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Sermon Illustrations for Lent 4 (2021)

Illustration
Numbers 21:4-9
In 2012, I had heart surgery to have a mitral valve repaired in my heart. For heart surgeons, that’s not necessarily a difficult operation. There are more delicate heart procedures than repairing a valve, but that’s easy to acknowledge when it isn’t your heart. When it is your heart, everything they must do is a big deal. It was clear that I couldn’t fix this myself. I don’t want to minimize in any way the importance of prayer. I put the situation in the Lord’s hands. On the human level, though, I had to put my trust in my surgeon. I had to look to him.

I was reminded of those days when I read this passage again. As Moses is traveling with the Israelites, they begin to grumble. As a consequence, God sends poisonous snakes that bit them, and many died. The people acknowledge their sin and repent. Moses seeks the Lord on their behalf, and he tells Moses to put up a bronze image of a poisonous snake. When the people are bit, they can look up at it and live. The Nehushtan, the name of contempt given to the serpent Moses made, would later be noted in John’s gospel (John 12:32) speaking of how he would die for the sins of all people.

When you are in trouble, look up to the one who can save you. Look up to Jesus.
Bill T.

* * *

Numbers 21:4-9
The people had murmured several times during their journey across the wilderness. In this passage they seem to outdo themselves. In Numbers 21:5, after saying there is no bread and there is no water, they complain about the manna. The word sometimes translated “loathe” is based on the word nefesh, incorrectly translated as “soul,” which refers to their breath, their being, and even, as Robert Alter notes in his recent translation, their “gullet.” They are saying that they can’t eat the gift of God without gagging. And this leads immediately to God’s retribution, perhaps because of the absolute lack of respect for what God has done for them. They have gone one step too far.
Frank R.

* * *

Ephesians 2:1-10
Grace is a gift from God. How many of us really believe that? And how many of us think we need to or even can earn grace? Paul is clear that it is through faith that we are in relationship with God. Grace is freely given. There’s a tendency among human beings to think we have earned everything we have received. Sure, we work hard, and some success is a result of that, but I know many people who work doubly hard and have very little – maybe not even a home, or food to eat, or health care. We Americans, and maybe others in the world, somehow believe that if we have a lot it is solely because of our own efforts. Maybe we need to look around us and see the advantages with which we began. I am a middle class, college-educated woman who has been blessed with a dedicated family who nurtured me. Yet had I grown up with brown or black skin, the dedication of my family would not have been enough. There were, and are, systems in place that would have disadvantaged me. God’s grace is freely given to us all, but we humans need to shift the systems, open the gates, tear down the walls, and move the mountains that prevent all people from fully experiencing that grace.
Bonnie B.

* * *

Ephesians 2:1-10
God’s grace and what it does to us warrant celebration. Playwright and dramatist Eugene O’Neil said it well in The Great God Brown: “Man is broken... The grace of God is glue.” Famed American Puritan Jonathan Edwards reflected on the happiness saving grace provides:

We needed only to have God’s wrath appeased, and our sins pardoned; but we needed to have the favor of God. To have God, not only not our enemy, but our friend... We needed not only to be delivered from hell, but to have some satisfying happiness bestowed. (Works, Vol.2, p.145)

This happiness and friendship with God make people eager to do good works, for as the lesson says we are now created to do good works (v.10). Martin Luther put it this way:

Our empty Law is ended by Christ Who fills the vacuum first by being outside of us, because He Himself fulfills the Law for us; then He also fills it with the Holy Spirit Who begins this new and eternal obedience in us... (quoted in Paul Althaus, The Theology of Martin Luther, p.234)

It seems that when we are caught up in grace and belief in a loving God, the brain’s prefrontal cortex is activated. This part of the brain is then flooded with the amphetamine-like brain chemical dopamine. These dynamics help us to have better control of brain, feelings of rage, and render us more compassionate and sociable (Andrew Newberg and Mark Waldman, Why We Believe What We Believe, pp.266-267).
Mark E.  

* * *

John 3:14-21
“And this is the judgment,” says Jesus in John 3:19. But the situation he describes is one where we judge ourselves. Light comes into the world, but many people choose darkness instead of the light to hide their deeds. The word translated judgement is krisis from which we get our word crisis. Clearly, the moment of choice, when we accept or reject Jesus, is a crisis. It is a crisis that cannot be put off or put aside. Are we going to accept the light? Are we going to choose the darkness?
Frank R.

* * *

John 3:14-21
When I was a kid in 1972, I enjoyed watching the movie Poseidon Adventure. If you aren’t familiar with that movie, it’s the fictional story of a ship that capsizes and begins to sink. Passengers on the ship are left to find their way out from the top of the ship to the bottom which is now the only part on the water. The tension mounts as the ship also starts to sink. Those who are trying to get out don’t have much time. I remember that a small group, led by a minister were trying to get out through the boiler room. One of the ship’s officers was leading a larger group the opposite way. I remember the passionate pleas from the minister for the officer’s group to turn around. The path they were on was going to lead to death. They wouldn’t listen, though. The only ones saved from the capsized ship were those who went with the minister.

I thought about that movie again as I looked at this passage. We are close to celebrating Jesus’ death and resurrection. I am reminded, once again, of the urgency of our message. There is only one way to salvation. It is the path articulated in John 3:16. All other roads lead to death. May we be passionate about sharing the truth with those around us.
Bill T.
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New & Featured This Week

The Immediate Word

Thomas Willadsen
Christopher Keating
Dean Feldmeyer
Mary Austin
Katy Stenta
George Reed
For June 1, 2025:
  • That They All May Be One by Tom Willadsen based on Acts 16:16-34, Revelation 22:12-14, 16-17, 20-21; John 17:20-26, Psalm 97.
Thomas Willadsen
Christopher Keating
Dean Feldmeyer
Mary Austin
Katy Stenta
George Reed
For June 1, 2025:
  • That They All May Be One by Tom Willadsen based on Acts 16:16-34, Revelation 22:12-14, 16-17, 20-21; John 17:20-26, Psalm 97.

CSSPlus

John Jamison
Object: Tickets to give the children. You may use the ones I have included, print your own, or just use simple tickets you might buy on a roll.

Note: Be sure to have enough tickets to be able to give one to each child during the message. Also, if you have very young children in the group, I find it best to include them in the first group receiving tickets, as they sometimes don’t really understand why they are left out of the group in the beginning.

* * *
John Jamison
Object: This message includes movements to reinforce the lesson. Based on your group, have them be as active as you dare in joining you with the movements.

* * *

Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Are you ready for our story today? (Let them respond.) Excellent! Let’s get started!

Emphasis Preaching Journal

David Kalas
Our family watched a movie together recently that left us feeling a bit mixed. The movie was great, mind you. Very well done. But the ending left us feeling frustrated, sad. We had expected a happy ending, but what we got was bittersweet, instead. 
Mark Ellingsen
Bill Thomas
Frank Ramirez
Bonnie Bates
Acts 16:16-34
Mark Ellingsen
Bill Thomas
Frank Ramirez
Bonnie Bates
Acts 1:1-11
The American middle class is still being squeezed. And there are too many Americans forever mired in poverty. A University of California at Davis study found that one-third to one-half of children who are poor for a substantial part of their childhood will be poor as adults. All this leads to despair, which the famed French existentialist Albert Camus defined as accepting your condition in life even when you can’t stand it (The Rebel, p.14).  

StoryShare

Peter Andrew Smith
Patrick rubbed his forehead and scrolled back on his laptop screen. He tried to ignore the other students in the study lounge who were working on projects and papers for their classes. He took a deep breath and started reading again.

“You okay?”

“Huh?” Patrick looked up and noticed Tim from his Monday morning class sitting just down from him. “Yeah, sorry just reading and having a hard time making sense of it.”

“Well, I’m bored of what I’m doing.” Tim closed the text book in front of him. “Mind if I have a look?”
John E. Sumwalt
I have heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love[a] toward all the saints, and for this reason  I do not cease to give thanks for you as I remember you in my prayers…(vv. 15-16)

Every church has at least one soul who embodies the Christ light like no other. If you cannot imagine who that might be in your congregation, maybe it’s you.

SermonStudio

Bonnie Bates
This reading from the book of Revelation, the vision of John, reminds us that Jesus is the beginning and the end, Jesus is the first and the last, the alpha and the omega. But even more than that, this reading reminds us to come to the Christ, to come to Jesus, to come to the water of life. Jesus poured his very self out to us and invited us to be a part of the work of the faith: a disciple. We are as invited to come with Jesus on a faith journey as Peter, Andrew, James, John, and all the others who followed Jesus were invited. The question is - what will we do with this invitation?
Carlos Wilton
(See Christmas Day, Cycle A, for an alternative approach.)

A genre of movies that's become popular in recent years is disaster films. Whether it is invaders from another galaxy, a catastrophic global climate change, or a falling asteroid, Hollywood loves to fill the nation's big screens with images of destruction.

Schuyler Rhodes
"Clap your hands, all you people! Shout to God with loud shouts of joy!" What images of fun and frolic this paints in the imagination. Behind the shouting and the clapping is an old New-Orleans-style jazz band. All around the band are daisy chains of people wrapped arm and arm, caught in the throes of dance and song. It is exuberance and wonder, joy and clarity, all bound up in one powerful package.
Frank Ramirez
One of the most obvious things about the night sky is the moon, especially the full moon. The full moon transforms not only the sky, but the earth, creating a dimmer, second kind of day, casting long shadows, and providing some guidance to those who find themselves outdoors.

Certainly, it is one of the things that children first notice about the sky. They can point to the moon, ask what it is, stare at it in wonder.

And then, a few days later, the child can wonder -- where did it go?
Steven E. Albertin
Today I want you to participate in the proclamation of today's message. Perhaps it will help you to remember the spectacular event and its significance that we are commemorating today.

John N. Brittain
Have you ever noticed that some constellations are named for animals that they don't really resemble? If you have ever been in the Scouts or taken a course in astronomy or just looked up into the sky at night, you know what I am talking about. As an undergraduate astronomy minor at Brown University, many years ago, I would give tours at the Ladd Observatory and on clear nights point out constellations from the outdoor gallery. But people often were not satisfied. For example, the stars in the constellation Ursa Major, The Great Bear, do not look the part.
Carlyle Fielding Stewart, III
The prisoners and the jailers had their world rocked one midnight 2,000 years ago. The report includes the following details:

1:00: Paul and Silas while on their way to a place of prayer see a slave girl who was popular for telling the fortunes of others. She made much money from this enterprise and a fortune for her owners. Each day she would go to the town square and as people passed by she would shout out her readings of their future. Some revered the slave girl for the accuracy of her predictions. Others feared her for the same reason.

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:

Jesus prayed to God asking that Jesus might be within us just as God was within Jesus, so that we may become completely one with God. In our worship today let us meet with the God within us, who is waiting to welcome us.

Invitation to Confession:

Jesus, sometimes we act as though you are not within us. Lord, have mercy.

Jesus, sometimes we refuse to look deep within ourselves and so can't find you. Christ, have mercy.

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