Advent Candle Lighting Liturgy and Daily Devotions for Week 2

This Advent season of 2020 the focus is on rekindling the gift of God. We certainly need our spiritual grounding and the gifts of faith to sustain us during these difficult times.

There is a ritual for lighting the Advent wreath each Sunday. Then there is a reading for each day of the week based on the theme of the week’s candle.

May we rekindle the gifts of hope, peace, joy, and love this Advent season!

Rekindle the Gift of Peace

Lighting the Second Advent Candle – PEACE

In our homes we gather around wreaths to pray our lost hopes, broken peace, limited joys, and love so hard to find and share in this season of coronavirus.   We affirm that our candles mean we claim the power to call this season Advent when God’s light comes into the world and nothing can overcome it.

Light one candle.

We light the candle of hope.  

Light a second candle.

We now light the candle of peace in spite of. . .

name those things, places, and concerns that call out for peace

God’s peace illuminates the possibility of reconciliation and healing and lights the wick of peace in our lives so that we may shine on the world and brighten the path toward peace.   Amen.


Monday Dec. 7  PEACE

‘. . .they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks’

Isaiah 2:4

December 7 is the anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor marking the entrance of the US into World War 2. 

Since then, wars have continued to erupt like a bad infection.  Now, instead of blatant attacks and bold overthrows, it seems like we have a continuous state of low grade war in many places in the world.  And since the world has become ever more a global community, these wars involve many different countries and interests.  And with the growing impacts of global climate change, this situation will only get worse. 

It seems that the days of war, with a beginning and a middle and an end, are over. 

One of the lessons that peacemakers have been trying to teach for centuries is that bombs don’t end war.  They don’t stop war.  They don’t eradicate war as a policy option.  War does not create peace.  Justice and human rights may create peace.  But we are investing so much in armaments and the military, we are sowing and growing war, not peace. 

How can we rekindle the dream of peace?  How can we honor Jesus as the Prince of Peace?  How can we turn turn our swords into plowshares?  The birth of Jesus was the birth of this possibility.  How can we make it a reality?

Prayer

May we seek to be peacemakers.  In our individual lives.  In our communities.  And, yes, even between countries and peoples. Jesus shows us that another world is possible.  Amen.  


Tuesday Dec. 8  PEACE

‘Glory to God in high heaven! And on earth, peace to those on whom God’s favor rests.’

Luke 2:14

This beautiful image from the Christmas story seems idyllic and pastoral.  But actually shepherds were the lowest rung of the economic and social ladder.  Almost outcasts.  Underpaid.  Overworked.  Expendable.  Not a group associated with God’s favor.  And yet that is the first group of people who receive the good news of the birth of Jesus. 

This story tells us that the birth of Jesus was intended to be good news to people who are at the bottom; who are marginalized and forgotten.  So how do we share good news with those who need it most today?  Is that part of our Christmas planning and celebrating?  I hope so!

The Christmas story is about peace for the poor.  Hard to square with the enormous over- shopping for consumer extravagances this season. 

Can we cultivate a greater sensitivity to the people who are made poor who live in our midst?   Can we listen to their stories?  Can we honor their dignity?  Can we receive good news from those made poor? 

Prayer

We are told that Jesus was poor.  He lived and worked among those made poor.  May our view of reality include all strata of society and may we see our common humanity.  Amen. 


Wednesday Dec. 9  PEACE

‘The peace of Christ be with you.’

This is said many times in church.  The peace of Christ.  We want to remember that Jesus was hunted down, arrested, put through a sham trial, and given the death penalty in a public and humiliating way.   Yes, the story of Jesus has violence and torture and suffering in it.  So, where is the peace? 

We want to think about peace as doing what you need to do, what you know is right and good and true, no matter the consequences.  There is peace of soul and spirit even in circumstances of violence when you know you are doing what is right, what is consistent with the teachings of Jesus, what is loving.  Even if it leads to trouble; what the late John Lewis would call good trouble. 

Maybe if your life is devoid of good trouble, you are not really living peacefully!

Prayer

May we live peacefully even when there are risks and costs.  Sometimes we are being given peace in our hearts even though our lives seem turbulent and unsteady.  Amen.


Thursday Dec. 10   PEACE

‘ . . they shall all sit under their own vines and under their own fig trees, and no one shall make them afraid. . .’

Micah 4:4

So, if no one was killed that you know of today, was it a peaceful day?  Is there peace in our city if there are no murders?  That is not how our faith teaches us to think about peace.

The Christian concept of peace comes from the Jewish concept of shalom.  Shalom means peace but it implies not just the absence of violence and threat.  Shalom implies individual and communal well-being.  Shalom indicates the conditions that lead to thriving and flourishing life. 

The Biblical concept of peace doesn’t just mean there is no war and no violence including in the home.  It means that there is access to human rights, health care, self determination, equality, a clean, safe environment, education, the arts, safe food, and housing. 

Law and order may have to do with limiting violence but it is not really about peace because peace has to do with fomenting what is good not just stopping what is bad. 

Most crime is committed by people who are not thriving and flourishing.  They are usually desperate in some way and in need of compassion and support from society. 

When everyone is fed and clothed and housed and treated with dignity and respect, then there will be much more peace in the world.  And with that peace there will be less violence. 

How can you be a part of creating more peace in the world by helping to create conditions more conducive to the flourishing of life for those who are being underserved and ignored?  Does that bring you some peace? 

Prayer

On this first day of Hanukkah, we join with our Jewish sisters and brothers in seeking shalom for all of Creation.  May the light of peace shine brightly.  Amen.


Friday Dec. 11   PEACE

‘Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you.  I do not give to you as the world gives.  Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid.’

John 14:27

How does the world give peace? Having wealth is perceived as assured peace – physical peace and inner peace –  knowing that you can meet your material needs and have access to resources that can keep you safe and healthy.  If you have financial stability and security, that is perceived as peace.

With Jesus, we are told that he may have owned one cloak and no house.  So, where is the peace in that?  Not knowing where your next meal is coming from?  Not having a permanent home? 

The peace Jesus is talking about is quite different.  Maybe there is peace in living your life for others, for the common good.  Maybe there is peace in living harmoniously with the Earth.  Maybe there is peace in forgiveness instead of holding grudges and seeking retribution.  Maybe there is peace in material simplicity.   Maybe there is peace in acceptance and understanding instead of exceptionalism and superiority.  And all of that peace has nothing to do with a bank account or an address or a title. 

Think about peace in your life.  Do you feel peaceful?  Where do you need peace in your life?   Do you need to think about the concept of peace in a different way?

Prayer

In Jesus, we are given peace.  Peace which passes all understanding.  May we open ourselves to the peace Jesus seeks to give to us.  Amen.


Saturday Dec. 12   PEACE

“God has brought down the powerful from their thrones, and lifted up the lowly; God has filled the hungry with good things, and sent the rich away empty.”

Luke 1:52-53

Today, millions of North Americans will celebrate the feast day of the Virgin of Guadalupe.  She is the Mary that is the patron saint of Mexico and she is beloved the world over.  Part of her appeal is that her story challenges white privilege, colonialism, patriarchy, and racism.  She gets her way with the European-dominated male hierarchy of the Catholic Church. 

Guadalupe pretty much does what Jesus does – challenging the hierarchy and patriarchy of his day and lifting up the lowly so that they are treated with dignity and respect. 

Prayer

Like the Virgin of Guadalupe, may we have the courage and persistence to challenge the systems of oppression that diminish life and dignity especially the life and dignity of people of color.  Amen. 

Advent Candle Lighting Liturgy and Daily Devotions for Week 1

This Advent season of 2020 the focus is on rekindling the gift of God. We certainly need our spiritual grounding and the gifts of faith to sustain us during these difficult times.

There is a ritual for lighting the Advent wreath each Sunday. Then there is a reading for each day of the week based on the theme of the week’s candle.

May we rekindle the gifts of hope, peace, joy, and love this Advent season!

Rekindle the Gift of Hope

The Advent Candle Lighting Ceremony for 2020 comes from Rev. Maren Tirabassi, a United Church of Christ pastor and poet in New England.  It has been adapted.

Some kind of arrangement of 4 candles is needed. Each week another candle is lit to mark the time of waiting for the celebration of the birth of Jesus.

Lighting the First Advent Candle – HOPE

In our homes we gather around wreaths to pray our lost hopes, broken peace, limited joys, and love so hard to find and share, in this season of coronavirus.   We affirm that our candles mean we claim the power to call this season Advent when God’s light comes into the world and nothing can overcome it.

Light one candle.

We light the candle of hope in the face of. . .

name those places, people, and concerns where hope is needed

God’s hope shines on hopelessness, and lights the wick of hope in our lives

so that we may shine on the world and brighten the path with hope.   Amen.


Monday Nov. 30  HOPE

‘For there is hope for a tree, if it is cut down, that it will sprout again and that its shoots will not cease.’

                           Job 14:7

Hope is an interesting concept because it is associated with the time.  Hope is about the future.  We hope for things in the future.  For things to come. We don’t say, ‘I hope I can loose 10 pounds last year.’  That is silly.  We might say, ‘I hope I can loose 10 pounds in the next year.’  The Advent season is a season of preparation for the a future event.  So it is by nature a season of hope.  Of looking forward.  And it is a time to ask ourselves what are we preparing for.  What kind of future are we expecting? 

As we prepare to celebrate the birth of Jesus, what are you hoping for?  Are your hopes consistent with the hopes and dreams of Jesus?  If not, how can you work on that? 

Prayer

In this season of Advent, may our hope be rekindled for a future in which the love, compassion, and healing of Jesus transform our precious world.  Amen.


Tuesday Dec. 1   HOPE

‘Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you. . .’

1 Corinthians 6:19

This is World AIDS Day.  Remember AIDS?  Now it is very much overshadowed by covid but AIDS continues to ravage lives in St. Petersburg and around the world.  The incidence in St. Petersburg is actually on the rise.

So, where is there hope in the face of this terrible disease?  A disease which is completely preventable?  Maybe the covid crisis will foster a greater interest in health and safety.  Maybe treatments will become more widely available for both diseases.  Maybe people will realize that they don’t want to avoid covid just to contract AIDS.  Maybe wearing a mask will have the ripple effect of making people think about wearing a condom.

Of course the more hope you have for the future, the more likely you are to tend to your health today.  Give some thought to what you are looking forward to and how that encourages you to care for your health.

Prayer

In these days of covid our attention is being re-focused on health.  We pray for all those suffering from covid and its many ripple effects.  We pray for all those impacted by AIDS and its devastating effects.  May we be attentive to care for our bodies so that we can live out the hopes and dreams of God for us and the world.  Amen. 


Wednesday Dec. 2  HOPE

‘Remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt, and the Lord your God redeemed you. . .’

                                                                                   Deuteronomy 15:15

Yes, hope is about the future, but hope is also about the past.  In the Hebrew scriptures, the people are continually being reminded of what God has done for them in the past.  This remembering helps to keep hope alive for what God will do for them in the future.  Looking back to see the good in our lives and in our collective history can help to keep our hope alive in difficult times. 

Name some things in the past that give you hope for the future.

Prayer

So often we allow ourselves to be caught in a cycle of remembering what is bad, unfair, hurtful, and destructive in the past.  But there is also another reality of the goodness and love that has marked the past.  This Advent season, may we choose to see the good so that we may face the future with hope.  Amen.


Thursday Dec. 3   HOPE

‘A thousand years in your sign are like yesterday when it is past, or like a watch in the night.’

Psalm 90:4

Sometimes it seems that our reality is confined to the news cycle.  Each day, a new barrage of issues, events, and concerns.  A batch for today.  A new one for tomorrow.  And the politics which surround us seem bound by the election cycle.  Instead of doing what is best for the country, elected officials seem to do what will get them re-elected.  In many ways our culture is very short sighted.  It’s about today.  Yesterday.  Tomorrow.  We are not usually thinking decades, centuries or millennia ahead.  Or behind.

But hope has a broad range.  It can be about yesterday, today, and tomorrow.  But the branching out of hope can be rooted far back into the past.  And hope can extend far into the future.  At Christmas we remember a birth over 2000 years ago.  And that birth was the realization of centuries of hoping and waiting.  In the long dark nights of this Advent season, may we free our vision to roam far into the past and to extend far into the future.

What are your hopes for a year from now?  20 years?  How about for the year 2525?  [There was a song about that. . .]

Prayer

In this Advent season, may our hopes be rekindled – dreams as close as a newborn child and as far away as the stars.  Amen. 


Friday Dec. 4   HOPE

‘Rash words are like sword thrusts, but the tongue of the wise brings healing.’

Proverbs 12:18

Hope can be as near as our next breath.  Sometimes I find myself hoping that the next thing that comes out of my mouth will be helpful, honest, and constructive.  Sometimes I find myself hoping that I will not let something hurtful out of my mouth.  Hope can be very much in the moment.  And when our hopes do not come to fruition?  We will probably have another opportunity, get another try, have another go of it. 

The holiday season can be fraught.  We want to say the right thing.  Give the right gift.  Offer the right consolation.  Give the right encouragement.  In a time laden with so many expectations and troubles.  Have hope that you can help to keep the flame of hope alive for someone else this Advent season.

Prayer

Sometimes it is difficult to maintain our hopes.  There are so many disappointments and failures.  May we continue to try to witness to the love and compassion of Jesus.  And may our efforts help to keep hope alive for others.  Amen.


Saturday Dec. 5   HOPE

‘The hopes and fears of all the years are met in thee tonight.’

This line from the well-beloved carol, O Little Town of Bethlehem, reminds us that Jesus was born in a time of hope and fear.  People were very much afraid in the context of Jesus’ birth.  The occupation by the Roman Empire was like having someone kneel on your neck.  But there were also many would- be messiahs in Jesus’ day.  The fear sparked hope.  People wanted to see deliverance. 

We are living in fearful, perilous times.  Between the pandemic and global warming, along with other threats, it is a scary time.  But the story of Jesus reminds us that fear can also breed hope.  So in these dark days, let us expect light – from ourselves and others. 

Prayer

The darker it is, the brighter the stars.  In these trying times, may our hope shine ever more brightly.  Amen.

LUCC Corona Daily Prayer

photo 3In response to the COVID-19 virus, the congregation is recommending that everyone in the church family pause at 9:00 a.m. each day, light a candle if you can (or put on the light on your cell phone. . .), and offer the prayer which follows.  Doing this together in spirit will help us to feel connected and bonded as a congregation.  You are encouraged to respond with a comment as part of our connecting as a church family and beyond.    

This devotion is based on the mission statement of Lakewood United Church of Christ.

The mission of Lakewood United Church of Christ as part of the Church Universal –

In this time of global pandemic we realize that around the world people are facing the same threat.  We are in solidarity as a species with common vulnerability.  We are all at risk and we are all needed to cooperate in our response. 

May we celebrate the presence and power of God in our lives and in our world –

We see the presence of Infinite Love the world over as people comply with drastic restrictions for the good of family, neighbors, friends, strangers, and even enemies.  We give thanks for the sacrifice of so many especially in the medical science and healthcare professions.  We are grateful for the generosity of compassion and care that we see around us. 

May we offer the hospitality and inclusive love of Christ to all people –

In this time of social distancing, isolation, and quarantine may we reach out in love especially to those who feel lost, alone, and forgotten. 

May we be mindful of the hardship this situation creates for children and families as well as elders.

May we extend kindness and compassion to those we encounter and may we convey support to our leaders, healthcare workers, and all those working to sustain society.

May we work for God’s peace and justice throughout Creation –

We realize that the restrictions and limitations forced upon us by this threat hit some people much harder than others.  Disparities in access to healthcare, technology, and financial resources magnify the suffering facing humanity at this time.  May we be aware and responsive to the needs of others as we are able.

We are also mindful that this time of reduced human activity is providing respite and renewal for the natural world which sustains us.

May this experience of unprecedented global threat strengthen the bonds of the web of life and deepen our connection to Infinite Love.  Amen. 

2019 Advent Devotion 21

Home for Christmas

Who hasn’t heard Bing Crosby croon, “I’ll Be Home for Christmas”? Even if you don’t call it up from your music source, you will inevitably hear it in a store or on the radio. It’s virtually unavoidable this time of year.

And while some may find it sappy, it’s actually quite poignant. The song was recorded in 1943 during World War II. The song was popular because it expressed the sentiments of soldiers stationed overseas during the war. They wanted to come home for Christmas but for most it would only be in their dreams. The song made the top 10.

In this song, home is described as the place where the “love light gleams.” When we think of home in this way, we realize that Christmas is about the love light of God gleaming on earth for everyone. Welcoming everyone. Inviting everyone home not only for the holidays but always. Jesus shows us what it means to make our home in God’s love. We are invited to live and grow and find our highest good in the unconditional, universal love of God.

Yes, we may experience that kind of love in our actual physical homes. And we ideally share that kind of love with our families. But that kind of home, that love, is what the church is about. Or it should be anyway. Church should always a place where the love light gleams; welcoming and accepting everyone. That is the message of Christmas. Divine love at home in humanity and made manifest in community, especially the community of the church.

So, I hope that church is on your agenda for the Christmas season. Home is waiting for you. And not just at Christmas. Whatever battles you are facing – in your daily life, in these challenging times, with your health, in your relationships, with your finances, with addiction – you can always come home to church where the love light is gleaming.

Prayer
We spend our lives looking for home. We want to be at home. A place of love and comfort, acceptance and growth. May we find home wherever we live as well as in the faith community. May we see the love light gleaming. And may we shine that light for others. Amen.