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Sermon Illustrations for Maundy Thursday (2018)

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Exodus 12:1-4 (5-10) 11-14
This was something like a last supper. After this they left Egypt. Just as in the Lord’s last supper blood was symbolically spilled as wine. Yes, the Israelites had to do something to be saved. Centuries later, Jesus did it for us and the Lord’s Supper is a reminder of what He sacrificed for us. Many in the world today have experienced great disasters like the recent earthquakes in Nepal and hurricanes and floods and the memory will go on for many years for the people who suffered from them. There were both Christians and non-believers who may have had other gods who all suffered together. I’m sure that sacrificing animals would not have saved those Christian believers, but I’m sure many felt that if they were saved, the Lord had saved them.

It is not easy today to separate the good from the bad as the Lord separated the Egyptians from his people.

Are we ready to follow him when we hear his call for us? Are we ready to make a sacrifice of something important to us to be saved? The alternative can be disaster as it was for the Egyptian families who lost some of their children. Even though they had obeyed, the journey the Israelites took was not an easy one. They suffered along the way and at times assumed the Lord had deserted them. The Lord may lead us through some rough times, like our recent hurricanes, but we must remain faithful and not doubt that he cares for us and is still guiding us so that one day we will be with him in the promised land of heaven -- the land he promised us if we obey him. We are lucky to be in a wonderful country compared to some others in this world. People are begging to get into the U.S. and away from the horrors they were experiencing in their lands. The Lord has led some here, but some will not be invited in. Trying to separate these is a job that our country faces, and we need the Lord to help us! Sometimes our churches do better than the government. We may be the ones to do the Lord’s will even if it requires violating our laws to do it.

I can’t help but think of some in the mission field, as the one’s I served in Nepal who suffered that terrible earth quake a couple years ago. We did all we could to support them with our mission funds. We sent over $50,000 in two years. The average yearly income in Nepal was only about $200. The church over there was lucky to get $50 a month if some American tourists attended. That had to cover the pastor’s salary. So there are even problems if there are no earth quakes.

Even those in our church today have their problems.
Bob O.


Exodus 12:1-4 (5-10) 11-14
It came as a surprise to all the young monks at the priestly fraternity of St. Peter in Lincoln, Nebraska. But when they released an album of Gregorian chants on May 12, 2017, they never expected it to be a best-selling classical album on Amazon. The album “Requiem” has many of the 80 seminarians and Catholic priests singing a traditional Latin funeral mass. What is equally more astonishing is the order was established as early as 1988. Rev. Gerard Saguto, the order’s North American superior, said, “We just wanted to put something out there to get people to think more about eternity, God and our life in reference to those things, and it seems we’ve been blessed with popularity, which none of us expected or were even trying to achieve.”

Application: A central theme in or lectionary reading is worship.
Ron L.


Exodus 12:1-4 (5-10) 11-14
The Passover is an important celebration of the Jewish faith. “The eight-day festival of Passover is celebrated in the early spring, from the 15th through the 22nd of the Hebrew month of Nissan, March 30-April 7, 2018. It commemorates the emancipation of the Israelites from slavery in ancient Egypt. It is observed by avoiding leaven, and highlighted by the Seder meals that include four cups of wine, eating matzah and bitter herbs, and retelling the story of the Exodus. In Hebrew it is known as Pesach (which means “to pass over”), because God passed over the Jewish homes when killing the Egyptian firstborn on the very first Passover eve.”1

Christian churches and faith communities may celebrate Passover, but remember that what we add makes the celebration a Christian one. It is important to celebrate the essence of the Jewish tradition with respect and adherence to tradition. Perhaps it is better yet to reflect on the fact that Jesus was celebrating Passover with his friends, all his friends including men, women and children (since Passover is a family celebration), when he offered to those gathered bread and cup, as symbols of his life -- his body and blood. Perhaps remembering that Jesus was a man of Jewish faith who formed a new way of worshipping God and living in covenant is more than enough.
Bonnie B.


Exodus 12:1-4, 11-14
Twentieth-century Jewish rabbi Morris Joseph has noted that “Passover affirms the great truth that liberty is the inalienable right of every human being." But we know that this inalienable right is consistently under threat. Racial imbalances continue to plague our nation. Pew Research Center found that in terms of 2015 salaries, Black men earned only 73% in salary of the white male paycheck and that Hispanics only garner 67% of a typical white male salary. A 2016 study of the Sentencing Project found that African Americans are incarcerated in state prisons at a rate that is 5.1 times the imprisonment of whites. And a 2017 Gallup Poll showed that the majority of Americans still do not think immigrants help the nation.

Overcoming injustices with the promise of freedom and liberty was associated at the Passover with the sacrifice of the lamb. We Christians see a connection between Christ’s sacrifice and this lamb. But one of the great theologians of the early church, Justin Martyr, pointed out the difference between Christ and the Passover lamb. While Hebrews continued to offer sacrifices, he says, Christ, the new sacrifice put an end to more sacrifices (Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol.1, pp.214-215).

Martin Luther also explained the nature of Christ’s Sacrifice:
Christ, therefore, became both “a curse,” and afterwards also “sin,” that is, a sin-offering upon which rest the sins of all men, and hence also the wrath of God and a miserable death. Since these things rest upon this offering, we are relieved for they rest on us no longer. (Sermons On the Passion of Christ, p.168)
The sacrifice of Christ means that freedom and liberty have already been achieved. We don’t need to be martyrs ourselves, to repeat Jesus’ sacrifice, in order to make them happen. But Passover and the Christian version of it are occasions for reminding ourselves, for strengthening our confidence that the threats to freedom and justice can never have the final say.
Mark E.


1 Corinthians 11:23-26
On November 1, 2006, Adrienne Shelly was found hanging from the shower rod in the Manhattan apartment that she used as an office. The incident was first ruled as a suicide, but then a further investigation reported it as a murder. A construction worker entered her apartment and killed Shelly during a robbery. He wanted her death to look like a suicide. Adrienne Shelly was an actress who also liked to write. She wrote the movie Waitress which she hoped would be shown at the Sundance Film Festival. The movie is about an unhappy pregnant married woman with a talent for baking pies. The year after Shelly’s death the film was shown at Sundance. A decade after her death, Waitress debuted on Broadway as a play. Shelly’s husband, Andy Ostroy, said of the Broadway production, now “the world gets to know Adrienne Shelly again in a whole different way. I think about what she would think if she had seen her name in lights on Broadway.”

Application: Maundy Thursday and Holy Communion is a way to see Jesus in a whole new way. Every time we participate in the sacrament his name truly does appear in lights on Broadway.
Ron L.


1 Corinthians 11:23-26
Transliteration means you didn’t bother to translate the word. You just move it over from one language to another. Good examples from the Bible include baptize (the Greek word literally means “immerse,” and is used for washing clothes and dishes), and Alleluia (the Hebrew means literally “Praise Yah!” with Yah the shortened version of the name for God in the Hebrew scriptures).

People sometimes call communion the Eucharist, but that’s a transliteration. The translation is “Thanksgiving.” A good translation (as compared to transliteration) is when the apostle Paul tells us in this passage that “…the Lord Jesus on the night when he was betrayed took a loaf of bread, and when he had given thanks, he broke it (1 Corinthians 11:23-24).” There’s that Eucharist word, translated instead of transliterated, as “giving thanks!”
Frank R.


1 Corinthians 11:23-26
Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper is one of the most admired, most studied, and most reproduced paintings the world has ever known. There are, though, some aspects of this painting that tend to get overlooked. The painting is large. Countless reproductions have been made in all sizes, but the original is about 15 feet by 29 feet. It was not created for a museum, nor does it reside in one. Although The Last Supper is easily one of the world’s most iconic paintings, its permanent home is a convent in Milan, Italy. And moving it would be tricky, to say the least. Da Vinci painted the religious work directly on the dining hall wall of the Convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie back in 1495. 

Visitors to Milan are often disappointed when they see DaVinci’s famous painting The Last Supper. The colors are so faint you can barely see the painting. Restoration has been going on for years with little success. The background of the world’s most famous fresco invites even more sadness. The wall on which it was painted began to crumble almost immediately after it was done. Not long after it was complete, the monks cut a door in the wall cutting off the feet of Christ. Later the building became a stable, then a storage room, then a barracks for soldiers. It is amazing that this great work of art should have been treated so casually. But then, the very supper that inspired it is treated casually by many -- even by some who profess that they follow the Christ who instituted it.
Bill T.


John 13:1-7, 31b-35
As a local church pastor, I have occasionally done foot-washing as a part of a Maundy Thursday worship service. I am amazed at how many people are unwilling to have their pastor kneel at their feet and wash them; well, really, only pour warm water over them and dry them. I cannot imagine how the disciples felt at their teacher and mentor, the one they believed to be the Son of God, kneeling at their feet. Jesus is clear. He was called to serve among the people, not lord any status over them. He was called to be the one who provided care.

Imagine the wonder of the moment of having the Savior of the world bow over your feet and wash them. It is an act of service, but more than that, it is an act of love. Washing the feet of the members of my congregation has been one of the most spiritual of experiences I have had as a pastor. To walk in the footsteps is one thing but to love as Jesus loved, to serve as Jesus loved and loves is another thing altogether. My friends, don’t deny anyone the opportunity to serve and to love.
Bonnie B.


John 13:1-7, 31b-35
All Judas wanted to betray Jesus for was only few dollars! Don’t let profit make us betray our Lord and savior. Ask the Lord to guide you.

Don’t we often misunderstand our Lord? Like Peter, it is embarrassing to have him wash our feet!! We may want him to wash our whole body! Why can’t we leave it up to him what he will do for us! Using his example can we humble ourselves to wash other’s feet? One of the great leaders of the church in Nepal, old Pastor Tir, came to a meeting where, at the end of the meeting, we were asked to wash each other’s feet. What a shock it was to have old Pastor Tir come and wash our feet. What an example! Would we wash a Baptist’s feet or a Catholic’s feet or the feet of one of those in a non-denominational church? To make it even worse, would be wash the feet of a North Korean even if he were a Christian? We are so surprised at what the Lord does for us or wants us to do for others. In one church back east the pastor had the people put their foot on the altar rail with their shoes on. Then he would dust the shoe with a rag. He said it was only symbolic.

The answer comes in our Lord’s command to love one another. We are even told in another place to love our enemy. How can we tell that to a soldier in the army? Yes, some have treated enemy prisoners with respect and even a level of love. We seldom think ahead to those occasions. We saw an example of it in Ken Burn’s TV story about the Vietnam War, where many had trouble having to kill someone on “the other side” who were often just citizens of a village on the wrong side.

Jesus even seemed to forgive Judas at the last supper.

At 90 I am close to going home to be with the Lord, so should I live any differently now? Even if we are younger shouldn’t we always want to follow Jesus’ example? We should think of that as we take the Lord’s Supper in our church.
Bob O.


John 13:1-17,31b-35
Jesus’ whole Ministry and the event depicted in the lesson are all about humility. In a society that thrives on self-promotion, that is not a message we want to hear. Self-promotion, we think, is the key to success. Success Coach Bonnie Marcus puts it this way:
Self-promotion is a leadership and political skill that is critical to master in order to navigate the realities of the workplace and position you for success.
Martin Luther nicely describes true Christian humility, the humility Jesus displayed and the kind that inspires Christians to display in life:
In a word, a truly humble man turns into the sort of person who is false to no one but has an honest, pure, and sincere heart... For he does not seek his own interests by his works and life; his eyes are not fixed on anything that is his... He does all his works for nothing, merely to serve others. (What Luther Says, pp.671-672)
Early 20th-century Anglican Bishop William Temple offers another deep insight about the humility of Jesus and his followers:
Humility does not mean thinking less of yourself than of other people, nor does it mean having a low opinion of your own gifts. It means freedom from thinking about yourself at all.
Jesus’ humble love frees us from ourselves!
Mark E.


1 http://www.chabad.org/holidays/passover/pesach_cdo/aid/871715/jewish/Pas...
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The Immediate Word

Dean Feldmeyer
Christopher Keating
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Nazish Naseem
For December 21, 2025:

SermonStudio

Garth Wehrfritz-Hanson
Pastor: Advent God: We praise and thank you for the word of promise spoken long ago by your prophet Isaiah; as he bore the good news of the birth of Immanuel–so may we be bearers of the good news that Immanuel comes to be with us. God of love:

Cong: Hear our prayer.
Dallas A. Brauninger
1. Text

Now the birth of Jesus the Messiah took place in this
way. When his mother Mary had been engaged to Joseph, but before they lived together, she was found to be with child from the Holy Spirit.18 Her husband Joseph, being a righteous man and unwilling to expose her to public disgrace, planned to dismiss her quietly.19 But just when he had resolved to do this, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said, "Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid to take Mary as your wife, for the
James Evans
(See Advent 1, Cycle B, and Proper 15/Pentecost 13/Ordinary Time 20, Cycle C, for alternative approaches.)

The recurring phrase, "let your face shine" (vv. 3, 7, 19), offers an interesting opportunity to reflect on the meaning of God's presence in our world. This reflection takes on a particular significance during the Advent season.

Richard A. Jensen
Our Matthew text for this week comes from the first chapter of Matthew. Matthew's telling of the Jesus' story is certainly unique. Matthew tells of the early years of our Savior stressing that his name is Jesus and Emmanuel; that wise sages from the East attend his birth; that Joseph and Mary escape to Egypt because of Herod's wrath. No other Gospel includes these realities.
Mark Wm. Radecke
In the Jewish tradition there is a liturgy and accompanying song called "Dayenu." Dayenu is a Hebrew word which can be translated several ways. It can mean: "It would have been enough," or "we would have been grateful and content," or "our need would have been satisfied."

Part of the Dayenu is a responsive reading that goes like this:

O God, if thy only act of kindness was to deliver us from the bondage of Egypt, Dayenu! -- It would have been enough.
Stephen M. Crotts
Some years ago I was in a London theater watching a Harold Pinter play. The drama was not very good really. I was getting bored. Then right in the middle of the play the theater manager walked on stage, excused himself, and made an announcement. The actors stared. The audience looked shocked. Me? I thought it was all part of the play. Such interruptions are rare in a theater. But nonetheless, the stage manager felt that it was necessary this time. His announcement was nothing trivial like, "Some owner has left his car lights on." Nor was it a terrifying message like, "Fire! Fire!
Timothy J. Smith
It is easy to get so caught up in the sentimentality and nostalgia of Christmas that we neglect the true reason we celebrate. We receive Christmas cards portraying a cute infant Jesus lying in a manger filled with straw. The Baby Jesus is pictured in the center with Mary and Joseph on one side, the shepherds and Magi on the other. We know this scene: animals are in the background, in the distance angels can be seen hovering, as a star shines brightly overhead. However, there is more to Advent and Christmas than celebrating the birth of a baby.
William B. Kincaid, III
If we cannot relate to Joseph and appreciate his situation, then our lives are simple, easy lives indeed. Now, by relating to Joseph or understanding what he endured, I don't mean to suggest that we all either have been engaged or married to someone impregnated by the Holy Spirit. Even in our frantic search for ways to explain how such a thing might have happened, we probably didn't think of blaming the Holy Spirit!
R. Glen Miles
"The Lord himself will give you a sign" is the way Isaiah begins his recitation of the promise containing all promises. Isaiah is talking to Ahaz. Ahaz is the king who is stuck in a political mess. It looks like Assyria is about to invade some of the countries neighboring Judah. Isaiah is recommending that the king refuse to sign on with these other countries and their armies and trust only in Yahweh, the Lord of all. Today's reading is a reminder of the promise of God to be with Ahaz and his people, no matter what happens, no matter who invades.
John T. Ball
Religion is a mutual relationship. We pledge loyalty and devotion to God and God blesses us. This is how Moses worked it out with Yahweh and his people who had recently escaped from Egyptian captivity. If the Israelites prove loyal to this mysterious Sinai god, then God would bless them with prosperity and well being. Those who deal with many gods are no different. Even though they have gods for various concerns, they still expect blessings and security in exchange for loyalty.
Susan R. Andrews
According to tradition, Joseph was the strong, silent type - an older carpenter who willingly submitted to impotent fatherhood - a second--string player in the drama of God's human birth. But according to scripture, none of this is true. All that is actually recorded in the Bible is that Joseph was a dreamer - a righteous man who transformed the meaning of righteousness by taking seriously his dreams.
Beverly S. Bailey
Hymns
O Come, O Come, Emmanuel (UM211, PH9, LBW34, CBH172, NCH116)
The God Of Abraham Praise (UM116, PH488, NCH24)
O Hear Our Cry, O Lord (PH206)
Hail To The Lord's Anointed (UM203)
Blessed Be The God Of Israel (UM209)
Emmanuel, Emmanuel (UM204)
People Look East (PH12, UM202)
Savior Of The Nations, Come (LBW28, CBH178, PH14, UM214)
The Virgin Mary Had A Baby Boy (CBH202)
Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus (PH1, 2,UM196, NCH122)

Anthem

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Prayers usually include these concerns and may follow this sequence:

The Church of Christ

Creation, human society, the Sovereign and those in authority

The local community

Those who suffer

The communion of saints


These responses may be used:


Lord, in your mercy
Hear our prayer

Lord, hear us.
Lord, graciously hear us.
Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:
Just before the first Christmas, an angel appeared to Joseph to tell him that Jesus would also be called "Emmanuel", meaning "God With Us." Let us listen to the guidance of the angels today as we prepare to receive God With Us once again.

Invitation to Confession:
Jesus, fill me with the awe of Christmas.
Lord, have mercy.
Jesus, fill me with the mystery of Christmas.
Christ, have mercy.
Jesus, fill me with Emmanuel -- God with us.
Lord, have mercy.

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Argile Smith
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What's Up This Week
"Samantha" by Argile Smith
"I'm Pregnant" by C. David McKirachan
"You'd Better Watch out..." by C. David McKirachan
"Terribly Vulnerable to Joy" by Scott Dalgarno
"The Great Christmas-Tree Battle" by Stan Purdum


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Emphasis Preaching Journal

Over the years, I grow more cynical about Christmas and just about everything that goes along with it. I have not become a scrooge, although the advancing years have made me more careful with my pennies. It is not that I cannot be moved by the lights, the music, and the fellowship of the holidays. I have not become an insensitive, unfeeling clod. My problem is that the language and the images and the music seem to have fallen short in expressing what must have been the feelings of the real human beings going through the events recounted in this story.

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What an exciting day this is! Today is the day before Christmas and tonight is Christmas Eve! People have different ways of doing things. Some people open their presents on Christmas Eve. How many of you do that? (Let them answer.) Others open their presents on Christmas Day. Which of you will open your presents tomorrow? (Let them answer.) Some open gifts on other days. Would any of you like to share another time when you open presents? (Give them the opportunity to answer.)

Why do you suppose we open gifts at this time of the year? (Let them answer.)

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