Showing posts with label Sunday bulletin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sunday bulletin. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 03, 2015

Science and Technology Sunday

The idea for this service came out of a discussion with my youngest daughter Olivia, the aspiring astronaut in the house.  She's more of an agnostic when it comes to God, and finds more meaning in science when it comes to the universe we live in.

We also have quite a few scientists in the congregation, from university folk to Dupont engineers of all sorts, not to mention my husband who works for Sikorsky Aircraft and would love to have a career in the solar industry.  So it seemed fitting that to have a Sunday worship that celebrates the gifts of science and technology.

In the weekly announcements I invited everyone to download the BibleGateway app on their phone or tablet so they could use it in worship.  At prayer time, some of us used the contact list in our phones as a prayer list.

Our call to worship was a video of Hubble space photography with a response from Psalm 111.




Response:  Praise God! I will give thanks to God
  with my whole heart,
in the company of the upright,
  in the congregation.

Great are the works of God,
  studied by all who delight in them.

Full of honor and majesty is God's work,
  and God's righteousness endures forever.

Our opening prayer was composed of quotes by astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson (probably much to his chagrin if he ever found out):

When we look up at the night sky, and we know that, yes, we are part of this Universe, we are in this Universe, but perhaps more important than both of those facts is that the Universe is in us. Remind us, O God, to reflect on that fact and to look up at the stars.  So often we feel small, because we are small and the Universe is big. Help us to know that really we are big, because our atoms came from those stars.  Unsettle our philosophy daily, that we not ignore all the Universe has to offer.  Teach us, that we would know more about the world today than we did yesterday and to lessen the suffering of others.  AMEN.


When we had Communion, the servers shared their experiences of the different "technologies" that were used to distribute the elements: intinction, wafers vs. bread in cubes, wine, juice, in the pew, at the railing.

    Prayer of Thanksgiving
    We give thanks for all the ways we can come to this Table and be closer to you, O God, and to each other.  Aid us in sharing this technology of grace, this science of love in the living of our lives, that the world, the very earth would know its creation for wholeness and goodness.  AMEN.

At the close of the service, we gathered in our usual benediction circle with the Communion table in the middle of it all:  as though we are a living cell and our worship is our nucleus, our center. 

It was a wonderful celebration of science and religion, two companions in the search for truth. 

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Psalm of Awesomeness



This past week was Celebration Sunday, when we honor our teachers and graduates, and the high school youth plan the worship service.

This is a psalm written by three teenage girls - can you see the influences?

 

Huzzah!
O God, your forgiveness is
          Like a big bowl of comfort food:
                   Ramen noodles
                   Fish fingers and custard
                   Smart Food White Cheddar popcorn.
We need your forgiveness because we have sinned,
Because we cannot always hold true to your commandments.
We know we did wrong but we also know
          We can work to make it better.
          Your acceptance is
                   like a mother’s hug
                   An open door
                   No matter who you are or where you are
                             On life’ journey, you’re welcome here.
    
     You paint the world
          You Van Gogh the stars
          You Monet the garden
     You are the Composer of the universe
          The symphony of Life.
     You sculpt all of creation.
     You spark an idea in our minds
          And kindle our creativity.

     Even the strongest people
          Can’t take on the world by themselves;
     No one remains virtuous forever.
     We see the way the world is going;
     Sometimes it all looks dark and gray;
          Other times it looks bright and green.
     Even if life as we know it ends
          We know that the ending of life
          Provides the pathway to new life.

     O God, you are our North Star
          You are our Doctor
                     our Helping Hand
                     our Parent teaching us to walk, to ride a bike.
You are the Force, created by all living things, that    
 surrounds us, fills us, and binds the galaxy together.

     Huzzah, O God!  Huzzah!

          —Psalm of Awesomeness: A Celebration of Awe and Life
Written by Hannah Cooper, Andrea Kingsbury, and Olivia Kingsbury

Sunday, September 13, 2009

from the Sunday bulletin


AFFIRMATION OF FAITH:

We are children of God.

God has made us and we belong to God.
We are disciples and truth-tellers,
Jesters and fools for one whose death set us free.

The Way of Jesus is a blessing we accept.
Our daring blesses others.
Christ is known in our love for each other
And for the stranger, the widow, and the orphan.
By accepting hope, our fear is transformed.
By trusting each other, our faith is strengthened.
By loving when it is most difficult, we see the Christ.
By listening, we witness the Spirit’s unfolding in our lives.
We are the Church, the Body of Christ, that creative force
That dares to lose its life for the sake of finding the gospel.

Amen.


THOUGHTS FOR PREPARATION

“A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.”

— Herm Albright

“Taking a new step, uttering a new word is what people fear most.”

—Fyodor Dostoyevski



Also, one church member informed me that at 12-step groups, the word 'fear' is an acronym for "F**k Everything And Run"!

Thursday, July 30, 2009

from the Sunday bulletin

Every Sunday we have a place in the worship order for an affirmation of faith. Sometimes we use the United Church of Christ Statement of Faith. Other occassions we have used the church covenant, which has its origins in the Congregational church. Most of the time we use something suggested by Homiletics or I have written it myself, according to the scripture and theme of the sermon.

This past Sunday we read words suggested by the Homiletics website but they were written by a group at a Mennonite seminary:

We believe in God
whose love is the source of all life and the desire of our lives,
whose love was given a human face in Jesus of Nazareth,
whose love was crucified by the evil that waits to enslave us all
and whose love, defeating even death,
is our glorious promise of freedom.
Therefore, though we are sometimes fearful
and full of doubt,
in God we trust;
and in the name of Jesus Christ, we commit ourselves in the service of others,
to seek justice
and to live in peace,
to care for the earth
and to share the commonwealth of God's goodness,
to live in the freedom of forgiveness and the power of the spirit of love,
and in the company of the faithful
so to be the church for the glory of God.

-From a morning prayer liturgy at Eastern Mennonite Seminary

Monday, October 20, 2008

from the Sunday bulletin

Thought for Preparation:

"Where am I? Who am I? How did I come to be here? What is this thing called the world? How did I come into the world? Why was I not consulted? And if I am compelled to take part in it, where is the director? I want to see him."

--Soren Kierkegaard, Danish philosopher and theologian (1813-1855)

Monday, September 15, 2008

from the Sunday bulletin


Find more videos like this on Monroe Congregational Church

This was from Sunday, Sept. 7, 2008. I'm front-and-center behind the communion table, singing with the church choir and guest vocalist Suzanne Vick, who reminds me of Rory Block in too many ways!

If the theology in this song were to be taken literally, I would find it quite offensive to my sense of reasoning. It brings up that cranky, difficult issue of theodicy--where is God in our suffering if God is all-powerful and all-loving? God is not about rescue but presence. When I think of 'delivered' I recall the midwives who companioned me while I gave birth. I was not spared the pain of labor, but I was graced with their care and faith in my ability to bring my children into the world. And if I am saved from anything, it is from myself. For me the meaning of this song is that we are not to give up hope, that we are companioned in all our sufferings, that God's grace is more than sufficient, and that mercy is God's ultimate power lived through our giving and loving.

He Never Failed Me Yet - by Robert Ray

I will sing of God's mercy
Every day, every hour he gives me power
I will sing and give thanks to thee
For the dangers, toils and snares
That he has brought me out
He is my God and I'll serve him
No matter what the test
Trust and never doubt
Jesus will always bring you out
He never failed me yet!

I know God is able
To deliver in time of storm
I know that he'll keep you
Safe from all earthly harm
One day when my weary soul is at rest
I'm going home to be forever blest
Trust and never doubt
Jesus will always bring you out
He never failed me yet!

Didn't my God deliver
Moses from King Pharoah
And didn't he cool the fiery furnace
For Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego?
When I think what my God can do,
He delivered Daniel, I know he will deliver you
Trust and never doubt
Jesus will always bring you out
He never failed me yet!