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The Promise of Christmas - Level and Smooth!

Children's sermon
Object: A shovel, rake, or hoe, or all three.

* * *

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

How many of you have ever taken a trip in a car somewhere? (Let them respond.) Back in Jesus’ day, if people wanted to go somewhere, they didn’t ride in cars like we do. If someone wanted to go from one place to another, they either walked or if they were rich, they might have ridden on a mule. And the roads they traveled on weren’t like ours either. Their roads went way up over big, steep hills and way down in deep, dark valleys. The roads had lots and lots of curves on them. Those curves were dangerous because sometimes people would hide behind them to jump out and rob people who were traveling by. One time, Jesus even told his friends a story about a man who was robbed on the road one day, and how other people were afraid to stop and help him.

That is why, when the man called John the Baptist came and started telling everyone about Jesus coming to help them, he told them something that the prophet Isaiah said a long time ago. Isaiah said that when God sent Jesus, he would make sure that every valley would be filled in, and every mountain and hill would be made low. He said the crooked roads will become straight, and the rough ways will become smooth. John told everyone that when Jesus got there, God would straighten everything out and make sure that all people would be safe and not have to be afraid. (Show your tools as you continue.) John said that when Jesus came, it would be like he got all of God’s tools out of the shed and would get rid of all of the hills, valleys, and curves that make life so hard for us. Jesus would make life smoother and safer for everyone and no one would have to be afraid anymore. That was the promise God made about what would happen when Jesus came. That was the promise of Christmas. (Put the tools away.)

Our roads are a lot better than those old roads, but life can still be hard for us sometimes, can’t it? (Let them respond.) We might have smoother and straighter roads, but can you think of things that still make life hard and scary for people today? (Let them respond.) Some people don’t have any place to live. Don’t you think that might be pretty scary? (Let them respond.) And lots of people don’t have anything to eat. I’ll bet that’s scary, don’t you? (Let them respond.) Some people get picked on and bullied and feel like they don’t have any friends at all. They feel like they are all alone and that nobody cares about them. That sounds pretty scary to me. (Let them respond.)

Some people just like to bully and pick on other people and do things that make those other people’s lives harder instead of easier. (Show your tools.) God wants to make things smoother and safer for everyone, but those people just want to dig things up to make life harder and scarier for other people. That is not why Jesus came to be with us on Christmas, is it? (Let them respond as you put down your tools.) No, it isn’t.

Jesus came on Christmas to remind us there are two very important things that God wants us to do. Who remembers the two things that Jesus told us God wants us to always do? (Let them respond.) He said that we should always love God, and what else? (Let them respond.) Jesus said that God wants us to love each other and take care of each other, didn’t he? (Let them respond.) He said those are the two most important things that God wants us to do. If we do and say things to help take care of each other, we will help make their lives smoother and safer, just like God wants us to.

Today is the Second Sunday of Advent. Advent is the season we remember to think about just why God sent the baby Jesus to us on Christmas. Did God send Jesus to make everything harder and rougher for us? (Show the tools again and let them respond.) No, that’s not why Jesus was born on Christmas, is it? (Let them respond as you put the tools on the floor.) Jesus came to be with us to remind us to not do or say things to make other people’s lives harder and more dangerous, but to say and do things that will help other people’s lives be smoother and safer. That is the promise God made to us on Christmas.

Before we go, I have a question for us to think about as we get ready for Christmas. Are we doing and saying things to help make life smoother and safer for other people, or are we doing and saying things that make life harder and more dangerous for other people?

Let’s pray and ask God to remind us that Jesus loves every one of us and wants us to follow him and take care of each other the way God takes care of us.

Prayer
Dear God, thank you for reminding us how much you love us and for forgiving us when we forget that. And please help us remember that you love all of the people you have created and help us let the people around us know that we love them just like Jesus loves us. Amen.
UPCOMING WEEKS
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Call to Worship:
At Jesus' baptism God said, "This is my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased." Let us so order our lives that God may say about us, "This is my beloved child in whom I am well pleased."

Invitation to Confession:
Jesus, when I fail to please you,
Lord, have mercy.
Jesus, when I'm sure I have pleased you, but have got it wrong,
Christ, have mercy.
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Reading:

StoryShare

Argile Smith
Contents
What's Up This Week
"Welcoming Mr. Forsythe" by Argile Smith
"The Question about the Dove" by Merle Franke


What's Up This Week

SermonStudio

Constance Berg
"Jan wasn't baptized by the spirit, she was baptized by spit," went the joke. Jan had heard it all before: the taunting and teasing from her aunts and uncles. Sure, they hadn't been there at her birth, but they loved to tell the story. They were telling Jan's friends about that fateful day when Jan was born - and baptized.


Elizabeth Achtemeier
The lectionary often begins a reading at the end of one poem and includes the beginning of another. Such is the case here. Isaiah 42:1-4 forms the climactic last stanza of the long poem concerning the trial with the nations that begins in 41:1. Isaiah 42:5-9 is the opening stanza of the poem that encompasses 42:5-17. Thus, we will initially deal with 42:1-4 and then 42:5-9.

Russell F. Anderson
BRIEF COMMENTARY ON THE LESSONS

Lesson 1: Isaiah 42:1--9 (C, E); Isaiah 42:1--4, 6--7 (RC); Isaiah 42:1--7 (L)
Tony S. Everett
Jenny was employed as an emergency room nurse in a busy urban hospital. Often she worked many hours past the end of her shift, providing care to trauma victims and their families. Jenny was also a loving wife and mother, and an excellent cook. On the evening before starting her hectic work week, Jenny would prepare a huge pot of soup, a casserole, or stew; plentiful enough for her family to pop into the microwave or simmer on the stove in case she had to work overtime.

Linda Schiphorst Mccoy
Bil Keane, the creator of the Family Circus cartoon, said he was drawing a cartoon one day when his little boy came in and asked, "Daddy, how do you know what to draw?" Keane replied, "God tells me." Then the boy asked, "Then why do you keep erasing parts of it?"1
Dallas A. Brauninger
E-mail
From: KDM
To: God
Subject: Being Inclusive
Message: Are you sure, God, that you show no partiality? Lauds, KDM

The haughty part of us would prefer that God be partial, that is, partial to you and to me. We want to reap the benefits of having been singled out. On the other hand, our decent side wants God to show no partiality. We do yield a little, however. It is fine for God to be impartial as long as we do not need to move over and lose our place.
William B. Kincaid, III
There are two very different ways to think about baptism. The first approach recognizes the time of baptism as a saving moment in which the person being baptized accepts the love and forgiveness of God. The person then considers herself "saved." She may grow in the faith through the years, but nothing which she will experience after her baptism will be as important as her baptism. She always will be able to recall her baptism as the time when her life changed.
R. Glen Miles
I delivered my very first sermon at the age of sixteen. It was presented to a congregation of my peers, a group of high school students. The service, specifically designed for teens, was held on a Wednesday night. There were about 125 people in attendance. I was scared to death at first, but once the sermon got started I felt okay and sort of got on a roll. My text was 1 Corinthians 13, the love chapter, as some refer to it. The audience that night was very responsive to the sermon. I do not know why they liked it.
Someone is trying to get through to you. Someone with an important message for you is trying to get in touch with you. It would be greatly to your advantage to make contact with the one who is trying to get through to you.
Thom M. Shuman
Call To Worship
One: When the floods and storms of the world threaten
to overwhelm us,
All: God's peace flows through us,
to calm our troubled lives.
One: When the thunder of the culture's claims on us
deafens us to hope,
All: God whispers to us
and soothes our souls.
One: When the wilderness begs us to come out and play,
All: God takes us by the hand
and we dance into the garden of grace.

Prayer Of The Day
Your voice whispers
over the waters of life,
Amy C. Schifrin
Martha Shonkwiler
A Service Of Renewal

Gathering (may also be used for Gathering on Epiphany 3)
A: Light shining in the darkness,
C: light never ending.
A: Through the mountains, beneath the sea,
C: light never ending.
A: In the stillness of our hearts,
C: light never ending.
A: In the water and the word,
C: light never ending. Amen.

Hymn Of Praise
Baptized In Water or Praise And Thanksgiving Be To God Our Maker

Prayer Of The Day

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Good morning, boys and girls. What am I wearing this morning? (Let them answer.) I'm wearing part of a uniform of the (name the team). Have any of you gone to a game where the (name the team) has played? (Let them answer.) I think one of the most exciting parts of a game is right before it starts. That's when all the players are introduced. Someone announces the player's name and number. That player then runs out on the court of playing field. Everyone cheers. Do you like that part of the game? (Let them answer.) Some people call that pre-game "hype." That's a funny term, isn't it?
Good morning! Let me show you this certificate. (Show the
baptism certificate.) Does anyone know what this is? (Let them
answer.) Yes, this is a baptism certificate. It shows the date
and place where a person is baptized. In addition to this
certificate, we also keep a record here at the church of all
baptisms so that if a certificate is lost we can issue a new one.
What do all of you think about baptism? Is it important? (Let
them answer.)

Let me tell you something about baptism. Before Jesus
Good morning! How many of you have played Monopoly? (Let
them answer.) In the game of Monopoly, sometimes you wind up in
jail. You can get out of jail by paying a fine or, if you have
one of these cards (show the card), you can get out free by
turning in the card.

Now, in the game of life, the real world where we all live,
we are also sometimes in jail. Most of us never have to go to a
real jail, but we are all in a kind of jail called "sin." The
Bible tells us that when we sin we become prisoners of sin, and

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