Sunday, March 29, 2020

Hopeful developments

Set aside any personal feelings you may have about the interviewer, and note this hopeful development from a smart doctor putting two and two together.

Friday, March 20, 2020

The Good Confession

Released today, The Good Confession, a collection of twenty-one recent sermons and five short table rites for the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper.

  

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

Prayers of the People on National Day of Prayer (March 15, 2020)

God of peace, we pray for the world,
for all nations, from east to west, from north to south,
for all who are enlisted in the battle 
against disease and illness, pestilence and plague, flu and virus,
for all elected officials, administrators, 
researchers, scientists, epidemiologists, 
doctors, nurses, health care workers, 
including those caring for loved ones at home, 
and of course, we pray for the sick, especially the elderly, 
those in nursing homes, and those with underlying conditions 
and weak immune systems.
Grant your healing and protection to one and all.

We pray for workers asked to work from home, 
students whose schools are closed or who must now study from home,
for teachers who must now teach from home,
for those in need of groceries, household goods, and other supplies,
with no way to venture out. 

We pray for businesses and industries under financial stress, 
and hospitals, doctor's offices, and emergency rooms pressed to the limit.
We pray for first responders, law enforcement, 
security personnel, and our military, 
dealing not only with the day-to-day risks of their calling,
but who now must be wary of possible contagion.

We pray, O Lord, for this nation,
that in this trying time we might come together, 
not fleetingly, superficially, and opportunitistically, but enduringly
with a renewed sense of neighborliness, concern, and mutual regard, 
with a spirit of love and good will, 
with humility, gratitude, trust, and generosity,
and inspire your church to take an exemplary and winsome lead 
in so doing.

Lord, we pray for the just who know you, 
that you may guard and protect, your saints, 
heal and nurture your people of faith, 
that we might be a blessing and bearers of hope 
to one another, to our neighbors, 
and to this confused, declining, and dangerous world. 

Lord, we pray for the unjust, 
that you would guard and protect those who do not yet know you,
that you might appear to and call them as you know how best to do: 
through your Spirit at work in creation and culture, 
through your Word  at work in the church, 
through dreams and visions, by whatever means, 
that you would awaken them to your goodness in Jesus Christ, 
and usher them by the waters of baptism 
into your kingdom of grace, forgiveness, and eternal peace.

We pray for ... 



[Silence.]

And we pray for one another as people of prayer, called to prayer,
that each of us might draw nearer to you in faith, 
trusting in you to turn our petitions into concrete blessings 
for all those we name before you;
help us to model and practice the penitence and faith of your priestly people,
that you might heal this land, this nation, and this world 
far beyond our own finite reach. 
All this we ask in the name of Jesus,
who taught us to pray, saying, "Our Father ... " 
Amen.

Monday, March 16, 2020

Planning and leading worship when the size of gatherings need to be limited or when church is cancelled

A faculty colleague has asked about planning worship and preaching in light of the present CDC recommendations against holding large gatherings—yesterday we were asked not to gather in numbers greater than 50 people, today that number has been reduced to ten (10), an interesting number in light of the Jewish tradition that ten men and a Torah scroll was the threshhold for forming a synagogue.

Until I can respond more fully, I noted another colleague (in pastoral ministry) linked to this article at Hacking Christianity, which explains more of the technical side of things. I gather there will be a number of such logistical suggestions forthcoming and available, so I will not attempt to duplicate that effort. More to follow ... 

Sunday, March 15, 2020

Read the actual Apocalypse and calm down

Everytime I run across a cute or quasi-clever neologism that hitches the suffix –ocalypse to some popular impulse to set everyone's hair on fire, I think: Now whoever came up with that very likely has never actually read the Book of Revelation or has not done so recently or seriously. The same is true of the Bible generally. What does panic indicate so clearly and accurately as someone who does not know the Bible, is unaquainted with the promises and the nature of God, and has no sense of the sheer goodness and grace of God and his desire that none should perish? Put another way, when you find that reading the actual Apocalypse (the Book of Revelation) has a calming effect on you, when you come away from it profoundly reassured, then you know you are the right track and you can also recognize that all the folks in panic mode over everything are, to put it kindly, not