New Year's Eve or Day
Worship
Special Days For Celebration
Worship Resources For Eighteen Occasions Throughout The Year
Comments on the Service
* This is a new year. Let us resolve to find something to please us in each day, and let us greet each new day of this year with glad hearts and shining faces.
* New Year's Eve is a time for remembrance and a time for anticipation. Don't let it pass lightly.
* Think of the headline events of the past year - and then think of the hidden everyday events that don't make news.
* New Year's Eve or New Year's Day is a time of taking inventory, confessing sins, acknowledging talents and celebrating gifts.
* We can take some time to dream for the future and we can vow to simplify our lives.
* There is no such thing as "lack of time." We all have exactly the same amount - twenty-four hours a day. It was the same for Martin Luther and for Joan of Arc as it is for us. Several years ago one of my New Year's Resolutions was to handle each piece of paper only once. I don't do very well at it but I still think it's a good idea.
* Some possible hymns:
"Now Thank We All Our God"
"Guide Me, O Thou Great Jehovah"
"O God, Our Help in Ages Past"
"Greet Now the Swiftly Changing Year"
"Another Year is Dawning"
* Some quotes (For use in bulletin or newsletter)
Memories should endure. Unless we know where we came from, something about the road we travelled as a people, how can we know who we are and where we are going?
- Hal Borland
There is a relation between the hours of our life and the centuries of time ... The hours should be instructed by the ages, and the ages explained by the hours.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
Nothing is worth more than this day.
- Goethe
* Send a press release to your local newspaper, such as the following:
NEWS RELEASE
Saint Mark Covenant Church
1234 Church Street
Anytown, USA 12345
Rev. Roger Grace, Minister
300-9000
- For immediate release -
Saint Mark Covenant Church of Anytown will hold their annual New Year's Eve [New Year's Day] Service at 11 p.m. [11 a.m.] on December 31 [January 1].
The music, Scripture, and sermon will focus on remembrance, thanksgiving, and hope.
"This will be a good time," says Pastor Grace, "for taking inventory of our lives, giving thanks for the gifts we have been given, and dreaming for the future."
All are urged and invited to attend. A time of friendship and refreshments will follow the service.
NEW YEAR'S EVE/DAY
Order of Worship
PRELUDE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
CALL TO WORSHIP
This is the day which the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it. (Psalm 118:24)
HYMN
PSALM 103:24-28 (Responsively)
THE GLORIA PATRI
Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit: as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen
SPECIAL MUSIC
THE LESSONS
(Use one, all, or a combination of these:)
Philippians 4:11
Psalm 118:24
Luke 18:15-17
CONTEMPORARY READING
The New Year emphasizes the central truth that our destiny is not controlled by blind fate nor by luck or superstitious practices but by our responsible thoughts and acts. NEW YEAR does not stress the comfort of faith, but its challenges.
- Rabbi Lothar Lubasch
The Quotable American Rabbis
Editor:
Samuel M. Silver
(Droke House, 1967), p. 140
A TIME FOR REMINISCING
The Minister says:
Turn now to a person next to you and talk about a New Year's Eve or New Year's Day you remember.
(Allow one or two minutes for this)
What was the latest you stayed out on New Year's Eve? Did you have a church service on New Year's Eve?
CHILDREN'S TIME
SERMON
HYMN
APOSTLES' CREED
OFFERING
Prayer - We give thee but thine own, whatever the gift may be. All that we have is thine alone, a trust, O Lord, from thee.
PRAYER
O God of newness and Creation, we know the years will roll around whether we are ready or not. You have placed us in a world of space and time, and through this process you bless us and nourish us. May this coming year be one of open hearts to an encounter with transcendence. And may it be a year when we find you under the edges of the ordinary. May your love be at work through us and may we live without fear or anxiety in the light of the event which gives us joy forever - the coming of your Son, Jesus Christ.
This we pray, and also as you taught us ...
THE LORD'S PRAYER
THE BENEDICTION
The Lord bless you and keep you.
The Lord make his face shine on you and be gracious to you. The Lord look upon you with favor and give you peace.
HYMN
POSTLUDE
Children's Message
Materials to have on hand: A homemade toy telephone constructed with two tin cans and a string about 25 feet long (one labeled 19__ [old year] and the other 19__ [new year]).
(Have two of the older youngsters get on either end of the tin can telephones and stretch out the string as far as it will go. Have the one holding 19__ [new year] say, "Thank you for a good year" to 19__ [old year]. Then have the one holding 19__ [old year] say to 19__ [new year], "We look forward to what you will bring." By now the other children will have the idea.)
The telephone is often used to spread some good news. We're going to do that now as we help l9__ [old year] speak to 19__ [new year]. (At this point give half the children a chance to talk to the other half, as time and numbers will permit. Ask them to relay the following messages, taking turns:)
Old Year person - "Hello New Year!"
New Year person - "Goodbye Old Year!" Old Year person - "God loves you and me!"
New Year person - "Yes, God loves you and me!"
Old Year person - "I'll be ______ years old in your year."
New Year person - "I was ______ years old in your year." Old Year person - "I hope you will be a fine year!"
New Year person - "You were a fine year!"
Old Year person - "Jesus love me, this I know!"
New Year person - "Yes, I know that too. Jesus loves me!" Old Year person - "What are you going to bring me?"
New Year person - "I will bring you - and everyone - God's good grace and love."
(You can add other questions and answers as appropriate in your situation.)
(Gather all the children back together and put aside the toy telephones.)
This has been fun, boys and girls, and we have heard lots of good news. Here at ______ Church we believe that the greatest good news is that God loves us - and all people. The Bible tells us that when it says:
For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.
John 3:16
Thanks, kids, for coming up. Now you may return.
Preaching Resources
"Reflecting at New Year's Time"
Texts:
Philippians 4:11; Psalm 118:24; Luke 18:17
1. Remembrance of the past (Philippians 4:11)
This is a good time to remember the many good things that came to us in the past year. Our natural tendency is to think that other people had it better and that the grass is always greener on the other side. That's why I like this story that Gerald Kennedy told: (I have lost the source)
A young man was proposing to a young woman. Said he: "I am not wealthy and I don't have a yacht and a convertible like Jerome Green, but, my darling, I love you."
The young woman thought for a moment and then replied: "And I love you too, John, but tell me a little more about Jerome Green."
2. Thanksgiving for the present (Psalm 118:24)
Here's a reading that speaks to the gift of "now." Ann Landers quoted it in one of her columns. I belive she found it in an Al-Anon book:
Today is mine. It is unique. Nobody in the world has one exactly like it. It holds the sum of all my past experiences and all my future potential. I can fill it with joyous memories or ruin it with fruitless worry. If painful recollections of the past come into mind, or frightening thoughts of the future, I can put them away. They cannot spoil today for me. It is mine.
- Anonymous
3. Hope for the future (Luke 18:17)
If children have not much else, they have hope. Looking at things with the eyes of children we can have hope again. And we might even understand what Mary Martin sang in South Pacific: "I'm stuck like a dope with a thing called hope ..."
Here's one child's world view. It lifted my hope factor when I read it:
When former hostage (in Iran) William F. Keough, Jr. reached Wiesbaden, West Germany, he found tons of letters waiting for him. Keough says he is not likely to forget one of them soon. It said: "I'm Susie Jones. I am eight years old. I am in the third grade, so I know what you've been through."
- From an Associated Press story Quoted in A Running Commentary by Roger Prescott
(C.S.S., 1983), p. 34
* This is a new year. Let us resolve to find something to please us in each day, and let us greet each new day of this year with glad hearts and shining faces.
* New Year's Eve is a time for remembrance and a time for anticipation. Don't let it pass lightly.
* Think of the headline events of the past year - and then think of the hidden everyday events that don't make news.
* New Year's Eve or New Year's Day is a time of taking inventory, confessing sins, acknowledging talents and celebrating gifts.
* We can take some time to dream for the future and we can vow to simplify our lives.
* There is no such thing as "lack of time." We all have exactly the same amount - twenty-four hours a day. It was the same for Martin Luther and for Joan of Arc as it is for us. Several years ago one of my New Year's Resolutions was to handle each piece of paper only once. I don't do very well at it but I still think it's a good idea.
* Some possible hymns:
"Now Thank We All Our God"
"Guide Me, O Thou Great Jehovah"
"O God, Our Help in Ages Past"
"Greet Now the Swiftly Changing Year"
"Another Year is Dawning"
* Some quotes (For use in bulletin or newsletter)
Memories should endure. Unless we know where we came from, something about the road we travelled as a people, how can we know who we are and where we are going?
- Hal Borland
There is a relation between the hours of our life and the centuries of time ... The hours should be instructed by the ages, and the ages explained by the hours.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
Nothing is worth more than this day.
- Goethe
* Send a press release to your local newspaper, such as the following:
NEWS RELEASE
Saint Mark Covenant Church
1234 Church Street
Anytown, USA 12345
Rev. Roger Grace, Minister
300-9000
- For immediate release -
Saint Mark Covenant Church of Anytown will hold their annual New Year's Eve [New Year's Day] Service at 11 p.m. [11 a.m.] on December 31 [January 1].
The music, Scripture, and sermon will focus on remembrance, thanksgiving, and hope.
"This will be a good time," says Pastor Grace, "for taking inventory of our lives, giving thanks for the gifts we have been given, and dreaming for the future."
All are urged and invited to attend. A time of friendship and refreshments will follow the service.
NEW YEAR'S EVE/DAY
Order of Worship
PRELUDE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
CALL TO WORSHIP
This is the day which the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it. (Psalm 118:24)
HYMN
PSALM 103:24-28 (Responsively)
THE GLORIA PATRI
Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit: as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen
SPECIAL MUSIC
THE LESSONS
(Use one, all, or a combination of these:)
Philippians 4:11
Psalm 118:24
Luke 18:15-17
CONTEMPORARY READING
The New Year emphasizes the central truth that our destiny is not controlled by blind fate nor by luck or superstitious practices but by our responsible thoughts and acts. NEW YEAR does not stress the comfort of faith, but its challenges.
- Rabbi Lothar Lubasch
The Quotable American Rabbis
Editor:
Samuel M. Silver
(Droke House, 1967), p. 140
A TIME FOR REMINISCING
The Minister says:
Turn now to a person next to you and talk about a New Year's Eve or New Year's Day you remember.
(Allow one or two minutes for this)
What was the latest you stayed out on New Year's Eve? Did you have a church service on New Year's Eve?
CHILDREN'S TIME
SERMON
HYMN
APOSTLES' CREED
OFFERING
Prayer - We give thee but thine own, whatever the gift may be. All that we have is thine alone, a trust, O Lord, from thee.
PRAYER
O God of newness and Creation, we know the years will roll around whether we are ready or not. You have placed us in a world of space and time, and through this process you bless us and nourish us. May this coming year be one of open hearts to an encounter with transcendence. And may it be a year when we find you under the edges of the ordinary. May your love be at work through us and may we live without fear or anxiety in the light of the event which gives us joy forever - the coming of your Son, Jesus Christ.
This we pray, and also as you taught us ...
THE LORD'S PRAYER
THE BENEDICTION
The Lord bless you and keep you.
The Lord make his face shine on you and be gracious to you. The Lord look upon you with favor and give you peace.
HYMN
POSTLUDE
Children's Message
Materials to have on hand: A homemade toy telephone constructed with two tin cans and a string about 25 feet long (one labeled 19__ [old year] and the other 19__ [new year]).
(Have two of the older youngsters get on either end of the tin can telephones and stretch out the string as far as it will go. Have the one holding 19__ [new year] say, "Thank you for a good year" to 19__ [old year]. Then have the one holding 19__ [old year] say to 19__ [new year], "We look forward to what you will bring." By now the other children will have the idea.)
The telephone is often used to spread some good news. We're going to do that now as we help l9__ [old year] speak to 19__ [new year]. (At this point give half the children a chance to talk to the other half, as time and numbers will permit. Ask them to relay the following messages, taking turns:)
Old Year person - "Hello New Year!"
New Year person - "Goodbye Old Year!" Old Year person - "God loves you and me!"
New Year person - "Yes, God loves you and me!"
Old Year person - "I'll be ______ years old in your year."
New Year person - "I was ______ years old in your year." Old Year person - "I hope you will be a fine year!"
New Year person - "You were a fine year!"
Old Year person - "Jesus love me, this I know!"
New Year person - "Yes, I know that too. Jesus loves me!" Old Year person - "What are you going to bring me?"
New Year person - "I will bring you - and everyone - God's good grace and love."
(You can add other questions and answers as appropriate in your situation.)
(Gather all the children back together and put aside the toy telephones.)
This has been fun, boys and girls, and we have heard lots of good news. Here at ______ Church we believe that the greatest good news is that God loves us - and all people. The Bible tells us that when it says:
For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.
John 3:16
Thanks, kids, for coming up. Now you may return.
Preaching Resources
"Reflecting at New Year's Time"
Texts:
Philippians 4:11; Psalm 118:24; Luke 18:17
1. Remembrance of the past (Philippians 4:11)
This is a good time to remember the many good things that came to us in the past year. Our natural tendency is to think that other people had it better and that the grass is always greener on the other side. That's why I like this story that Gerald Kennedy told: (I have lost the source)
A young man was proposing to a young woman. Said he: "I am not wealthy and I don't have a yacht and a convertible like Jerome Green, but, my darling, I love you."
The young woman thought for a moment and then replied: "And I love you too, John, but tell me a little more about Jerome Green."
2. Thanksgiving for the present (Psalm 118:24)
Here's a reading that speaks to the gift of "now." Ann Landers quoted it in one of her columns. I belive she found it in an Al-Anon book:
Today is mine. It is unique. Nobody in the world has one exactly like it. It holds the sum of all my past experiences and all my future potential. I can fill it with joyous memories or ruin it with fruitless worry. If painful recollections of the past come into mind, or frightening thoughts of the future, I can put them away. They cannot spoil today for me. It is mine.
- Anonymous
3. Hope for the future (Luke 18:17)
If children have not much else, they have hope. Looking at things with the eyes of children we can have hope again. And we might even understand what Mary Martin sang in South Pacific: "I'm stuck like a dope with a thing called hope ..."
Here's one child's world view. It lifted my hope factor when I read it:
When former hostage (in Iran) William F. Keough, Jr. reached Wiesbaden, West Germany, he found tons of letters waiting for him. Keough says he is not likely to forget one of them soon. It said: "I'm Susie Jones. I am eight years old. I am in the third grade, so I know what you've been through."
- From an Associated Press story Quoted in A Running Commentary by Roger Prescott
(C.S.S., 1983), p. 34
