This Week in Worship – for Sunday, February 26th

First Sunday in Lent

On Ash Wednesday the church began its journey toward baptismal immersion in the death and resurrection of Christ. This year, the Sundays in Lent lead us to focus on five covenants God makes in the Hebrew Scriptures and to use them as lenses through which to view baptism. First Peter connects the way God saved Noah’s family in the flood with the way God saves us through the water of baptism. The baptismal covenant is made with us individually, but the new life we are given in baptism is for the sake of the whole world.

First Lesson: Genesis 9:8-17
Psalm: Psalm 25:1-10
Second Lesson: 1 Peter 3:18-22
Gospel Lesson: Mark 1:9-15

This Week in Worship – for Wednesday, February 22nd

Ash Wednesday

Lent begins with a solemn call to fasting and repentance as we begin our journey to the baptismal waters of Easter. As we hear in today’s readings, now is the acceptable time to return to the Lord. During Lent the people of God will reflect on the meaning of their baptism into Christ’s death and resurrection. The sign of ashes suggests our human mortality and frailty. What seems like an ending is really an invitation to make each day a new beginning, in which we are washed in God’s mercy and forgiveness. With the cross on our brow, we long for the spiritual renewal that flows from the springtime Easter feast to come.

First Reading: Joel 2:1-2, 12-17
Second Reading: 2 Corinthians 5:20b-6:10
Gospel Reading: Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21

“All Hands on Deck” – Sermon for February 19, 2012

Transfiguration of Our Lord
Sermon by Pastor Jeffrey Ingold
Gospel: Mark 9:2-9

Ash Wednesday

This Wednesday, at 7:00 p.m., we will gather for the traditional observation of the beginning of Lent, with the liturgy of Ash Wednesday. The ritual of The Imposition of Ashes will be administered, along with Holy Communion.

This Week in Worship – for Sunday, February 19th

Transfiguration of Our Lord

The Sundays after Epiphany began with Jesus’ baptism and end with three disciples’ vision of his transfiguration. In Mark’s story of Jesus’ baptism, apparently only Jesus sees the Spirit descending and hears the words from heaven. But now Jesus’ three closest friends hear the same words naming him God’s beloved son. As believers, Paul writes, we are enabled to see the God-light in Jesus’ face, because the same God who created light in the first place has shone in our hearts to give us that vision. The light of God’s glory in Jesus has enlightened us through baptism and shines in us also for others to see.

First Reading: 2 Kings 2:1-12
Elijah taken up to heaven and succeeded by Elisha
Psalm: Psalm 50:1-6
Out of Zion, perfect in beauty, God shines forth in glory. (Ps. 50:2)
Second Reading: 2 Corinthians 4:3-6
God’s light seen clearly in the face of Christ
Gospel: Mark 9:2-9
Revelation of Christ as God’s beloved Son
Liturgical Color: White

This Week in Worship – for Sunday, February 12th

Sixth Sunday after Epiphany

The leper is confident in Jesus’ power to heal. Naaman, on the other hand, is comically hard to convince that he can be healed by such an unlikely foreigner as Elisha, who directs him to wash in such a sorry excuse for a river as the Jordan. Jesus’ healing power is here among us in the ordinary water of the font, in the ordinary bread, in the ordinary people who make up the body of Christ. We would be well-advised to take the advice of the least powerful among us (like the servant girl in Naaman’s household) if we want to find the one who will heal us.

First Reading: 2 Kings 5:1-14
Naaman is healed of leprosy
Psalm: Psalm 30
My God, I cried out to you, and you restored me to health. (Ps. 30:2)
Second Reading: 1 Corinthians 9:24-27
Run the race for an imperishable prize
Gospel: Mark 1:40-45
The healing of one with leprosy
Liturgical Color: Green

This Week in Worship – for Sunday, February 5th

Fifth Sunday after Epiphany

In Isaiah it is the one God who sits above the earth and numbers the stars—it is that God who strengthens the powerless. So in Jesus’ healing work we see the hand of the creator God, lifting up the sick woman to health and service (diakonia). Like Simon’s mother-in-law, we are lifted up to health and diakonia. Following Jesus, we strengthen the powerless; like Jesus, we seek to renew our own strength in quiet times of prayer.

First Reading: Isaiah 40:21-31
The creator of all cares for the powerless
Psalm: Psalm 147:1-12, 21c (Psalm 147:1-11, 20c NRSV)
The LORD heals the brokenhearted. (Psalm 147:3)
Second Reading: 1 Corinthians 9:16-23
A servant for the sake of the gospel
Gospel: Mark 1:29-39
The healing of Peter’s mother-in-law
Liturgical Color: Green

“A-Ha!” – Sermon for January 29, 2012

Fourth Sunday after Epiphany
Sermon by Pastor Jeffrey Ingold
Gospel:  Mark 1:21-28

This Week in Worship – for Sunday, January 29th

Fourth Sunday after Epiphany

In Deuteronomy God promises to raise up a prophet like Moses, who will speak for God; in Psalm 111 God shows the people the power of God’s works. For the church these are ways of pointing to the unique authority people sensed in Jesus’ actions and words. We encounter that authority in God’s word, around which we gather, the word that trumps any lesser spirit that would claim power over us, freeing us to follow Jesus.

First Reading:  Deuteronomy 18:15-20
Psalm:  Psalm 111
Second Reading:  1 Corinthians 8:1-13
Gospel:  Mark 1:21-28
Liturgical Color: Green

“Come” – Sermon for January 22, 2012

Third Sunday after Epiphany

Sermon by Pastor Jeffrey Ingold
Gospel: Mark 1:14-20

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