Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Reflections on “What I Need from My church: Worship” Psalm 99

this sermon affirms the central role worship in the life of the church and our individual lives of discipleship. 


“What I Need from My church:  Worship”  Psalm 99;  SAPC, Denton; September 26, 2021; Fall, 2021 series


Introduction:  We continue our fall preaching series reflecting on what we need from our church.


As I mentioned last week, the question is not asked because we believe the church’s task is to give us whatever our hearts desire, but because the church’s task is to give us what we need to grow in our faithfulness and our discipleship.


We need worship.


As the pandemic began, we here at St. Andrew (along with lots of other churches)  asked the question:  what must the church find a way to do no matter what?


a.  We learned, of course, that we could do lots of things, but at the outset the one thing we believed we could not give up was worship.


We had to find ways to do it differently.


we  took a brief sabbatical from the Lord’s Supper until we could figure out how to do it;


we took a longer sabbatical from baptism until it seemed safer;


But from day one, we believed that worship had to happen in some form or fashion.


Years before the pandemic, John Westerhoff, a Worship professor, noted: “There remains to the church only one unique and peculiar responsibility:  the conduct of public worship.  If the church does nothing other than to keep open a house, symbolic of the homeland of the soul, where in season and out, women and men come to reenact the memory and vision of who they are, it will have rendered society and each of us a service of unmeasurable value. So long as the church bids women and me to participate in the liturgies of the Christian faith community, it need not question its place, mission or influence in the world.  If it loses faith or is careless in its rituals, it need not look to its rituals to save it.”  John Westerhoff


We affirmed that truth -  like the Israelites in the day of the Psalmist, we worship; like in the vision of heaven described in Revelation, we worship.


a few reflections on why we need to worship. 


Move 1: We need to worship because that's what God calls us to do.


a.  As some of you may know from some other settings, I have been fascinated for several years now about the role of worship in the Exodus story.


  1. When God sends Moses and Aaron to talk to Pharaoh about why Pharaoh needs to the the Israelites go, the main reason given is so that they can worship God in the wilderness.

2.  If we back up to the why the Israelites were crying out to be rescued from slavery in Egypt, we get this strange dialogue – the Egyptians are demanding more bricks and more work from the Israelites, and the Israelites cry out, “let us go and offer sacrifices to God.”


3.  How do those two fit together?


4. Or remember the words for which Moses is famous "let my people go.” do you know what the next part of the sentence is? “Let my people go so that they may worship me in the wilderness” (Exodus 7:16)


5.  Loses some of the drama of the moment. No wonder they left it out of the movie!


6., and what do the Israelites do as soon as they cross the Red Sea and are in the wilderness? Break out into song and sing praises to God. They are free, let the worship begin.


b. Why do they need to go to the wilderness to worship God?


1. couldn't they have tried to get Pharaoh to let them worship God in Egypt?


2. Is this God's way of reminding the Israelites how important worship should be to them?


3. God in sort of a round about way saying, “hey your worship of me is so important I will lead you out of slavery!”


c.  I worked with a young couple several years ago as they explored where they wanted to go to church.


1. The wife had a Presbyterian background and the husband did not really have a church background.  I married them because of her background with the Presbyterian church. 


2.  They have their kids and decide it is time to start going to church.  


3.  They visit a very large church in the area. There is a lot they like about the church – lots of different programming; they can worship Sat. night; Sunday morning early, or Sunday late morning;  there is babysitting provided any time there is a function at the church.  They love the upbeat, contemporary music.  But, they never feel the sense of community they long for – too many people; changing faces each time they attend a different function. They never seem to meet the same people twice.


4.  So they try a smaller membership church. There is much to like about the church.  Each week they see the same people sitting in the same pews; the people are friendly and inviting;  they feel a sense of community and connectedness they do not feel at the larger church.  But, those traditional hymns are kind of boring and the formality of the worship (the minister even wears a robe) is less exciting that worship at the larger church. And, with worship only on Sunday mornings and Christian education only on Sunday mornings, their busy schedules with the kids make it hard to make it to church.


5.  So, they ended up going nowhere.


6. Interestingly enough, they have gone to church on-line some during the pandemic.


7.  We have lots of reasons to go to worship and lots of reasons not to go - most of which revolve around our schedule, the value we think worship give us, to 


8.  But do not forget that God calls us to worship. 


Move 2:  We need to worship because it shapes us as people of God.


  1. I hear comments about why people come to worship.


    1. Get my week started right.”
  1. after the long week, I need a place to come and get recharged.
  2. Gas station model for worship – come and get filled up for the next part of your journey.


4.  Good stuff.  We like to hear how important worship attendance is to people.

b. But worship is more than being filled for the moment - worship shapes us.


1.  We take our liturgy seriously!


2.  whether you are here in-person or on the livestream, together we move through the same pattern of worship.


3.  It is an intentional pattern - meant to shape us.


4.  Part of community - gathering.


3.  Centered on God’s Word.


3. Response to God’s Word - offering, sacraments, minutes for mission.


4. This pattern gives shape to a life a discipleship - being a disciple means being part of community; means centering our lives on God’s Word; it means responding to God’s Word


c.  Sacraments


1.  Baptism - God’s claim on us;


 the role of the community in supporting us - when we stand with Regan today we live out our calling as a community of faith; 


the power of God’s Spirit to be at work in our midst - the mystery of splashing water on a young child’s head and declaring that we have entered the waters of baptism can only happen by the power fo the Holy Spirit.


2. Lord’s Supper - God’s gift to us of Christ;


the presence of the Risen Christ;


the table where all are invited and we are reminded of how we are connected in Christ.


We need to worship to be shaped as disciples of Christ.


Move 2: We need a place of worship because worship provides a foundation for what we do as a church.


a. Worship helps us put what we are doing as the body of Christ into its proper context.


  1. Word moves us to respond.


  1. Mission -NT Wright:  mission without worship generates into various kinds of do-goodery, following agendas that may be deeply felt but are by no means necessarily connected with Jesus” (The Meaning of Jesus: Two Visions, Marcus J. Borg and N. T. Wright, 208)
  1. Of course, Wright also reminds us that our worship also leads us to act or else it becomes a form of self-indulgence (and might even imply worship of a God other than the one revealed in Jesus);

b.   Just as worship gives shape to who we are as disciples of Christ, worship gives shape to who we are as a community of faith.


Move 3: We worship because of who God is.


a. Donald Miller writes in his book Blue Like Jazz: When we worship God we worship a Being our life experience does not give us the tools with which to understand. If we could, God would not inspire awe.” Blue Like Jazz, Donald Miller, 202


  1. Worship gives us the opportunity to engage and be engaged by the God who is beyond all our definitions. 


  1. God has proved again and again to be worthy of our praise.

b. We work hard to make God accessible to people in our worship.


  1. you don't have to wear a suit and tie if you're a man or a dress if you're a woman to worship God. 


  1. In fact, if you are on livestream we do not even see what you are wearing, or if you’re sitting at rapt attention in your living room or hanging out on the back porch enjoying the fresh air.
  1. We encourage bringing to worship so that they might discover God, and be shaped as we are.
  2. Even have a time with Young Disciples to make God's word more accessible to kids.
  3. We try to break down barriers to God.


4. we don't need a priest to mediate for us in our relationship with God (I wont' turn my back on you in worship).


5. Ironically, in that effort to make God accessible, we may also have taken some of the awe out of worship.


  1. As we read Psalm 99 this morning, we read the words that would have been uttered in the worship context and perhaps feel some of that awe.
  1. the Psalm is broken into three sections, all of which end with a refrain of praise (Bobby Morris, Adjunct Faculty, The Jerusalem Center for Biblical Studies Jerusalem, Israel, Israel http://www.workingpreacher.org/preaching.aspx?commentary_id=1534)

2. We worship God because the only appropriate response to the majesty and mystery of God is worship and awe.


Conclusion: In a world with lots of options for worship, lots of demands on our time, I am glad you are  in worship with us this morning.


I hope our worship has filled you and shaped you and given you the opportunity to turn to God and give yourselves over to the one who is worthy of our worship.  Amen.  

Reflections on “What Do I Need from My Church: To do a new thing” Sept 19, 2021

This sermon kicked off the fall preaching series:  What Do I Need from My Church."  Each week we will answer that question.  this series grows out of all the pondering we have done about how the church has been and continues to be changed by the pandemic.

“What Do I Need from My Church: To do a new thing” Sept 19, 2021, SAPC, Denton; Dr. Richard B. Culp; Isaiah 65: 17-25


Isaiah 65: 17-25

For I am about to create new heavens

  and a new earth;

the former things shall not be remembered

    or come to mind.

18 

But be glad and rejoice forever

    in what I am creating;

for I am about to create Jerusalem as a joy,

    and its people as a delight.

19 

I will rejoice in Jerusalem,

    and delight in my people;

no more shall the sound of weeping be heard in it,

    or the cry of distress.

20 

No more shall there be in it

    an infant that lives but a few days,

    or an old person who does not live out a lifetime;

for one who dies at a hundred years will be considered a youth,

    and one who falls short of a hundred will be considered accursed.

21 

They shall build houses and inhabit them;

    they shall plant vineyards and eat their fruit.

22 

They shall not build and another inhabit;

    they shall not plant and another eat;

for like the days of a tree shall the days of my people be,

    and my chosen shall long enjoy the work of their hands.

23 

They shall not labor in vain,

    or bear children for calamity;[e]

for they shall be offspring blessed by the Lord—

    and their descendants as well.

24 

Before they call I will answer,

    while they are yet speaking I will hear.

25 

The wolf and the lamb shall feed together,

    the lion shall eat straw like the ox;

    but the serpent—its food shall be dust!

They shall not hurt or destroy

    on all my holy mountain,

says the Lord.


Introduction:   We start the fall with uncertainty.


I do not need to go into great detail about uncertainty - we all know it and feel it in our work lives, in our personal lives, as we live out our daily routines.  


Uncertainty about what rules apply where about masks and social distancing; 


Uncertainty about what are the best practices to avoid getting sick?  


Uncertainty about when and where and how we can connect with other people?


As a member, or visitor, or regular attender of St. Andrew, we face the uncertainty about how to attend, what to commit to, how to interact as a community of faith


The church faces uncertainty as well.


who is still out there whom we do see because they are on the livestream?


who has slipped away in time we have not been able to get together?


who has been so changed by the pandemic that their particular needs or worldview is no longer best served by st. Andrew?


In this time of uncertainty, or at least wondering what it means to be church, we ask the question:  What do I need from my church?


The question is not asked with the understanding that the church’s role is satisfy our whims and desires?


the question is ask with the understanding that St. Andrew is part of the body of Christ, and as the body of Christ we are called to engage God’s people.


Each week we will reflect on one fo aspect of what we need from our church.  


This week, we begin with we need our church to do a new thing.


Move 1:  To do a new thing reflects what God does.


a.  the prophet Isaiah spoke long before the pandemic.


1.  he spoke God’s word to a people who were struggling.


2.  People who knew what it was like to be exile


3.  People who knew what it was like to feel uncertain about their future.


4.  People who knew what it was like to feel powerless in their world and out of control.


b.  Isaiah announces for them what God is doing.


1. God is going to do a new thing.


2. God is going to create a new heaven and new earth.


3. God is going to not just move into the future, but lead them into a future full of possibilities. 

c.  Two important aspects about what God is doing.


1.  God has plans for the whole cosmos.


2.  God plans for more than just the righteous remnant.


3. God’s new thing is not for a just a few people, but for the world.


4. When we contemplate what God is doing, it is not God doing a little personal thing just for us.


5.  No, it is God transforming the world.


6. As St.Andrew seeks to do a new thing, it is not just about us, but about us and all of God’s creation.

move 2: when the church does a new thing, it models for us and invites us along to the process of doing a new thing.


a.  Go back to march, 2020.


1.  In just a day or two we had to move from a church that met in person for all its activities; gathered for worship; visited beforehand; shared coffee and cookies after worship to a church where we could not meet in person.


2.  How do we worship if we cannot come together in person?


3. How do we connect?


2. St. Andrew, like so many other church, had to change, quickly, on the fly.


b.  Primarily because we had little time and we had a bit of infrastructure to support on-line worship, we had a worship team lead worship from the Sanctuary.


1.  AFter the first Sunday, we had to evaluate how to best do worship.


2.  We heard early on from many of you about how much you appreciated the organ music and the soloists and how much being able to see the sanctuary and feel some normalcy in those chaotic days meant.


3. So we committed to worship on the livestream from our sanctuary each week.


4. Other churches made other choices.


5. Some churches went to Youtube worship that could be recorded in lots of different places.  It gave some flexibility and opportunities:


if the sermon was on the 23rd Psalm, the minister could preach from a field with sheep.


liturgists could participate from their kitchen tables.


6.  Our choice at St. Andrew lifted up our values of music and place, while using technology to connect us.


c. after Isaiah prophesied about God doing a new thing,  the Israelites had their work cut out for them.


1.  how to participate in the new thing God was doing.


2. Such is our task - how do we move forward, evaluating options, making choices, so that we can be part of what God is doing in the world.


3.  As we do it together as a community of faith, it also calls us in our personal lives of discipleship to give ourselves over to what God is doing.


Move 3:  Doing a new thing is about possiblities.


a. Zac Brown Comeback Tour  “the last year hasn’t been what I wanted it to be, so we are having a comeback tour.”  


1.   Not comeback - new creation.


2.  Image of Eden - right relationship with God and one another.



  b. The wolf and the lamb shall feed together,


1. Hard to imagine that possiblity.


2.  But following a God of new creation opens up to hard to imagine possibilities.


3.  We know that God about whom Isaiah prophesied is the God of resurrection, who can turn death into life.


c.  A few years ago I read Jill Taylor’s insights about recovering from a  stroke:  “I have been very fussy this time around about which emotional programs I am interested in retaining and which ones I have no interest in giving voice to again (impatience, criticism, unkindness).  What a wonderful gift this stroke has been in permitting me to pick and choose who and how I want to be in the world.  Before the stroke, I believed I was a product of this brain and that I had minimal say about how I felt or what I thought.  Since the hemorrhage, my eyes have been opened to how much choice I actually have about what goes on between my ears.” My Stroke of Insight:  A brain Scientist's Personal Journey, Jill Bolte Taylor (122)


1. We have been through a tremendous shock over the last 18+ months to our understanding of our world, our lives, and what it means to be church.


2.  It has been can continues to be challenging - but it is also full of possibilities.


3.  Possibilities God sends to us.


4. Possibilities we claim.


Conclusion:  Lots of stories about the great Reformer Martin Luther.  HIs theology, his insights, his work.


But, but one fo the stories told about him was that he became a monk after promising to do so when caught in a lightning storm.


Surely we have made promises o God - if you get us through this pandemic,…..


The God who is doing a new thing says, “Come on.”