Saturday, December 07, 2024
The Last Prophecy
Malachi 3:1-4
The Last Prophecy
2nd Sunday of Advent
Year C
Prelude
Greeting
Lighting of the Advent Candle
Reader One: The prophet Malachi calls us to watch for the messenger God will send us, a messenger who burns with a passion for God’s coming salvation. “For he is like a refiner's fire and like fullers' soap; he will sit as a refiner and purifier of silver, and he will purify the descendants of Levi and refine them like gold and silver, until they present offerings to the LORD in righteousness” (Malachi 3:2b-3).
Congregation: In a world driven by a passion to maintain the status quo, we choose to live with a passion for God’s peace, to listen to those who call us to righteousness, and to submit ourselves to God’s grace, that we might be refined and purified until we reflect God’s love throughout the earth.
Reader Two: We light this candle of peace as a sign of our commitment to passionately pursue the work of making peace in our hearts, our families, our communities, and throughout the earth until God’s kin-dom comes on earth as it is in heaven.
Light the second candle of the Advent wreath. (United Methodist Board of Discipleship)
Call to Worship
Children of God, prepare the way! The Word of God is coming!
We come to listen and receive God’s Word among us.
Children of God, the prophets call to us now and from generations past, urging us to prepare and refine our hearts for the coming of the Word of God. Are you listening?
We come to listen and prepare to receive God’s Word among us.
Children of God, this is the mark of our preparation: that passion for God’s Word would burn within us, cleansing us and renewing us to reflect God’s love throughout the world.
May God ignite our passion for God’s Word that has come among us as we listen, prepare, and receive all that God has for us today. Amen.
Written by Dr. Lisa Hancock, Discipleship Ministries, June 2024.
Opening Prayer
Compassionate God, greet us with your grace this day, for we need you. We cannot save ourselves. Though we may be frantic with activity, our efforts do not yield peace, peace as you can give. Today we would be quiet enough to hear your voice. Today we would be still enough to feel your touch. Help us to find that place where we can receive as well as give, wait as well as act, and listen as well as speak. Our whole world needs your peace. Let us come before you and learn your ways, laying down our weapons and feeding the hungry. Come to us now, through Jesus the Christ. Amen.
Written by Ruth C. Duck in Touch Holiness: Resources for Worship, Updated(Cleveland: Pilgrim Press, 2012), 5.
For use in worship, using the following attribution:
Reprinted by permission of the publisher from Touch Holiness, ed. Ruth C. Duck and Maren C. Tirabassi. Copyright © 1990 by The Pilgrim Press.
Song Angels from the Realms of Glory UMH 220
A Sermon for all ages
Each of us is holding a copy of the Bible. The Bible is God’s Word to us. The Bible is true. The Bible teaches us about God’s promises and plans for all men, women, boys and girls. Everything that God says He is going to do is going to happen.
As we have studied God’s Word together we have had opportunities to see how God made promises to His people and how He has kept His promises. We have seen how God promised His people that if they would repent and turn away from their sin and turn back to Him, He would forgive them (Joel 2:13). God loves His people and will never stop loving them. Because He loves them He has to punish their sin. The Jewish people ignored the prophets God sent to warn them to turn away from their sin. God kept His word and punished them by sending them to Babylon for 70 years to be prisoners (Jeremiah 25:11). After 70 years God kept His promise to let His people return to Jerusalem. God sent prophets to encourage the Jewish people who returned to their city that was destroyed. He sent prophets like Haggai and Zechariah to remind His people that the Messiah would come and they would finally live peacefully with God’s blessings. God used Ezra and Nehemiah to help rebuild the temple and the walls.
Today we are going to be studying Malachi the last minor prophet in the Old Testament. Let’s open our Bibles and find the Book of Malachi.
The name Malachi means “my messenger”. God had a message for His people. Malachi reminded the people that God loved them.
1. What does Malachi’s name mean? (My messenger)
2. What did Malachi remind God’s people? (He loved them)
3. Why was God disappointed with His people? (They weren’t bringing the best offerings, the priests were not teaching the people to live according to God’s truth, they were robbing God and they said it was useless to serve God)
4. What kind of offering did God require the people to bring for a sacrifice? (An animal that wasn’t sick or injured, one without blemish)
5. What is the Day of the Lord? (The day God will punish all the wickedness on the earth)
6. How long was God silent after Malachi gave His message? (400 years)
7. What change do you need to make in your life to give God your very best?
(Ministry to Children, Kelly Henderson)
PRAYER OF CONFESSION
God of Grace,
you blow the breath of life into our lungs,
you have formed us in your image.
And yet we acknowledge that sometimes
we are not who you would have us be.
You challenge us to embrace the refining fire of your love,
to meet you on the threshing floor of life, to be washed as with fuller's soap.
But in our heart of hearts
we would rather keep those things
that would be removed in such an encounter.
Through your Grace, life-giving God, accept us as we are,
Unrefined, unwashed, the chaff mixed in with the grain.
And help us to move into a new way of being
...time of silence...
Listen! For this is Good News!
God's Grace is wider than our wildest imaginings.
God's Grace embraces us as we are and where we are
and draws us out to be the people we were created to be.
Thanks be to God! Amen.
Written by Rev. Gord Waldie on his blog, Worship Offerings. http://worshipofferings.blogspot.ca/. Re-posted on the re:Worship blog at https://re-worship.blogspot.com/2013/08/prayer-for-grace-malachi-3-1-4.html.
Scripture Malachi 3:1-4
Sermon The Last Prophecy
The major themes of the advent season are prophecy and promise. In the 4 weeks before Christmas we look at the ancient promises that God made to the people of the world. And we follow along with how those promises and prophecies have played themselves out in modern times. Malachi is the last prophecy of the Hebrew Bible. It is believed that Malachi was the prophet Ezra – he convinced the Hebrews to purify themselves and to rebuild the temple so that they would have a place to come and worship God. The Hebrew bible never really says why – but it seems that after the words of Malachi – God slowed down in sending God’s words through prophets. There are 400 years between the end of the book of Malachi and the beginning of the book of Matthew- the New Testament begins in prophecy. In the new testament, we hear confirmation that all that the prophets said was fulfilled in the birth of Jesus. There are several places where the new testament says that God will not send any more prophets to the world. To be fair, the muslims do consider Jesus to be a prophet, but they say that Muhammad was the last prophet that God sent to the world.
Either way, it is significant for us that as the age of prophecy ends, the age of fulfillment begins. The Holy Spirit speaks to us in a brand new way, the spirit works in the hearts of the righteous, in the life of Jesus Christ and in the words of scripture.
It is interesting, that the last big question of the last Hebrew prophecy is still a question for today. Where is the God of justice? For some reason it seems like evil prevails. Crooked people seem to get aways with anything now. It seems like we live in a world where there are no rules, no respect, no need to do the right thing.
Malachi is a series of conversations between God, God’s messenger, and God’s people. In our scripture, the message to us is two fold or may even three fold – first, don’t worry, justice is coming. God sees what is going on in the world. God does not have a police force to enforce righteousness, but God knows what is going on and who is doing it. The presence of God came to us in the life of Jesus Christ.
- Second we need to prepare ourselves for the coming of justice in the world. It is easy for us to expect justice for other people. But God’s justice is for us all. Instead of focusing on what others are doing wrong, we need to focus on our own lives. When justice comes into the world permantly, how will that affect our own actions.
- Third we have to be careful what we ask for. In order for the world to heal, it will be painful. God’s justice will be painful, but it will be in our own best interest. Sort of like old school medical cures. Today, medicine is sugar coated. They do everything to make medical cures comfortable. That was not so in the olden days. I used to hate to come down with a cold, because my mother would make me drink nasty cod liver oil. And as a child, it was never a good day when my mother would pull out the mercurochrome to put on a scape or sore. That stuff would burn and hurt so much more than the original wound. And yet supposedly, it bought about healing. The day they took that stuff off of the market was a good day. And yet that is a good image of what God’s justice is like. Malachi says that it is like a refiners fire – it will burn, but it will make you a better person. Justice leads to repentance, and repentance leads to forgiveness, grace and peace. Justice is coming, but it will affect us all. With God’s judgement better days are coming.
If you thought that 400 years was a long time to wait for the biblical story to continue with the birth of Jesus, imagine to 2024 years since Jesus’ birth that we are waiting for Jesus to return. When we look at the news it is easy to believe that the spirit of God is not around. It seems that things have gotten out of hand. Even I ask God, if God is all powerful and has control of all of life, why does God allow the things in the world to go on? When will Jesus return and end all of this craziness? When will justice prevail? When will the prophecy be fulfilled?
Experiment of couples juggling too much
There was as advent experiment – where couples were asked to stand on stage and to literally juggle some important symbols of life – 10 couples were given a wedding ring, a soccer ball, a tablet computer, a crystal vase, a cup and a saucer, and a cross. As you can imagine, as the couples lined up and started juggling, you could hear broken glass, and bouncing balls everywhere. Every couple dropped these symbols as they tried to juggle them all at one time. That is the sound of the beginning of advent – the sound of chaos and broken glass. The sound of God shaken up our symbols, our priorities, our beliefs, our hopes and our dreams. But there was one couple that did not drop the things that they were juggling. They realized that they couldn’t keep everything in the air – so they took some time to prioritize what was most important to them – their faith – the cross, their children – the doll, and the wedding ring. Everything else had to be put aside.
Most of the things that come to us that shake us – is God’s way of telling us that we cant have everything, we cant do everything, we cant be everywhere – so we have to be forced to pick what is really important to us – and focus just on those things, and let everything else fall to the ground and breaking.
Being shaken up is a sign of God’s love. It is a sign that God plan for salvation is working full speed ahead.
On the second Sunday of Advent – that is what the world sounds like – chaos, confusion, and wanting of a sense of justice. If 400 years is a long time, 2024 is so much longer. Advent starts with us wating for Jesus to return. When will that be? The New Testament prophecy sais that there is no way of us every to know.
Remember the words of Malachi – the day is coming – so now we wait, we prepare, we open our hearts. God’s justice will affect all of the world. God’s peace will benefit us all as well. The coming of Christ is a moment for everyone to rejoice.
Did you know that some of the most popular Christmas songs were actually written by Jewish people? These songs include: Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer, Let is Snow, The Christmas song, It is the most wonderful time of the year, Santa Baby, Silver Bells, Winter Wonderland. There are many others. Perhaps it is just a matter of making money for them, perhaps they understand what it means to wait for the messiah, Perhaps God’s vision of a world where justice prevails and we all chose to live as righteous people is the fulfillment of a promise made to all of humankind, regardless of our religion or creed.
This advent, remember that even in the midst of silence God still speaks. We can find peace, in a world where the unjust prevail. Let us pray……..
Song All the Earth is Waiting UMH 210
Pastoral Prayer
Lord’s Prayer
Stewardship Moment
In Advent and during the Christmas season stories are often told of people eager to offer something to the baby Jesus.
The story of the poinsettia comes from Mexico, focusing on two young children, so poor they picked weeds on the side of the path they walked to church. When they arrived to offer their weedy gift, they found the weeds blossomed into brilliant red when they laid them at the manger bed.
The classic story of “The Other Wise Man” by Henry Van Dyke details the travels of Artaban, who wanted to join the wise men following the star. He had several gifts when he began his journey. Side-tracked when he used a gift to help a dying man, Artaban finally got to Bethlehem, only to discover Jesus and his family had left for Egypt. Artaban traveled for 33 years, searching for Jesus until he finally comes to Jerusalem, where his last gift is used to redeem a woman who was up for sale as a slave.
What story might be told because of the gifts you bring to offer to the Redeemer today?
Let us share our gifts with joy.
Prayer of Thanksgiving
With grateful hearts, O God, we bring our gifts and ourselves to offer our lives back to you.
Thank you for redeeming us.
Thank you for claiming us as your own beloved children.
Accept this offering.
Help us put it and ourselves to use this week,
that we might share the Good News of your peace with the world. AMEN. (Disciples of Christ Center for Faith and Giving)
Announcements
Closing Prayer for Facebook
May the Spirit of Light,
The Christ of Love,
And the God of Joy
Infuse our souls with peace and a song of thanksgiving
As we seek the presence of God in our world.
Community Time Joys and Concerns (United Church of Christ Worship Ways)
Benediction
Go, now, blessed with a passion that refines, molds, and shapes each of our hearts to reflect God’s glorious love that transforms despair into hope, violence into peace, and distress into flourishing. Amen.
Written by Dr. Lisa Hancock, Discipleship Ministries, June 2024.
Postlude
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment