Friday, November 22, 2024

Liturgy w/communion for December 1, 2024 (Advent 1-C)

  Texts: Jeremiah 33:14-16; Psalm 25:1-10; 1st Thessalonians 3:9-13; Luke 21:25-36

Call to Worship Because of You, Righteous God,
we begin our journey to Bethlehem, trusting that You will lead us
down the paths of faithfulness. For You, Child Jesus, we wait, on this day of anticipation and hope, in the days of doubt and worry. With You, Spirit of Advent, we serve, those for whom this season
is not one of joy; those whose lives are empty
of family and friends. Prayer of the Day Because of You, Fulfiller of promises, we come to know the way to Bethlehem, where justice is born to a shunned family, where the riches of Your love are born into poverty. Because of You, Sign of our redemption, grace sprouts hope in the winter of our despair, goodness overcomes evil in the streets of our cities, love transforms hate in the hardest of hearts. Because of You, Abnegator of our fears, we are taught to pray in the shadows of our worries, and to trust that Your peace is preferable to those easy prejudices sold on every corner. Because of You, God in Community, Holy in One, we will be led in this holy season to the place of our hope and redemption, even as we pray, saying, (The Lord’s Prayer) Call to Reconciliation If only our hurtful words, our damaging actions, our foolish choices would just go away.
But they don’t, and so we offer them, as well as ourselves, to God for forgiveness
and for our healing. Please join me, as we pray together saying, Unison Prayer for Forgiveness The chances we have to be more compassionate; the moments to offer hope to a lonely friend; the good fortune we could give to those who have so little. The signs are all around us, Good and Upright God, of how we fail to live as your people. Do not meditate on our bungling ways, God of steadfast love, but remember the mercy of Your heart. That mercy which forgives us; that mercy which makes us whole; and especially, that living mercy who came down one night so long ago, Jesus the Advent of our redemption. Amen. Silence is kept Assurance of Pardon Raise your heads, children of God! In the bleak mid-winter of our lives, our redemption draws near. In the springtime of our doubts, the kingdom of God approaches. Even when we feel most alone, the One who comes to us is the salvation promised so long ago. Thanks be to God, we are forgiven! Amen. Prayer of Dedication/Offering Because of You, Abundant God, we have blessings to offer to others. May You use our gifts to restore hope to the despairing, to feed the hungry, and to fill the empty hearts of the lonely. This we ask in the name of Jesus. Amen. Great Prayer of Thanksgiving May the coming God be with you. And also with you. Lift up your hearts, people of God,
your redemption draws near. We will offer them to the One who leads us
down paths of faithfulness. Join together in singing thanksgiving
to God, our righteousness. We praise the One for whom we wait,
this day and every day. The days of creation came, God of goodness, when You spoke on that first morning, calling forth budding flowers for each spring, warm breezes for summer days, tumbling leaves in the autumn, bright, brittle stars on winter nights. You did all this, and so much more, so we might discover Your ways, but we chose to walk the paths paved by sin and death. Prophets came, speaking of Your promises and calling us back to Your truths, but we continued to reflect on the teachings of temptation. So You sent Jesus to us, Your Word which will never fade. With those whose hearts are strong in holiness, with those who long for justice for all people, we offer our songs of thanksgiving: Holy, holy, holy are You, God our righteousness. Because of You, all creation awaits Your advent. Hosanna in the highest!
Blessed is the One who comes to us in weakness. Hosanna in the highest! You are holy, God of our salvation, and Your Child is the bearer of justice. He set aside great glory to come incognito to us. Knowing our fears, he showed us how to trust in You. Feeling our despairs, he filled us with Your overflowing hope. Experiencing our death, he went into the grave so death might become a safe place for us, and we would receive Your redemption. As we set out on this Advent journey, as we seek to walk the way to Bethlehem, we remember that mystery we call faith: Christ died,
the Branch broken on the unjust tree; Christ was raised,
declaring ‘the Lord is my resurrection!’ Christ will return, the advent
of God’s glory and grace for all. Come now to Your children gathered at the Table, pouring out Your Spirit on the gifts of the Bread and of the Cup. This is the bread which, though broken, strengthens us to stand up for justice and to face the bullies named terror and hate. This is the cup which overflows with grace, so we might transform our communities into safe places for all people; so we might see our siblings in those the world would have us fear. And when we raise our heads to see our redemption draw near at the end of all time, we will join our siblings in singing Your praises forever and ever, God in Community, Holy in One. Amen. Sending Now may our God prepare us
to serve our siblings. We will devote ourselves to walking
with others to Bethlehem. Now may our Lord Jesus Christ steer us
into all the places we do not want to go.
We will throw ourselves into the mission
of feeding the hungry, into the privilege of learning from the poor. Now may the Holy Spirit move us
to increase in love for others. We will take up the cause of justice
in every corner of our lives, we will help to bring the kingdom of hope
near to everyone around us.
(c) Thom M. Shuman

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Liturgy w/communion for November 24, 2024 (Reign of Christ/Christ the King - B)

  Texts: 2 Samuel 23:1-7; Psalm 132:1-12, (13-18); Revelation 1:4b-8; John 18:33-37

Call to Worship
We have chosen to be here, where God remembers us.
God comes to us, the One who was and is and is to come.
Like leaves skipping over the carpet of grass:
God comes to us, the One who was and is and is to come.
Like the first glimpses of the sun peeking over the horizon:
God comes to us, the One who was and is and is to come.
Like the moon lighting our way on a cloudless, autumn night:
God comes to us, the One who was and is and is to come.

Prayer of the Day
Almighty God:
from the beginning of time
to the end of eternity,
you have chosen
to use your power and majesty
     to love us,
     to redeem us,
     to shape us as your people.

King of Kings
and Lord of Lords:
you became weak
     so you could confront
     the strength of sin and death,
confounding their ridicule
with your resurrection.

Spirit of God,
resting upon us:
may your power enflame us
     with your peace;
may your peace touch us
     with your grace;
may your grace fill us
     with your hope;
may your hope lead us
into your Kingdom.

God in Community, Holy in One,
may your word be on our lips,
as we pray together as Jesus
has taught us, saying,
(The Lord’s Prayer)

Call to Reconciliation
While there are many with power in our world - power to hurt us, power to hire or fire us, power to control us - only God has the power to forgive us and make us new people. Let us confess how we fear the power of the world, and welcome the power of God's grace.

Unison Prayer for Forgiveness
     The choices we make, Mighty God, reveal who we are. Choosing the lies of the world, your Word has not been on our lips. Choosing independent and isolated lives, we do not reflect your Spirit in our actions towards others. Choosing to exalt the powerful of our day, we are unable to follow the One whose weakness gives us life.
     Forgive us, God who became weak for our sake. Do not turn your face from us, but help us to face ourselves honestly. Free us from our captivity, so we may faithfully follow Jesus Christ, our King, our Lord, our Savior.

Silence is kept

Assurance of Pardon
Shout for joy, children of God! The God who was and is and is to come loves you, forgives you, and renews you.
God's Spirit rests upon us, grace and peace are the gifts of our loving God. Amen.

Prayer of Dedication/offering
As we offer our gifts in this moment to you, Holy God, we pray that they might be used to bring hope, to bring healing, to bring new life to all your people.  In Jesus' name, we pray.  Amen. 

Great Prayer of Thanksgiving
May the Rock of our lives be with you!
And also with you!
People of God, open your hearts to the One who loves us.
We will not turn away from the God of grace.
Children of God, lift your voices in thanksgiving to the One who has freed us from sin.
Our souls rejoice in the One who is, who was, who is to come.

You entered the headquarters
of chaos, Mighty One,
casting aside the shadows
so that the sun might shine
on that cloudless first day,
the morning rain glistening
off the verdant grass.
Humanity was clothed in righteousness,
to listen to your voice, to be your people.
Yet, we moved into death's dwelling place,
resting our feet on sin's comforting stool.
Having made an everlasting covenant with us,
you sent the prophets, your words
springing from their lips,
but we would not listen to their voices.
Then you sent Jesus to us,
the One who loves us
and frees us from our bondage.

We lift our voices in glad song to you,
joining our voices with those around us,
and all your servants in heaven:

Holy, holy, holy are you, God of amazing imagination.
All creation echoes with cries of wonder.
Hosanna in the highest!

Blessed is the One who is, who was, who is to come.
Hosanna in the highest!

Holy are you, God of every age,
and blessed is the favorite of your heart, Jesus Christ.
For this, he was born,
that we might be swaddled in mercy;
for this, he came to us,
that we might follow him
into that kingdom which is forever;
for this, he went to the cross
testifying to the truth
that sin has no power over us,
that death cannot defeat your love.

Remembering all the hardships he endured,
praising you for the gift of new life in the resurrection,
we tell of that mystery we call faith:

Dying, Christ was our salvation;
rising, Christ is our new life;
returning, Christ is to come to bring us home.

Turn your face towards us,
and pour out your Spirit
upon this Table of grace,
and your children gathered around it.
As we eat of the bread,
we will open our souls
to listen to your voice,
which sends us to speak out
for the misused and oppressed of our time.
As we drink from the cup,
we will open our hearts,
so we might go into the world,
to speak truth to those
who have only known lies,
to serve all whom the world has forgotten.

And when the time comes and Christ reigns forever,
over sin, over death, over all creation,
we will gather at the feast you have prepared for us,
our hearts overflowing with joy
as we sing your praises forever and ever,
God in Community, Holy in One. Amen.

Sending
Let us go forth to serve God's children in weakness,
so others might find the strength to live.
Let us go forth as powerless as Jesus,
to empower others with hope.
Let us go forth with our arms full of the Spirit's peace,
so the world might be healed of all its brokenness.


(c) Thom M. Shuman

Liturgy w/communion for Thanksgiving Day RCL Year B

 Texts: Joel 2:21-27; Psalm 126; 1st Timothy 2:1-7; Matthew 6:25-33


Call to Worship

Our help is in the name of the Lord who made heaven and earth.
We glorify our God with songs of thanksgiving and joy.
God has done great things for us, filling us with grace.
God fed our ancestors in the wilderness, God clothes us with hope.
We will offer our hearts to God, always saying, 'Thank you!'
to the One who loves us.
We will sing our praises, shouting of God's presence in our lives.


Prayer of the Day
Hot showers in the morning
and cool breezes in the evening;
work that provides for our families,
and abundance that makes us generous;
silly jokes told by third graders,
and the silent tears of a grandmother
lost in her childhood forever.
What blessings are ours, Creation's Joy!

Teachers who patiently help us with our math,
and mentors who keep us on the right paths;
friends who shovel snow off sidewalks before we waken,
and employers whose hearts are greater than their profits;
piano teachers who smile at our repeated mistakes,
coaches who teach us (one more time)
how to curl the ball into the goal.
What blessings are ours, Servant of Joy!

Dogs who bounce us awake early in the day
and cats who lullaby us to sleep at night;
grandfathers who teach us how to whittle
and sisters who give up a date to baby sit;
little boys who always forget to wipe their mouths
and folks who always remember to say 'thank you.'
What blessings are ours, Joyous Spirit!

God in Community, Holy in One,
thanksgiving is in every word we speak,
even as we pray as Jesus taught us, saying,
(The Lord’s Prayer)

Call to Reconciliation

We wonder what's for lunch, we worry about work tomorrow, we fret about the test that is coming up. So much worry, so much time waster over things we cannot control. The One who showers earth with rain, who places the stars in the autumn sky, is the same One who wraps mercy tight around you, who feeds us on healing and hope. Let us confess how our worries keep us from trusting the God who hears us and restores us to new life. Please join me as we pray,

Unison Prayer for Forgiveness
  Because we live in this modern, tech-driven, twittering age, we often forget what you have done for us, God of every blessing. We pat ourselves on the back for our ability to learn new computer skills, but have forgotten that life is more than a machine. We have more than we could ever use yet, like squirrels, store up more and more. Our faith is often pushed to the back of the closet, to make room for all the fears we wear so easily.
   Forgive us, Restorer of life. As you clothe us with your grace and mercy, may we share with those who have so little. As our hearts overflow with your love and wonder, may we offer them as gifts to everyone we meet. As you feed us with your joy and hope, may we welcome to the Table all those who lives are filled with tears and pain. As we gather with family and friends during this season, may we continue to give thanks for the gift of Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior.  Amen.


Silence is kept

Assurance of Pardon

This is the good news: as God dresses creation in wonder, so you will be clothed in grace; as God pours out abundance upon the earth, so you will be blessed with peace and joy.
We don't say it often enough, but thanks be to God for healing, for life, for wonder, for mercy. We are blessed, for we are forgiven. Amen.

Great Prayer of Thanksgiving

The Lord of blessings be with you.
The Lord be with you, also.
Be glad and rejoice, God's people,
lifting your hearts to the restorer of lives.
We offer them to the God who clothes us in grace.
People of God, come to the Table where you shall eat and be satisfied.
With shouts of joy, we gather to praise the name of God!

Your mouth was filled with laughter,
God of our every moment,
as you sang creation into being.
The heavens rang with shouts of joy,
as fruit-bearing trees sprang up,
as green pastures rippled with wonder.
Crafted in your image, you would
satisfy us with the bounty of grace,
but we chose the destroyer, death,
hanging out with the life-cutter, sin.
Prophets and psalmists were sent by you,
longing to restore us to your side,
but we put their words to shame.
So that everyone might be saved,
Jesus came to be with us,
herald of your grace,
bringer of your truth.

With those who lifted thanks by crossed rivers,
with those who offered gratitude for simple gifts,
we join our voice in praising your name:

Holy, holy, holy are you, God of wonder and delight.
All creation is filled with your joy.
Hosanna in the highest!

Blessed is the One who comes to clothes us in grace.
Hosanna in the highest!


Holy are you, Restorer of broken lives,
and blessed is Jesus Christ, Mediator of salvation.
Seeing the nightmare of our lives,
he became one of us, so we
might see the dreams you have for us.
Knowing how our hearts overflowed
with fear, bitterness, and worries,
he came with peace and comfort.
Teaching that the body is more than sin,
that life is more than death,
he became our ransom on the cross,
our salvation by rising from the grave.

As we give thanks for his life and death,
as we shout with joy for his resurrection,
we speak of that mystery we call faith:

Christ died, the righteousness for all.
Christ was raised, the resurrection for all.
Christ will return, the fulfillment for all.


Pour out your Spirit
doing great things with the bread and the cup.
Empty, we will be filled
with the plenty of your grace,
the broken bread strengthening us
so we might bring healing to a world
shattered by violence and despair.
Longing for hope, we shall be satisfied
with the cup of blessing and hope,
our lives overflowing
with your love and compassion,
pouring ourselves out for the
poor and marginalized of our time.

And when all our worrying hours have ended,
when we are clothed in your mercy forever,
we will gather with our sisters and brothers,
our mouths filled with laughter,
our hearts echoing glad songs of joy to you,
God in Community, Holy in One. Amen.

(c) Thom M. Shuman

Sunday, November 10, 2024

Liturgy w/communion for November 17, 2024 (Pentecost 26/Trinity 25/Proper 28/Ordinary 33 - B)

 Texts: 1st Samuel 1:4-20; 1st Samuel 2:1-10; Hebrews10:11-14 (15-18), 19-25; Mark 13:1-8

Call to Worship
Come, let us give thanks to God!
We gather together to praise the One who strengthens the weak,
and hears the prayers of the forgotten.
Come, let us give thanks to Christ!
We gather together to sing of the One who calls us to serve those
who are hungry and alone at this time of year.
Come, let us give thanks to the Spirit!
We gather together to exalt the One who provokes us to love
not only our family and friends, but the guest among us.

Prayer of the Day
You raise up the poor,
to give them the best rooms in your house;
you pull the broken
from the dust of the world,
brushing them off and clothing them with joy;
you exalt those we have pushed aside,
and let them say grace at the feast in heaven.
You are our God, and we worship you.

When we are tempted to wander off after
the rumors of sin,
you guard our feet so we can walk
as faithful people;
when we think we need to pay attention
to all the gossip around us,
you give us a double portion
of good news, so we will not fear.
You are the Christ, and we will listen to you.

When no one else will listen to us,
we can pour out our soul to you;
when no one notices us,
you see our misery, and fill us with joy;
when everyone else forgets who we are,
you remember us and call us by name.
You are our Spirit of Love, and we welcome you into our hearts.

God in Community, Holy in One, we raise our prayers to you,
even as we speak the words of Jesus,
(The Lord’s Prayer)

Call to Reconciliation
Longing for the touch of God, we cry out; humbled by the awareness of our human nature and brokenness, we bring our prayers of confession to God, praying together,

Unison Prayer for Forgiveness
     We have to admit, Holy Listener, that we are more likely to be irritated by the lives of others, rather than being provoked to love them. When we are called to encourage those around us, too often our actions and words discourage them. Offered lives of peace and hope, we wander around filled with anxiety and despair.
     Forgive us, Rock of Redemption. Cleanse our hearts, so we might be more loving; keep us on the path of faithfulness, so we might find those whom we are called to serve; give us your words, so we might confess your hope offered to all who are broken, who are lost, who cry out to you. This we pray in the name of Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior.

Silence is kept

Assurance of Pardon
This is the good news: God gives us hope, God gives us peace, God gives us joy so we may share these gifts with everyone we meet.
Thanks be to God, who has forgiven us and provoked us to love others and to serve all who are around us. Amen.

Prayer of Dedication/Offering
We who are full can now give bread to others.  We who are well-off can reach out to raise up the poor.  We who have everything can offer a seat of honor to those who have nothing.  We who are blessed by you, Exalted God, can be blessings to others.  And so we pray that the gifts we have may give hope to the despairing, give strength to the weak, and justice to the oppressed.  Amen.

Great Prayer of Thanksgiving
May God who is faithful be with you.
And also with you.
Hold fast to the confession of our hope, God's people!
Our hearts will not waver in testifying to God's grace.
Encourage one another to go forth to serve the world.
With glad songs, and lives of service, we will proclaim our God.

God of wonder and power:
by a single word spoken into
the silent emptiness of chaos
creation burst forth early in the morning.
Day after day, your imagination
crafted beauty beyond compare,
meadows sprinkled clean with joy's water,
the sun appearing through dawn's curtains.
You offered humanity a home for all time,
but we hired ourselves out to sin,
becoming bloated on the bread of death.
Through the prophets, you offered
again and again to take us back but,
year after year, we continued to provoke
you with our rebellious nature.
You sent Jesus to us, so your hope
might be written upon our heats,
so we might be redeemed
by your singular Word of love.

So, we lift our voices in praise to you,
joining with Hannah and Samuel,
with Penninah and her forgotten children,
singing your grace forever and ever:

Holy, holy, holy are you, God who listens to prayers.
All heaven and earth reveals your creativity.
Hosanna in the highest!

Blessed is the One who comes to give himself for us.
Hosanna in the highest!

Holy are you, God of all the faithful,
and blessed is Jesus Christ, perfecter of the sanctified.
He sat beside the doorpost of glory,
seeing the acid tears of our despair
etch our faces with deep canyons,
listening while our lips struggled
to form our cries for help and hope.
Though he found favor in your sight,
he became one of us,
knowing our misery,
befriending our loneliness,
cradling our despair in his heart.
By the single act of going to the cross,
and giving himself to the grave,
he destroyed the power of sin and death,
that we might live with you
for all time beyond time.

As we celebrate the faithful life of our Brother,
as we remember the redemptive death of our Savior,
we would laud that mystery we call faith:

By Christ's death, we are made whole;
by Christ's resurrection, we are made alive;
by Christ's return, we will inherit a seat at the Lamb's Feast.

With a single word of 'welcome!'
you pour out your Spirit
upon the simple gifts of redemption,
writing the names of your children
on the place cards which seat them
next to the Groom at the Wedding Banquet.
As we brush the crumbs
of the Bread of life from our lips,
may we reach out to brush
the ashes of despair off
the hopeless around us.
As we lift the cup of hope
to our lips and drink deeply,
may we be as eager to lift
the poor from poverty's dusty floor,
offering them your living waters.

And when our lives are perfected in glory,
when we are gathered for all time
with our sisters and brothers from every time,
our hearts will celebrate your love and hope for us,
God in Community, Holy in One. Amen.

Sending
Go forth now as God's people.
We will go to offer joy to those in misery,
to remember all who have been forgotten.
Go forth now as sisters and brothers of Jesus.
We will go to offer the best rooms of our hearts to the lonely,
to pick up all those we have knocked down.
Go forth now as hearts of the Spirit.
We will go to share a double portion of grace with the empty,
to invite others to walk the paths of faith with us.

(c) Thom M. Shuman

Monday, November 04, 2024

Liturgy w/communion for November 10, 2024 (Pentecost 25/Trinity 24/Prober 27/Ordinary 32 - B)

 Texts: Ruth 3:1-5, 4:13-17; Psalm 127; Hebrews 9:24-28; Mark 12:38-44

Call to Worship
God's Word called into being the pumpkins,
the geese who fly south, the leaves which litter our lawns.
In awe, we come into the presence of the God of vivid imagination.
God's arms reach down and gather up
children, lovingly placing us in grace's lap.
In joy, we reach up to the God who loves us completely.
God's Spirit fills our lungs, so we can cry out for justice
for the broken, the young, the old, the abandoned of our time.
In service, we join with our God to build hope in our world.

Prayer of the Day
In gentle touches of fathers,
in calming words of mothers,
you care for us;
through teachers in schools,
neighbors at the corner,
colleagues who share jobs with us,
you touch us with your peace.
We worship you, Holy God,
with our words and with our silence.

You appeared but once,
yet all people have been
cleansed in your grace;
you lived but once,
yet every life is redeemed
by your love;
you died but once,
and all people will live
in your kingdom forever.
Jesus, Friend of the fallen,
we follow you with our lives.

Stained by the pride of the world,
you wash us with your tears;
made naked by the criticisms of others,
you clothe us with your grace;
condemned by those around us,
you hallow us with your hope.
We welcome you into our hearts,
Spirit of Joy.

God in Community, Holy in One,
we lift our prayers to you
as we use the words Jesus taught us,
(The Lord’s Prayer)

Call to Reconciliation
We bring our flawed lives to God, not so much to be made perfect, but to be whole. Let us confess our sins to God, trusting the One who builds joy from our despair.  

Unison Prayer for Forgiveness
     Bountiful Love: our self-focus causes us to imagine how poor we are. We are convinced we don't have enough:
     enough honor,
     enough respect,
     enough recognition,
     enough to live on.
And so, in our poverty, we cannot trust you, we cannot see the emptiness of others, we cannot help but cling to more than we need.
     Forgive us, Bestower of Blessings. Tell us we can be more loving; whisper to us of how we can be more compassionate; sing to us of how we can serve others - all in the name of Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior.

Silence is kept

Assurance of Pardon
The good news is that we are made whole; not by our efforts, not by any work we have done, not by any word of ours.
Out of the riches of grace, God pours forgiveness into our lives, giving us all we need in Jesus Christ, so we might live in hope and joy. Thanks be to God. Amen.

Prayer of Dedication/Offering
Imagining we are very poor, we think our gifts don't matter, and so give very little.  Yet, from the abundance of your love, you challenge us to be as faithful as the woman Jesus speaks about.  Make us more generous and gracious givers, even as you take what we offer in these moments, and use them in the work of your kingdom.  Amen.

Great Prayer of Thanksgiving
May God watch over you!
And also over you!
Offer your hearts to the One who creates new life for those who are empty.
We bring our lives to God, the restorer of new life.
People of God, give thanks to the One who gives us all things.
We praise the One who is abundant beyond all expectations

Once and for all, you spoke,
God of overflowing gifts:
as your Word called the sun
to shine and the earth to spin;
as your hand stirred the dust,
shaping us in your image;
as your Spirit breathed grace
into our empty lungs.
You would feed us with peace,
but we gnaw on the bread moldy with anxiety;
When you would clothe us with glory,
we put on the long robes of sin,
the hems dragging through dusty death.
In vain, the prophets rose early
to speak your words of invitation;
in vain, they stayed up into the late hours,
watching for our return to you.
Yet, out of the abundance of your love,
you sent Jesus to us,
so that we might not live in the poverty
of our despair and fear.

With Ruth and Naomi, with Boaz and David,
with widows in poverty, and children on the streets,
we join our voices as we sing to you:

Holy, holy, holy! Lord God of grace!
All creation is filled with the bounty of your love.
Hosanna in the highest!

Blessed is he who has not left us without hope.
Hosanna in the highest!

You are holy, God of wonder and wisdom,
and blessed is Jesus Christ, our Brother,
who left you, in faith and obedience,
to enter humanity's world,
not as a mere copy, but truly one of us.
Again and again, he pointed to you:
Restorer of broken lives,
Nurturer of every hungry heart,
Lover of each child.
Sitting opposite death, watching as
we went down to its threshing floor,
he offered himself in our place,
putting in everything he had,
so we might receive the gift
we need to live on with you.

Remembering his gentleness and generosity,
remembering his compassion and clarity,
we speak of that mystery we call faith:

Christ died, once, and it was for all;
Christ was raised, once and for all;
Christ will return, for those who wait for him,
     to bring them home to God,

Once and for all,
pour out your Spirit
upon those who gather
around your bountiful Table,
where life and love are placed.
You nourish us with your bread
filled with gentle grace,
so, that fed, we may serve those
who hunger for hope in their lives.
You restore our flagging spirits
from the overflowing cup of joy,
so, that refreshed, we may take
new life to the poor and hopeless
in every place where they are found.

And when the foundation of the world is no more,
when we enter that haven made by your hands,
when we sit with our sisters and brothers
at the feast where we are fed from your heart,
we will offer glad songs of joy to you,
God in Community, Holy in One. Amen.

Sending
God sends us out into the world.
We will gather up God's children and bring them to the lap of grace.
Jesus invites us to watch with him.
We will notice those who give from their scarcity,
challenging us to offer our abundance to those in need.
The Spirit clothes us with grace.
We will go forth to welcome all we meet into our hearts.

(c) Thom M. Shuman

Alternate texts liturgy w/communion for November 10, 2024 (Pentecost 25/Trinity 24/Proper 27/Ordinary 32 - B)

 Texts:  1 Kings 17:8-16; Psalm 146; Hebrews 9:24-28; Mark 12:38-44

Call to Worship
We gather to praise our God.
The One who created everything;
the One who keeps faith with us.
We gather to follow Jesus.
Who comes to build justice on the ruins of despair;
who comes to set us free from our fears.
We gather to listen to the Holy Spirit.
Who teaches us to care for the most vulnerable;
who shows us how to see the forgotten in our midst.

Prayer of the Day
In your kingdom of surprise,
God of all people,
it is the broken who bring healing,
the lonely who reshape communities,
the vulnerable who will feed us,
the shoved-aside who come to rescue us.

In your kingdom of unexpected grace,
Jesus who watches those we don’t,
it is not those with million-dollar smiles
and $5000 suits who share the gospel,
but the little child with her smile,
the wisdom-wrinkled grandparents’ stories,
the trust of those who give from their scarcity.

In your kingdom of amazing wonder,
Spirit who calls us not to be afraid,
it is not those who seek the limelight
or go around on book tours who teach us,
but those whose hope is offered freely,
whose joy never runs empty,
whose welcome is never taken away.

In the topsy-turvy kingdom you bring,
God in Community, Holy in One,
we find life, hope, peace, freedom,
and so we pray as we are taught,
(The Lord’s Prayer)

Call to Reconciliation
We always seem to notice the rich, the powerful, thinking those are the people we should emulate.  But we find you in those who are broken, we find you in those who sacrifice, we find you in those who care deeply for others.  Hear us, as we confess how we have noticed the wrong people, and longed after the wrong values.  Join me, as we pray together saying,

Unison Prayer for Forgiveness
   In these moments, we must confess that we have listened more to the politicians, the wealthy, the celebrities than to you, Faithful God.  We have failed to keep faith with those around us.  We have let others become captive to the angry words that have no life.  We have pushed aside those around us in our eagerness to follow those whose words offer only empty air and broken promises.
   Forgive us, Merciful God, for not noticing all who give from their scarcity, when we have so much.  Forgive us for watching out more for ourselves than keeping an eye on families who suffer.  Forgive us for caring more about ourselves than for those who are more vulnerable.  Forgive us and strengthen us to follow Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior.

Silence is kept

Assurance of Pardon
Despite our foolishness and poor choices, our God remains faithful in this and every moment.  The One who created everything, continues to renew us, to restore us, and to forgive us with love.
Thanks be to God. God’s hope never fails us, God grace continues to fill our emptiness, and God mercy continues to make us new.  We are forgiven.  Amen.

Prayer of Dedication/Offering
Whether out of our scarcity, or from our abundance, we pray that these gifts might offer life instead of despair, hope instead of grief, grace instead of fear to our sisters and brothers around us.  This we pray in the name of Jesus.  Amen.

Great Prayer of Thanksgiving
God welcomes you to this Table.
Our God invites you as well.
Here, when we think our hearts are hollow and lifeless,
our God fills them with love and grace.
And so, we lift our hearts to our God.
Here, in the silence and scriptures, in the word and the wonder,
we are called to praise our God.
And so, we join our voices in songs of thanksgiving to our God.

Then, God spoke, ‘go now,’
and creation rushed forth
into the emptiness of chaos, as
   beauty was brushed on butterflies’ wings,
   goodness was poured into tumbling waters,
   joy tumbled through desert lands,
   hope graced the sunrises with glory.
All this and so, so much more
was offered to those shaped in your image,
God of love, hope, and peace,
   but we wanted the adulation sin offered,
   and longed to put on death’s garments.
You whispered to men and women, ‘go now,’
so prophets and poets came with your words
of welcome to call us back to you,
   but we were too eager to embrace foolishness,
   and pushed them aside.
So that we might know of your hopes and love for us,
you whispered to your Child, ‘go now,’
so that glory might transfigure into grace.

With those who picked us up when we had fallen,
with those who seek to keep faith with you,
we join in offering our praise:

Holy, holy, holy are you, God who overturns the world.
All creation trusts you and offers exultant praise.
Hosanna in the highest!

Blessed is the One who was eager to be with us.
Hosanna in the highest!

Though holy as you, Eternal God,
Jesus set it to one side, so we might know of your hope.
Born into economic scarcity,
   he offers us the abundance of your grace;
living among people oppressed by power,
   he builds the foundation of justice for all;
knowing what it is like to be rejected,
   he offers a welcome to all outsiders;
experiencing the hunger pangs of loneliness,
   he calls each of us ‘sister’ and ‘brother’;
Daring to challenge sin’s power,
   he is placed in death’s cold cell,
   where your resurrection power sets him free,
   as the same promise is made to us.

As we seek to live as he did, watching and learning
from those too easily dismissed by our society,
we declare that mystery we call faith:

Jesus died, trusting God in that moment;
Jesus has been raised, and will never die again;
Jesus will come, opening our eyes to your resurrection love.

‘Come now,’ you invite us, God of the feast,
as you pour out your Spirit on us
and the bread and the cup.
All we need is a morsel of the broken bread
to strengthen us and send us
   to feed the hungry and build justice,
   to open the eyes of those who never notice suffering,
   to lift others back to their feet.
All we need is a sip of the cup’s grace
to be willing and empowered to go out
   to set free all the captives of cruelty,
   to offer a warm heart to those who know only cold shoulders,
   to share hope, love, and peace to everyone we meet.

And when all time and history has come to an end
and you gather us from all generations
around that Table of life and grace,
we will sing our praises to you,
God in Community, Holy in One.  Amen.
   
Sending
‘Go now,’ God says to us in this moment.
And so, we will go to share from our abundance
with all who live in scarcity’s shadows.
‘Go now to serve,’ Jesus challenges us in this moment.
And so, we will join in building neighborhoods of justice,
in keeping faith with all who have been forgotten.
‘Go now to understand,’ the Spirit urges us in this moment.
And so, we will go to watch (and learn from)
those who welcome outsiders into their lives.
  

© Thom M. Shuman