1 Kings 21 1-10, (11-14), 15-21a; Psalm 5:1-8; Galatians 2:15-21; Luke 7:36
- 8:3
Call to Worship
In the morning, God hears our voices as we
lift our prayers and songs.
In the morning, God whispers to us
in
the gentle breezes stirring the world.
In the morning, we look for God
alive and active around us.
In the morning, we find God playing
hopscotch
with the kids on the corner.
In the morning we come
together to worship our God.
In the morning, God gathers us up to lead
us
down the streets of justice and faithfulness.
Prayer of the
Day and our Lord's Prayer
In the morning,
Listening God,
you break
open your heart
to pour your love upon us;
you bathe our
tired and sore souls
with your healing tears;
you dry our
weeping
with the caress of your gentle Spirit.
In the
afternoon,
Hospitable Jesus,
even knowing we are sinners,
you
invite us to lunch,
so we can be nourished
with your
hope and peace.
No matter how deep in debt
we are to sin,
you pay
off the entire amount.
In the evening,
Spirit of our sighs,
you kiss us and call us
your Beloved,
as you tuck us into
bed
to keep watch over us
while we sleep.
In
every moment,
God in Community, Holy in One,
you are present with
us,
even as we lift the prayer Jesus has taught us,
Our Father . .
.
Call to Reconciliation
Too often, we believe our identity is shaped
by our job, our status, our good deeds. God would give us a new identity,
grounded in Jesus Christ. Let us confess our reluctance to lose who we
believe we are, so God can shape us into who we can be, as we pray together
saying,
Unison Prayer of Confession
We must admit, God our
Parent, how much we are like children. We become resentful over the fact
that you do not do what we think you should do. We pout when a friend
decides to spend more time with someone else. We can turn sullen when our
loved ones refuse to let us have our way.
You could bring disaster upon
us, Loving God, but you choose to give us what we don't deserve - the grace
and mercy of your heart. Pour out your tenderness upon us, so Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior, might live in us, and we might offer our lives in
service to others.
Silence is kept
Assurance of Pardon
God
not only listens to the cries on our lips, but also pays attention to the
groaning of our hearts. God restores us to wholeness, and invites us to a
new way of living.
We are welcomed, we are loved, we are given new life,
we are filled with peace. Thanks be to God, we are forgiven!
Amen.
Great Prayer of Thanksgiving
May the God of grace be with
you.
And also with you.
Lift your hearts to the One who feeds you at
this Table.
We bring them to God, who anoints us with grace and
life.
Sing to the One who hears you in every moment.
We offer our
songs, and our sighs to God, who promises to listen to us.
In the morning
you rose,
Graceful and grace-shaping God,
wandering through time and
space
sprinkling viriditas* throughout creation,
so that we might live in
your wonder:
stars rustling in the night,
settling down to
watch over us;
leaves breathing in and out
with gentle
sighs to lullaby us to sleep.
You planted Eden's vineyard near your
heart
so we might be close to you forever,
but we turned our faces
away,
listening to those two scoundrels,
sin and death, who
cursed you,
urging us not to eat of your joy.
Each morning, you
heard the sighs
of those who longed for you,
so you sent the prophets
,
but we continued to sell ourselves to evil.
So, in grace and hope, you
sent Jesus,
to love us and give himself for us.
As we come to your
house, invited by you;
as we take are places at the Table you have set,
we
sing in awe and wonder to you:
Holy, holy, holy are you, God who does
not delight in wickedness.
All creation calls to you in every
moment.
Hosanna in the highest!
Blessed is the One who
forgives our sin.
Hosanna in the highest!
You are holy, God who
spreads a feast for us,
and blessed is Jesus Christ, our Savior, our
host.
When we lay on our beds,
turning our faces to the shadows around
us,
he came to throw open the shutters,
that we might see
your grace pouring in upon us.
When we were bone weary
from wandering the
streets of hopelessness and fear,
he bathed our feet with your
tears.
When we had torn down
all the bridges back to you,
he
rebuilt them, using the stones of the empty tomb,
so we might
follow him home.
As we gather at this Table of grace,
as we celebrate
that we are crucified with Christ,
we speak of the mystery we know as
faith:
Christ died, that those two scoundrels,
death and
sin, might be defeated;
Christ arose, so he might live in us;
Christ will come, to anoint us with the abundant oil of
resurrection.
Through the abundance of your Holy Spirit,
which you
pour out upon us
and the gifts of the bread and cup,
we come to the feast
you have prepared.
Enter our lives, that as we eat
of the Bread which
makes us whole,
we might feel your kiss of grace,
taking it out into
all the world,
never to stop in sharing it
with everyone we meet
until
the whole creation is at peace.
Enter our hearts, that as
we drink
deeply of the cup, we might be
filled with living waters of
hope,
taking them to anoint all who
live in despair and
loss.
And when that last morning comes,
when we go to your house,
taking our places
at your Table, next to our sisters and brothers
from
every time and from every place,
we will sing our glad songs to you,
God
in Community, Holy in One, forever. Amen.
* - Hildegard of Bingen uses
this word to imagine the greening power of God
© Thom M.
Shuman