeem and to help us. As we worship him today, may this hope be born into our lives.  Come, let us worship God!

Second Advent Sunday!
Good morning. May God bless our worship today on this second Sunday in Advent. Think of the Baptist’s cry, urging us all to “Prepare the way for the Lord and make straight paths for him.”  In a world filled with conflict, war and violence, we hope for the day when God’s Messiah would usher in a new era of peace and justice.

We now light this candle—the Candle of Peace, symbolizing our longing for the coming of the peace of God into our lives.  
Congregation’s responseCome Lord Jesus and grant us your peace, today and always!  (Candle is lit).

May our loving God, while we pray for peace to prevail, enable each of us to work for his peace amidst the various conflicts that flourish in our lives and our world.  As we worship today, may his peace be born into our lives. Come, let us worship God!

Third Advent Sunday.
Good morning. May God bless our worship today on this third Sunday in Advent.  Remember John the Baptist’s joyful testimony about the coming Messiah.   Through the work of God’s Holy Spirit in our lives, we too are able to announce his coming into our world today and to share the joy of his presense in our lives with all around us. 

We now light this candle— the Candle of Joy, symbolizing the unfathomable joy we have in Christ.  
Congregation’s responseCome Lord Jesus and grant us your joy, today and always!  (Candle is lit)

May our loving God help us to rejoice in our salvation and may that joy fill all aspects of our lives that may we freely share it with others.  Come, let us worship God!

Fourth Advent Sunday
Good morning. May God bless our worship today on this fourth Sunday in Advent.  Remember the angel Gabriel’s proclamation that God’s love for the world would be revealed in a Child that would be born to a young woman of low estate.  From the One who came into the world on that first Christmas day, we learned the extent of God’s love and we also learned that each of us are truly beloved children of God Almighty.

We now light this candle—the Candle of Love, symbolizing our need for the amazing love of God shown through Jesus Christ, our Lord.
Congregation’s responseCome Lord Jesus and grant us your love, today and for all eternity!  (Candle is lit)

May our loving God help us to be in awe because his love for each of us knows no boundaries.  May his love be mirrored in all aspects of our lives as we share his love with others. Come, let us worship God! 


Afrikaans:
Kort, vars liturgieë vir die opsteek van die Advent-kerse
Eerste Adventsondag: Goeie môre!   Vandag is die eerste van 4 Sondae wanneer ons die Advent van Christus onthou, die feit dat Christus na ons toe kom. Die vier kerse verteenwoordig die 4 Sondae en die progressiewe aansteek van die kerse is ’n simbool van Christus, die Lig van die wêreld.
Meer as 2000 jaar gelede het Hy as ’n Baba na ons toe gekom, maar Hy wil steeds na ons toe kom en ons moet die pad vir sy koms gelykmaak en vir Hom plek maak in ons lewens, ons huise en ons kerke.  Ons sien ook uit na sy wederkoms wanneer Hy al die trane van ons oë sal afvee.   

Ons steek nou die eerste Advents-kers aan, die Kers van Hoop, wat ’n simbool is van ons verlange dat Christus sal kom om ons hoop te gee vir elke dag.  
Gemeente respons:   Kom Here Jesus en skenk ons hoop vir vandag en vir altyd.

Mag die genadige God ons help altyd hoopvol te wees, omdat Christus na ons toe kom. Terwyl ons die Here vandag aanbid, mag sy hoop in ons lewens herleef.  Kom ons aanbid God!  (Votum en seëngroet volg...)

Tweede Adventsondag.
Goeie môre, mag die Here vandag ons aanbidding seën op die tweede Adventsondag. Dink aan die oproep van Johannes die Doper om die pad vir die koms van die Messias gereed te maak.   In ’n wêreld vol konflik en geweld verwag ons dat die koms van Christus in ons wêreld vrede en geregtigheid vir almal sal bring. 

Ons steek nou die tweede Advents-kers aan - die Kers van Vrede, ’n simbool van Christus en van die vrede wat Hy bring. 
Gemeente respons:   Kom Here Jesus en skenk ons u vrede  vir vandag, en  vir altyd!

Mag die liefdevolle God ons in staat stel om vredemakers te wees wat ’n verskil maak in die lewens van mense om ons – en in ons wêreld. Terwyl ons vandag aanbid, mag God ons sy vrede skenk.  Kom ons aanbid God!

Derde Adventsondag.
Goeie môre, mag die Here ons aanbidding seën op hierdie derde Adventsondag. As ons onthou met hoeveel blydskap Johannes die Doper die koms van die Messias aangekondig het, mag dit ons inspireer om Christus met net soveel blydskap met ander deel, omdat Jesus na ons toe kom.

Ons steek nou die derde advents-kers aan – die Kers van Vreugde, ‘n simbool van ons verlange na die onuitspreeklike blydskap wat ons ervaar wanneer ons Jesus ontvang.
Gemeente respons:   Kom Here Jesus en skenk ons blydskap vir vandag en vir altyd.  

Mag die liefdevolle God elkeen van ons opreg bly maak oor ons verlossing en ons inspireer om hierdie vreugde met ander te deel. Terwyl ons vandag aanbid, mag die Here ons sy vreugde skenk.  Kom ons aanbid God!

Vierde Adventsondag.
Goeie môre, mag die Here vandag ons aanbidding seën op die vierde Adventsondag. Dink aan die aankondiging van die engel Gabriël dat God se liefde vir die wêreld openbaar is deur die geboorte van ’n Baba uit ’n jong vrou van nederige afkoms. Jesus het ons geleer dat ons die geliefde kinders van die Almagtige is.

Ons steek nou die vierde Advents-kers aan – die kers van Liefde - , ’n simbool van Christus en die wonderlike liefde van God wat ons in Christus leer ken.  
Gemeente respons:   Kom Here Jesus en skenk ons u liefde vandag, en tot in alle ewigheid.


Mag die liefdevolle God ons help ons om ons te verwonder oor die grenslose liefde wat Hy vir elkeen van ons het en mag ons sy liefde opgewonde met almal deel.  Terwyl ons aanbid vanoggend, mag ons sy liefde vir ons sien.  Kom ons aanbid God!  

Monday, November 25, 2013

Advent 2013

Ideas, prayers and readings for the Season of Advent – the four Sundays before Christmas, starting on 1 December 2013.

The word “Advent” essentially means “coming” and “expecting”.

A. During the Advent Season we in faith are looking forward to the day when the kingdom of Jesus will bring all distress to an end. And Jesus who promised to return to us says: “Yes, I am coming soon." (Rev 22:20).  It is a time for hope.

B. During this season we also remember that Jesus wants to come to our lives, here and now, through his Spirit’s work in us, and through us come to a lost world in dire need of him.  It is a time for peace with God and each other.

C.  God became a man and was born as a baby on that first Christmas, to become our Redeemer and King!   . It is a time to be filled with joy.

D.  .  God so much loved us that he sent his Son, that we may not perish but have eternal life.  This love we share with our fellow believers and with the whole world.    Ultimately Advent is a Season for love.

We remember during Advent that Jesus Christ promised to physically come to us again, to create a new heaven and earth in which we will live for all eternity! This expectation inspires us that the coming of the Lord brings hope, peace, joy and love to our lives, our churches and our world!

Central Message:  God gave his Son
During the Advent Sundays, until Christmas day, we will remember that Christ took on our weak, human nature and became one of us.   As the Apostle Paul puts it in 2 Cor 5: 21:  God made him who had no sin, to be sin for us so that in him, we might become the righteousness of God.

This is what Christ did for us during that first Christmas day. In taking on ”weak human flesh”, he associated himself with our dilemma which is the result of our mistakes, disobedience and sin. He came to live the life that God requires and we cannot accomplish, and lived it perfectly, holy and without sin, in our place! The Son of God became our brother and will never leave nor forsake us.

During the Season of Advent, the four weeks before Christmas, we want to celebrate that when God gave the gift of salvation, he did not send new laws and rules through which to figure out how we can be saved. No, he sent his Son to save us.

The central Advent message always remains that (John 3:16) God so much loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whosoever believes in him shall not perish, but have eternal life.

Let’s trust in the Son. Let’s rejoice because he did everything we could not do, to save us! Let’s pray that he will come again soon to dry all our tears and grant us peace.  Let’s wait with the same urgent love of the believers in the New Testament Church for the victorious and conquering return of Christ, our King.

The Advent Candles
The four Advent candles represent the four weeks of Advent. The progressive lighting of one more candle every Advent Sunday symbolizes the expectation and hope surrounding our Lord’s first coming into the world and the anticipation of his second coming to judge the living and the dead.
The lighting of candles during this Season signifies Christ, the Light of the world.

Each candle represents one of the Advent themes:
The first Sunday we light the candle of Hope,
Second Sunday the candle of Peace,
Third Sunday the candle of Joy
and the fourth Sunday the candle of Love.

Many congregations involve children and teens to each Sunday light the next candle, involving them not only in the exciting countdown to Christmas day, but instill the expectation of Christ coming into our lives, and Christ returning to us on the Day of the Lord.

Advent prayers when we light the Advent candles during the services each Sunday:
First Advent Sunday:  Gracious God, in the living of our busy daily lives, keep us ever ready, ever faithful and ever hopeful for the day of Christ’s return. As we worship you, may this hope be born into our lives.

Second Advent Sunday:  Loving God, while we patiently wait for Christ’s return and for your peace to ultimately prevail, enable each of us to work for peaceful solutions to the various conflicts which abound in our lives and our world.  As we worship you, may your peace be born into our lives.

Third Advent Sunday:  Merciful God, while we patiently wait for Christ’s coming again, may each of us rejoice in our salvation; and may that joy permeate all aspects of our lives and be freely shared with others. As we worship you, grant us your joy.

Fourth Advent Sunday:  Gracious Creator, while we patiently wait for Christ’s coming again, inspire us when we celebrate Christmas now soon to come, to marvel on the fact that your love for each of us knows no bounds. May this love now be mirrored in all aspects of our lives as we freely share it with others.

Suggested Readings during Advent:
Second Advent Sunday: Isaiah 11:1-10; Psalm 72:1-7, 18-19; Romans 15:4-13; Matthew 3:1-12

The liturgical colour for Advent is purple, the royal colour, because we expect the coming of our King.  In recent years blue became an alternative colour for Advent in some congregations, because purple also is the liturgical colour for Lent.

In family practice, the Advent candles are usually lit at home on Sundays at lunch or dinner time, after the blessing of the food.  The same prayers as above and one of the readings can be part of this beautiful and edifying ancient Christian practice to follow at ho

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Feast of Christ the King! Recommitted to our Lord.

Revelation 1: 5 and 6.  To him who loves us and has freed us from our sins by his blood and has made us to be a kingdom and priests to serve his God and Father—to him be glory and power forever and ever! Amen.

In loving us and freeing us from our sins, Christ has made us, all who trust in him for our salvation, to be a kingdom of priests serving our God. We are all a part of the kingdom that is not from this world, but from God. We are priests who serve as mediators between God and this world.

On the festival day of Christ the King, we re-committed ourselves to surrender to Christ as the sovereign of our lives and to listen to his voice as those who seek the truth. Our commitment means that we do not hesitate to, in every circumstance, declare that Christ is King and that he is above all powers and rulers and worldly authorities.

If to Christ our Lord is given all power in heaven and on earth, if we were purchased by his precious blood, if we submit to his dominion and if this power embraces all people, it must be clear that not one of our abilities is exempt from his rule and reign. Christ reigns in our minds, in our wills, in our thoughts and emotions and in our bodies.
Glory and power to the King of kings!


Wednesday, November 20, 2013

BREATHE, by Theo Groeneveld.

The Rev Theo Groeneveld, minister at Emmanuel Presbyterian Church in the east of Pretoria, South Africa, (http://emmanuel.org.za) wrote:

I was thinking about the end of year chaos everyone finds themselves in and put this together.


As we get into this crazy time of year, remember to BREATHE
Be assured (present continuous tense) that you are loved by and precious to God (Isaiah 43:1-3)
Remember that nothing can separate you from God (Romans 8:38-39)
Ease up on yourself - God doesn't see your failures - He sees what Christ did for you (Romans 8:1)
Ask God to give you peace in the midst of your challenges - He will do it (Philippians 4:6-7)
Thank God for all the good things you have - It shifts your focus (Colossians 2:6-7)
Hold on to the promises of God's Word which will light our way (Psalm 119:105)
Exalt God in all you do - It is life's ultimate purpose (Colossians 3:17)



Monday, November 18, 2013

Where shall we go and what bread shall we eat?

In John 6 we are told that many followers of Jesus left him.  His claims of being the “One that came from heaven”, of being the Bread of life and that those who did not eat of his flesh and drink of his blood could not be his followers, were simply too much for them.

Jesus asked for a complete and total commitment to himself. His followers could not even comprehend such dedication and left him.  This is the reason why Jesus asked the “twelve” in John 6: 67 and 68 an important question - “Do you want to go away as well?”

The image is clear.  Just as bread sustains physical life, so does Jesus Christ sustain eternal life. Just as God once saved his people from starvation in the dessert by giving them manna, so in Jesus Christ, God saves his people from eternal death.  In both cases what is necessary for life to be sustained, is a gift from God.
Jesus Christ alone gives life. And all of this is still true today.

Verse 67 - 69:  Jesus said to the Twelve, “Do you want to go away as well?” Simon Peter answered him, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life, and we have believed, and have come to know, that you are the Holy One of God.”

While many today abandon the call to follow Christ as their first love and first priority, do you too want to leave his service and stop following him, because he asks too much of you? 

And if you decide to go away – where would you go, and what bread would you have to eat?

Friday, November 15, 2013

Prayer for the Feast of Christ the King (2013), with Scripture Lessons and Sermon Ideas.

The Feast of Christ the King: 24 November 2013.
This feast is celebrated on the last Sunday of the Christian Calendar! 
Sunday 1 December 2013 is the first Sunday of Advent, the “New Year” of Christianity.

A liturgical Prayer for the Feast of Christ the King on 24 November 2013:
Gracious God and heavenly Father, we come into your presence in the name of our Lord Jesus, the Almighty Christ and King of all!

Today, Lord Jesus Christ, we celebrate your glorious victory. We gladly bring honour to you, our Redeemer, who has not only redeemed us when we were lost, and bought us for God your Father with your precious blood, by your death on the cross and your resurrection, but also ascended to the right hand of God as King and Lord of all.  We rejoice that your Kingdom has come on earth, just as it is in heaven.

We bring honour to you, our Saviour, whom we call Christ, the King, who victoriously reigns now, and reigns forever.  You, dear Lord, dealt with our every need, delivered us from every enemy, healed us from all sin, harm and injury and you are worshipped when heaven and earth bow down before you as Lord of heaven and earth. One day every knee shall bow and every tongue confess, that you, Lord Jesus, are the King of kings and the Lord of lords!

Majestic Lord, everything promised about your reign has not happened on our earth yet! You are the King, and yet, your dominion is in many ways not visible and is still coming to us and to our world.  We live in hope, and in faith, that we truly heard the Word of God, that testifies that you will come in glory to effect in the smallest detail of your glorious reign.

King Jesus, thank you that you not only bring salvation to us, but through your work that you do through the ministry of your Church, you bring redemption and salvation to the whole world, yes, to the ends of the earth.  Your people accept the grace that you bring, and commit their lives to the power of the Holy Spirit who empowers your children and your Church to fulfil your commission to preach the gospel to everyone. Now bring justice wherever we serve you and bring hope and light where darkness still hides your glorious reign and salvation.

Dear Lord of every aspect and facet of our lives, help us to live only for your honour, glory and reign. Help us to be obedient, by the power of your resurrection and of your Spirit. We know that nothing will separate us from the love of God that we received in Christ our King and our Lord! 

We pray for all your servants, majestic Lord! For those who preach your word and for those who listen. Protect and guide all the missionaries sent to the ends of the earth to proclaim salvation in you. Guide and keep them and bless their work for you.  Call many more servants to do your work and make us obedient to your call.

In your mercy, heal the sick and comfort those who are weeping. Set the captives free and grant relief to the poor.  Sanctify those who are powerful and influential and humble and bring to fall those who are proud. 
Bring to an end the kingdom of darkness and let your majesty shine as the light of the world.

Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world, grant us your peace.
And now, great King of kings and Lord of lords –
have mercy on us, and on all your people.
In your Name, Lord Jesus Christ, we pray!
Amen.


Scripture Lessons for the Feast of Christ the King: 
Jeremiah 23:1-6;
Psalm 46; 
Luke 22: 14 - 30.   

Sermon Ideas, using the reading from Luke 22: 14 - 30.
Luke 22: 24 – 30:  A dispute also arose among them as to which of them was considered to be greatest. Jesus said to them, “The kings of the Gentiles lord it over them; and those who exercise authority over them call themselves Benefactors. But you are not to be like that. Instead, the greatest among you should be like the youngest, and the one who rules like the one who serves.   For who is greater, the one who is at the table or the one who serves? Is it not the one who is at the table? But I am among you as one who serves.   You are those who have stood by me in my trials.   And I confer on you a kingdom,   just as my Father conferred one on me,  so that you may eat and drink at my table in my kingdom and sit on thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel.

Introduction:   At the institution of the Lord’s Supper, Jesus offered his disciples the “Cup of the New Covenant” and established his Church on his sacrifice on the cross and on his glorious resurrection. No more would the sacrament of the Passover reminds of being delivered from Egypt, but the sacrament of his Supper would remind of deliverance from the kingdom of darkness and entering into the glorious reign of the Almighty Christ. In the same way, the sacrament of Baptism would replace the Sacrament of Circumcision and initiate all the believers and their children into the Church, the sharp sword of the Kingdom of God that brings life and purpose to every facet of our lives.
Because the Prince of Peace reigns and we are the beneficiaries of his grace and mercy!

What does his reign brings to our lives, today?

Jesus, Ruler and Judge, is like one who serves.  
Although the one who sits down to eat is greater than the one who serves him,
Jesus rules like the one who serves and not like the one who sits down to eat.
At his Table Jesus establishes a Kingdom where we receive from him forgiveness, purpose and assurance of his love and redemption, while we may sit down to enjoy his love and his mercy.
Therefore we serve and honour a King who enables us, who delivers us, who employs us and who serves all our needs in every aspect of our lives.

We too should be servants like our King is, serving the lost world, and the Church,  with all the benefits of his broken Body and his Blood.
·         The kings of the Gentiles lord it over them; and those who exercise authority over them call themselves Benefactors. But you are not to be like that.
·         The greatest among you should be like the youngest, and the one who rules like the one who serves.
·         Disputes among Christians about who are the most important show that they still embrace the worldly values of authority and power, and not the example that Jesus gave us of “ruling through service” and “winning through sacrifice”.

Jesus as the one who displays love, enables freedom from sin and oppression of evil and redeems believers from the tyranny of both sin and sinners.
Christ creates a kingdom and establishes priests for God his Father who serves as he did and rules as he does.  It is therefore not to earthly powers that Christians owe allegiance.  It is not around political parties, cultural groupings or any other caucuses that Christians should unite!   

We, Christians, are a nation composed of various tribes, cultures and languages, but we share first and foremost the authority of our holy Christ, who sought us and bought us and made us partakers of his New Covenant and his glorious Kingdom that grants salvation, freedom, love, justice and righteousness to our world by serving us and feeding us of himself. 
To him we dedicate our worship, our obedience, our allegiance and our service and in his Name we proclaim that the Kingdom of God is near! 

We are called to unite under the rule of Christ, to become rulers and judges (verse 30) according to his example.  As such our allegiance to Christ may lead us to resist political tyranny, economical oppression and corruption and cultural divides and enmity.

Yet most of all, as we unite under the rule of Christ the King  -  as we stand by the Christ in his trials and the trials of his Body on earth, we testify that he is the true Saviour of the world, the deliverer from sin and judgment and our hope for the future, even for eternal life! 

“You are those who have stood by me in my trials.   And I confer on you a kingdom,   just as my Father conferred one on me,  so that you may eat and drink at my table in my kingdom and sit on thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel.”

Monday, November 11, 2013

Distasteful lukewarm worshipers!

Revelation 3: 15 17: I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other!   So, because you are lukewarm—neither hot nor cold—I am about to spit you out of my mouth. You say, ‘I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.’ But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked.

The passage in Revelation 3: 14 – 22 addresses the church of Laodicea. Their material prosperity at the time caused this church to be spiritually asleep. Jesus Christ described this distasteful condition as “lukewarm” and invites them to repent of their condition and make him the centre of their love and passionate worship once again.

Hypocrisy based on false (materialistic) self-confidence makes you lukewarm which represents being unendurable and distasteful to God.  Christ’s warning is that he is about to spit you out of his mouth. You may be lost forever.

Yet Christ’s encouragement, his promise, is that he stands knocking at the door of the household of his faith community. If we hear his voice and open the door, he will come in, have true fellowship with us again and feast with us. Jesus wants to change distasteful, unfaithful, lukewarm Christians into enthused, passionate and useful followers of Christ again.

Jesus is ready to cover the shamefulness of our unfaithfulness and restore his relationship with us that we may experience the full and complete blessing of true fellowship with him and of meaningful worship once more.