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Who Am I?

Children's sermon
Object: A copy of a birth certificate.

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Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Are you ready for our story today? (Let them respond.) Excellent! To get started, I have a question for you. Can anyone tell me what you think you would like to be when you are grown up? (Let them respond and ask them about their choices.) It is exciting to think about what we all might become, isn’t it? (Let them respond.) And maybe a little bit scary, too, isn’t it? (Let them respond.) And you know, if you aren’t sure what you want to be yet, that is perfectly fine. One of these days you will say, “I know what I want to do!” so if you aren’t sure right now, don’t worry about it.

Now, let me ask you another question. Who can tell me what this is? (Show the birth certificate.) It is called a birth certificate, isn’t it? (Let them respond.) Who knows what that is? (Let them respond.) It is the document they create when we are born. It shows our name, who are parents are, when we were born, where we were born, how much we weighed when we were born, and some other things. It tells all about us when we were born. It kind of tells us who we are, doesn’t it? (Let them respond.) But it doesn’t tell all about us now, does it? (Let them respond.) Our birth certificate tells who we were when we were born, but doesn’t really tell who we are now, does it? (Let them respond.) We have changed a lot since we were born, haven’t we? (Let them respond.) We are changing all the time, aren’t we? (Let them respond.) That’s what our story is about today.

One day, Jesus was talking with some people and he was trying to tell them who he was. He told them that God had sent him to help them. He said he was like bread that God sent from heaven. (Show the bread.) He said he was like bread that God had sent them from heaven to make sure they were never hungry or needed anything again. Jesus was telling them that he was God’s son and that God had sent him to help them. That’s pretty cool, isn’t it? (Let them respond.)

But, some of the people got all upset and started arguing. They said things like, “Did he just say he was God’s Son and came from heaven? That’s crazy. I know he grew up in Nazareth.” And somebody else said, “Yeah, he did. And I know his parents. His father was a carpenter named Joseph, and his mother is a woman named Mary.” Somebody else said, “I heard he was born in Bethlehem.” They all shouted, “Why the heck are you saying you came down from heaven? We know where you are from and who you really are!”

The people were all upset because they thought Jesus was lying to them, weren’t they? (Let them respond.) They didn’t give birth certificates back when Jesus was born. (Show the birth certificate.) But someone would have written a note in the temple documents that told about a baby named Jesus being born to Mary and Joseph in Bethlehem that day. So when Jesus told them he was God’s Son and that God had sent him to them, the people said they knew who he was and that he sure wasn’t from heaven. They all said they knew who he really was, didn’t they? (Let them respond.)

But they made a mistake, didn’t they? (Let them respond.) They knew Jesus was born in Bethlehem and grew up in Nazareth, but they didn’t know who he was now, did they? (Let them respond.) They didn’t know how God had helped him grow up to become someone very special who was going to help so many people, did they? (Let them respond.)

And we are just like that, too, aren’t we? (Let them respond.) We might know who we were when we were born, and even know who we are right now. But we don’t know who God is going to help us become.

You know, I don’t think God cares too much about a piece of paper that says who we were when we were born. (Put down the birth certificate.) I think God is more interested in who we are going to be. Right now, we might be big or small, rich or poor. We might live in a nice place or we might not have such a nice place to live. We might be really popular, or really shy. God knows those aren’t the things that tell people who we really are, or who we are going to become, are they? (Let them respond.)

So, I have an idea. Instead of worrying about what we are going to be when we grow up, let’s think about how much God loves each one of us, no matter who we might be now, and just wonder how God is going to help us become someone special who can help take care of the people around us.

Let’s pray and ask God to remind us that God created each one of us, and wants to help us become someone who will help take care of each other and 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.
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John Jamison
Object: A 2025 calendar.

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Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Are you ready for our story today? (Let them respond.) Excellent! This is a story about something that happened after Jesus was baptized when he went back to his hometown of Nazareth to visit his family and friends. While he was visiting, he went to the service at the synagogue, just like we come to our church service. During the service, they asked Jesus to read the scripture, so he stood up and read. He said:

The Spirit of the Lord is on me,

The Immediate Word

Mary Austin
Dean Feldmeyer
Christopher Keating
Thomas Willadsen
George Reed
Katy Stenta
For January 26, 2025:

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Wayne Brouwer
It seems everybody knows about Victor Hugo’s greatest novel, even if few have actually read it. He called his masterpiece, Les Miserables, and said that it was “a religious work.” So it is. The story echoes the gospel message at nearly every turn.

The main character, Jean Valjean, has been beaten hard by the cruel twists of fate. He has seen the sham of hypocrisy on all sides. So he casts the name of the Lord to the ground like a curse. What does God know of him, and what does it matter?
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Nehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10

StoryShare

Frank Ramirez
Did you ever notice in most of the old movies how the credits are at the front and they don’t share much information? Take the classic The Wizard of Oz. The overture begins with a rousing fanfare, followed by musical allusions to the key songs in the show. Visually, we see the Metro Goldwyn Mayer logo featuring the roaring lion and the words “Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents,” and of course the title of the film.

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:

The Spirit of the Lord was upon Jesus as he worshipped in the synagogue at Nazareth. Let us ask God's Spirit to fill us as we worship in church today.

Invitation to Confession:

Jesus, when we are unaware of your Spirit within us,
Lord, have mercy.

Jesus, when we deny your Spirit within us,
Christ, have mercy.

Jesus, when we reject or damage your Spirit within us,
Lord, have mercy.

Reading:

Luke 4:14-21

SermonStudio

Stephen P. McCutchan
Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.
-- Luke 4:21

Constance Berg
David led us the two blocks from our church to his place of worship: a synagogue. We all gathered around him to hear what he was saying. The mid-week church school students had been studying the Jewish faith for three weeks, and now it was time to visit a synagogue!

David's job was to help the rabbi, who could only come to town periodically. David spoke with much pride of the customs that have been handed down for centuries and that he now espoused.
Robert F. Crowley
Theme

Is the body of Christ able to work together in harmony because the spirit of the Lord is upon it, or is it meant to operate like any other organization?

Summary

Pastor Ralph needs some work on his car and he is also dealing with differing factions in his church. He is not having a good day. Earl, his friend and mechanic, gives him some good advice on taking care of his car and then relates it to his church -- get all the parts working together; after all, they all have the same manufacturer -- the Holy Spirit.

Playing Time
Dennis Koch
Gospel Theme:
An overture for the oppressed

Gospel Note:
Luke's moving of Jesus' hometown sermon from later in his ministry (as in Mark) to its inception makes it a kind of programmatic overture for the Master's entire career. Jesus' choice of passage (from Tito-Isaiah) to define his objective is as sobering today as it was then, for the recipients of the good news are to be, not the comfortable and contented, but the poor, the imprisoned, the blind, the oppressed.

Liturgical Color:
Green

Suggested Hymns:
O God Of Light
James Evans
Psalm 19 celebrates two different media through which God is revealed: nature and the law.

The first part of the psalm calls our attention to the presence of God in nature -- "The heavens are telling the glory of God." The word "glory" is the Hebrew kabod and literally means weight or heaviness. The derived meaning is something akin to "reputation." God's reputation is evident in the heavens.

But reputation for what?

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We live in a society in which right and wrong have become largely a matter of personal opinion. All individuals are seen as a law unto themselves, and what is right for one person is not necessarily right for anyone else. Indeed, if any person tries to impose their ethical standards on another, the response is usually defensive anger. "Don't try to impose your middle-class morality on me," goes the complaint. "I know what is right for me, and you have no business trying to meddle in my life!"
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I shall never forget the night that Mae June came to church. Mae June was a workingwoman who, in our little community, was often seen in the late hours of the night in some of the darker places of our little town.

Harry N. Huxhold
In the Sundays of the Epiphany we are reminded in our worship how God continually reveals God's Person. That, of course, is done most clearly in the Person of our Lord Jesus Christ, who came to be one of us. Today the emphasis of the Lessons is on how God is revealed in the Word. In the Holy Gospel, Jesus himself points out how he is revealed in the word, or the word is revealed in him, but the people do not seem to understand. That is always a problem in communication. The words can be ever so clear, but do people get the message?
Robert S. Crilley
Let me offer you a hypothetical situation. Suppose you had a friend who was unfamiliar with the church. The person had never attended a worship service or sat in on a Sunday school class. He or she had never participated in any of the midweek fellowship activities or volunteered to help out with one of the mission trips. In effect, Christianity was a complete mystery to him/her. And so, more out of curiosity than anything else, the person asks you, "What exactly is the church?"
Julia Ross Strope
A single song is being inflected through all the colorations of the human choir.
The way to become human is to recognize the lineaments of God in all the wonderful modulations of the face [of humankind].
-- Joseph Campbell, The Hero With a Thousand Faces

Call To Worship
Leader: Welcome! Together we'll explore ancient stories about a public reading, the awesomeness of Creation, satisfying life together, and we will claim our God-given abilities.

Special Occasion

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