Showing posts with label Proper 18 C. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Proper 18 C. Show all posts

Call to Worship: Deuteronomy 30: 15-20

Here’s a call to worship or invitation to the Table inspired by Deuteronomy 30:15-20.  It was written by Joanna Harader, and posted on Spacious Faith.

Call to Worship
(inspired by Deuteronomy 30:15-20)

God has set before us life and death.
We long to choose life.

God has set before us blessings and curses.
We long to choose blessings.
So we gather this morning around the table–Christ’s table.
We gather to drink the cup of blessing; to eat the bread of life.
Let us share the meal together. Let us feast on the Word.
Let us worship God with joy!

~ written by Joanna Harader, and posted on Spacious Faith. http://spaciousfaith.com/tag/deuteronomy-30/

Opening Prayer: Take Up Our Cross


Here is an opening prayer of invocation inspired by Jesus’ invitation to “Take up your cross and follow me.” It was posted on The Minor Keys blog.

Call to Worship

(inspired by Matthew 10:38, 16:24; Mark 8:34, Luke 9:23, 14:27)

Loving God,
you call us to turn away from our own selfish interests,
to take up our cross, and to follow you.
To find our lives,
may we live them in service of your mission.

As we come before you this morning,
give us open hearts and open hands.
Make us eager to hear your voice
and seek your guidance.

Open our minds to your ever-present spirit
that is always moving within and around us
Open our spirits to your nudging
and open our lives to your love.

~ posted on The Minor Keys. http://theminorkeys.blogspot.ca/


Blessing: Psalm 1

Here’s a simple blessing from Psalm 1.

Blessing
(Psalm 1:1-3, New Living Translation)

Oh, the joys of those
who do not follow the advice of the wicked,
or stand around with sinners,
or join in with scoffers.

But they delight in doing everything the Lord wants;
day and night they think about his law.

They are like trees planted along the riverbank,
bearing fruit each season without fail.
Their leaves never wither,
and in all they do, they prosper.

Prayer: Psalm 1

Here’s a prayer of confession and commitment from Jeff’s Blog. It was inspired by Psalm 1.

Prayer
(inspired by Psalm 1)

Holy God,
we come before your throne and admit
that most of the time we are too busy singing and praying
and feeling good and feeling bad
and feeling so-so
to stop and listen for your tiny, little whispers. 
In your word you paint for us a picture of full and abundant life,
life that can only be had by drinking your living water,
knowing you not as a title, but intimately, a mystery….

We pray that our lives would be planted near you –
that we would send our roots deep into your word and your life,
that we would draw nourishment from you,
and that with the life you give we would in turn
provide shelter and comfort and blessing
to whoever comes under our branches.

We pray that we would not walk in the counsel of the wicked,
nor stand in the way of sinners,
nor abide in the house of the scornful,
but that our delight would be in you,
in your truth, in your grace, now and forevermore.


Confession: Breathe Life into these Bones

Here’s a prayer of confession from John Birch’s Faith and Worship website.

Prayer of Confession
(inspired by Ezekiel 37:1-14, Matthew 16:24, Luke 14:27,
Matthew 7:21-23, Matthew 25:31-46 and others)

You call us to be your voices in this world
and we stay silent.

You call us to be your hands in this world
and we keep them hidden.

You call us to be your feet in this world
and we go our own way.

When we meet those who are doubting
and say nothing, forgive us.

When we meet those who need your touch
and do nothing, forgive us.

When we are called to take up your cross
and carry nothing, forgive us.

Breathe life into these bones
bring freedom to these lives
that we might declare
with heart and soul and voice
that you are our Lord and our God. Amen

~ written by John Birch, and posted on Faith and Worship. http://www.faithandworship.com/

Call to Worship: Psalm 139

Here’s a call to worship inspired by themes in Psalm 139.

Call to Worship
(inspired by Psalm 139)

We’ve come to worship God,
who loved us before we were yet born,
who knows us even better than we know ourselves,
whose presence never leaves us,
and whose love for us never ceases.
This is our God.
Let’s worship together!

Prayer of Confession: Loving Others

Here is a prayer of confession and words of assurance from Rev. Mindi’s Rev-o-lution website. They were inspired by the scripture readings for Epiphany 7A.

Prayer of Brokenness/Confession

Holy God,
we confess that we do not always love our neighbor.
We confess that we have despised others,
even to the point of hatred.
We confess that we have been hurt by others.
We confess that forgiveness and reconciliation at times
are just impossible for us.
We know that nothing is impossible in You.
We come to You, seeking healing and wholeness for us.
Help us, whenever possible, to live in peace with others,
to seek reconciliation and healing and forgiveness.
For Your Son came and lived among us,
was betrayed and denied,
abused and put to death.
He rose again,
and came with the message of peace to those
who had denied him and abandoned him.
May we walk in his ways. Amen.

Blessing/Assurance of Pardon
(inspired by Matthew 19:26, Psalm 139, Romans 8:31-39)

For nothing is impossible with God.
There is no place you can go,
no end of the earth you can run,
where God cannot find you.
There is nothing on earth or beyond death
that can separate you from the love of God
in Christ Jesus our Lord.
You are forgiven.
You are loved.
You are reconciled to God.
Go and live with the love of God. Amen.

~ written by Rev. Mindi, and posted on Rev-o-lution. http://rev-o-lution.org/

Litany of the Called

Here’s a litany which focuses on the call of Jesus. It was written by Roddy Hamilton, and posted on Mucky Paws.

Hamilton writes: “For four people reading from a single microphone in the middle. As one finishes and moves away, another comes in to pick up the story. One story, made up of each other’s stories.

There are so many stories we could have used for this. This is but a pinhead’s selection of people called to follow, to come from the darkness and shadows of one life… and called to be fully alive in the world, for that is what Jesus calls of us: not to be church members, or signatories to some doctrine, but to he fully alive with the life God grants and set that free in the world.”

Litany of the Called

Voice 1 (Male):
“Come follow me,” he said as he walked towards us.
“Leave the nets behind. Become nets yourself.
We have an adventure to be part of.”
And so we left with him not knowing what lay in front of us.

Voice 2: (Female):
In front of me was a crowd of Pharisees: all of them hypocrites.
They knew what I had done and done it mainly with them,
yet they were ready to stone me for it.
Jesus called out,
“Let him who is without sin cast the first stone,”
and there was silence
and one by one they left me with him
who called me to go and find my humanity again,
and so I went more alive than ever before.

Voice 3 (Female):
She was more alive than every before, my daughter.
When her father left her to find Jesus
he knew he’d never see her again, my poor daughter,
not able to make it to womanhood.
But Jesus never gave up hope.
We left him with her
and after what seemed an eternity he called for food,
‘Your daughter is alive and hungry”
and so we threw our sadness into celebration
that she had been called back to life.

Voice 4 (Male):
I was called back to life.
I was once dead,
not the death of eternity, worse than that,
the death of the living.
I am a tax-collector.
My death was the silence and hatred of others
until I climbed a tree,
and was invited back into my own home by Jesus
for a meal through which I was reborn,
a new person now called a friend of God.
I was on my way.

Voice 1 (Male):
We were on our way, ten of us,
unclean with bandaged limbs,
dirty rags covering our hands and feet
that leprosy was eating away.
Everyone avoided us except Jesus who touched us,
befriended us and called us back into community,
clean once more and acceptable.
I ran back to Jesus to thank him,
it was all I could do.

Voice 2 (Female):
It was all I could do to say ‘Yes!’
Yes to God asking me to be his handmaid:
mother of a child who would be the salvation of the world,
who harboured hope enough
to bring down the oppressor and the tyrant
and lift up the poor and hungry.
I was called to be the mother of God
and I said ‘Yes!’

Voice 3 (Female):
I said ‘yes’
but it wasn’t in some biblical story.
It was now.
I said ‘yes!’ to God’s justice today,
God’s hope now,
God’s intent in me,
to call out the life in me,
and set it free in the world,
to be a follower of adventures,
a follower of dreams,
a follower of love.

Voice 4 (Male):
Be a follower of love,
and join the fishermen and the sinners,
the women and the children,
the sick and the poor,
the needy and the hopeful:
called to be fully alive in this world,
called to be the hands and feet of heaven,
called to be all we can be,
called to follow.

~ written by Roddy Hamilton, and posted on the New Kilpatrick Parish Church website. https://www.nkchurch.org.uk/original-liturgy 

Prayer: People of Love and Grace

Here’s a prayer from Rev. Mindi, based on Matthew 5:43-48, where Jesus teaches about loving our enemies.

Prayer
(inspired by Matthew 5: 43-48)

Holy Jesus,
You call us into a life that others have told us is easy, but it is not.
You challenge us to forgive, to love our enemies,
to bless those who curse us.
We want the easy way,
but You have given us the hard path.
Grant us the patience and endurance to journey with You,
to allow ourselves at times to stumble,
to live into the hard way
so that we might fully experience
Your love, grace and peace in this world,
by becoming a people full of love and grace
and forgiving others.
In Your name we pray. Amen.

~ written by Rev. Mindi, and posted on Rev-o-lution. http://rev-o-lution.org/

Benediction: Choose Life

Here is a closing commission and benediction inspired by the suggested scripture readings for Epiphany 5, Year A.  It was written by Nathan Nettleton.

Commission & Benediction
(inspired by Deuteronomy 30:15-20, Matthew 5: 37)


God has placed before you life & death, blessings & curses.
Therefore choose life, follow God’s way.
Go now, and be a people of reconciliation and integrity.
Let your “yes” be “yes” and your “no” “no”.

And in all the paths you walk
may God hold you steady and close.
May Christ Jesus bless you and every place you enter.
And may the Spirit give you length of days and fullness of life.

We go in peace to love and serve the Lord,
...In the name of Christ. Amen.

~ copyright © 2006 Nathan Nettleton LaughingBird.net

Confession: We have done wrong

Here’s a prayer of confession from the Book of Common Worship.

Prayer of Confession

“Today I have given you the choice between life and death,
between blessings and curses….
Oh, that you would choose life,
that you and your descendants might live!”  Deuteronomy 30:19

Eternal God, our judge and redeemer,
we confess that we have tried to hide from you,
for we have done wrong.
We have lived for ourselves
and apart from you.
We have turned from our neighbors
and refused to bear the burdens of others.
We have ignored the pain of the world
and passed by the hungry, the poor, and the oppressed.

In your great mercy, forgive our sins
and free us from selfishness,
that we may choose your will
and obey your commandments;
through Jesus Christ our Savior.

~ Book of Common Worship, p. 54. Copyright © 1993, Westminster/John Knox Press

Prayer: Epiphany 6A

Here’s a prayer of commitment inspired by the suggested scripture readings for Epiphany 5, Year A.  It comes from the Ministry Matters website.

Response to the Word
(inspired by Matthew 5:21-37, Deuteronomy 30:15-20)

O God, send your Spirit upon us and light our path,
that we may travel the road you have prepared for us.

Having heard your scriptures proclaimed,
and your word revealed,
enable our hearts and minds to more fully understand
your goodness and your grace.

Help us break free from ideas that no longer bring life,
that we may embrace the life-giving work of your Spirit.

Challenge us to forsake paths that ask little of us,
and help us resist the evils and temptations of this world,
that we may truly follow the way of kingdom living. Amen.

~ posted on the Ministry Matters website. http://www.ministrymatters.com/

Confession: Broken People

Here’s a prayer of confession and words of assurance inspired by Jeremiah 18:1-11 and Isaiah 64:8, where God is portrayed as a potter. It was written by Rev. Mindi.

Prayer of Brokenness/Confession

Creator God,
You created the earth, whole and round;
You created us to be whole people.
But we have become fragmented, cracked and broken.
We have been broken by false promises,
lost relationships, shattered trust.
We have become cracked with the experience of systemic sin:
prejudice, oppression and fear.
We have become fragmented,
building up walls instead of lending hands.
Forgive us when we have done the breaking,
heal us where we have been hurt.
Let Your light shine through our cracks and scars
so that we might bring light to the world,
showing that in You we are made whole.
In You we find healing.
In You we find renewed life.
Help us to forgive, to love, to mend. Amen.

Blessing/Assurance of Pardon

God is the Potter, we are the Clay.
When we are cracked and broken,
God helps to bring us back together.
Sometimes we don’t feel the same afterwards,
but God uses every piece,
and offers us the newness of life to begin again. Amen.

~ written by Rev. Mindi, and posted on Rev-o-lution.  http://rev-o-lution.org/

Prayer of Adoration

Here’s a prayer of praise inspired by Jeremiah 18:1-11 and/or Isaiah 64:8.  It was written by John Birch.

Prayer of Adoration
(inspired by Isaiah 64:8, Jeremiah 18:1-11)

Like clay in the potter’s hand,
so we are to you, O Lord!
You take the ordinary
and often imperfect,
and make something beautiful,
moulding us into the people
you envisioned us to be.
In your hands we are made new,
perfected Lord, by you.
In your hands we are made useful
in service Lord, for you

~ written by John Birch, and posted on Faith and Worship. http://www.faithandworship.com/

Confession: Proper 18 C

Here’s an act of confession inspired by the suggested scripture readings for Proper 18, Year C.  It was written by Thom Shuman.

Call to Reconciliation
Our sins are not to be hidden from God. 
Rather, we bring them into the Light and lay them on the Table,
trusting in the One who shaped us for goodness
and will transform our brokenness into wholeness. 
Please join me as we pray, saying,

Unison Prayer of Confession
Searching God, we are so attached to our possessions,
we have trouble sharing them.  
We are so connected to our pleasures
that we cannot feel the pain of those around us.  
We are so stuck on ourselves,
we cannot sense our souls slipping away into the shadows.

Most merciful God:
loosen us from the grip of the world,
so we may feel your healing touch.
Sever us from our sin,
so your Spirit might bind us to you.
Reshape us, redeem us, renew us,
so we may take up our crosses
and follow our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

Silence is kept

Assurance of Pardon
The God who calls us is the God who created us;
the God who formed us is the God who forgives us.
This is the Good News—we are God's new creation.
In the name of Jesus Christ, we are forgiven.
Thanks be to God. Amen.

~ written by Thom Shuman, and posted on Lectionary Liturgies. http://lectionaryliturgies.blogspot.ca/2010_08_01_archive.html

Responsive Litany: Psalm 139

Here’s a responsive litany based on Psalm 139.  It comes from the Seekers Church community.

Responsive Litany
(inspired by Psalm 139)

God, you search me and know me.
Before I sit, you know when I will rise.

God, you search me and know me.
Before I speak, you know what I will say.

God, you search me and know me,
in my joy and despair,
in my breathing in and breathing out.

God, you search me and know me.
Your knowledge is too deep to reach,
too vast to comprehend.

God, you search me and know me.
Search me, O God, and know my heart.

Prayer: The Potter and the Clay

Here’s are some opening comments and an opening prayer inspired by Isaiah 64:8 and/or Jeremiah 18:1-11, where God is portrayed as a Potter.  It was posted on the Leicester Cathedral website.

Opening Comments

Pick up a lump of clay and mold it in your hands
Think about the creation of the world—
the touch of God’s hands on the very substance of the universe

As you change the appearance of the clay with the touch of your hands,
think how the world you live in has touched and changed you...

Think of how your hands have touched other people –
in love, in anger, in sorrow and in joy...

Think of the things and people who have touched your life
and molded you into the person you are today...

“Yet, O LORD, you are our Father.
We are the clay, you are the potter;
we are all the work of your hand.” (Isaiah 64:8)

Prayer

Look, Lord, on an empty vessel that needs to be filled.
In faith I am weak—strengthen me.
In love I am cold—warm me and make me fervent
so that my love may go out to my neighbour.
I doubt and am unable to trust you completely.
Lord, strengthen my faith and trust in you.
You are all the treasure I possess.
I am poor, you are rich,
and you came to have mercy on the poor.
I am a sinner, you are goodness.
From you I can receive goodness,
but I can give you nothing.
Therefore I shall stay with you.

(Martin Luther)

~ posted on the Leicester Cathedral website. http://www.cathedral.leicester.anglican.org/Our%20life%20%26%20work/sensory.html

Confession: You are the Potter

Here’s a corporate act of confession inspired by Jeremiah 18:1-11 and/or Isaiah 64:8. It was posted on the website of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada.

Prayer of Confession
(inspired by Jeremiah 18:1-11, Isaiah 64:8)

God, You are the Potter and we are the clay.
But we are aware that today, and yesterday, and the day before that,
we have lived as though it’s only about us.
We have lived as though we are the potters, not the clay.
O Steady One,  hear now our thoughts, our regrets, our confessions for the times
when we have acted selfishly, as though only what we want, matters.  

Silent prayers of confession 

With this confession, we remember
You are the Potter, we are the clay.

O Steady One, sometimes when we charge ahead
without thinking about how our words and actions will impact others,
things turn out wrong or ugly.  
We think of broken relationships with family members,
with friends, even within the church.
Hear our thoughts and our regrets for the times today and yesterday
when things have turned out wrong or kind of ugly.

Silent prayers of confession 

With this confession, we remember
You are the Potter, we are the clay.

O Steady One, 
forgive us when  we act with disregard for all that you have created. 
Forgive us for over-consuming,
for looking for the next new thing
and throwing away what is still perfectly good.
Forgive us for the ways we pollute and exploit your good earth. 
Forgive us for oil spills and land mines
and many other things we do that destroy and maim your creation.
Hear our thoughts and our regrets
for the ways that we have taken your creation for granted.

Silent prayers of confession 

With this confession, we remember
You are the Potter, we are the clay.

O Steady One,
why did we think that we could be in charge and it would turn out right?
We come longing for a change in our heart, for healing,
for new opportunities to get the order of things right.
With this confession, we remember that the right order is that…
You are the Potter, we are the clay.

~ posted on the Manitoba/Northwestern Ontario Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada website. http://www.mnosynod.org/crosswordsept23-10-clayideas.html

Responsive Benediction: God the Potter

Here’s a responsive benediction / closing prayer inspired by Isaiah 64:8 and Jeremiah 18:1-11, where God is portrayed as a Potter.

Benediction
(inspired by Isaiah 64:8, Jeremiah 18:1-11)

We came to this sacred space
to celebrate and affirm that the Lord is like a potter,
making and reshaping us into God’s image
to be and share the Good News.

Lord, send us out into your world
as your change agents
to help mold and remake the human condition,
with your grace and your help.
Let it be so in this age and forever more. Amen!

~ posted on the website of the First Christian Church of Decatur, Georgia. http://www.decaturdisciples.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Like-New-Clay-in-the-Potter%E2%80%99s-Hands.pdf

Readers' Theatre: Deuteronomy 30: 15-20

Here’s a readers’ theatre setting of Deuteronomy 30:15-20.  It is set for two voices.

Readers’ Theatre
(Deuteronomy 30: 15-20)

Now listen!
Today I am giving you a choice between life

and death,

between prosperity

and disaster. 

For I command you this day to love the Lord your God
and to keep his commands, decrees, and regulations
by walking in his ways.

If you do this, you will live and multiply,
and the Lord your God will bless you
and the land you are about to enter and occupy.

But if your heart turns away and you refuse to listen,

and if you are drawn away to serve and worship other gods, 

then I warn you now that you will certainly be destroyed.

You will not live a long, good life
in the land you are crossing the Jordan to occupy.

Today I have given you the choice between life

and death,

between blessings

and curses.

Now I call on heaven and earth to witness the choice you make.

Oh, that you would choose life,
so that you and your descendants might live! 

You can make this choice by loving the Lord your God,
obeying him, and committing yourself firmly to him.
This is the key to your life.

And if you love and obey the Lord,
you will live long in the land the Lord swore to give your ancestors
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.