W 175 Scripture-Based Liturgies

Liturgies contributed by Grove readers

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Worship series

The following two liturgies were contributed by Grove readers:

  1. In The Steps of The Passion: A Service for Palm Sunday or during Holy Week (Contributed by Pam Odam, Barmouth, Gwynedd)
    View and print the service sheet (folds to A5)
  2. A Service for Palm Sunday (contributed by Pam Odam)
  3. Morning Prayer (contributed by Richard Seel, Bacton Green, Norfolk)

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In The Steps of The Passion

Introduction

Most services are unable to allow people to travel at their own speed through the Word. This has been deliberately designed to be 'passive' as the purpose of this liturgy is to allow people to travel the road through the Passion narrative, but also to give them the opportunity to 'get off the bus' and meditate on whatever speaks to them. There should be as little movement as possible so it is suggested that three people are used. One to read the poetry, one for the readings and one for the prayer each having their own place to stand, preferably where they do not have to move far to sit. At the end of each prayer there should be a short period of silence before the complete verse of the following hymn is played through.

So that the singing does not 'fizzle out' a small choir (5 or 6 voices) should lead the singing to enable those attending the freedom to participate, or otherwise. The hymns are suggestions and may be substituted as appropriate. The poetry is all taken from 'Awaken to a Dream' " 1997 by the International Library of Poetry as a compilation. Featured poets submitted poetry which was judged and accepted entries then published.

Instructions to leaders: To help maintain a quiet environment it is suggested that papers suitably placed in a file are kept on a reading desk or stand and not held. At the end of your section turn quietly to the next so it is ready to use. Whoever is following should not stand up until the previous leader is seated.

Choir: Stand at the beginning of the last line of the play over and sit at the end of each hymn. Use the beginning of each play over to find the hymn you are about to sing.

Poetry Reader: Stand once choir is seated, wait if there seems to be a lot of movement Announce the title followed by author.

Scripture Reader: Announce each passage before reading ( even if it is only a verse) ensure that if you are using a bible passages are clearly numbered. Alternatively have each group of readings typed out on a sheet. It is not appropriate in this setting to announce the end of readings or provoke any response.

Prayer Leader: Precede the prayer with the words 'Let us pray' Allow a moment for people to change position. Finish each prayer with the word AMEN

Leader The service will lead us in the steps of the Passion narrative using a series of short poems, which will be preceded by a hymn and followed by a short passage from Scripture and a prayer. To enable us to sing our praises to God without being distracted by trying to do two things at once we will make our gift offering during the play over of the first hymn. During this the palms which will now be blessed will be distributed. They can be used as a focus for your meditation if you find unwanted thoughts intruding. There will be no introductions - hymns will be preceded by a playover of a complete verse. If you wish to continue to pray or meditate whilst a hymn is being sung remain seated otherwise please stand during the last line of the play over and sit at the end of each hymn. Prayers will be preceded by the words 'Let us pray' when you may adopt a kneeling position if you so wish.
Blessing of the Palms
Hymn Humble Yet Holy (from Man of Galilee) (m 10.11.10.11.)

Humble yet holy a donkey rode in
Hosanna, Hosanna we sing to our king
Palm leaves and coats were thrown down on the ground
Hosanna, hosanna there's joy all around

Jesus rode in on the humblest of beasts
Hosanna, Hosanna, prepare for the feast
But Jesus knew then he was destined to die
Hosanna, Hosanna he looked to the sky

Father forgive them for what they will do
Hosanna, Hosanna your words must come true
For the future of man and the promise you gave
Hosanna, Hosanna I go to my grave
Repeat v1

Poem Palm Sunday (Marie J Post 20th Century)

Astride the colt and claimed as King,
That Sunday morning in the spring,
He passed a thornbush flowering red

That one would plait to crown his head He passed a vineyard where the wine
Was grown for men of royal line
And where the dregs were also brewed

Into a gall for Calvary's rood A purple robe was cast his way
Then caught and kept until that day
When, with its use a trial would be

Profaned into a mockery His entourage was forced to wait
To let a timber through the gate
A shaft that all there might have known
Would be an altar and a throne

Readings Zech 9 v9
Matt 16 v21
Matt 20 v17-19
Prayer Based on a prayer from Prayers before Worship

Jesus, you rode into your city in triumph on this day, receiving the shouts and the welcome of many. Receive our welcome, our acclaim in this church today. Speak from the hearts and minds of all who lead our worship and then help us all to go out and to proclaim you as King over all the world and every life Dear Master, we remember that many who claimed you as King on Sunday shouted 'crucify' on Friday. Confirm our faith today so that our love for you will never falter or turn to hatred but will remain constant now and for ever. We offer our act of worship to you Lord AMEN

Hymn The Sacrifice (Fran Vincent, 20th Century)
Poem Thy Way, Not Mine, O Lord

He knelt there raising fear filled eyes, Father can this be?
Must I, Thy only Son be nailed upon a tree?
Oh God, 'My God' the tears of blood slip slowly down my cheek
Father, give me strength, sustain me, let me not be weak.
You sent me as mortal man, to taste the cruelties of sin
O 'God' do not forsake me now, let not Satan win

I asked then to watch with me, to ease my bitter fear,
But Father they are sleeping when I longed they would be near
He looked upon the men asleep as the night wind sighed
'where were you my friends in my darkest hour when my soul near died'

The light crept slow, he stood erect, the tears were gone,
About his pale and holy face, Heaven's aura shone.

Reading John 17 v1-5, 24-end
Prayer John Kingsnorth New Parish Prayers

Lord Jesus Christ in the olive garden you faced in prayer
the devil's last and greatest temptation:
To take the easy way out, the sensible solution,
That was not the will of your Father.
Give us grace to listen O Lord to the quiet insistent voice
That draws us up Calvary's path,
Far from the world's highway.
The path that lead us to the cross
But also to the empty tomb and the glory of your resurrection
For your name's sake AMEN

Hymn Come and See, Come and See
Poem Was I There (NS Howells, 20th Century)

Was I a follower, a disciple one of twelve?
Who gave up trades and fishing, to teach and pray themselves
Was I among the angry crowds that shouted 'crucify'
Release to us Barabbas, but He the King must die?

Did I have the Pilate's hands, I washed to pass the blame?
For I found there was no blemish upon his holy name.
Perhaps I was the Judas man, who sold him for a fee
As he walked with his disciples in cold Gethsemane.

Was it I denied him thrice, before the cock did crow?
To turn my head, perhaps in shame, I really do not know,
Was I at the table as they sipped the royal wine?
When he broke the bread and gently said,
'This is my body on which you dine'

Maybe I was the soldier who made the thorny crown,
And placed it firmly on his head and watched the blood run down
Did I wield the hammer that nailed him to the cross
Then ripped up all his garments, and for his robe did toss?

As I begin to wonder was it all just but a dream
I see it much more vividly, was I there I must have been.

Reading 1 Peter 2 v21-end
Prayer Frank Colquhoun, New Parish Prayers

It was for us Lord that you endured all this
The hatred, the treachery, the rejection of men;
The scourging, the mockery the crown of thorns
The agony and dereliction of the cross.
It was for us and for our salvation that your suffered and died
Give each of us a deeper understanding of what you have done for us
And of what we owe to you;
That we may live as those who are no longer their own but what been bought with a price,
The price of your life-blood O Lamb of God,
Our most gracious Redeemer and King
AMEN

Hymn Glory Be To Jesus
Poem I Died for Love of Thee, Sheila Halliday

Behold my sacred body, so painful bruised and torn
Behold the crown upon my head and pain of every thorn

Behold my hands, such loving hands that long to hold you near
Come see the nails that you put there because of doubt or fear

Behold my feet that walked the path, where I fell beneath the load
And see, the suffering in my face, the agony untold

Behold my heart so full of love, my heart so full of tears
For when I called you answered me with abuse, taunts and jeers

Behold your Lord upon the cross, the cross you made for me
Behold me in my dying, for I died for love of thee

Reading John 3 14-17
Prayer A Prayer of the Episcopal Church of America

Lord Christ, who for the love of our souls
chose the costliest following of the father's will
forgive us, who have so often followed the easy path of selfish desire
and set your law of sacrifice within our hearts;
that we may be ready to deny ourselves,
and courageously walk in your footsteps,
our crucified Redeemer, who lives and reigns in the glory of
the Father and Holy Spirit, one God for evermore AMEN

Hymn Blessed Assurance Jesus is Mine
Closing Prayer We commit ourselves anew to Gods service in the words of the closing prayer which you will find on the service sheet.

Look at your hands
See the touch and the tenderness
GOD'S OWN FOR THE WORLD

Look at your feet
See the path and direction
GOD'S OWN FOR THE WORLD

Look at your heart
See the fire and the love
GOD'S OWN FOR THE WORLD

Look at the Cross
See God's Son and our Saviour
GOD'S OWN FOR THE WORLD

SEND US OUT INTO YOUR WORLD TO LIVE AND WORK
TO YOUR PRAISE AND GLORY
AMEN

Service Sheet

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A Service for Palm Sunday

Introduction

This service for use on Palm Sunday is intended to reflect on the Jewish Festival Jesus was intending to keep in the Temple at Jerusalem and look at the background against which the events of that day were played out. There is ample scope for imagination in this, space can be utilised to represent Jerusalem, Bethany and the Temple and the service can move towards it. There are opportunities for dance, drama, banners, flags and moments which allow for quiet reflection. Possible suggestions are made in italics.

Leader Explain the purpose of the service giving any special instructions to be followed:

In the singing of our first hymn let us bring to mind God and recall that we worship the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob, the God of the Jews of Jesus era and God today.
Movement from 4 places to a central gathering place possibly at the back. Banners bearing the names of Abraham Isaac and Jacob could meet with your own church banner.

Hymn The God of Abr'ham praise
Leader On the day we celebrate as Palm Sunday Jesus was entering Jerusalem to attend the Feast of the Passover
Readings Exodus 12 1-5, 11-20
Narrator The Jewish religious year commences with the month of Nisan at a full moon (about Mar April our time) and the cycle of Temple festivals commences with the Passover and Feast of Unleavened Bread. The "Passover " took place on the 14th day of Nisan (Leviticus 23: 5-6) and the Feast of Unleavened Bread from 15th to 21st (Exodus 12: 15). But they became to be treated as one FESTIVAL as can be seen from Matthew 26:17 and Josephus the Jewish historian described it as 'an eight day festival'

Passover was the 1st of 3 Feasts at which all males of Israel were bound to appear before the Lord. The rules were that every Israelite who was physically able, not unclean according to the Law and no further distant from Jerusalem than 15 miles was to appear in Jerusalem. Woman were not obliged to attend although many did.

This section could be mimed

There was much to be done in preparation for the Passover festival, the flocks and herds had to be tithed, the 13 Temple treasure chests were publicly opened and emptied with the contents going into the appropriate treasury chamber , from the 'Chamber of Secrets' alms were given to those who under the Law qualified for them, the whole of this must have required an enormous layer of administration. One other important job which happened a month before was done to ensure that people travelling did not come into contact with graves and become ritually unclean. People were not only buried in cemeteries usually outside of the towns but also where they fell if on the road, so to reduce the possibility of ritual uncleanness they whitewashed the sepulchres - a fact Jesus commented on (Matt 23 :27) when he accused the Pharisees of being like whitewashed tombs, clean on the outside but to be avoided if one did not want to be tainted.

If the gathering place has been at the back of the building move forward towards Jerusalem:

Over the preceding days and weeks Jews travelled from all corners of the globe, many travelling long distances to make a once in a lifetime pilgrimage . It has been estimated from a census made by the High Priest on the numbers attending that between 1 and 3 million people made their way to Jerusalem for this Festival. Just picture the scenes we see of refugees moving in their thousands and multiply it by 10 to get an idea of the scale of the event. On the Way we are told that they would have sung Psalms and hymns unto the Lord

Hymn The Lord's my Shepherd -  could be sung as metric Psalm, plainchant or in any other version known to the congregation
Narrator

Jerusalem itself stood apart from the surrounding area, its 4 miles circumference cut off on three sides by valleys and within the city itself there were other deep natural clefts in and along which sprawled the busy town with its streets, markets and bazaars, but high above it all isolated in its grandeur stood the Temple Mount. Despite still being completed when Jesus made his journey there its courts rose terrace upon terrace, till, high above the city, within the enclosure of marble cloisters, cedar roofed and richly ornamented the Temple itself stood out a mass of snowy white and gold , glittering in the sunlight against the half-encircling green background of Olivet.

Possibility for Liturgical dance depicting the arrival outside of Jerusalem and the wonder at its beauty.

Reading Psalm 125 This Psalm was probably part of the Temple liturgy.
Narrator

Six days before Passover Jesus returned to Bethany a suburb of Jerusalem about 2 miles from the eastern slope of the Mount of Olives, (John 12:1) where he had raised Lazarus from the dead. John tells us that crowds of Jews came to see both Jesus and Lazarus. (John 12 9 - 'meanwhile a large crowd of Jews found out that Jesus was there and came not only to see him but also Lazarus whom he had raised from the dead')
We know that Jesus was able to draw many to him as we have the record of the feeding of the 5000 and know that so many gathered (Mark 3 9) 'that he went out in a boat to keep the people from crowding him'.

During this enter Jesus and his disciples everyone turns to face that place - only a short distance from Jerusalem so no major movement necessary.

Narrator Matthew tells us that Jesus sent two of his disciples to the nearby Galilean settlement of Bethpage to bring him an ass. Jesus was well aware that he was doing this in fulfilment of the Prophecy of Zechariah (Chap 9:9) but we are told that it was not until after his death the disciples saw the significance of the event. (John 12:16) 'At first his disciples did not understand all this. Only after Jesus had been glorified did they realise that these things had been written about him and that they had done these things to him'

Mime the action
Hymn Hail to the Lord Almighty / All Glory Laud and Honour

Use as a processional and stop between verses for next two sections. Opportunity to use banners and flags or palm branches here. Suggest only Jesus and the disciples move at first

Narrator Jesus coming from Bethany approached Jerusalem from the east and unlike the other approaches where the city was in view from far off, this route hid it from view until at a particular turn in the road it suddenly burst on ones horizon, we are told 2 things about this particular journey by Luke
Prayer Frank Colquhoun, New Parish Prayers
Reading Luke 19 37-40

The Jews as a Nation were expecting their Messiah to come and free them from the bonds of the Romans , a military figure who would drive out the Gentiles and restore the former glory of Israel but nevertheless Jesus had a following of men and women who were aware that he offered them something special even if they were not really sure of what it was. Luke tells us that what happened was a spontaneous outburst of Jesus disciples

Hymn Continue Hymn

Everyone move towards the place that represents the Temple

Reading John 3 14-17
Narrator Luke also tells us that as he approached the city Jesus wept, it seems likely that this happened at the moment Jerusalem broke into Jesus' view. It was only 200 yards or so from that point to the base of the Temple Mount and it seems entirely feasible that at the moment Jesus rounded the corner and saw, lying before him Jerusalem in all her splendour and magnificence, he was overcome with emotion at the enormity of the knowledge he held within himself that was still hidden from the others about him.

Possibility for liturgical dance performed without music at this point.

Lord Christ, who for the love of our souls
chose the costliest following of the father's will
forgive us, who have so often followed the easy path of selfish desire
and set your law of sacrifice within our hearts;
that we may be ready to deny ourselves,
and courageously walk in your footsteps,
our crucified Redeemer, who lives and reigns in the glory of
the Father and Holy Spirit, one God for evermore AMEN

Narrator Jesus knew that about 250,000 lambs were about to be slaughtered in the temple as a sacrifice to God for the forgiveness of men's sins. 1 lamb sufficed for about every 10 people,. (bearing in mind the culling of animals that was necessary during the foot and mouth crisis, just imagine the logistics of actually doing that) he also knew that God was calling him to end for ever this slaughter and sacrifice by giving his own life as a final token sacrifice by which all men would be redeemed, no wonder he wept.

Gather people into groups of 10 and give each group a lamb and lead them into the Temple.
Jesus visits each group and removes the lamb taking them from the Temple and laying them at the foot of a cross to represent the end of the need for sacrifice.

Prayer
Hymn Ride On, Ride On In Majesty

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Morning Prayer Based on John 4:4-42 (The Samaritan woman at the well)

Introduction
Opening Hymn SOF 567-We are here to praise you.

Service leader & bible readers process up

Morecombe & Wise joke: André Previn: You're playing all the wrong notes!
Eric: I'm playing all the right notes - but not necessarily in the right order.
RS This service is going to be the same: all the usual parts of Morning Prayer-prayers, Bible readings, confession, creed, hymns & songs, sermon-will be there, but not necessarily in the right order. For instance, there is no sermon as such. The whole service is really the sermon as it will follow the pattern and teachings of the Bible passage. I will guide and draw out a few themes, but in one sense we will all be preaching to each other.
Responsive bible reading - John 4:4-42
Readers return to their seats
Responsive bible reading John 4:4-42

Readers return to their seats

Introduction by RS
  • Firstly, Jesus & his disciples had found themselves in a bit of bother. It's not entirely clear what it was-some rivalry with John the Baptist's followers, perhaps. A feeling that the people were missing the point and that it was time for his ministry to move on, perhaps. Or more likely, since John mentions that the Pharisees had heard about Jesus' "success" it was because they were in danger of attracting unwelcome attention. After all, if wasn't long after this that John was arrested. Or perhaps it was a combination of things.
  • But for whatever reason, Jesus decided to go back up North, to Galilee, his home land. And the way he chose to go was through Samaria. There were other ways to go (despite what the gospel says-perhaps there is some sense of imperative response to God's will here), but this appears to have been the most common. However, it wasn't always the most trouble-free. Luke tells of a journey that Jesus made in which a Samaritan village refused them hospitality because they were going southwards-towards Jerusalem.
  • In fact, there was a history of bad feeling between the Jews and Samaritans which went back centuries. Samaria was the name of the capital built by Omri after the civil war between Solomon's sons split the Jewish nation into two: the Northern kingdom, composed of the ten tribes, and the Southern, with its capital in Jersualem, composed of Judah & Benjamin.
  • When the Northern kingdom was captured & taken into exile, other nations were encouraged to send settlers to the land. When the Northerners returned from exile they inter-married with these foreigners-which meant paying attention and worship to the foreign gods as well. When the southerners returned under the leadership of Nehemiah & Ezra they fell out with the Samaritans and purged the priesthood of those who had inter-married.
  • Over the following years the Jews and the Samaritans grew further apart, each claiming the truth. The Samaritans built a temple on Mount Gerizim, where they claim the sacrifice of Isaac took place. They claimed allegiance to the Torah alone, downplaying or denying the importance of the prophets. In 126 BC John Hyrancus destroyed the temple and relations worsened even further.
  • So, with religious and political differences between them we have a situation like Northern Ireland or Bosnia. Doubtless it was only the Pax Romana which kept travellers safe from real trouble.
  • Such was the background to Jesus' journey-personal stress in his own ministry; political & religious stress in the countryside through which he was travelling.
Jesus asks for water (vv4-6)

Man comes to front and sits down

Comment from RS It was the 6th hour-noon, the height of the day, the heat of the day. Jesus was tired and thirsty. (It is interesting to note that John, who is the most insistent of the evangelists of Jesus' divine nature is also the one who is least afraid of reminding us of Jesus' very human nature and weaknesses.) So he sat down by the well while his disciples went off to get some food from the nearby village. He did not have a bucket to draw water so he could not get a drink. Instead he waited.

Woman comes to front

Dialogue:

M: Would you give me a drink of water?
W: How come you, a Jew, are asking me, a Samaritan woman, for a drink?
M: If you knew the generosity of God and who I am, you would be asking me for a drink, and I would give you fresh, living, water.
W: Sir, you don't even have a bucket to draw with, and this well is deep. So how are you going to get this 'living water'? Are you a better man than our ancestor Jacob, who dug this well and drank from it, he and his sons and livestock, and passed it down to us?
M: Everyone who drinks this water will get thirsty again and again. Anyone who drinks the water I will give will never thirst-not ever. The water I give will be an artesian spring within, gushing fountains of endless life.
W: Sir, give me this water so I won't ever get thirsty, won't ever have to come back to this well again.

Comment from RS (vv 7-15)
  • The exchange between the woman and Jesus is happening at a number of different levels. On the first, he asks for water; she shows amazement; he teases her with a reference to 'living' (that is flowing, spring), water.
    This is a remarkable event. Jesus would be defiled by taking water from such a person-a Samaritan (we've already talked about the enmity between Jews & Samaritans); a woman (it was considered inappropriate for a Rabbi to speak to a woman alone); an adulteress (according to the Torah, she should be stoned to death). She could hardly be a more inappropriate person for him to ask. But thank God that he did and that he still does. Nothing, it seems, can separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus.
  • She misunderstands Jesus' response to her all too understandable amazement but is somehow impressed (she calls him, "Sir"). But like so many of us when we encounter Jesus she does not accept him easily. Instead she challenges him: she asks him if he thinks he is greater than Jacob (who was also known as Israel and was the founding father of all twelve tribes of Israel).
  • Jesus doesn't get caught up in her argument or her mindset. That would be fruitless. Instead he continues to emphasise what is positive in his offer: his says that his water will quench thirst for ever, unlike Jacob's. His water will flow from within giving eternal life. Clearly, he is speaking metaphorically or symbolically now.
  • The woman asks for the water-so that she will never thirst & so that she won't have the drudge of filling her water jar each day.
  • Does she misunderstand? Is she returning his humour? Or is she indicating a deeper and growing understanding-that Jesus's gifts are about the whole person; body, soul and spirit.
  • Jesus asked for what he wanted. The Samaritan woman asked for what she wanted. So also do we as we are led in prayer…
  • Prayers for living water led from congregation. (Band play 'Let your living water flow over my soul' quietly underneath prayers):
    Water for cleansing
  • Water for living
  • Water for healing
  • Water for cooling
  • Water for play
Hymn SOF 414 O God my Creator, create in me that river of water that flows full and free
The dialogue between Jesus and the woman then steps up a gear:

M: Go call your husband and then come back.
W: I have no husband.
M: That's nicely put: 'I have no husband.' You've had five husbands, and the man you're living with now isn't even your husband. You spoke the truth there, sure enough.
W: Oh, so you're a prophet! Well, tell me this: Our ancestors worshipped God at this mountain, but you Jews insist that Jerusalem is the only place for worship, right?
M: Believe me, woman, the time is coming when the Samaritans will worship the father neither here at this mountain nor there in Jerusalem. You worship guessing in the dark; we Jews worship in the clear light of day. God's way of salvation is made available through the Jews. But the time is coming-it has in fact come-when what you're called will not matter and where you go to worship will not matter.
It's who you are and the way you live that count before God. Your worship must engage your spirit in the pursuit of truth. That's the kind of people the Father is looking for: those who are simply and honestly themselves before him in their worship. God is sheer being itself-Spirit. Those who worship him must do it out of their very being, their spirits, their true selves, in adoration.
W: I don't know about that. I do know that the Messiah is coming. When he arrives, we'll get the whole story.
M: I am he. You don't have to wait any longer or look any further.

Confession
RS At this point the disciples returned and the woman left for her village.

Man and Woman return to their seats

Comment from RS
  • Jesus' innocuous suggestion, "Go call your husband…" leads to an amazing piece of dialogue. At one level he is confronting the woman with details of her private life which he could not possibly have known in a natural way. No wonder she was impressed.
  • At another level he was confronting her with her sinfulness-remember that there were many who would stone her. Yet he simply states the fact, there is no apparent sign of judgement or condemnation.
    m Further, the five husbands may also refer to the strange gods worshipped by the Samaritans, or rather to the five peoples also settled in Samaria with the Israelites on their return from captivity. (Babylon, Cuthah, Avva, Hamath & Sepharvaim). Cf imagery of God as Israel's husband in Hosea 2:7.
  • This interpretation gains weight when we consider that the evangelist has only just (at the end of the previous chapter) had John the Baptist speaking of Jesus as "the bridegroom".
  • However, we mustn't assume this passage is allegorical. The nature of the dialogue and the immediacy of the events must surely indicate an narrative based on a true encounter. Jesus did indeed meet this woman.
  • One message from this passage, as from many others in John, is that when Jesus speaks to us, whether through the Bible, or by the prompting of the Holy Spirit in our conscience or by the ministry of someone else, what He says is often true on more than one level.
  • If He says to me, "Don't be so stubborn." I will say, "I'm not being stubborn!" But even when I've have heard Him and am prepared to say sorry and change my ways, I need to be aware that Jesus isn't just concerned with my behaviour. He is also speaking to me about my deeper attitudes and character. My stubbornness is a symptom of my wrong relationship with God. It's no good treating the symptoms but leaving the disease in place.
  • So, when I turn to God in confession and ask him for healing, I need to bring the depths of my being to Him and not only my surface behaviour.
  •  I also need to recognise that He knows my state of health even when no-one else does-even when I hide it from myself. Standing before Him I am completely exposed; no masks, no pretence-standing, naked, just as I am.
  • Take some moments to become aware of what it is that Jesus knows about you-things that you'd probably rather he didn't know. Things that the rest of us here certainly don't know.
  • Now let us bring our need for healing to him in the words of the confession at section 5 on page 48 [ASB]:
Confession
She is not rejected
  • So, Jesus does not reject because of outward form.
  • He does not reject because of gender or religion.
  • But even more radically he does not reject because of sin or dissolute life style.
  • She is, after all, an adulteress for whom the Mosaic law requires death by stoning. We know from John 8 that he doesn't condone this. But he does not condemn. He accepts.
  • The radical nature of this acceptance is shown in the woman's response. What does she do, this woman whose secret life has just been exposed by a passing stranger? She goes and tells all her friends! Apparently she does not feel burdened down with guilt or shame after her encounter with Jesus. Quite the reverse.
  •  It is the same with us. We are accepted, too. But do we always feel that liberation that comes from our acceptance and forgiveness. For some of us it can be hard. So let's grasp that freedom and new life together and say together the words of absolution: (section 6, page 49)
Absolution (said together)
Hymn SOF 487 - River Wash Over Me

He tells her about true worship (19-24)

Comment from RS
  • The woman's appreciation of Jesus has gone up another notch. Grudging respect is no longer enough. He is a prophet-although since the Samaritans did not recognise the validity of the OT prophets this, too, may have been double edged. Perhaps, though, she is already beginning to wonder whether Jesus is the prophet foretold in Deut 18:15-a foreshadowing of the Messiah (or the Taheb, as the Samaritans called him).
  • But still she wants to debate with him; are her questions genuine attempts to discover more or are they merely devices intended to throw up barriers and put off the moment of decision? It's difficult to tell.
  • And frankly, it's often difficult to tell with our questions, too. We are not called to blind faith-Jesus would not have performed signs and wonders if he'd wanted unthinking obedience-but there does come a time when we have to put doubts and questions aside and take that step (though it might feel like a leap) of faith.
  • She asks Jesus about worship-on the mountain appointed by God (Mt. Gerizim (Deut 11:29) or in Jerusalem.
  • Jesus is clear about the 'superiority' of the Jews, for salvation is from the Jews.
  • Yet she is not to worry, for the time is coming-indeed, has already come-when the time and the place will not matter. What will count-what does now count-is a form of worship in which our spirit engages with the Spirit of God. This is also truthful worship; very hard to do, especially if we start from ourselves. Instead we must be open to the Spirit and he will guide us into all truth.
  • This kind of worship does not come from us. It starts with the Father, via the Sprit, and what we do is our Spirit-led response to his goodness, mercy and grace.
  • We here have a long way to go before we are really worshipping in Spirit and Truth yet we must not be downhearted. There is a longing for true worship in this place and God is faithful. If we pray for the gift of worship he will give it to us.
  • So let us try to use music and singing to help us with a mood of attentiveness and responsiveness. Let us try to be open to the spirit and let us respond from our hearts to the Lord.

Time of musical worship led by RS and music group

He proclaims himself Messiah (vv 25-06)
Comment from RS
  • Finally, Jesus lets the cat out of the bag:
  • I am he.
  • The words "I am" are the words that God spoke to Moses from the burning bush. From a man, they verge on the blasphemous. From Jesus they are simple truth.
She goes to village and says, "Come and see" (vv28-30)
Homily on mission
  • Her witness has a number of elementsm
  • She did not keep it to herself
  • She urged others to 'come & see'
  • She told of the effect on herself-she is authentic, not trying to manipulate or use clever words or stratagems.
  • She asked questions, rather than proclaiming dogmas.
  • She leads others to Jesus; she does not 'convert' them.
The villagers ask him to stay because of her witness (vv 39-42)
Prayers
  • Prayer for mission
  • Prayer for church
  • Prayer for God's work in politics & government
  • Prayer for us in the world
Lord's prayer (section 18, page 58)
The villagers ask him to stay because of her witness (vv 39-42)
Comment from RS
  • Finally, after having spent two days in Jesus's presence, the villagers come to believe for themselves.
  • No longer is theirs a second-hand faith, but one lived and experienced. The more time we spend in Jesus's company, the deeper and more real our faith will become.
  • So let us end our service of worship today by affirming our faith together, using the words of the creed.

Creed (section 16, page 57)
Ending
Hymn SOF 362 - Shine Jesus, Shine
Dismissal

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