Dictionary: Rest
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Bulletin Aid
Rolland R. Reece
Memorial Day Today, Creator God, we remember. We remember the courage of our forefathers who decided they could no longer bow to England's crown, so they went to war to gain our country's independence. We remember the agony and blood-letting of that war that pitted American against American, the north against the south. Even to this day the wounds of that fighting are yet to be healed. We remember that many years ago we sent our troops to "fight the Kaiser" in a war that was to end all wars. Then less than ...

Sermon
Rodney Thomas Smothe
Let's just see where this road will take us. These words often spoken when we make a wrong turn, give a false sense of comfort. Our hope is that if we drive long enough we will come to a familiar place and once again regain our bearings. Sometimes our confidence in our own abilities and unwillingness to admit that we're lost, causes us to drive several miles out of the way before we stop and ask for directions. Although the signs along our journey confirm that we are headed in the wrong direction, we ...

Isaiah 51:17--52:12
Sermon
Rodney Thomas Smothe
There are few passages of scripture in the Bible that speak with such authority, wonder, and amazement. God's ultimate plan for the salvation of humankind was unfolding, but how could they grasp the full meaning of what this Suffering Servant would come to mean to the world? In the Old Testament people offered animals as sacrifices for their sins. Now God was offering not an animal but a lamb of human origin. But how could these people in Isaiah's time understand the full meaning of what God was getting ...

Drama
Karren Boehr
Theme: When Life's Priorities Need Changing Victory in one's Christian life often comes down to priorities, priorities that the world parades before God's people as everyday fare. However, sometimes "everyday fare" can rob us of the very life of Christ. Setting: An ordinary family living room Characters:FATHER: Energetic, an obvious football fanaticSON: Twelve to fourteen years old, warm, open, serious thinker Costumes: Modern casual at home dress; Son has on a football cap Props: Two chairs, or a chair ...

Drama
Karren Boehr
Theme: The Christ Of Christmas Changes Lives (Based on Isaiah 61) Scenes I - IV are placed in various areas of the sanctuary. In Act I each of the four scenes portrays a different pitfall of the holiday season: the bitter family feelings, the busyness, the anxiety, the loneliness. In Act II the same scenes are touched by the glory and power of the Christ Child. (The optional use of a spotlight enhances the effectiveness of each scene.) Act I (Actors in Scenes I - IV take their places, then freeze) Scene I ...

Acts 6:8-15, Acts 6:1-7
Drama
Robert F. Crowley
Theme: The church has had turmoil from the start. It was as difficult then as it is now. The church can only survive if Jesus is the head. Summary: A mysterious visitor from church "headquarters" calls on the Rev. John Baxter, pastor of a modern day church that is having some major problems. The visitor proposes some startling answers for the church's dilemma and firmly implants the solution by a unique object lesson from history. Playing Time: 10 minutes Place: A church meeting room and then thirty years ...

Matthew 15:21-28
Drama
Robert F. Crowley
Theme: Jesus has total control over the powers of darkness. Summary: A mother talks to a psychiatrist about her demonized daughter and how she was delivered. The psychiatrist won't accept the healing. Playing Time: 3 minutes Setting: The office of Dr. Willis Props: A file folder A new book Costumes: Contemporary Time: The present Cast: Dr. Willis -- a psychiatrist Mrs. King Debbie -- her daughter DR. WILLIS: (ENTERS WITH MRS. KING) Sit down, please. Mrs. King, your daughter ... MRS. KING: I can't sit. ...

Bulletin Aid
Wayne H. Keller
Theme: Jesus Before Pilate. "Are You the King of the Jews?" The question for us is this: "Is Jesus our King?" THE COMMUNITY GATHERS TO CELEBRATE Pastoral and Congregational Invitation (Pastor and Ministers) Welcome to Christ the King Sunday. According to one author (unknown to me), and according to the prophets of Israel, God was not meant to be worshiped. We are related to God, not through adoration and praise, but through our painful involvement with the divine will. The religion that we often dream up ...

Bulletin Aid
Wayne H. Keller
CELEBRATION THROUGH PRAISE Pastoral Invitation Pause for what one may call a "pregnant pause," even several moments after the congregation is silent and waiting for you to begin. Wait until the people are edgy, and even anxious, for you to begin. Then, slowly and deliberately say, "Peace, be still." Again, wait for several moments before continuing. Then add, "Are you ready to begin corporate worship?" If no response, ask again and again until you get a response. (Idea borrowed from my Lectionary Worship ...

Sermon Aid
E. Carver McGriff
The word "Advent" comes from the Latin word adventus, meaning arrival. The season begins on the Sunday nearest November 30th (Saint Andrew's Day). Most of us grew up loving this season and, probably, thinking of it as "the Christmas season." Now that we're preachers, we're more sophisticated than that, but it's good to remember that all of our people, especially the children, are starting to build a level of excitement which will culminate on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. It's also apparent to all who ...

Ephesians 1:1-14
Sermon
Frank Luchsinger
A plane flies through the night. A winter storm howls as the pilot radios for meteorological information, trying to steer clear of the worst of it. All has gone well apart from the weather. The news that a heart was coming had reached the airport in plenty of time for the pilot to ready her plane for take off. By the time the ambulance arrived with sheriff escort, the engines were warm and ready to taxi onto the runway. The controller held air traffic as the two-engine craft sped down the runway and lifted ...

Sermon
Maurice A. Fetty
The Festival of Pentecost long has been neglected within American Protestantism. Often coinciding with Memorial Day weekend, it tends to be overshadowed by parades and visits to cemeteries and memories of those loved long since and lost a while. Even more than that, it is overshadowed by the official opening of summer for those of us in northern states. Memorial weekend is for opening cottages, launching boats and for getting a good start on a summer tan. But the Festival of Pentecost has been around about ...

Sermon
Barbara Brokhoff
A musician in a camp meeting where I preached wrote a country-gospel song titled, "Sin Will Take You Farther Than You Want To Go and Keep You Longer Than You Want To Stay." Nineteen words is a tad long for a song title, but it does state a succinct and compelling truth: sin will get you in serious trouble. In this lesson, Ahab is king and is married to the wicked, Baal-worshipping Jezebel, and covets the vineyard belonging to a worshipper of God named Naboth. Ahab had plenty of property of his own, but he ...

Sermon
Thomas Long
Stashed away in a drawer somewhere around my house, now nearly forgotten, is a batch of old 45 rpm records from the '50s and early '60s. Worn and scratchy, long since outmoded by the flashy digital technology of compact discs, these primitive vinyls were once the jewels of a great treasure trove. Elvis' grinding out "Hound Dog," Buddy Holly and the Crickets' hiccuping "Peggy Sue," Chuck Berry's joyful hot licks in "Maybellene," the Coasters' slapstick tour de force "Charlie Brown," the mournful "Tears On ...

Sermon
William B. Kincaid, III
What do Richard Nixon and Shirley Temple have in common? While they may have shared many common interests and traits, isn't it true that neither one ever outlived their pasts? When Richard Nixon was buried behind the house that his father built, he went to his grave as the president that was forced to resign in the face of humiliation and scandal. Even amid his remarkable rehabilitation which included significant contributions to the world's conversation about public policy, Nixon may as well have had " ...

Sermon
Russell F. Anderson
Revised Common:Deuteronomy 30:15-20 1 Corinthians 3:1-9 Matthew 5:21-37 Roman Catholic:Sirach 15:15-20 1 Corinthians 2:6-10 Matthew 2:17-37 Episcopal:Sirach 15:11-20 1 Corinthians 3:1-9 Matthew 5:21-24, 27- 30, 33-37 Lutheran:Deuteronomy 30:15-20 1 Corinthians 2:6-13 Matthew 5:20-37 Seasonal Theme: The Holy Spirit is prominently featured in the Epiphany Season pericopes. The Spirit does not act in isolation but works to create and sustain the spiritual community. Each week we will examine a different ...

Sermon
Harold Warlick
One of the major ingredients in any kind of endeavor is load-management. A college student, for example, must have special permission from the dean to take more than a certain number of courses per semester. Past wisdom has taught that students experience inevitable time-management problems and personal stress when they overload a schedule. In the realm of everyday consumption of energy, most cities now have load-management regulators which are placed on homes. City energy departments give a discount to ...

Jeremiah 30:1--31:40
Sermon
E. Carver McGriff
A place to start with this passage is the use of the word "husband" by Jeremiah to describe the message God has given him. But let's jump, for a moment, to the Old Testament book of Hosea. It's a metaphorical story about a man, Hosea, whose wife was unfaithful. Ancient law would have permitted all sorts of dire punishment for that, but Hosea loved his wife too much to think in terms of punishment. Instead, he wanted her back, hopefully as things had been before her adultery. Thereafter, the story tells of ...

Sermon
Timothy J. Smith
During his first visit to the United States, Albert Schweitzer found himself at Pennsylvania Station in New York City, waiting for a train that would take him, his wife, and some friends to Colorado. It was the first time he had seen an immense American railroad station, and there was much to do and look at while they waited. Then Schweitzer saw a broom and, in the middle of the big crowded place, quietly began to sweep up the rubbish on the ground. After a little while he realized that in the meantime the ...

Sermon
George W. Hoyer
We are all being taught by God. Jesus cited that in one of the lessons from John's gospel we have heard on the last four Sundays. We have been taught. We have learned. Today we have the final exam. The gospel poses a number of questions. They seem to be rhetorical, asked simply for effect. No answer seems to be expected. But how successful would a student be who, seeing his final examination, looks up and says to the instructor, "I assume all these questions are rhetorical"? Are you ready? Give answers to ...

John 16:5-16, John 15:18--16:4
Sermon
William G. Carter
Everywhere you looked, you saw people in tie-dyed t-shirts. Mothers gave drinks of apple juice to their children, while men in gray pigtails sipped Budweiser and tossed the empties beneath somebody's car. Teenagers spread blankets on the asphalt and took naps in the summer sunshine. Middle-aged hippies danced freely throughout the Philadelphia parking lot. Hundreds of mourners spontaneously gathered outside the Spectrum to bid goodbye to rock guitarist Jerry Garcia. Whenever Jerry Garcia and the Grateful ...

Sermon
William G. Carter
Mark 2:23--3:6 (C, RC) Mark 2:23-28 (L) A few years ago, I was asked to serve as the worship leader at a regional church conference for teenagers. The enthusiastic recruiter told me about the wonderful experience I could expect from the gathering. "Every summer," she said, "the conference brings together about a hundred or so young people at a camp that has no swimming pool. We gather during the dog days of August. The conference is so much fun, nobody misses the pool!" My assignment was to preach sermons ...

Romans 14:1--15:13
Children's Sermon
B. Kathleen Fannin
Object: None, though two possibilities include a cereal bowl and a donut. Lesson: Differences; tolerance. It seemed to me, as I thought about this text, that the best way to get its message across to young children would be to discuss with them what they each ate for breakfast; surely they would not all have eaten the same thing. But I failed to factor in one detail of the morning's activities: during the church school hour there was an all-church breakfast. Of course, by the time I realized this, my route ...

1 Corinthians 11:23-25
Children's Sermon
B. Kathleen Fannin
Object: A small loaf of bread or a roll and a ceramic glass. Lesson: Communion; sharing; community; remembering. "Have any of you ever had trouble remembering things?" I ask the assembled children. Heads nod; a few hands go up. "Raise your hand if you've ever had trouble remembering something." Every child raises a hand; I raise mine too -- and have no doubt every adult in the room has mentally done so as well. "It looks like all of us have this problem sometimes. Do any of you know, or remember from ...

Ephesians 4:1-16
Children's Sermon
B. Kathleen Fannin
Object: A piece of material and a threaded needle. Lesson: Prayer; love; healing. As the children gather on the steps of the chancel area in the sanctuary, I pull a piece of red-and-white striped cloth out of my pocket. "What have I brought with me today?" I ask them. "A piece of material," Deborah replies. "A piece of material," I repeat as I take one end of it in each hand. I had, prior to the start of worship, cut a tiny slit in one edge of the material to facilitate my forthcoming demonstration. "What ...

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