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Second Sunday of Easter - A

David Coffin
It is the time of year for the last push of demands before the summer season beckons upon the horizon. The children's school system is squeezing in as many meetings as possible for parents. Teachers are trying to push assignment and test dates before the even warmer days arrive in May and June. Many church organizations have their denominational gathering about this time of year. They have business they hope to have wrapped up so staff and volunteers can take the summer off out of the area or on mission trips.
Schuyler Rhodes
Recently a friend told me the story of his move to our community. It was a job transfer, and he was needed in the new location much sooner than he or his family had expected. Previous excursions to the area with his wife to look for a new home had proven unsuccessful. The home they were leaving had been sold, and they needed to find a new house quickly. So with the help of a realtor and with his wife unable to be present, my friend selected and bought a house for his family. The best he could do was to attempt to describe the house to his wife, but he had no pictures to send and no way for her to see the house before he bought it. Can you imagine buying a house for your wife without her seeing it? My friend let it be known that he would never do anything like that again. Somehow I believe...
Wayne Brouwer
One of my good friends died last year. He had reached a good age and was mostly ready to go. In fact, he once told me he had more lives than the proverbial cat's nine. On too many occasions, because of cancer and accidents and blood diseases, doctors had written him off. Yet, like the Energizer bunny, he kept going and going and going....

But in the year before his death he knew the end was coming. He joked about it one day, telling me that several of his friends had recently conversed about death. One said that when he was gone, he hoped people would say nice things at his funeral about how he was a truly godly man and always tried to do the right thing. Another chimed in that he hoped people would mention how much he loved his family and was a friend on which...
Recently a friend told me the story of his move to our community. It was a job transfer, and he was needed in the new location much sooner than he or his family had expected. Previous excursions to the area with his wife to look for a new home had proven unsuccessful. The home they were leaving had been sold, and they needed to find a new house quickly. So with the help of a realtor and with his wife unable to be present, my friend selected and bought a house for his family. The best he could do was to attempt to describe the house to his wife, but he had no pictures to send and no way for her to see the house before he bought it. Can you imagine buying a house for your wife without her seeing it? My friend let it be known that he would never do anything like that again. Somehow I believe...
Fresh air is precisely what many people feel they never get in church. Many recall the experiences of former times when the air was stodgy and stuffy. In some communities of faith the air is still a bit stifling, and so when invited to worship, the response is often, "Been there. Done that."

Yet our lessons are full of the freshness of spring, bringing life and vigor to what had been dormant, as though frozen in winter and refusing to thaw.

Acts 2:14a, 22-32

The isolated verse that introduces our pericope identifies the speaker of the following sermon as Peter. The audience, omitted by our not reading the second half of verse 14, is the people of Judea who had gone up to Jerusalem as the rules required for the festival of Passover. Yet their...

Biblical scholars, conservative and liberal alike, date most of the New Testament letters before the gospels and Acts, as in Luke-Acts. So a sermon reconstructed in Acts -- few believe that we have stenographic records, either, in these compressed half-column sermons -- is not the first preached witness to the resurrection. But the story of Pentecost, the early gathering day with its account of the coming of the Spirit, qualifies as a symbolic "first sermon" tryout.

Quite naturally, scholars and people of ordinary faith probe the few lines here to get clues to the mentality of people who thought they had buried hopes with Jesus, only to find Jesus Christ and their hopes liberated and very much alive. This time, Peter speaks to the "men of Judea and all who live in...
David Kalas
The Sunday after Easter is an unenviable time for preachers in many churches. The mood and events of Holy Week have both a depth and an excitement that can make the Sunday after Easter something of a letdown. The palm branches are gone. The lilies are gone, and it will seem that a great many people are gone, too. Surely the attendance in so many of our American churches is a letdown on the Sunday after Easter.

So what shall we do on the Sunday after Easter? Take a vacation? Follow the lead of our people who stay home in great numbers this day? Bring in someone off the bench to fill the pulpit?

Throughout the gospels, Jesus repeatedly told people not to spread the word about him. After they were healed (Luke 5:14), after they witnessed miracles (Matthew 17:9;...
David Coffin
As a pastor and a Christian, I have always found the challenge of “Easter” to be not allowing it to be reduced to one climactic Sunday after the 40 days of Lent. That is, how can one celebrate and experience the new life of this season in a way that it is a meaningful part of the spiritual journey, when the rest of the society might give people maybe the afternoon of Good Friday off from work for the weekend of Easter Sunday. The Easter season of new life is not the old life resuscitated (like Lazarus in John 11). New life has both comforting as well as unanticipated stressful experiences in this season.

Acts 2:14a, 22-32
David Kalas
Last week felt very much like a climax.

In many of our churches, the season of Lent is experienced as weeks of focus and expectation, leading up to Easter Sunday. Starting on Ash Wednesday, perhaps as individuals or perhaps as a church family, we engage in seven weeks of deliberate reflection and spiritual discipline. And last Sunday represented the grand conclusion of that period.

Meanwhile, even if the larger season of Lent is not high-profile in your church, or even if this year’s Lenten season was significantly interrupted, still your people probably experienced Holy Week as full and significant. There is the festivity of Palm Sunday, the drama of Maundy Thursday, and the somber darkness of Good Friday. But it all comes to a joyous climax on Easter Sunday....
Mark Ellingsen
The lessons and the theme of the Second Sunday of Easter testify to how Christ and his resurrection have their way with us. This theme matches the practice of the early church on the Sunday after Easter when newly baptized members were admitted into the fellowship as full members, a Sunday to celebrate how the Easter Gospel had changed them.

Acts 2:14a, 22-32
In the First Lesson we consider the second half of the two-part early history of the church attributed to Paul’s Gentile associate, Luke (Colossians 4:14; II Timothy 4:11; Philemon 24). Its main emphasis is the universal mission of the church and to vindicate Paul’s ministry. But as Paul did not negate the Jewish inheritances of the faith, so in this lesson we hear part of Peter’s address...

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Spiritually Speaking
by Keith Wagner
Psalm 16
Alex A. Gondola, Jr.
Keith Hewitt
Contents
What's Up This Week
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"Tracks" by Keith Hewitt


What's Up This Week

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Thomas had never seen his friends so excited. Peter's eyes were shining, and he could hardly contain his impatience. John was always quieter than Peter, but even he seemed full of barely suppressed eagerness. They were both tugging at Thomas, while at the same time dancing round him.

Thomas reluctantly agreed to go to the cave with them, although he continued to think they were mad. "If there was nothing there last week, how can it have changed now?" he kept asking.

SermonStudio

Stan Purdum
This psalm is a song of confidence and trust, and the first-century church found in it a prophecy of the Resurrection. Peter, in his Pentecost sermon, quotes verses 8-11 (Acts 2:25-28), applying them to the risen Lord. Thus, its designation as the responsorial psalm for Easter 2.

The psalm falls easily into three divisions: verses 1-4, there is no good apart from God; 5-8, the Lord is my portion and my counselor; and 9-11, there is joy and life with God.
John R. Brokhoff
THE LESSONS

Lesson 1: Acts 2:14a, 22--32 (C, E)
According to God's plan and David's prophecy, Jesus was raised from the dead. This pericope is a part of Peter's Pentecost sermon. It is a sample of the early church's preaching, as Luke understood it, summarized in the crucifixion, resurrection, and fulfillment of prophecy. Peter emphasizes that what happened to Jesus was according to God's plan. He quotes Psalm 16 as a prophecy by David of the resurrection which was fulfilled. The disciples are witnesses to the fulfillment because of their encounters with the risen Lord.
Tony S. Everett
So, here we are just over one week after Easter Sunday. Vigils are finished. Sunrise services are over. Dishes from the youth breakfast have been washed and put away. Brass and tympani fanfares have concluded. Flowers on the cross have begun to wilt and blow away. Fewer pews are filled.
Richard L. Sheffield
What the disciples of Jesus reported to their fellow disciple Thomas they had seen seemed unbelievable. And Thomas didn't believe it! They said they saw Jesus alive. Well, Thomas saw him alive until late the previous Friday afternoon when Thomas saw him dead. It was now Sunday afternoon -- and to what they said they saw, Thomas' response was, "Seeing is believing," and until I see something different from what I have already seen, I will not believe a word of what you say.
Albert G. Butzer, III
Several years ago the Episcopal Church launched a creative and clever advertising campaign. One of their ads pictured a young man with a frustrated look on his face because someone had put a heavy piece of tape across his mouth. His mouth had been taped shut; he was unable to speak. The caption, which accompanied the picture, said this: "The problem with churches that have all of the answers is that you can't ask questions."
Harry N. Huxhold
The United States of America has earned the reputation of being the most violent culture in the world. That really is an oxymoron. How can one speak of culture as being violent? Yet the problem of violence is so widespread in our nation that Gavin De Becker, an authority on violence, notes that we are a nation with more firearms than adults, and twenty thousand guns enter our commerce every day. His book, The Gift of Fear, is about our fear which furnishes us survival signals to protect us from violence. We should not be shocked that anyone is capable of violence.
Bill Mosley
The great luxury liner was on fire, but no one knew it. Deep in the hold, near the engine room, hundreds of tons of coal were stored. Coal--powered ships used to carry the coal in a watered--down state. But this ship was new, and very big; bigger than any ship ever built, or had ever sailed. So even though the coal was watered for safety, the enormous amount meant that there were dry spots. A fire smoldered undiscovered deep in the coal supply, and when it was discovered, a fire--fighting crew was sent to quench it. They worked for days, even weeks, and couldn't put it out.
B. David Hostetter
CALL TO WORSHIP
Bless our God who has given us counsel.
Come to worship with exulting heart and rejoicing spirit.

PRAYER OF CONFESSION
Beverly S. Bailey
Hymns
I Danced In The Morning (UM261, PH 302)
Christ Is Risen! Shout Hosanna! (CBH 272)
Jesus, The Very Thought Of Thee (NCH507)
We Live By Faith And Not By Sight (NCH256, PH398)
O Sons And Daughters, Let Us Sing (NCH244, PH116, 117)
Breathe On Me, Breath Of God (CBH356, UM420, PH316)
These Things Did Thomas Count (NCH284)
When In The Night I Meditate (PH165)

Anthems
From the Messiah: I Know That My Redeemer Liveth, G. F. Handel
Frank Ramirez
Call To Worship (Acts 2:32)
This Jesus God raised up, and of that all of us are witnesses.


Collect
We lift up our eyes to you Lord, after the despair of the cross. We follow the path from the empty tomb to see you risen and walking among us! We praise your name in victory! Amen.


Prayer Of Confession

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Fresh air is precisely what many people feel they never get in church. Many recall the experiences of former times when the air was stodgy and stuffy. In some communities of faith the air is still a bit stifling, and so when invited to worship, the response is often, "Been there. Done that."

Yet our lessons are full of the freshness of spring, bringing life and vigor to what had been dormant, as though frozen in winter and refusing to thaw.

Acts 2:14a, 22-32
Wayne Brouwer
One of my good friends died last year. He had reached a good age and was mostly ready to go. In fact, he once told me he had more lives than the proverbial cat's nine. On too many occasions, because of cancer and accidents and blood diseases, doctors had written him off. Yet, like the Energizer bunny, he kept going and going and going....

CSSPlus

Good morning, boys and girls. This morning we read from the Bible about a special meeting between Jesus, who had been resurrected a week earlier, and his disciples. All of the disciples believed the resurrection except Thomas, who had not been in the room when Jesus met with the disciples a week earlier. Thomas had heard about it but didn't believe. He said that unless he saw for himself the wounds in the hands and side of Jesus, he would not believe.
Good morning, boys and girls. What does this sign mean? (Let them answer.) It is a question mark. When you see it that means someone is asking a question. Sometimes it means that someone doesn't believe what you are saying. That means the person is doubting you. It's a very common thing to have doubts about something. If one of you told me that you don't like to play with toys, I'd say, "I'm not so sure about that. I doubt it. I'll bet you really like to play with toys." If one of you told me that you didn't like candy, I would say, "I'm not so sure about that. I doubt it.
UPCOMING WEEKS
In addition to the lectionary resources there are thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
Easter 2
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160+ – Illustrations / Stories
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