Saturday, December 29, 2012
A Short Meditation on the Lord’s Prayer
While preparing to teach a class on Luther during Lent I rediscovered this amazing resource. The forerunner to the small catechism we don't know how involved Martin Luther was in its writing. Justus Jonas and John Agricola was tasked by the reformer to compile a resource to help teach children the faith. Thier finished product included a wonderful meditation that I have borrowed and reword a little bit for use with my 2nd year confirmands.
A Short Meditation on the Lord’s Prayer
Revised and Adapted from A Booklet for the Laity and Children
1526
by Matthew Voyer
Soul: Our Father in heaven, we are your children.
However we are estranged from you and far from you.
How can we ever find our way back to the Home You have created for us?
God: A child honors their father, and a servant obeys its master.
If I am your father, where is the honor?
If I am a master, where is the awe and reverence I deserve?
For my holy name is mocked and rebuked by you. (Malachi 1:6 and Isaiah 52:5)
Soul: My Father, unfortunately You speak the truth.
We acknowledge and repent of our sin.
In your mercy, may You grant us your grace
that your name may be made holy in us.
May we not think, say, or do anything that does not honor and glorify you.
Help us magnify your name and hold it above our own ambition and glory.
For we seek to love, fear, and honor you, as children should their father.
God: How can my name be made holy in you while your hearts and minds are inclined to evil and held captive by sin? (Genesis 8:21)
Soul: O Father indeed our bodies are drawn to sin,
and the world, the devil and our appetites desire to dominate our lives and
separate us from you.
Come to our aid and let your kingdom be present
so that sin may be eliminated,
and we may become righteous in your eyes.
God: My help often brings pain and destruction.
Those that I want so save and correct feel condemned and put to shame.
When my help is so often rejected, what more can I do?
(Deuteronomy 32:39, Psalm 78:10-11, Isaiah 5:1-5)
Soul: We hate that we do not understand
and embrace your help, Father in Heaven.
Grant us your grace and help us allow your holy will to be done in us.
Even though it may be painful continue to discipline us,
as to refine and purify our hearts and minds,
do as You want with us,
as long as it is your will and not ours that is accomplished.
For your will and our own so often contradict each other,
and yours is right and good,
even though we do not understand it,
and ours is evil, even though we find it so at tractive.
God: With your mouths, you so often confess your love for me
while your hearts remain far off.
And when I worked to correct and improve you,
you abandoned me.
Even those of you who cherished and honored me
eventually tuned their backs on me,
returning to their idols and my disfavor. (Isaiah 29:13)
Soul: O Father, again You are correct.
For we cannot do this alone;
we need your strength and nurture.
So take us into your hands and have your way with us,
so You may be glorified.
In the trials that lay ahead, strengthen us by your Holy Word
and our daily bread.
May Your Son, the true bread from heaven, abide in our hearts.
So we, being strengthened by His presence,
may joyously endure the death of our own wills and embrace yours.
And give us good and faithful pastors and teachers
who will not bring us worldly comfort
but rather, provide us with your holy gospel.
God: It is not good to take what is good and is meant for my children
and throw it to the dogs.
You sin constantly
and when you hear my word preached, you refuse to listen.
(Matthew 7:6, 15:26, Jeremiah 5:5, Isaiah 42:20)
Soul: Father, have mercy on us!
Do not deny us your provision because of our sin.
We are so sorry that we do not do your Word justice.
Please have patience with us, your poor children.
Take away our sin and do not judge us;
for no one is worthy in your sight.
Please remember your promise to forgive all who offer forgiveness for others, not because we have earned forgiveness by forgiving others;
but simply because You are gracious and truthful,
and we trust in your promise.
God: I forgive you so often,
but you do not remain steadfast and faithful.
You have a weak faith,
because you cannot stay with me for long,
but you are always be tempted again. (Psalm 78:8 and Matthew 26:40-41)
Soul: Oh Father, we are weak and vulnerable
to many overwhelming bodily and worldly struggles.
Please hold us in your hands
so we do not fall back into sin and temptation.
Give us grace and strength to remain in faith throughout these struggles.
Without you, we can do nothing.
God: I am just, and my judgment is always right and good.
Sin must not go unpunished.
Your sin will have consequences, and I must discipline you. (Psalm 11)
Soul: Since sin leads to more sin, deliver us from every evil.
So that freed from all sin and shame,
we may live out your Holy will
and be people of your kingdom,
who exalt and praise your name forever and ever Amen.
And since You taught us to pray this way,
we will forever trust that You hear us.
Sunday, December 23, 2012
Everybody Loves an Underdog
Micah 5:2-5a and Gospel: Luke 1:39-45 (46-56)
This week we were given a big bag of used DVDs and videotapes. The first one that drew Toby’s attention was the DVD Sky High. As many of you know super heroes hold a very special place in our house. So when Toby saw those spandex clad cape wearing teenagers on the front of the DVD case he knew what movie he wanted to watch again and again. However as the movie developed he realized it wasn’t a typical superhero movie. The typical superhero flick is about mighty and powerful individuals that can be depended on to save the day. But as Sky High’s story evolved it was evident that the heroes of this story were going to be a crew of weaker, less significant students known as the sidekicks or “hero support’ if you wanted to be politically correct. You see this movie went from being about the extraordinary to being about the ordinary. It became a quintessential underdog story.
And I was ok with that; after all everybody loves an underdog. Believe me, I’m a lifelong Cubs fan…We love to hear and see stories of people who seem to defy all the odds and do great things; people who somehow transcend normalcy or even mediocrity in inspiring ways.
Friends today I would like to recommend a book full of underdogs. This book if you will is an anthology of underdog stories (hold up bible). As much as we love underdogs, the entire biblical witness reminds us that God loves them even more. Moses wasn’t even supposed to make it out of infancy let alone be able to lead his people to the Promised Land. David, a little shepherd boy from the small town of Bethlehem watches his brothers go off to war and then slays the giant and becomes the king through whose line the savior of the world is promised.
And then there is Mary. This poor and insignificant young girl from an isolated farming community would become the mother of the messiah. How cool is that. You see the story that we hang the eternal state of our souls on is a true life underdog story. Mary goes from being poor and insignificant to being an object of ridicule and shame. As an unmarried pregnant woman she could’ve been stoned to death but God uses another underdog to protect her and provide an upbringing for his son. Joseph, whose royal ancestry meant absolutely nothing to his friends and neighbors, lived the quiet and average life of a tradesman in that small community of Nazareth. This seemingly ordinary man was called to be Mary’s husband and protector and Jesus’ foster father. His decision to stand by Mary despite her supposed indiscretion wouldn’t have won him any steps up the social ladder either.
Of course the miracle that these two were going to participate in couldn’t happen in a small and insignificant place like Nazareth. So God had to call Mary and Joseph out of Nazareth; but not to a place of more import to the comparable hamlet of Bethlehem. God calls His chosen parents from the boonies to the sticks. Today’s prophecy from Micah reminds us that this small forgotten town will see the birth of yet another king. Of all the underdog stories we love, this should be our favorite one by far.
Why does God reveal himself in this way? Why doesn’t he offer salvation through a savior that would be easily recognizable and who would demand loyalty and dependence. I think that a God who is known only through the eyes and values of a fallen world would prove Himself to be nothing but an idol. For the incarnation of God to be truly well… incarnational God with us, Immanuel, would have to be born into the common and ordinary. A look around reminds us that the common and ordinary are full of things like poverty and pain, shame and struggle. And it is those things that are redeemed by the birth we remember this week.
Part of my Christmas season devotions always include a Christmas sermon of Martin Luther’s. The sermon includes this quote.
She starts out on the journey with Joseph, her husband… Then when they came to Bethlehem, they were the most insignificant, the most despised people, as the evangelist indicates. They were obliged to make room for everybody, until they were shown into a stable and had to be satisfied to share with the animals a common hostel… Thus God indicates that he pays no attention at all to what the world is or has or can do, and on the other hand the world proves that it knows nothing at all of, and pays no attention to what God is, has, or does.
You see brothers and sisters our best and brightest will never cure what truly ails us. No eloquent head of state will legislate true justice into existence, no mighty military leader will force true peace on a people, and even the world’s brightest doctors can hold death off for only so long. But justice, peace, and eternal life are exactly what God brings forth in this baby’s birth.
The hymn that Mary sings today, that the church has always sung with her in its daily prayer is as clear a summation of God’s good news as we’ll find in all of scripture. Listen again to Mary’s song.
49for he who is mighty has done great things for me, and holy is his name. 50And his mercy is for those who fear him from generation to generation. 51He has shown strength with his arm; he has scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts; 52he has brought down the mighty from their thrones and exalted those of humble estate; 53he has filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he has sent empty away. 54He has helped his servant Israel, in remembrance of his mercy, 55as he spoke to our fathers, to Abraham and to his offspring forever.”
God exalts the lowly and calls the mighty to place themselves in His hands so they too may be exalted. And the world may see its messiah trough those who trust in His care. This is what it means to gather around the manger this Christmas season, to humble ourselves before this child in the hay, to join with Mary in singing her song. So we may be blessed and God may be known. I pray that as the birth of the Christchild approaches we can all find ourselves as underdogs in humble estate so we may fully know God’s presence and participate in His marvelous work.
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