Call to Worship
Take some time to be still, alone or together.
This is a time to quieten our thoughts and wait with God.
Psalm 116:12-15 (NIV)
What shall I return to the Lord
for all his goodness to me?
I will lift up the cup of salvation
and call on the name of the Lord.
I will fulfill my vows to the Lord
in the presence of all his people.
Song – TiS 179
Praise with joy the world’s Creator
Words – John Bell
Praise with joy the world’s Creator,
God of justice, love and peace,
source and end of human knowledge,
force of greatness without cease.
Celebrate the Maker’s glory,
Power to rescue and release.
Praise the Son who feeds the hungry,
frees the captive, finds the lost,
heals the sick, upsets religion,
fearless both of fate and cost.
Celebrate Christ’s constant presence –
Friend and Stranger, Guest and Host.
Praise the Spirit sent among us,
liberating truth from pride,
forging bonds where race or gender,
age or nation dare divide.
Celebrate the Spirit’s treasure –
foolishness none dare deride.
Praise the Maker, Son and Spirit,
one God in community,
calling Christians to embody
oneness and diversity.
Thus the world shall yet believe,
when shown Christ’s vibrant unity.
Readings
Prayer of Confession
We come in prayer with tears in our eyes,
and shame in our hearts.
Or we should…
What is happening to our world?
We come in prayer with tears in our eyes,
and shame in our hearts.
Or we should…
What is happening to our world?
We speak and sing about unity, healing and freedom
but that is not true in our world.
We confess that we are part of this broken world.
We confess……
I confess that I fail to recognise disadvantage when it doesn’t apply to me.
We confess… I confess that prejudice is invisible, unless it is aimed at me.
We confess… I confess I am unaware of grief, or illness, or family violence
if it is not happening to me.
Lord, have mercy on me and my failures.
Open my eyes and my heart.
Please forgive me.
Amen
Giving Birth To Laughter
A monologue by Sarah, to follow the reading.
Source: Spill The Beans Issue 16
So I laughed.
Yes, I laughed
when I heard.
Laughing was my default reaction after all those years.
It’s what everyone told me to do.
Look for the things that make you laugh.
Find the things that bring a moment’s lightness, a brief respite.
God knows I needed those moments.
And yes, I found them.
I learned to forget,
to step outside the guilt and the pain,
to be lost in the fleeting respite,
caught up in the wonder of the spring rain,
the flowers in the desert, the
look in my husband’s
eyes, those rare times
he still gazed at me with
love and not pity.
For long years, laughter never failed me. I
could even turn it on
as I watched all the mothering around me,
other women’s children taking their first steps,
running into my arms
while they were still too young
to understand my shame.
Did I trust God’s
laughable promise? Did
Abraham trust, even
as he fell into sardonic
mirth when he heard
the first time?
Of course
we sat down and looked at it seriously.
If it’s God’s promise, I reasoned, I’ll cope,
even with Hagar’s belly swelling. It all made sense.
And then I laughed.
I laughed at myself when no-one could hear me.
Who was I kidding?
How would I cope?
How did it make sense?
What was God doing?
What had I done wrong?
It all happened so easily for her.
Abraham loved the boy
his boy
and I saw the joy in him
that I had never been able to bring.
It was too much.
I called on the laughter but it would not come.
I searched for it in the winking stars,
in the smell of good soup,
in the faces of friends,
but it would not come.
It came with the visitors’ news.
The cakes were baking
and I was dusting the flour from my hands
when I heard them speak my name.
How did they know my name,
and why care to speak of me?
“Sarah shall have a son”.
They heard me laughing,
and would not let me deny it!
Praise God,
nor was there any denying the pleasure,
or the promise,
or my pregnant old body,
or the tears of joy in my husband’s eyes
when we held our son.
What did we name him?
We named him Laughter.
Reflection – Promises Kept
Song – Kyrie eleison
The next song is a lament and prayer for forgiveness.
The words ‘Kyrie eleison’ mean ‘Lord, have mercy on us’,
Look around you, can you see?
Times are troubled, people grieve.
See the violence, feel the hardness;
All my people weep with me.
Kyrie eleison,
Christe eleison
Kyrie eleison.
‘Walk among them, I’ll go with you,
Reach out to them with my hands.
Suffer with me and together
we will serve them, help them stand.’
Kyrie eleison,
Christe eleison
Kyrie eleison.
Forgive us, Father, hear our prayer.
We would walk with you anywhere,
through your suffering, with forgiveness,
take your life into the world.
Kyrie eleison,
Christe eleison
Kyrie eleison.
Bible – Matthew 9:35-10:8 (CEV)
Jesus went to every town and village. He taught in their meeting places and preached the good news about God’s kingdom. Jesus also healed every kind of disease and sickness. When he saw the crowds, he felt sorry for them. They were confused and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd.
[Read on in your own Bible about how Jesus called the twelve apostles. He sent them out with these instructions.]
Go only to the people of Israel, because they are like a flock of lost sheep. As you go, announce that the kingdom of heaven will soon be here. Heal the sick, raise the dead to life, heal people who have leprosy, and force out demons. You received without paying, now give without being paid.
Something to think about:
- Where do we see confused and ‘lost sheep’ in our world today?
- Where do we see this in our own country and neighbourhood? If you heard Jesus calling you by name to follow, what would he be asking you to do?
Prayers for Others
From Caroline Wallace
Heavenly Father, Loving God, Lord of lords and king of kings,
While we acknowledge the tough times we are currently facing, we are thankful for the privileges that many of us have: Free or affordable education, employment, roofs over our heads, and our friends and family.
There are many more things for us to be thankful for. You have always been good to us even when we repeatedly fail you and each other.
Father, it looks like there is no end to the current troubles being experienced in the US and around the globe. There seems to be no end to racial and gender inequality, or various forms of oppression at different levels of society.
People do not seem to be learning from history as it keeps repeating itself.
At a time when we all need to be united, there appears to be more division than ever before! There seems to be more misunderstanding and warring between governments and individuals, which gives the impression of very dark ages ahead of us rather than behind us.
Lord, help us all to hold onto you and find peace in this imperfect world.
Help us to receive these challenging times as opportunities to trust you.
We ask that you give world leaders the strength and wisdom they need to confront today’s problems. Help them put aside their own pre-conceived ideas, expectations, or agendas and enable them to empathise with marginalised communities and carefully listen to their stories of desperation.
We also pray for influential companies and organisations everywhere.
Enable them to pool their resources and respond to the plight of those who have been overlooked, underestimated, rejected, abused, or dominated.
We may not know what the future holds for us, but we have faith that you will continue to sustain us no matter what we go through.
In a world that often projects hate and violence, you are a God of mercy, of justice, of hope, and of peace. You are also a God of forgiveness and second chances, of unconditional love, and deliverance.
We pray that you deliver us from all the evil that we are witnessing now and remind us once again of your glorious presence through your healing hand upon humankind.
In the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.
Song – Goodness Is Stronger Than Evil
Words by Desmond Tutu, music by John Bell
Goodness is stronger than evil
Goodness is stronger than evil,
Love is stronger than hate,
Light is stronger than darkness,
Life is stronger than death.
Victory is ours, victory is ours,
Through him who loved us.
Blessing
The grace of the Lord Jesus be with you
and love be with you all.
Prepared for people in Gungahlin Uniting Church, ACT by Margaret Reeson