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Sermon Illustrations for Lent 1 (2022)

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Deuteronomy 26:1-11
I like stories of deliverance. There is something about an oppressed people being set free that touches me.  Those who know history know Oscar Schindler used his enamelware factory as a cover in order to save Jews. Jan and Antonina Zabinski used the zoo they were running for the same purpose. Jaap Penraat from Holland used to smuggle Jews dressed as construction workers. All of them justly received the Righteous Among the Nations honorific from the State of Israel. 

Felix Kersten is not as well known, nor is he as decorated. His work in delivering the Jewish people, though, is every bit as important. Kersten was a skilled doctor and masseur so much so, that Heinrich Himmler, commander of the S.S. asked him to work for him. In his new job, Kersten was able to hear all kinds of disturbing information about the horrors committed by the Nazi regime. He concluded that the skill which had made him a healer had also destined him to use his new circumstances to save lives. He applied a basic give and take method: one massage for one life (or more if possible). The World Jewish Council credits him with saving 60,000 of their people, and the number of Dutch, Poles, Finns, and Norwegians he saved is difficult to estimate.

Deliverance stories inspire and often motivate a response of gratitude. The Jewish people today remember well those who delivered them during the Holocaust.  The Jewish people of old were to remember who brought them out of Egypt. Are we grateful for the deliverance we’ve experienced?
Bill T.

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Deuteronomy 26:1-11
What does it mean for the people of God to confess, “My father was a wandering Aramean”?  One tradition is that Aramean refers to “Aram alongside the River,” where Abraham sent his servant to look for a spouse for his son Isaac. (“…Isaac was forty years old when he married Rebekah, daughter of Bethuel the Aramean of Paddanaram, sister of Laban the Aramean.”). The phrase itself in Hebrew, ‘arami ‘oved ‘avi, is filled with alliteration, which makes it easy to memorize and say aloud. ‘oved could be translated “wandering,” which is the usual choice, but it can also mean “lost”. The New Jewish Publication Society translation reads “My father was a fugitive Aramean.” Robert Alter translates it as “My father was an Aramean about to perish….” The phrase seems to be referring to the past when Jacob, ancient in years, had to relocated to Egypt with his extended family, because of the seven years of famine that struck the ancient world. God’s people, planted in the land of promise, flowing with milk and honey, needed to remember that things weren’t always so easy for them, that nobody is entitled to prosperity, and that they owed everything to God – including this year’s harvest!
Frank R.

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Romans 10:8b-13
The lesson refers to our confessing faith.  About this matter Martin Luther writes:

For confession is the principal work of faith by which a man denies himself and confesses to such an extent that he would deny his own life and all things rather than affirm himself.  For in confessing God and denying himself he dies. (Luther’s Works, Vol.25, p. 411)

Truly to confess is to affirm that we are saved by grace alone, and not works.  Luther again offers a thoughtful reflection:

It follows, then, that a Christian must believe that we are justified by an other righteousness.  Let all works by which we aim to gain righteousness and all our own merits depart, because we are built upon the foundation of not doing works but by believing.  Therefore, let every godly man terrified by sin, run to Christ as the mediator and propitiator, and let him leave all his own works behind. (Luther’s Works, Vol.16, pp.230-231)

Famed 20th-century theologian Karl Barth reminds us that everything, even our confession and calling on God, is the work of our Lord:

Men call upon God, because and only because he has answered before they call. (The Epistle to the Romans, p.383)
Mark E.    

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Luke 4:1-13
The Sundew plant, which grows in the Australian bush country, is a fascinating and dangerous plant. It has a slender stem and tiny, round leaves fringed with hairs that glisten with bright drops of liquid as delicate as fine dew. The insect, however, that dares to dance on it, is doomed. Although its attractive clusters of red, white, and pink blossoms are harmless, the leaves are deadly. The shiny moisture on each leaf is sticky and will imprison any bug that touches it. As an insect struggles to free itself, the vibration causes the leaves to close tightly around it. This innocent-looking plant then feeds on its victim.

I thought about that plant in connection with a familiar passage today. Temptation appears inviting, satisfying, even delightful, but the consequences are terrible and maybe even deadly.  The temptations Jesus faced were real. He could have succumbed to them. Satan appealed to his physical needs. He demanded he prove God’s protection and even offered a pathway to a kingdom with no cross.  As inviting as those thoughts might have been, Jesus saw through them to the consequences and rebuked and rebuffed Satan.

Amy Carmichael wrote of temptation, “All the great temptations appear first in the region of the mind and can be fought and conquered there. We have been given the power to close the door of the mind. We can lose this power through disuse or increase it by use, by the daily discipline of the inner man in things which seem small and by reliance upon the word of the Spirit of truth. It is God that worketh in you, both to will and to do of his good pleasure. It is as though he said, ‘Learn to live in your will, not in your feelings.’”
Bill T.

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Luke 4:1-13
In their verbal duel, Satan doesn’t offer Jesus anything he’s not already entitled to. He just tempts him to bypass his Father’s plan and take a shortcut that excludes sacrifice and pain.

There was another temptation I think we overlook. Jesus must have been tempted to ignore the call, stay home, and be the oldest brother, fulfilling the duties of Joseph who seems to have passed on. One of the things that Jesus sacrificed by abandoning his duties as the oldest brother included care for his mother. This all fell on the second son, Jacob, who we call James. The gospels tell us that Mary and her other sons thought Jesus had gone just a little nuts, but when they went out to find him and bring him back to his senses, and the family business, Jesus told the crowd that his real family consisted of those who followed him. That had to hurt.

Nevertheless, by being faithful to his calling Jesus on the cross was ultimately able to care for his mother, by putting her into the care of the beloved disciple, not the second oldest brother Jacob. That may have been hurtful, but Jesus had other plans for him. The apostle Paul tells us about a special resurrection appearance to Jacob/James, who went on to become the leader of the Christians in Jerusalem, as mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles. The historian Josephus says he was known as Jacob the Just to believers and non-believers.

Around the year 62 AD the governor of Judea, Festus, died, and the next governor was on the way, when James was tried by the religious authorities, and stoned to death. He was cast down from the tower of the temple, the very one where Jesus was tempted by Satan (mentioned in Luke 4:9). When the fall failed to kill him, he was stoned to death. His dying words demonstrated he listened to his brother Jesus very carefully: “I beseech thee, O Lord, God and Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
Frank R.
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John Jamison
Object: A heavy coat for one of the children to wear. Make it as heavy as possible by adding rocks, bags of rice, or other heavy objects in the pockets. For more fun, also have a few extra heavy things you can give the child to hold or put on to wear. When you select the child to wear the jacket, select one for whom the jacket will feel pretty heavy. Select a second child to be the “friend” in the story.

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Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Are you ready for our story today? (Let them respond.) Excellent! Let’s get started!
John Jamison
Object: A colorful flower like a Bird of Paradise or something with an interesting-looking blossom. If you are not near a florist, many grocers have flowers like these available. Just change the name of the flower in the message as you talk about it.

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The Immediate Word

Katy Stenta
Mary Austin
Christopher Keating
Dean Feldmeyer
George Reed
Tom Willadsen
For December 1, 2024:

StoryShare

John E. Sumwalt
People will faint from terror, apprehensive of what is coming on the world, for the heavenly bodies will be shaken. (v. 26)

Ernie Vohland was the baker in Montello, Wisconsin, when, fresh out of seminary, I was appointed to serve as pastor at Trinity United Methodist Church in 1978. He was one of the first people I met on Sunday morning, and later at Leone’s Bakery when I stopped in for sweet rolls the next day, Ernie wouldn’t let the new preacher pay. 
Frank Ramirez
Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink, or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food and the body more than clothing? (v. 25)

Did you ever think about the word “earworm?” The very idea of a literal earworm, some sort of parasite caught inside your ear is such a disturbing image I hate to even think of it. I apologize, but if you some of you need to get the wiggles out go ahead and shake your shoulders a bit.

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Bonnie Bates
Mark Ellingsen
Bill Thomas
Frank Ramirez
Jeremiah 33:14-16
God proclaims that the promises made to Israel will be kept. It brings to mind the question, “How good am I at keeping promises?” Do I blithely make a promise and then forget about following through? Do I make a few promises and diligently keep every single one? Do I avoid making promises, so I don’t have to keep them? I’m not sure in which category I fit and maybe the category changes from day to day and circumstance to circumstance.
Mark Ellingsen
Jeremiah 33:14-16
Bill Thomas
Bonnie Bates
Mark Ellingsen
Frank Ramirez
Joel 2:21-27
Andrena Sawyer once wrote, “God’ s restoration will go beyond what was, to set a new standard for what is good.” Restoration and renewal are important concepts for us as human beings.
Frank Ramirez
Thanksgiving is one of the most blessed, most anticipated, and most dreaded holidays on our calendar. The expectations are so high, and oftentimes we’re the ones setting the bar against which we measure ourselves. In the midst of giving thanks, these three scriptures give us a different perspective.

Joel 2:21-27

SermonStudio

Mary Austin
As this Advent season begins, what have you promised yourself about the holidays this year? Are you vowing to have a simpler Christmas? Planning to make time for some activity you love, or time with beloved people?

What promises are ahead for your family? Do you know some kids who are waiting eagerly to see what Santa will bring? Adults who are waiting eagerly to collapse, and finally get some rest? People who find this time of year hard, and are just hoping to get through it?
Wayne Brouwer
"Screw your courage to the sticking-place," says Lady Macbeth to her doomed husband in Shakespeare's tragedy, "and we'll not fail." But fail they do and no amount of courage in the world can save them or turn them into heroes.

Courage is a funny thing. It's a bit like happiness: the more you seek it, the more you demand it, the more you try to call it up, the less it shows its face.

Richard A. Jensen
It had been a tough week for Glenda Kruse. Glenda was a real estate agent and she had sold only one home during the entire month of November. She was getting desperate. She had to make a living after all.
James Evans
There is perhaps no greater challenge to the life of faith than suffering. There is an implicit expectation that God, who is strong and loving, will protect those who are weak. When tragedy befalls the innocent, it is hard not to wonder about God's strength or goodness, or both.

Stephen M. Crotts
Therefore I tell you, do not be anxious about your life, what you shall eat or what you shall drink, nor about your body, what you shall put on it. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothing? Look at the birds of the air; they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they? Which of you by being anxious add one cubit to his span of life? And why are you anxious about clothing?
Mary S. Lautensleger
In the parable of The Giving Tree, a young boy would gather his favorite tree's leaves on mild autumn afternoons. He fashioned them into a crown for his head and played king of the forest. The tree was fun to climb, and he loved to eat its delicious apples. The boy enjoyed swinging from the tree's branches, and discovered a shady resting place beneath those same branches on hot summer days.
John A. Stroman
Joel informs the people of Judah that God has willed that humankind should have abundant life. This abundant life is characterized by good relationships with others, with all of God's creation, as well as the land and all its creatures. He points out that this abundant life of relationships is possible by first having a harmonious relationship with God. The prophet warns Judah if they desert God, making God unnecessary, and turn to other sources for life, then Judah is faced with hopelessness and the threat of annihilation.
Harold C. Warlick, Jr.
A minister held an administrative position in a major university in a large city. Part of his responsibility was overseeing the program for minority students in that school. The counselor for minority students and the faculty members teaching and working with minority students were under his supervision. The program had not been well run, so prior to his arrival the school had terminated the entire staff. He had to employ a new part-time director for the program.

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:

As we enter the dark season of Advent, representing the darkness of the world before the light of Christ came at Christmas, let us hold before God any darkness and suffering we ourselves experience, whether at school or at work or in our home lives. (Pause for a few moments silence.) Let us remember that Jesus Christ takes our darkness and suffering and transforms it for us.

Invitation to Confession:

Jesus, darkness can be scary. When we are afraid, Lord, have mercy.

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