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Something Old, Something New

Commentary
There’s that old rhyme associated with weddings, “Something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue, and a sixpence in her shoe.” These were the things the bride was supposed to wear to her wedding to ensure prosperity and good luck.

Regardless of the origin and history of this rhyme, it’s worth noting that we are the bride of Christ, and in these lectionary scriptures for this Sunday we are being given something old, something new, and something borrowed. I’m not going to worry about anything being blue, and it’s too hard for some of us to put our hands on a sixpence.

The something old comes from Isaiah. The suffering servant whose words can cut us to our heart are redefined in the mission and ministry of Jesus. The something borrowed is the image of wealth which the city of Corinth enjoys in contrast to the poverty of other parts of Greece. Paul tells the Corinthians their true wealth comes from Jesus, and not through their own cleverness. The something new is that ancient archetype, the word, finding new definition in Jesus, the Lamb of God.

Isaiah 49:1-7
Isaiah’s description of the suffering servant, which will be explicated in the chapters that follow, are something planed by God from of old. The prophet says he was called before his birth, commissioned to be God’s own arrow, God’s own sword, to convict not by conquering, but through his suffering witness. Note that here the servant speaks for himself, not for the Lord. The prophet is one who is deeply despised, abhorred by the nations, yet he will be honored and glorified. The church has seen in these words of old the King of kings, coming at yuletide. He who through his suffering will be despised and abhorred will surprise all, revealed as the Lamb of God, as John the Baptist saw so clearly. His own received him not, but he will take away the sin of the world. The servant will be vindicated. This is what is meant when Jesus quotes Psalm 22 from the cross. The suffering servant is the model not only for the ministry of Jesus, but for us as well. I’ve been recently reading Robert A. Caro’s massive four volume biography of Lyndon Johnson, and he makes the point in more than one place that the nonviolent arm of the Civil Rights movement was intended to strike the core of white America’s conscience by forcing them to witness the unmerited suffering of the African Americans who witnessed nonviolently to the truth of their cause. It’s no easier now for us to live like Jesus, especially in an age of Twitter where one is supposed to respond to insults with a ceaseless barrage of insults of our own.

1 Corinthians 1:1-9
There’s a lot going on in this letter of Paul to Corinth. Corinth is a bustling city of commerce located on the Isthmus of Greece, multi-ethnic, a center of many faiths, in contrast to the poverty of Macedonia. The Corinthians owed their wealth to a geographical accident. Ships could reduce the risks associated with a Mediterranean voyage by either unloading their ships on one side of the isthmus, transporting the goods by cart, and reloading on another waiting ship, or if the ship were small enough, putting the ship on wheels and transporting it directly. Their wealth was not the result of their own merit, but good fortune.

Paul borrowed that image of wealth and its source, and reminded them that they were made rich, with regards to their knowledge, and testimony, and spiritual gifts, because of God’s gift of Jesus Christ. It’s not our own merit, but God’s blessings, that makes us wealthy in salvation. We are often tempted as Americans to take credit for our good fortune without crediting the happy accident of our birth here. We who are the descendants of wanderers (as Abraham wandered without ever truly arriving, who is our spiritual ancestor) sometimes despise contemporary immigrants who are looking for the same blessings. And we who are comfortable church people are uncomfortable with newcomers to the faith who haven’t learned to respect us enough to do what we say.

John 1:29-42
Something new — a whole new way of looking at Jesus. What a difference a day makes. While the other three gospels have Jesus die on Passover, his death takes place on the preparation day, the day before, when lambs are slaughtered for the Passover meal. The blood of the lamb, splattered on the doorposts of the Israelite slaves in Egypt, will save these families from the Angel of Death. The blood of the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world, will save us from the condition of sin which enslaves us, despite our best efforts, to alienation and despair.

This is so new, so different, that two disciples of John leave him and follow Jesus. One of them, Andrew, inspires his brother Simon to meet Jesus, who gives him a new name: Cephas, Peter, Rock. Jesus grants new insight to Nathaniel who is bound by old prejudices – Can anything good come from Nazareth – to come to agree with Phillip that here is the one pointed to by the law and the prophets. And greater things are to come. All these disciples are now something new.

A new name, a new way of looking at scripture, a new life in Christ can be liberating, but it’s also scary because we have to set aside our preconceptions. It’s all part of entering a new relationship with God as the bride of Christ. Are we ready to become something new?
UPCOMING WEEKS
In addition to the lectionary resources there are thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
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The Immediate Word

Dean Feldmeyer
Christopher Keating
Thomas Willadsen
Katy Stenta
Mary Austin
George Reed
Nazish Naseem
For February 1, 2026:
  • What the Lord Requires by Dean Feldmeyer. The world’s requirements are often complex and difficult. God’s requirements are simple and easy. Kinda.
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The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus told the people how they could be blessed by God and experience God's kingdom. In our worship today let us explore the Sermon on the Mount.

Invitation to Confession:
Jesus, sometimes I'm full of pride instead of being poor in spirit.
Lord, have mercy.
Jesus, sometimes I'm overbearing and pushy, instead of being meek.
Christ, have mercy.
Jesus, sometimes I'm not exactly pure in heart.
Lord, have mercy.

Reading:

StoryShare

John E. Sumwalt And Jo Perry-sumwalt
Contents
What's Up This Week
Stories to Live By: "You Fool"/ "Us Who Are Being Saved"
Shining Moments: "A Comforting Dream" by Harold Klug
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What's Up This Week
by John Sumwalt

Sandra Herrmann
John Jamison
Contents
"Child Sacrifice" by Sandra Herrmann (Micah 6:1-8)
"Ka-Chang" by John B. Jamison (Matthew 5:1-12)


* * * * * * * *


Child Sacrifice
Sandra Herrmann
Micah 6:1-8

SermonStudio

Stephen P. McCutchan
For Jews demand signs and Greeks desire wisdom, but we proclaim Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles....
-- 1 Corinthians 1:23-24

Russell F. Anderson
BRIEF COMMENTARY ON THE LESSONS

Lesson 1: Micah 6:1--8 (C, E, L)
John N. Brittain
The other day I stumbled onto a Discovery Channel show about underwater archaeology (not basket weaving). The archaeologist described the process of identifying the probable location of an underwater wreck site, the grueling work involved in beginning the process, and the same kind of methodical work that characterizes all scientific archaeology. But then her eyes twinkled as she described the joy of uncovering the first artifact, or recognizing a significant discovery. And that of course is what it is all about, the final product of discovery.
Tony S. Everett
Late one night, Pastor Bill was driving home after spending the past 23 hours in the hospital with his wife, celebrating the birth of their son. It had been a glorious day. His wife was peacefully resting. His extended family was ecstatic. His son was healthy. Surely God was in heaven and all was right with the world.

Linda Schiphorst Mccoy
When I'm teaching a class, and want to get a discussion going, I often begin with something that's called a sentence stem. I start a sentence and let the participants complete it. This morning, if I were to ask you to complete this sentence, what would you say? "Happy are those who...." What would you use to complete the thought?
Dallas A. Brauninger
E-mail
From: KDM
To: God
Subject: Demands On God
Message: All these demands don't make sense, God. Lauds, KDM
R. Glen Miles
What does God want from us? The answer is simple, but it is not easy to put into practice. What God wants is you. What God wants is me. God wants our whole selves. The prophet Micah makes it fairly clear that ultimately God does not care too much about religion and the things that come with it. Religion isn't a bad enterprise. It is okay as a way of reminding us about what God wants, but in the long run being good at religion is not what God desires. What God requires is us. It is simple to understand but not necessarily the thing we would offer to God first.
John B. Jamison
It was a strange sound. Some said it was a kind of "clanging" sound, while others said it was more of a "ka-ching," or more accurately, a "ka-chang!" It sounded like the result of metal hitting metal, which is exactly what it was.

In the valley off to the west from the hillside is a steep cliff rising up the face of Mount Arbel. The face of the cliff is covered with hundreds of caves, with no good way to get to them without climbing straight up the cliff. That's why the Zealots liked them. They were safe.
Amy C. Schifrin
Martha Shonkwiler
Prayer Of Dedication/Gathering
P: Our Lord Jesus calls each of us to a life of justice, kindness, and humility. We pray that in this hour before us our defenses would fall and your love would be set free within us.
Father, Son, + and Holy Spirit, your mercy knows no end.
C: Amen.

Intercessory Prayers

Emphasis Preaching Journal

David Kalas
We have a prejudice in favor of things complex. Not that we necessarily desire complexity, but somehow we trust it more. We figure that complexity is the prevailing reality in our world, and so we feel obliged to be in touch with it. We would love to hear that this thing or that is really quite simple, but doctors, politicians, futurists, ethicists, economists -- and even some preachers -- keep discouraging us. It's actually quite complicated, we are told, and there is no simple answer.
People tend to say in times of personal or community disaster, "God works in mysterious ways." The point they are making is that when we can't figure out any logical answer to a situation, it must be the work of God. It is one way of making sense out of an inexplicable event.
Schuyler Rhodes
In 1993 brothers Tom and David Gardner began a financial information service they named The Motley Fool. Dressed in their trademark court jester hats, the motley fools can be seen and heard offering their advice and warnings concerning the stock market on a variety of talk shows and financial news channels.

CSSPlus

Good morning, boys and girls. How many of you have spent time around babies? (let them answer) Babies are so cute when they are happy but hard to please when they are upset. Babies can't talk, can they? (let them answer) So when they don't get what they want they cry. When they are hungry they cry. When they are sleepy they cry. When a stranger tries to hold them they cry. How do we know if babies are sick, hungry, or tired? (let them answer) Most of the time a baby's mom can figure out what's wrong even when we can't.
Teachers or Parents: Have the children sit on the floor and pretend that they are on a mountaintop and learning at Jesus' feet. Ask: "How is this classroom different from classrooms you have seen?" "How is it like them?" Read various portions of the "Sermon on the Mount" (Matthew 5-7) that they might understand (such as Matthew 7:7-11 -- prayer; 7:12 -- the Golden Rule; 7:15 -- being true). Be careful -- many parts of the Sermon on the Mount are difficult for children to understand and may lead to great misunderstanding and perhaps fear.

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