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Saturday, June 18, 2022

JUNETEENTH—June 19, 2022

A LITURGY FOR WORSHIP AND CELEBRATION



OPENING WORDS—John 4.24
t God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.”


SONG OF PRAISE
We Are Marching In the Light Of God
(Click Here For Music)
—v. 1 Anders Nyberg (b. 1955)
—vv. 2, 3 Andrew Maries (b. 1949)
—South African traditional

Verse 1:
We are marching in the light of God,
we are marching in the light of God
We are marching in the light of God,
we are marching in the light of God
We are marching, we are marching, Oh.
We are marching in the light of God.
We are marching, we are marching, Oh.
We are marching in the light of God.

Verse 2:
We are living in the love of God,
we are living in the love of God.
We are living in the love of God,
we are living in the love of God.
We are living, we are living Oh,
we are living in the love of God,
we are living, we are living Oh,
we are living in the love of God.

Verse 3:
We are moving in the power of God,
we are moving in the power of God.
We are moving in the power of God,
we are moving in the power of God.
We are moving, we are moving, Oh,
we are moving in the power of God,
we are moving, we are moving, Oh,
we are moving in the power of God.


PRAYER FOR WORSHIP
Almighty God, we come to worship you today with open hearts and open minds. We want to hear and receive what you have to say to us in this service. Speak to us today as you spoke to those who went before us. Tell us the stories of your wonders and greatness. We are ready to hear them. Remind us once again of your grace and love. Help us teach your goodness to our children and the next generation. Amen.


READING—Exodus 15.21c-27
And Moses made the Israelites journey onward from the Sea of Reeds [22] and they went out to the Wilderness of Shur, and they went three days in the wilderness and did not find water. And they came to Marah and [23] could not drink water from Marah, for it was bitter. Therefore is its name called Marah. And the people murmured against Moses, saying [24], “What shall we drink?” And he cried out to the LORD, and the LORD [25] showed him a tree, and he flung it into the water, and the water turned sweet. There did He set him a statute and law, and there did He test [26] him. And He said, “If you really heed the voice of the LORD your God, and do what is right in His eyes, and hearken to His commands and keep all His statutes, all the sickness that I put upon Egypt I will not put upon you, for I am the LORD your healer.” [27] And they came to Elim where there were twelve springs of water and seventy date palms, and they encamped there by the water.
—Alter, Robert. The Five Books of Moses: A Translation with Commentary. W. W. Norton & Company.




CONTEMPORARY READING
This first experience of freedom is a bitter one, as the Israelites learn what it means to be bought with a price. They were freed from Egypt but now belong to YHWH. They used to serve Pharaoh, but now they must serve YHWH and this God has the ability to inflict plagues as well as to heal. Moreover, over, their first experience of freedom reminds Israel that there is much to learn about this God. After all, what kind of God leads thirsty people to water they cannot drink?

The story of Exod. 15:22-27 is evocative for African Americans, whose first taste of freedom was a bitter one. The promise of forty acres and a mule was an empty one, and like the experience of Israel in the wilderness, newly freed slaves were arguably less safe than they were in slavery. The experiences of Reconstruction caused African Americans to ask, "Where is the land of promise?" The ongoing challenges lenges to the African American community raise the question "Are we there yet?" and, more importantly, tantly, "Will we ever get there?" The provisional supply is satisfactory as a temporary plan, but many members of the African American community feel it has become a permanent way of life as African Americans, like Israel in the wilderness, move from one crisis to another.

The ongoing challenges lenges to the African American community raise the question "Are we there yet?" and, more importantly, tantly, "Will we ever get there?" The provisional supply is satisfactory as a temporary plan, but many members of the African American community feel it has become a permanent way of life as African Americans, like Israel in the wilderness, move from one crisis to another. This and other accounts of murmuring raise questions about the ability of God's people to trust God's provision. The word that is translated as "murmur," rib, has a legal context that speaks to the pursuit of what one is due legally. The very word murmur speaks to God's obligation of provision and presence to Israel. The murmuring accounts form a motif in scripture-one that is very much a part of many Africana religious traditions. The centrality ity of music to the people of the African continent makes for a tradition that embraces the practice of corporate murmuring. The community cries out, moans, and laments when there is a need, with the full expectation that God will answer. In fact, this act of crying out is a reflection of the strength of the bond between the people and God. The people cry to God because they understand that there is no greater power and no greater love.

The rib comes from an intimate relationship. It is fraught with difficulty and frustration, but it is a bond like that between spouses or between parent and child. It is for that reason that Jeremiah describes the wilderness ness as a "honeymoon" for God: "I remember your devotion, your love as a bride, how you followed me in a land not sown" (Jer. 2:2).

The wilderness experience in Exodus picks up on a motif that is prevalent throughout scripture-namely, namely, the desert being a place of encounter with God. In Genesis 12, Abram begins his sojourn in the wilderness, where he has multiple encounters with God. In Genesis 16 and 21, Hagar encounters God in the wilderness. Jacob, Abraham's grandson, also has multiple encounters with God in the wilderness derness (Genesis 28 and 32), and Moses meets God in the wilderness of Sinai. Now, the entire people of Israel are taken from bondage into the wilderness for an extended period of formation that is rooted in Israel's utter dependence on God.

The wilderness then is a place that is literal and metaphorical. It is the place of isolation and trial, but it is also the place of intimacy, where God places a mark on his bride. This mark is one born out of suffering. Belonging to God means sharing in the redemptive suffering of the world, and in the ketub- bah there is no prenuptial agreement. Here the reality ity of being chosen by God comes into focus. God chooses people because we could not and would not willingly choose to share in redemptive suffering.
The experiences of African Americans and the Israelites make clear that the encounter and experience ence with God is the foundation for the covenantal relationship that enabled both communities to remain people of faith in the face of a harsh environment. ment. One prominent example of the covenant is the Ten Commandments or Decalogue ("ten words"). —Hugh R. Page Jr.. The Africana Bible: Reading Israel's Scriptures from Africa and the African Diaspora.


READING—Corinthians 3:17
Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom.




SONG OF CELEBRATION
We Shall Overcome
(Click Here For Music)
—Joan Baez, Billy Bragg, Bruce Cockburn, Guy Davis, Ruby Dee, Ani DiFranco,
Emmylou Harris, Larry Long, Scarlett Lee Moore, Bernice Johnson Reagon,
Toshi Reagon, Tao Rodriguez-Seeger, Pete Seeger, Dar Williams
—Afro-American Spiritual

1). We shall overcome, we shall overcome,
we shall overcome someday!
Oh, deep in my heart I do believe
we shall overcome someday!

2). We'll walk hand in hand.

3). We shall all be free.

4). We shall live in peace.

5). The Lord will see us through.


READING—John 8.31-33
31 Then Jesus said to the Jews who had believed in him, “If you continue in my word, you are truly my disciples, 32 and you will know the truth, and the truth will make you free.” 33 They answered him, “We are descendants of Abraham and have never been slaves to anyone. What do you mean by saying, ‘You will be made free’?”


LITANY—A Christian Affirmation of Juneteenth
Leader: As we commemorate freedom as African Americans, let us not forget the trials and tribulations faced by our ancestors forced into slavery for hundreds of years.
People: Thanks be unto God for granting freedom and giving us victory through Jesus Christ our Lord!
Leader: Let us continue to emphasize the importance of education and the advancement of the African American race.
People: Thanks be unto God for granting freedom and giving us victory through Jesus Christ our Lord!
Leader: God has granted us freedom, let use it wisely, guard it carefully, and embrace it totally.
People: Thanks be unto God for granting freedom and giving us victory through Jesus Christ our Lord!
Leader: Allow this Juneteenth celebration to serve as a reminder of our tenacity, our ability to hold on to hope and to our God.
People: Thanks be unto God for granting freedom and giving us victory through Jesus Christ our Lord!
Leader: Let all people of all religions come together and acknowledge a period in our history that shaped and continues to negatively influence American society.
People: Thanks be unto God for granting freedom and giving us victory through Jesus Christ our Lord! We are more than conquerors through Jesus who loves us so.
Leader: Allow other ethnic groups to be sensitized to the conditions our ancestors endured and help them to understand why racism and bigotry cannot have the last word.
People: Thanks be unto God for granting freedom and giving us victory through Jesus Christ our Lord! We are more than conquerors through Jesus who loves us so.
Leader: Let all African Americans continue to hope for a better tomorrow while remembering and rejoicing over our triumphant heritage.
People: We will not forget the “Middle Passage.” We will continue to tell our ancestral story of bondage that gave way to freedom, both physically and spiritually. We shall forever strive to advance the Kingdom of God through liberation and excellence.
All: Thanks be unto God for granting freedom and giving us victory through Jesus Christ our Lord! We are more than conquerors through Jesus who loves us!
—http://www.theafricanamericanlectionary.org


SONG FOR HEALING
For the Healing Of the Nations
(Click Here For Music)
—Fred Kaan (1965)
—ST. THOMAS attrib. to John Francis Wade (c. 1743)

1). For the healing of the nations,
Lord, we pray with one accord,
for a just and equal sharing
of the things that earth affords.
To a life of love in action
help us rise and pledge our word.

2). Lead us forward into freedom;
from despair your world release,
that, redeemed from war and hatred,
all may come and go in peace.
Show us how through care and goodness
fear will die and hope increase.

3). All that kills abundant living,
let it from the earth be banned:
pride of status, race, or schooling,
dogmas that obscure your plan.
In our common quest for justice
may we hallow life’s brief span.

4). You, Creator God, have written
your great name on humankind.
For our growing in your likeness,
bring the life of Christ to mind
that by our response and service
earth its destiny may find.




PRAYER OF REMEMBRANCE
Holy God of Liberation and Justice, we thank You for this day. We bless You for your unfailing love, care, and concern for all who have been and are marginalized, oppressed, and enslaved, throughout human history up to this very day. Today we give You special thanks for your unfailing love, care, and concern for the descendants of enslaved Africana people in America.

We remember and lift up [our ancestors] [all the souls] who were forcibly taken from Africa, taken from their families and tribes and villages and lands.

We remember and lift up [our ancestors] [all the souls] who chose the Atlantic Ocean as their grave instead of enslavement in an unknown land.

We remember and lift up [our ancestors] [all the souls] who arrived and survived on these shores even as their humanity was denied, their bodies were abused, and their labor was exploited.

We remember and lift up all the souls whose lives were brutally ended by enslavers and their descendants out of entitlement, anger, envy, resentment, spitefulness, fear, bigotry, racism, and sheer, unbridled evil.

We remember and lift up all the souls who survived in the face of and in spite of the heinous horrors of enslavement and those who enslaved them. Thank You for the strength, tenacity, ingenuity, wisdom, perseverance, and resilience with which You imbued them. Thank You for bringing them through the eras and times of enslavement, Civil War, Reconstruction, Jim Crow, and fights for civil rights.

We thank You for how those attributes continue to live on in us descendants in spite of systems and people who still seek their destruction.

And while we acknowledge and are grateful for this day as the first national observance of Juneteenth in America], we praise You for always acknowledging and loving us as your children and always desiring our full emancipation and our full flourishing.

As we remember and lift up those in the American context, we also remember and lift up all people of African heritage around the world who suffer marginalization, oppression, and enslavement because of the color of their skin. God, we pray for your justice, liberation, and love to meet them in their circumstances so that they may be fully free to live safely and abundantly in this life.

Loving and Liberating God, may your vision, love, care, and concern for all people of African descent be fully realized in our lifetime. Help and strengthen us to partner with You in working to make it so.

We offer this prayer, and ourselves, to You in the name of the Liberating Christ, who with the Holy Spirit abides with You forever, Holy One, Holy Three. Amen.
—https://worship.calvin.edu/resources/resource-library


SONG OF SOLIDARITY
Lift Every Voice And Sing
(Click Here For Music)
—Amanda Bradshaw (arrranger)
—African-American Spiritual

1). Lift every voice and sing till earth and heaven ring,
ring with the harmonies of liberty.
Let our rejoicing rise high as the listening skies;
let it resound loud as the rolling sea.

2). Lift every voice and sing till earth and heaven ring,
ring with the harmonies of liberty.
Let our rejoicing rise high as the listening skies;
let it resound loud as the rolling sea.

3). Sing a song full of the faith that the dark past has taught us;
sing a song full of the hope that the present has brought us;
facing the rising sun of our new day begun,
let us march on, till victory is won.




[Full Score with Verses Not Included Above]

(Click Here)
—James Weldon Johnson (1871-1938)
—LIFT EVERY VOICE, John Rosamond Johnson (1921)

1). Lift ev’ry voice and sing,
till earth and heaven ring,
ring with the harmonies of liberty.
Let our rejoicing rise
high as the list’ning skies,
let it resound loud as the rolling sea.
Sing a song full of the faith that the dark past has taught us.
Sing a song full of the hope that the present has brought us.
Facing the rising sun
of our new day begun,
let us march on till victory is won.

2). Stony the road we trod,
bitter the chast’ning rod,
felt in the days when hope unborn had died;
yet with a steady beat,
have not our weary feet
come to the place for which our people sighed?
We have come over a way that with tears has been watered.
We have come, treading our path thro’ the blood of the slaughtered,
out from the gloomy past,
till now we stand at last
where the bright gleam of our bright star is cast.

3). God of our weary years,
God of our silent tears,
thou who hast brought us thus far on the way,
thou who hast by thy might
led us into the light,
keep us forever in the path, we pray.
Lest our feet stray from the places, our God, where we met thee;
lest our hearts, drunk with the wine of the world, we forget thee;
shadowed beneath thy hand,
may we forever stand,
true to our God, true to our native land.




CLOSING PRAYER
Faithful God, we are grateful for all the ways You met and spoke to us in this worship service. May all that You have spoken take deep root in the soil of our souls and find expression in our words and deeds. Keep before us the love, care, and concern You have for all people and, on this day, especially for the descendants of enslaved Africana people in America. Help us to remember that we have a holy responsibility to see and treat them as You do: worthy of regard, respect, honor, and care, today and every day. Grant us the courage and strength not to grow weary or abandon this holy responsibility, and may we be your hands, your feet, and your voice in this world to accomplish it. We offer this prayer, and ourselves, to You in the name of the Liberating Christ, who with the Holy Spirit abides with You forever, Holy One, Holy Three. Amen.
—https://worship.calvin.edu/resources/resource-library

Friday, June 17, 2022

ANSELM’S PRAYER TO ST PAUL: OUR GREATEST MOTHER


O St Paul, where is he that was called
the nurse of the faithful, caressing his sons?
Who is that affectionate mother who declares everywhere
that she is in labour for her sons?
Sweet nurse, sweet mother,
who are the sons you are in labour with, and nurse,
but those whom by teaching the faith of Christ
you bear and instruct?
Or who is a Christian after your teaching
who is not born into the faith and established in it by you?
And if in that blessed faith we are born
and nursed by other apostles also,
it is most of all by you,
for you have laboured and done more than them all in this;
so if they are our mothers, you are our greatest mother...

And you, Jesus, are you not also a mother?
Are you not the mother who, like a hen,
gathers her chickens under her wings?
Truly, Lord, you are a mother;
for both they who are in labour
and they who are brought forth
are accepted by you.
You have died more than they, that they may labour to bear.
It is by your death that they have been born,
for if you had not been in labour,
you could not have borne death;
and if you had not died, you would not have brought forth.
For, longing to bear sons into life,
you tasted of death,
and by dying you begot them.
You did this in your own self,
your servants, by your commands and help.
You as the author, they as the ministers.
So you, Lord God, are the great mother.

Then both of you are mothers.
Even if you are fathers, you are also mothers.
For you have brought it about that those born to death
should be reborn to life -
you by your own act, you by his power.
Therefore you are fathers by your effect
and mothers by your affection.
Fathers by your authority, mothers by your kindness.
Fathers by your teaching, mothers by your mercy.
Then you, Lord, are a mother
and you, Paul, are a mother too...

And you, my soul, dead in yourself,
run under the wings of Jesus your mother
and lament your griefs under his feathers.
Ask that your wounds may be healed
and that, comforted, you may live again.

Christ, my mother,
you gather your chickens under your wings;
this dead chicken of yours puts himself under those wings.
For by your gentleness the badly frightened are comforted,
by your sweet smell the despairing are revived,
your warmth gives life to the dead,
your touch justifies sinners.
Mother, know again your dead son,
both by the sign of your cross and the voice of his confession.
Warm your chicken, give life to your dead man, justify your sinner.
Let your terrified one be consoled by you;
despairing of himself, let him be comforted by you.
and in your whole and unceasing grace
let him be refashioned by you.
For from you flows consolation for sinners;
to you the blessing for ages and ages. Amen.
—Prayers and Meditations of St Anselm, trans. Benedicta Ward (London, 1973), pp.152-6.


Thursday, June 02, 2022

A PRAYER FOR TIMES AS THESE

God is with you.
And also with you.
In God we pray:

Creating One
whose redeeming work
has given us hope
that the peace and justice
of your Kin-Dom
will come at last
and be fulfilled
in your perfecting love.

This, O Presence of Sacredness,
has been our hope through the ages
yet, we would be dishonest
if we claimed that such hope
has not come with
ebbs and flows
in the crises that fill each day.

Once, again, O Faithful One,
we are in an ebb
of hope
hopelessness is mounting
and it seems to pique
in each yesterday
only to find new intensity
in the events of today.

We are traumatized,
O Gentle Whisperer,
the carnage of disease
the autrocity of war
the heinous acts of
mass shootings
the apostacy in your
church
the political scandal
of democracy
the conflict in civil rights
denying the personhood
of women
and
people of color
the hatred of people
who do not fit our expectations
of what gender and sexuality
is to be
the animosity toward
other nations
amd the abhorrence of
white nationalism
might this list end here?

no

but my brain cannot
name anymore
of the ways
we have become
other than who you
created us to be.

Listening God
who hears our prayers
spoken and unknown to us
within our hearts and minds
we do not expect our
throughts and prayers
to be enough to change your world
no doubt actions of faithful
service
in the way of Jesus
must come from
and accompany our words
and tears.

Still, we are tired
overwhelmed
somewhere between raw
yet numb
feeling helpless
and defeated
a people whose faith
is diminished along with
our hope.

we know the repitiveness
of our words
they are older
than the Scriptures
themself
"How long, O God, how long?"

It is not to question your Righteousness
O Just and Judging One
it is but a expression
of the faith we have in you
trusting that you will act
trusting that you will bring peace
trusting that you will provide justice
for all who have been wronged

but, yes, there is within our cry
a gnawing advesary
that tempts of to places
of apathy
where we begin to wonder
will anything ever change?
will the madness of harm and violence
ever cease?
will there be a day
when the hurt and loss
and evil and destruction
will be but a
memory?

Help us, O God,

help those who are suffering
may their grief be accompanied
with comfort

help those who are leaders
of state
may their decisions be made
with the truth and wisdom
that is your Spirit

help those who care for the hurting
may their work and help be given
in strength and perseverance

help those who have betrayed
by the church
and those who have betrayed
your good news
may the abused and often
invisible survivors
find resolution
and their predators
come to true repentance

help those who suffer
in poverty and homelessness
in loneliness and isolation
may we find ways to open doors to safe places
where all can be at home

help the depressed and anxiety filled
may they find respite and
times when your calm
soothes their troubled souls

help us all
as we seek answers
as we discern what it is
we need to do
as we need places apart
from the daily challenges
that renewed and revived
we together
may make a difference
and move our society and culture
away from the capitalism
that defines rich and poor
and the impirial systems
that divide and separate
excluding in the lie
that might makes right

may your Kin-Dom come
O Sovereign of Hosts
may your Kin-Dom come
here and now
without exception
may your Kin-Dom come
Amen.