Sunday school activities - October 17, 2021

Theme Discussion

This little video will tell you about today’s scripture reading:

James and John were two of Jesus’ closest disciples. They wanted to be sure that they got the best seats in heaven – right beside Jesus – so that everyone would recognize how close they were to him. They wanted to be singled out as the closest friends of Jesus. They asked Jesus to promise them those seats. The other 10 disciples were pretty angry when they found out what James and John were up to! They all thought of themselves as Jesus’ BFF.

Well, Jesus not only tells them that he wasn’t in charge of assigning seats, but he tells them that sitting right beside him would also mean that they would have to live the way he did, do the work, and accept the suffering. They say they can handle that – but then he adds something interesting! He says that in order to be the leader, you have to be a servant.  It’s not all about getting what you want; it’s about being the kind of person people can rely on to help and to make sure that everyone else has what they need first.

The disciples wanted the power and the prestige that being right next to Jesus would bring – but Jesus reminded them that they had to give up a lot and work hard for others to earn that place at the head of the table.

Have you ever wished that something would just magically happen without your having to work for it? Maybe you wished for the highest marks in the class, or to be recruited to the NHL! We know these things take a lot of work and dedication – and that once you have them, then you are expected to continue to strive to be the best. Can you think of some other examples of this?

Who do you think makes the best leader - someone who pushes their way to the front of the line to make sure they get what they want, or someone who helps everyone in the line get what they need?

Have you ever made a “wish list”? Often these include gifts we want for our birthday or for Christmas. Try making a new kind of wish list that would make both you and others happy.

Response Activity Ideas

Helping Hands

Jesus told the disciples that people who work hard for others are the real winners!  What are some ways you could help others in your family and neighbourhood?

Trace your hand on coloured paper and cut out several times.  On each write or draw a job (clearing the table, taking out garbage, etc.), or a kind action (giving a hug, reading to someone, etc.) that you could do for someone else.

You could display your hands in your home by making a wreath or mobile out of them to remind you to look for ways to work for others.  Or maybe staple them together as coupon book to give to your family that they could cash in for your services!

Super Leaders!

Print out the super-hero template.  Inside the outline, write down (or draw) as many qualities or actions you can think of to describe the kind of leader Jesus is and calls to be.  Which of the ideas will you strive to be or do this week?

Outdoor option:  Have someone in your family lie down on your driveway in a ‘super-hero’ pose and trace around them with sidewalk chalk.  Inside the person-shape, write all your combined ideas about the qualities of the best leaders.

Older children/youth extension:  Compare your list of good leader traits to people in authority or power that you know (principals, elected government officials, public health leaders, CEOs in big corporations, etc).  In what ways do they live up to your ideals?  What kind of perks do they get from being ‘at the top’?  What are some challenges and responsibilities they face?  How would you feel if you were in their roles and how would you aspire to act?  

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Sunday Worship Service - October 17, 2021

 BELLS CORNERS UNITED CHURCH

21st SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST
CELEBRATION OF BAPTISM

October 17, 2021

The video recording of this service can found here.
You can also dial-in by phone to listen to the audio recording at 613-820-8104.

Gathering Music:  River MV3

(Words & Music: Julian Pattison, 2003)

1.       River, rush-a-down to the ocean blue,
          River from a mountain high.
          River, as you do what rivers do,
River, draw the Spirit nigh.

2.       Spirit, come-a-down to the river-side,
          Spirit, spark of wondrous thought.
          Spirit, I am free for you to guide,
          Spirit, pray that I be taught! 

3.       Water, let me drink of your healing pow’r,
Water, strength and life you give.
Water, as I travel with each hour.
Water, help my body live.

4.       River, flow-a-down where you ran before, River, source of clearer view.
          River, as I walk your rocky shore,
          River, see my journey through.
          See my journey through. (2x) 

Welcome & Centering for Worship     Rev. Kim. Vidal

Good day everyone! On behalf of BCUC, I welcome and greet you in the name of Jesus Christ on this 21st Sunday after Pentecost. Today, we are happy to welcome the families and friends of Jessica & Kory Thomas as we celebrate the baptism of their child, Makenzie Bertrand Thomas during the onsite service in the sanctuary. Wherever you are, whether you are joining us via online, or onsite, or even reading the printed text of the service in the comfort of your homes, we are glad that you have joined us today.

We continue worshipping in the sanctuary on Sunday mornings at 10 am with a maximum number of 50 people. Due to the Covid variants that continue to pause some health threats to the community, the Public Health recommends staying at home, but if you wish to attend the service, you are most welcome. As a faith community called to love and serve others, let us be mindful of the health protocols such as masking, social distancing, hand sanitizing and staying home if you feel unwell. It is also highly recommended to get vaccinated as one of the best precautionary measures to protect yourself and others.

During this time of pandemic, the work of the church carries on. Please take time to keep in touch with each other through prayers, phone calls, emails or via Zoom. Check also the many announcements on our website including Sunday School resources for your children at bcuc.org to keep you informed and give you opportunities to respond.

Friends, at the font and at the table, in the church and in the world, in our tears and in our laughter, we meet Christ. Let us come as faithful people, centering ourselves in God as we worship together.

Lighting of the Christ Candle        Acolytes: Peck-Jones Family

Friends, as we light this Christ candle, remember the promise expressed by these words: “Do not fear, for I have redeemed you; I have summoned you by name; you are mine. When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you.” (Isaiah 43: 1-2)                                          

Call to Gather     Rev. Lorrie Lowes

(Bill Steadman, Gathering Pentecost 2-2018 Year B. Used with permission)

We come into this space,
prepared to celebrate the God of energy and truth,
aware of the needs of the world,
and open to the Spirit that leads us.
We trust in God to guide our journey.
God supports us as we seek to share life with others.

In words and in songs, in stories and in prayers,
in quiet times and happy times,
God is with us!

Opening Prayer

(Gord Dunbar, Gathering ACE 2016-2017 Year A. Used with permission)

Let us pray…
Holy God, you have fashioned and formed us in your image, calling us by name.
You fire in us a shining glaze that reflects your tender loving care.
We ask that you pour your love upon us, a refreshing, cleansing water
calling out all that is Christ in us, shining into our world.

Remind us in our gathering today that we are your beloved,
for we see your love reflected in ourselves and in one another.
In the name of God: Creator, Redeemer, Sustainer, we pray. Amen.

Hymn:   Praise the Lord with the Sound of Trumpet VU 245

(Words & Music: Natalie Sleeth, 1975)

1 Praise the Lord with the sound of trumpet,
praise the Lord with the harp and lute,
praise the Lord with the gentle sounding flute.

Praise the Lord in the field and forest,
praise the Lord in the city square,
praise the Lord anytime and anywhere.

Praise the Lord in the wind and sunshine,
praise the Lord in the dark of night,
praise the Lord in the rain or snow

or in the morning light.

Praise the Lord in the deepest valley,
praise the Lord on the highest hill,
praise the Lord, never let your voice be still.

2 Praise the Lord with the crashing cymbal,
praise the Lord with the pipe and string,
praise the Lord with the joyful songs you sing.

Praise the Lord on a weekday morning,
praise the Lord on a Sunday noon,
praise the Lord by the light of sun or moon.

Praise the Lord in the time of sorrow,
praise the Lord in the time of joy,
praise the Lord every moment,

nothing let your praise destroy.

Praise the Lord in the peace and quiet,
praise the Lord in your work or play,
praise the Lord everywhere in every way!

Celebration of Baptism: Makenzie Bertrand Thomas

Parents: Jessica & Kory Thomas
Godparents: Cheryl Moore & Mark McCue

In our onsite worship service today, we welcome Makenzie Bertrand Thomas, child of Jessica and Kory Thomas. Today we welcome her into our church family through the sacrament of baptism. We also welcome the godparents, Cheryl Moore and Mark McCue. Let us offer our support, our prayers and our congratulations to Makenzie and her family on this momentous occasion.

Children’s Anthem:  Welcome to the Family of God (N. Sleeth)   CGS & Bell Canto    Directed by Erin Berard

Welcome! Welcome!
Welcome! Welcome!
Welcome to the fam’ly of God!
You’ve been washed in the water
and given a name;
Never again will you quite be the same!
So, Welcome! Welcome!
Welcome! Welcome!
Welcome to the fam’ly of God!
Welcome! Welcome!
Welcome! Welcome!
Welcome to the fam’ly of God!
You’ve been blessed by the Spirit and greeted with love
Chosen and claimed by the Lord up above!
So, Welcome! Welcome!
Welcome! Welcome!
Welcome to the fam’ly of God!

Storytime  Rev. Lorrie

When I was setting the table for our Thanksgiving dinner last weekend, I counted all the people who would be there – and we were 13! So, I put all the leaves in the table and figured out how to get that many of us around the table… I put 5 chairs on one side of the table, against the wall, and 6 on the other side where there was more room to pull your chair out, and one at each end. When I was just finishing, my grandsons came in and started choosing where they wanted to sit. This is a new house for all of us, so nobody has a “usual” seat.

What seat would you pick? Would you want to be on the wall side where there was more elbow room or on the other side where you could push your chair out if you wanted to leave the table? Or would you want to sit at one of the ends – at the head of the table? Which is the best seat?

In our Bible reading today, two of the disciples – James and John – come to Jesus with a request. They want to pick the best seats in heaven, one on each side of Jesus. They want to get their dibs in first and they want Jesus to promise them those best seats right now. And Jesus says, “Really? Are you sure you want those seats?” He understands that those places come with a lot of work and responsibility. They will have to be willing to face all the work and suffering that Jesus has to deal with – but they assure him that they are up for the challenge.

When the other disciples hear what James and John are trying to do, they aren’t very happy. What makes those two think they are so special? Well, Jesus tells them all that he can’t make that decision anyway and that the places of honour they imagine in heaven will be places that are earned, not just picked. To earn that special place, they will be expected to be servants to each other and the world. Leaders don’t just have privileges, they have huge responsibilities. If you want to be a leader, Jesus tells his friends, you have to be willing to put others ahead of you, to help them first. You don’t become a leader by pushing your way to the front, you become a leader because you make life better for the people around you.

Our Thanksgiving table worked out really well. In the end, the kids picked seats on the side with more chairs – because they know they are smaller and take up less space than the adults. They also were proud to be able to help clear the dishes and let the adults relax after dinner.

Everyone was comfortable and happy. I’m proud of those kids! Can you guess which seat I picked? The one right next to the kitchen! I think it’s the best place of all – and it was even better because I had three helpers!

Let’s finish with a prayer:

Loving God, sometimes we think we can ask you for anything and you will give it to us because we know you want us to be happy. But often you know better than we do what will be best.

Help us to think carefully about the wishes we have and the choices we make. Help us see that we are happiest when we make sure the people around us are happy too. Amen.

Hymn:    Let Us Build A House MV1

(Words & Music: Marty Haugen, 1994)

1        Let us build a house where love can dwell and all can safely live,
          A place where saints and children tell how hearts learn to forgive.
          Built of hopes and dreams and visions, rock of faith and vault of grace;
          here the love of Christ shall end divisions:

          All are welcome, all are welcome, all are welcome in this place.

2        Let us build a house where prophets speak, and words are strong and true,
          where all God’s children dare to seek to dream God’s reign anew.
          Here the cross shall stand as witness and as symbol of God’s grace;
          here as one we claim the faith of Jesus:

          All are welcome, all are welcome, all are welcome in this place.

3        Let us build a house where love is found in water, wine and wheat;
          a banquet hall on holy ground, where peace and justice meet.
          Here the love of God, through Jesus, is revealed in time and space;
          as we share in Christ the feast that frees us:

          All are welcome, all are welcome, all are welcome in this place.

4        Let us build a house where hands will reach beyond the wood and stone
          to heal and strengthen, serve and teach, and live the Word they’ve known.
          Here the outcast and the stranger bear the image of God’s face;
          let us bring an end to fear and danger:

          All are welcome, all are welcome, all are welcome in this place. 

5        Let us build a house where all are named, their songs and visions heard
          and loved and treasured, taught and claimed as words within the Word.
          Built of tears and cries and laughter, prayers of faith and songs of grace;
          let this house proclaim from floor to rafter:

          All are welcome, all are welcome, all are welcome in this place.

Prayer for Illumination  Reader: Jordan Berard

God of Wisdom, as we ponder on your Word, remind us again that we are your beloved children. Open us to receive your spirit of grace and inspire us to embrace your life-giving Word. Amen.

Gospel Reading:   Mark 10: 35-45 (NRSV)

The Request of James and John

35 James and John, the sons of Zebedee, came forward to him and said to him, “Teacher, we want you to do for us whatever we ask of you.” 

36 And he said to them, “What is it you want me to do for you?” 

37 And they said to him, “Grant us to sit, one at your right hand and one at your left, in your glory.” 

38 But Jesus said to them, “You do not know what you are asking. Are you able to drink the cup that I drink, or be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with?” 

39 They replied, “We are able.” Then Jesus said to them, “The cup that I drink you will drink; and with the baptism with which I am baptized, you will be baptized; 

40 but to sit at my right hand or at my left is not mine to grant, but it is for those for whom it has been prepared.”

41 When the ten heard this, they began to be angry with James and John. 

42 So Jesus called them and said to them, “You know that among the Gentiles those whom they recognize as their rulers lord it over them, and their great ones are tyrants over them. 

43 But it is not so among you; but whoever wishes to become great among you must be your servant, 

44 and whoever wishes to be first among you must be slave of all. 

45 For the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many.”

May the Light of Christ dwell where the Word is spoken. Thanks be to God!

Sermon:   “Who Wants to Sit Beside Jesus?”   Rev. Kim Vidal

May the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts be acceptable to you, O God, our rock and our strength. Amen.

Let’s admit it! Seating arrangements can be at times frustrating, tricky or deceiving! How many of you have attended a wedding reception and did not enjoy every minute of it because you were seated with someone that you are not on good terms with? What about in a public gathering when someone asked you to move because you are sitting in a VIP seat? Or that time in a restaurant when you waited to be seated for more than 30 minutes because you were in a party of 2 and those in larger groups were seated first even if you were way ahead of them?

In high school, I always wanted to sit in the front row so I could listen well to the teacher. But I also had a selfish motive behind this. I would like the teacher to notice how attentive I was so if I ask a question she would at least remember me and perhaps give me a good mark. On one particular day, the class was preparing for project presentations. One classmate asked if she could switch seats with me because she was a bit nervous and sitting in front will give her enough confidence. I told her I was in the same boat with her and I don’t want to be called first. I managed to convince her to stay where she was. With assurance, I told her not to worry because I felt that the presenters would be called by their last names in alphabetical order as that was the usual practice. My classmate’s last name is M and mine is V so that would have given us enough time to muster our confidence when it was our turn to speak. To my surprise, the teacher announced that the presentations will be done row by row beginning with those sitting in the front row. My assumptions were totally wrong. To add to my consternation, I was called first. That did not sit well with me and I was not able to deliver my presentation with confidence. A lesson learned.

“Be careful what you wish for.” How many times have we heard this aphorism? Singer 
songwriter Luke Combs wrote a song with the same title and this is what he said:

“…sometimes things are not what you think they're going to be. What you want is not always what you need…Sometimes what you think you'll find. It is not quite what real life has in store
So be careful what you wish for.”

In our Gospel story today, brothers James and John made a peculiar request to Jesus. Known as the Greek word “boanerges” meaning “sons of thunder”, the brothers were outspoken, hot-tempered and were not shy to ask or tell Jesus or anyone else what they want. They were the ones who asked Jesus, in another story, to rain down fire on those people who refused to offer Jesus and the disciples hospitality. But there’s another side of their upbringing as to why they are so assertive. James and John came from a more affluent family than Simon and Andrew and the rest of the other disciples. Their father Zebedee, owned a fishing business with large fishing boats and employed many people. They must have received whatever they have asked from their wealthy parents. They felt they were entitled to be treated differently from the other disciples.  After all, didn’t they follow Jesus and left a life of comfort behind? Why wouldn’t they expect a little something in return on the day when their leader moves up on top? They were counting on Jesus to be a winner not a loser. They followed Jesus and had seen him in action – teaching, healing the sick, socializing and doing some extraordinary things - someone who will bring down the Roman oppressors and liberate the people from their impoverished state. They truly believed that Jesus was a winner and being on the good side of the winner makes them winners too! 

James and John approached Jesus and said, “Teacher, we want you to do for us whatever we ask.” Whatever we ask! We have words for this attitude: demanding? high maintenance? arrogance? “We’re entitled to something here, Jesus.  After all, we’ve sacrificed a lot to be your disciples.” The request sounds a bit like children asking their mom or dad to promise to give their request or their wish without even telling them first what it is. “Please swear on your heart that you’ll do this for me!” This way of asking is almost always part of our prayers. “Oh, God, please give me this and give me that. I am counting on your answering this prayer of mine because I deserve it.” Ever requested or prayed for one like this before?  Well, Jesus, being how good and considerate he was, listened to the brothers’ request but Jesus did not make any promises. Neither did he reprimand them – something he is quite capable of doing at other times. He simply listens to their question, and responds with a question, “What is it that you want me to do for you?” How may I be of service to you? 

Without mincing their words, James and John say: “Grant us to sit, one at your right hand and one at your left, in your glory.” “Glory” isn’t a word we use much these days.  It sounds very churchy and sacred.  But let’s face it: we do have our modern version of glory in this day and age. Prestige, fame, entitlement, privilege, distinction, success, honour, pride. James and John do not only want to get the best seat with Jesus but they want to retire as privileged disciples of Jesus. In fact, they don’t simply want this honour; they’re convinced that they deserve them. That they’re entitled to them. So what’s the big deal about sitting at the right and left of Jesus? It was customary in Jesus’ time, when gathering for a dinner or a feast, for example, to have the places of honour assigned to the VIP’s – the very important people. The most coveted positions were at the right or the left hand-side of the host. Those seats were reserved for those representing people with power. 

Jesus replied with disbelief at their request, “You do not know what you are asking. Are you able to drink the cup I drink, or be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with?” Jesus was actually telling them, “I am going to suffer a great deal, I don’t think this is the joyride you’re expecting. Are you willing to drink the cup – to experience tremendous challenges and hardships and be baptized with the baptism of rocky road and service? Do you still want to follow me?” Impulsively, the brothers replied, “Yes, we are able!” This may be a call to all of us. How much do we say “I am able” when really, we are not? Not because of our own limitations or inabilities. But because what is being asked of us is not who we are and should be. James and John and perhaps the rest of the disciples do not understand who Jesus is or what his whole mission is about. Jesus did not come to be a powerful ruler but to be a servant-leader.

The word that is translated as follow in most instances in the Gospel is rooted in the Greek word for "road." To follow Jesus, to claim a place in the reign of God, is to be on the road, journeying with the rest of humanity, embracing what may happen along that road. To follow Jesus, first and foremost, is not merely to secure a glorious seat. To drink the cup and to be baptized by the same spirit as Jesus is to be on the road, encountering life in movement and motion, rather than anticipating a stationary life seated at the right or left of some royal throne. To drink the cup and to be baptized is to feast at a table of grace; and this life is a life far more concerned with giving than with keeping, a life more attuned to sharing than possessing, more committed to caring than indulging. To live this life, one must be prepared for living, a life of service. Out of this service, a spirit of servant leadership emerges. Leadership comes through those who are prepared, not to dominate, but to serve and even to suffer at the side of Jesus. Jesus is saying not only to James and John but to all of us – “If you will be my followers, prepare to serve with love because that is what your faith is about.”

We may be angry at James and John’s request like the other 10 disciples.  But on a more positive side, I think the two brothers placed their full trust in Jesus.  Debie Thomas writes: “James and John cling to the belief that Jesus will win in the end.  They put their trust in him — his word, his love, his leadership, his faith.  Given what they’ve seen, heard, and experienced, they can’t conceive of a meaningful future apart from their Teacher.  Their personal hopes and dreams —imperfect though they might be — are rooted in Jesus… Jesus tells his disciples that true greatness is not found in climbing to the top and exercising power over others. Rather, true greatness, true leadership is found in serving and loving others.”

Today we have witnessed the baptism of Makenzie. We have committed to nurturing her, supporting her and her family to live a life of love and justice. Remind yourself that our true worth lies in our relationships: with God, with each other, the whole of creation and how we treat one another. When we treat the other with value and dignity, loving each other, encouraging each other, recognizing each other’s gifts, and helping each other live out our individual callings in the world… when we are free of the desperate need to “be on top,” free of our fear, that we find our self-worth and real selves.

Do you want to sit beside Jesus?  Then prepare yourself for a life of service and love.

Thanks be to God. Amen.

Sources: The BCUC Lectionary Group
Joseph S. Pagano, “Winners and Losers”, October 17, 2021, Sermons That Work website.
Kathleen L. Wakefield, “How We Want” October 19, 2003 Sermons That Work website.
Debie Thomas, What Glory Looks Like, 14 October 2018. Journey with Jesus. net

Prayers of the People & the Lord’s Prayer   Rev. Lorrie

Holy One, we give you thanks today for the blessing of welcoming a young child into our faith family, for the joy of hearing a little one’s voice in this place after so many months of pandemic restrictions. We miss the sounds of children in this place. We miss seeing familiar faces, raising our voices in song, and gathering together for fellowship. Give us the patience and the wisdom we need to see this dark time through.

Open our senses to the many blessings that surround us at this time of year – the changing colours, the bountiful harvest, the busy-ness of birds, animals, and people as we all begin to prepare for the winter ahead. Thank you for the rhythms of life that remind us that life is still abundant, constant, and hopeful, even in times of ongoing restrictions.

We pray for those in our faith family who are facing difficulties due to illness, isolation, insecurity, and grief. May they continue to feel your presence and our love. May these be the lights on their paths to comfort and healing.

We pray for all those in our home communities, especially those dealing with struggles we cannot see. We pray for our neighbouring communities of faith, our friends at Christ Church, St. Martin de Porres, and the Jami Omar mosque. Help us in our common work toward making the world a better place for all.

We pray for our leaders, municipal, provincial, and federal and for leaders around the globe. Give them the wisdom to see responsibility of the privilege and power they possess so that they are used for the common good rather than personal gain. May we all learn to align our wishes and wants with the dream of your kin-dom on earth.

Source of gratitude, love, and hope, hear the joys and concerns we express aloud and the ones we hold silently in our hearts as we recite together the words that Jesus shared with his followers so long ago…

Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kin-dom come, thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread, And forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.
For thine is the kin-dom, the power and the glory,
Forever and ever, Amen.

Invitation to Offer        Rev. Kim

On a morning like this, when we celebrate the blessing of a new baby and the joy of baptism, we are reminded to share our many blessings with others. And so, we take this time to offer our gifts of time, talents and treasures. If you are not on PAR and wish to send in your offering and donations, you can drop them in the mailbox by the kitchen door of the church or mail them to BCUC. You can also send in your support through e-transfer. Thank you for your continued love and support to BCUC.

Offertory Prayer

(Glad Faith Klassen, Gathering, Pentecost 1, 2021 Year B. Used with permission)

God our Creator, giver of all good and perfect gifts, we bring our praise for who you are, the one who is and was and is to come. You continue the work of creating, of giving and forgiving, and we give thanks for it all, embracing your grace and love. Help us on our journey to live the mystery of being born of water and spirit. Be patient with us as we learn to embrace your grace and extend it to others. We offer up to you all we are, all we have, and all we are becoming, in the name of Jesus, our perfect example. Amen.

Sending Forth  Rev. Kim

(Inspired by the prayers of David Sparks and Beth Johnson, Gathering 2016-17. Used with permission)

People of God,
We have listened, we have shared.
We have sung, we have prayed,
We welcomed a new child and her family.
We have been about God’s work.
Go forth from this holy place with hope.
Christ will be recognized among family,
friends and strangers.
Go forth as God’s baptized people,
knowing that the refreshing waters
will sustain you in your journey. Amen.

Hymn:   Would You Bless Our Homes and Families VU 556

(Words: Walter Farquharson, 1974; Music: Ron Klusmeier, 1974)

1 - Would you bless our homes and families,
source of life who calls us here,
in our world of stress and tension,
teach us love that conquers fear.
Help us learn to love each other
with a love that constant stays;
teach us when we face our troubles,
love’s expressed in many ways.

2 – When our way is un-demanding,
let us use the time that’s ours.
To delight in simple pleasures,
sharing joys in gentle hours.
When our way is anxious walking
and a heavy path we plod.
Teach us trust in one another
and in you, our gracious God.

3 – From the homes
in which we’re nurtured,
with the love that shapes us there,
teach us God, to claim as Family
everyone whose life we share.
And through all that life may offer,
may we in your love remain,
may the love we share in families
be alive to praise your name.

4 - Let us reach beyond the boundaries
Of our daily thought and care,
Till the family you have chosen
spills its love out everywhere.
Help us learn to love each other
with a love that constant stays;
teach us when we face our troubles
love’s expressed in many ways.

Departing Music: I Have Called You by Your Name MV 161

(Words & Music: Daniel Charles Damon, 1995)

1 I have called you by your name, you are mine;
I have gifted you and ask you now to shine.
I will not abandon you; all my promises are true.
You are gifted, called, and chosen; you are mine. 

2 I will help you learn my name as you go;
read it written in my people, help them grow.
Pour the water in my name,
speak the word your soul can claim,
offer Jesus’ body given long ago. 

3 I know you will need my touch as you go;
feel it pulsing in creation’s ebb and flow.
Like the woman reaching out,
choosing faith in spite of doubt,
hold the hem of Jesus’ robe, then let it go. 

4 I have given you a name, it is mine;
I have given you my Spirit as a sign.
With my wonder in your soul,
make my wounded children whole;
go and tell my precious people they are mine.

 

Monthly Zoom Fellowship – 11 am

Sunday Worship Service - October 10, 2021

 

BELLS CORNERS UNITED CHURCH

CREATION TIME 5 / THANKSGIVING SUNDAY

ALL-AGES WORSHIP SERVICE

October 10, 2021

The video recording of this service can be found here.
You can also dial-in by phone to listen to the audio recording at 613-820-8104.

Gathering Music:  Touch the Earth Lightly VU 307

(Words: Shirley Erena Murray, 1991; Music: Colin Gibson, 1991)

1 Touch the earth lightly, use the earth gently,
nourish the life of the world in our care;
gift of great wonder, ours to surrender,
trust for the children tomorrow will bear.  

2 We who endanger, who create hunger,
agents of death for all creatures that live,
we who would foster clouds of disaster,
God of our planet, forestall and forgive!  

3 Let there be greening, birth from the burning,
water that blesses and air that is sweet,
health in God’s garden, hope in God’s children,
regeneration that peace will complete.  

4 God of all living, God of all loving,
God of the seedling, the snow and the sun,
Teach us, deflect us, Christ reconnect us,
Using us gently and making us one. 

Welcome & Centering for Worship   Rev. Kim Vidal

Good day everyone! On behalf of BCUC, I welcome and greet you in the name of Jesus Christ on this Fifth Sunday of Creation Time in the Season of Pentecost. Today, we are celebrating Thanksgiving Sunday. Wherever you are, whether you are joining us via online, or onsite, or even reading the printed text of the service in the comfort of your homes, we are glad that you have joined us today.

We continue worshipping in the sanctuary on Sunday mornings at 10 am with a maximum number of 50 people. Due to the Covid variants that continue to pause some health threats to the community, the Public Health recommends staying at home, but if you wish to attend the service, you are most welcome. As a faith community called to love and serve others, let us be mindful of the health protocols such as masking, social distancing, hand sanitizing and staying home if you feel unwell. It is also highly recommended to get vaccinated as one of the best precautionary measures to protect yourself and others.

During this time of pandemic, the work of the church carries on. Please take time to keep in touch with each other through prayers, phone calls, emails or via Zoom. Check also the many announcements on our website including Sunday School resources for your children at bcuc.org to keep you informed and give you opportunities to respond.

Friends, on this Thanksgiving Sunday, we come with grateful hearts, not just for all the blessings that we have received, but for who God is within us. We gather now in worship to show our gratitude in song, in word and in prayer.

Lighting of the Christ Candle    Acolytes: Amelia & Georgia Baynes

The Light of Christ brings hope.
It is the Light of Life and Love.
A beacon of Creation fire.
Let us give thanks for the Light
That shines for all of us!

Call to Gather[1]       Rev. Lorrie Lowes        

We gather this morning to celebrate the Harvest Home!
We are surrounded by the beauty and bounty of the earth.
We gather with hearts filled with gratitude as our senses take in all that we’ve received;
the warm embrace of our church family;
the sight of produce fresh from garden, orchard and field;
the aroma of roast turkey and fresh baked pumpkin pie;
the sound of wild geese overhead and the crush of leaves beneath our feet;
the expectation of a feast awaits us.
For the bountiful blessings, in praise and thanksgiving,
Let us gather as friends and neighbours. 

Embodied Echo Prayer [2]    Berard Family

Please repeat after me…                        

Holy God,
you were with us when we were born,
you are with us as we grow,
you are with us when we hurt,
you are with us when we are whole.
Thank you! Thank you! THANK YOU!
Would you help us to see?
Would you help us to hear?
Would you help us to love?
So we might change ourselves.
So we might change the world! Amen.

Hymn:     This is the Day that God Has Made  MV 122 (English & French)

(Words & Music: Bruce Harding, 2003; French trans. David Fines, 2005)

1 This is the day that God has made; we will rejoice and be glad!
This is the day that God has made; we will rejoice and be glad!
Singing hallelu, singing hallelu, singing hallelu!
We will rejoice and be glad!
Singing hallelu, singing hallelu, singing hallelu!
We will rejoice and be glad!  

2 Voici le jour que Dieu a fait; nous le vivrons dans la joie.
Voici le jour que Dieu a fait; nous le vivrons dans la joie.
Chantant Al-le-lu! (3x); nous le vivrons dans la joie
Chantant Al-le-lu! (3x); nous le vivrons dans la joie. 

Repeat 1

Storytime  Rev. Lorrie

“The Secret of Saying Thanks” written by Douglas Wood and illustrated by Greg Shed, Simon and Schuster Books for Young Readers, New York, 2005.

From the cover flap:

“Perhaps you’d like to know a secret, one of the happiest ones of all. You will surely find it for yourself one day. You’ll discover it all on your own, maybe when you least expect it. If you’ve not yet discovered the secret of saying thanks, it’s waiting for you. The secret can be found in the sunrise that offers promises for the day ahead, or in the gentle shade of a tree sheltering you from the hot rays of the sun, or on the rock that offers rest from a long walk. In the inspirational text that made him a bestselling, internationally acclaimed author, Douglas Wood offers a spiritual homage to nature, home, and family. Greg Shed’s stunning portraits of the natural world tenderly portray all of the many ways in which we can say thanks for the wonders we sometimes take for granted in life.”

Here is the secret if you’ve not already guessed it…

“The heart that gives thanks is a happy one, for we cannot feel thankful and unhappy at the same time… We don’t give thanks because we’re happy. We are happy because we give thanks.”

Hymn:  Ev’ry Day is a Day of Thanksgiving MV 185

(Words & Music: Leonard Burks)

Ev’ry day is a day of thanksgiving, God,
you’ve been so good to me.
Ev’ry day you’re blessing me.
Ev’ry day is a day of thanksgiving.
I will glorify you, O my Lord, today!

                              Repeat 

You keep blessing me, blessing me, blessing me.
You opened the door that I might see,
you’re blessing me.
And you keep blessing me, blessing me, blessing me.
I will glorify you, O my Lord, today!         

Prayer for Illumination[3] Reader: Ruth Howes       

Without the guidance of your Spirit, O God,
your Word would be mere words on a page, tales of long ago.
Inspire our hearing and quicken our faith,
so that your Word may become a message from you.  Amen.            

The Gospel Reading: Matthew 6:25-33 (NRSV)

Do Not Worry

25 “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? 

26 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? 

27 And can any of you by worrying add a single hour to your span of life?  

28 And why do you worry about clothing? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they neither toil nor spin, 

29 yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not clothed like one of these. 

30 But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will he not much more clothe you—you of little faith? 

31 Therefore do not worry, saying, ‘What will we eat?’ or ‘What will we drink?’ or ‘What will we wear?’ 

32 For it is the Gentiles who strive for all these things; and indeed your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things. 

33 But strive first for the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.

May the Light of Christ dwell where the Word is spoken. Thanks be to God!

Sermon:   “Thanks-Giving, Thanks-Living!”  Rev. Kim

Gracious God, thank you for the gift of your Word being opened to us in our hearing today. As we reflect on your Word, open our hearts and our minds to listen to them with understanding. Amen.

In an anxious-driven, worry-wart world, we are sometimes comforted by popular songs that make us shun away from the worries of the day.  In the movie Lion King, for instance, there is a song called Hakuna Matata, which literally means “do not worry for the rest of your days!” Another song called “Don’t Worry Be Happy” popularized by Bob McFerrin in the late ‘80s has a light-hearted fun to it which makes the song unforgettable. “Don't worry. Be happy. Cause when you worry your face will frown, and that will bring everybody down.” 

While it’s true that these songs do not exactly convey the same sentiment that Jesus expresses in today’s gospel reading, they offer us a kind of wisdom that life is much brighter when we stop worrying and get on with life. I think we can all agree that everyone is worried about something. The sad truth is – there are still millions in the world, particularly those in third world countries who live below poverty line. They worry about the basic necessities of life – food, shelter, clothing, safety, health, education.

In Canada where we live, we may not worry so much about what we will eat or wear, as many did in Jesus' time. The first century Jewish people were under an oppressive regime that condoned poverty, illiteracy and social injustices - a society where the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. The poor peasants worry about the next food on the table or clothes to protect them from the harsh scorching sun or to keep them warm at cold nights. The rich worry about their lands and animals and whatever property they own. Will the Roman rulers seize their properties if they could not pay their taxes? Will they be killed for fighting for their rights? Were they risking their lives when they follow the Rabbi Jesus?

Today, we may have different worries from those of Jesus’ time, but we worry all the same. I once read an article as to what an average person's anxiety is focused on. Results show that 40% are about things that will never happen; 30% -- about things in the past that can't be changed; 12% -- about criticisms by others, mostly untrue; 10% -- about health, which gets worse with stress; and 8% -- about real problems that will be faced.

We worry about the COVID pandemic.  When will this pandemic ease up on us? We worry about our health and those we love. What will the test results show? When will I get better? Will I make it to retirement, to see my children's children, or even another year on this earth? We worry about relationships. We worry about what people think about us. Will they like me or hate me? Will they remember me? Will I fit in the circle? I often observe that parents, love to worry about their children. Will they be safe, successful, and financially stable? Will they get into the right school, get the right job, marry the right person (and stay married)? Will they have children and will those children ever learn to behave? Will our kids keep the faith, go to church and treasure the values we raised them with, or will they go their own way? Some of us are worried about getting old and being fragile.

We worry about ongoing wars, or political upheavals in the world – of terrorism and the threats of those who would harm Canadians abroad or at home. We worry about natural disasters that disturb our quiet stability or even take the lives of people.

Some of us worry about our congregation – how we will get everything done around here in this pandemic time with finances tight and expenses getting higher? And some of us might even worry about our faith in God. Will God continue to be present in my life despite my shortcomings? Will I have to answer for those unpleasant things I have done or unkind words that I said?

Yes, we could go on and on about our worries and they never seem to end. Worry comes in many flavours, shapes and sizes. And sometimes we make the mistake of masking them by saying “Oh, I'm not worried, I'm just concerned”. Sometimes we tend to rationalize things in order to justify our anxious state. Here is where worrying would take its toll. If we allow the worries in this life to take charge of us, we would not have time for anything else. Life can be stressful and may not be worry-free, but I believe there is a better alternative than unwarranted worrying. How many of us realize that worrying leads to fruitless results and wasteful use of time and energy? Walter Kelly writes: “Worry is faith in the negative, trust in the unpleasant, assurance of disaster and belief in defeat...worry is wasting today's time to clutter up tomorrow's opportunities with yesterday's troubles.”

Jesus asked the same question: “And can any of you by worrying add a single hour to your span of life?” I think Jesus is trying to point us to the heart of the question of worry. Do we trust God? Do we trust God to provide for our daily needs? Do we trust God to hold us in times of uncertainties and seemingly hopeless situations? Do we rely on God’s grace to journey with us through life?

In order to understand his argument why we should not worry, Jesus points us to nature and uses two examples: the birds of the air and the lilies of the field. What we see when we look at the birds is not a lesson on laziness or waiting for their food to come. They still dig their worms and hunt for bugs and pad their nests with twigs and leaves. They fly from yards to forests, finding seeds from bird feeders, or from trees or from the earth. But Matthew’s Jesus says it is God that feeds them. It is God that provides for their needs. Birds are birds and yet they go about their work not worrying when the sun comes up tomorrow. Look at the lilies of the field; which have no will of their own to labour and spin, they don’t lie awake at night fretting over which pair of slacks would go best with a red sweater. Again, Jesus claims God takes care of them. If God delights in adorning grass like lilies, that's here today and gone tomorrow, then surely God will look after our human needs.

What then should we do when worries attack us? Should we just sit down and do nothing? Some of us understand this text as an excuse for taking little or no responsibility for one’s life, that we should just completely trust God to provide everything we need as we sit tight and become idle. Yet, as one Bible commentator notes, the challenge to trust in God does “not exclude working and having property. The words are directed to people involved with sowing, reaping, storing in barns, toiling, and spinning, but who are called to see that their life is not obsessed with these things.” (from The New Interpreter’s Bible). Our culture is anxiety-driven, it keeps people consuming, it keeps us busy, competitive, grasping at too much power, and to sustain in our belief system that having control and wealth makes one successful in life. With these weighing on our hearts and minds, our priorities can lead to further anxieties about whether we will have enough or be enough. It follows that the more worried we are, the less loving we can be; and the less loving we are, the less satisfied and thankful we’ll be for what we already have and who we already are. Jesus is teaching us to move away from obsessions that create and sustain chronic acute worrying. 

We are not birds or lilies. We are God’s human family. The birds and lilies have taught us that God can be counted on to provide for us and does so abundantly. Through God’s grace, we are given daily bread, roof over our heads, not to mention family and friends, fresh air, the warmth of the sun, land, animals and all of creation. I believe that God uses others and human situations to lead us to opportunities in making our lives far better and enriching; providing comfort when we are scared. God enters our lives though others with inspirational nudges, with power to cope, with the will to make wise choices and with comforting and healing grace. 

On this Thanksgiving Sunday, let this prayer inspire us: “I thank you, God, for waking me up this morning.”  Waking up to a new day provides us with new possibilities and adventures, for giving thanks and for living a life of gratitude. When we give thanks and live thanks, we trust that even in the wilderness, there is a wellspring of fresh water and bread for the journey. St. Brigid, who embodied the Divine Feminine in Celtic spirituality, teaches us that gratitude is grounded in appreciation and sharing.  Our abundance does not fully belong to us; it is intended to uplift the vulnerable in our midst and delight the spirit of those whom we encounter, sharing our abundance in response to the abundance we receive.  In the world St. Brigid imagines, everyone has enough because everyone is willing to share with their neighbour. This is the lesson that Jesus taught his followers to rely on God’s providence, not to worry, but to have a grateful heart. “Being thankful makes sense”, says Melody Beattie. “Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life. It turns what we have into enough, and more. It turns denial into acceptance, chaos to order, confusion to clarity. It can turn a meal into a feast, a house into a home, a stranger into a friend.”

“Do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will bring worries of its own. Today’s trouble is enough for today.” Instead of worrying, let us give thanks instead. Give thanks and live thanks! Live faithfully. Trust in God.  Let me close with this prayer written by St. Brigid: 

“I should like a lake of finest ale, for the king of kings. I should like a table of the choicest food, for the family of heaven. Let the ale be made from the fruits of the earth, And the food be forgiving love. I should welcome the poor to my feast, for they are God’s children. I should welcome the sick to my feast, for they are God’s joy. Let the poor sit with Jesus at the highest place. And the sick dance with the angels. God bless the poor, God bless the sick, And bless our human race. God bless our food, God bless our drink, all homes, O God, embrace.” Amen.

A Prayer of Thanksgiving & the Lord’s Prayer: “Choose Thanks”[4] Rev. Kim

God, there are days we do not feel grateful.
When we are anxious or angry. When we feel alone.
When we do not understand what is happening in the world or with our neighbors.
When the news is bleak, confusing. God, we struggle to feel grateful.
But this Thanksgiving, we choose gratitude.

We choose to accept life as a gift from you,
and as a gift from the unfolding work of all creation.
We choose to be grateful for the earth from which our food comes;
for the water that gives life; and for the air we all breathe.

We choose to thank our ancestors, those who came before us,
grateful for their stories and struggles,
and we receive their wisdom as a continuing gift for today.

We choose to see our families and friends with new eyes,
appreciating and accepting them for who they are.
We are thankful for our homes, whether humble or grand.

We will be grateful for our neighbours, no matter how they voted,
whatever our differences, or how much we feel hurt or misunderstood by them.

We choose to see the whole planet as our shared commons,
the stage of the future of humankind and creation.

God, this Thanksgiving, we do not give thanks.
We choose it. We will make this choice of thanks with courageous hearts,
knowing that it is humbling to say “thank you.”

We choose to see your sacred generosity,
aware that we live in an infinite circle of gratitude.
That we all are guests at a hospitable table around
which gifts are passed and received.

We will not let anything opposed to love take over this table.
Instead, we choose grace, free and unmerited love,
the giftedness of life everywhere.
In this choosing, and in the making, we will pass gratitude onto the world.
We choose thanks. Amen.

We ask this prayer of thanksgiving in the name of Jesus Christ who gave thanks and lived thanks and taught his disciples this prayer:

Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kin-dom come, thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread, And forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.
For thine is the kin-dom, the power and the glory,
Forever and ever, Amen.

Invitation to Offer         Rev. Kim

In this season of harvest and plenty when we are grateful for God’s amazing bounty, we are called to share the gifts we have been given with others. Time, talents, and treasures are all wonderful ways to further the mission of this church and the building of God’s kin-dom in the world. If you are not on PAR and wish to send in your offering and donations, you can drop them in the mailbox by the kitchen door of the church or mail them to BCUC. You can also send in your support through e-transfer. Thank you for your continued love and support to BCUC.

Offertory Prayer

Fill us with gratitude, O God. From you, all blessings flow.
To you, all gratitude shall return. Empower us, as a gracious people,
overflowing with compassion and love, to shape our lives and the world for good. Amen. 

Sending Forth[5]    Rev. Lorrie

Let us leave this time and place of worship
remembering God’s goodness to us:
a goodness known in Creation, in relationships.
Let us commit ourselves to lives of thanksgiving and thanks-living,
remembering that when we are simply grateful, life is simply great!
Let us go now with smiles on our faces,
with joy in our hearts,
with purpose and in kindness,
To be God’s people in all the places life calls us to be.
May you go forth in peace. Amen 

Hymn:  Sing to the Lord of Harvest VU 519

(Words: John Samuel Bewley Monsell,1866; Music: Johann Steurlein, 1575, harm. Healey Willan, 1958)

1 Sing to the Lord of harvest, 
sing songs of love and praise, 
with joyful hearts and voices 
your hallelujahs raise;
by whom the rolling seasons 
in fruitful order move; 
sing to the Lord of harvest 
a joyous song of love. 

2 God makes the clouds drop fatness, 
the deserts bloom and spring,
the hills leap up in gladness, 
the valleys laugh and sing. 
God fills them all with fullness, 
all things with large increase; 
and crowns the year with goodness, 
with plenty and with peace. 

3 Bring to this sacred altar 
all things God's goodness gave, 
the golden sheaves of harvest, 
the souls Christ died to save:
your hearts lay down before him 
when at his feet you fall, 
and with your lives adore him 
who gave his life for all.

Departing Music:    Great is the Lord (Michael W. Smith)

Monthly Zoom Fellowship – No Zoom meeting today. Join us on October 17, 2021 at 11 am.

[1] Phil Hobbs, Gathering, Pentecost 2, 2016.

[2] Whole People of God, October 4, 2015.

[3] Inspired by the prayer of Beth W. Johnson, Gathering, Pentecost 2, Year C, 2013, Used with permission.

[4] Diana Butler Bass

[5] Bob Root, Gathering, Pentecost 2, 2018. Used with permission.

Sunday school activities - October 10, 2021

Theme discussion

Today we are celebrating Thanksgiving! We folks here at BCUC sure have many things to be thankful for, don’t we? Strange as it may seem though, when things are going well in our lives, we often forget to give thanks. Thanksgiving is a day to remind us of all the wonderful things that are in our lives.

The story we read in the Time for the Young at Heart today, “The Secret of Saying Thanks” reminds us that we are surrounded by many things to be thankful for every day – in nature, and in the people who love us – things we often take for granted. It’s a reminder to look for those things that make us feel comfortable and loved and happy.

The ‘secret’ that this story shares with us is this:

“The heart that gives thanks is a happy one, for we cannot feel thankful and unhappy at the same time… We don’t give thanks because we’re happy. We are happy because we give thanks.”

How can you use this secret to make you feel happy, even when you’re having a hard day?

The examples given in the book don’t talk about new toys, or nice clothes, or big parties. They are things that are around us every single day: sunshine, flowers and trees, rocks and hills, birds and animals, the moon and stars, the people who love us…

Today when you celebrate the things you are thankful for, take a look around you at the wonderful things that are there for you every day. Take a moment to say “thank you” to those things. This is what makes Thanksgiving Day special. It reminds us of the secret:

“We don’t give thanks because we’re happy. We are happy because we give thanks.”

Response Activity Ideas

Thankful Yoga

This activity from kidsyogastories.com matches up key lines from the story “The Secret of Saying Thanks” to a yoga pose.  Read the ‘story line’ in the first column, then try the pose described and illustrated in the other two columns.  Breathe deeply and focus your mind on being grateful for God’s gifts and the sense of happiness these thoughts bring.

Click to print PDF (5 pages)

Click to print PDF (5 pages)

Daily Gratitude

Does your family have a special time each day to practice an attitude of gratitude?  Some people do this around the dinner table, others before bed. Today, make a plan to build a time for gratitude into your family’s routine.  It doesn’t have to be complicated, but it’s great to have a plan or routine so you can keep it up! 

Some ideas:

  • Hang a white board in a prominent place and encourage each family member to write down something they’re thankful for sometime during the day.  Read them together before bedtime!

  • Good, Great, Wow! - When you’re getting tucked into bed, think of something good, something great, and something fantastic (wow!) that happened that day. Grown-ups could share, too!  This helps keep looking for the positives even on not-so-great days.

  • As a table grace before dinner, have everyone contribute something they feel grateful for that day.

  • Gratitude journal - Get a little notebook for each member of the family (or one shared book), and make a plan to pause for 5 minutes together each day and record 3 things you’re thankful for.

Gratitude Tree Craft

Check out this brief video and make your own tree for Thanksgiving.

Materials: small branch, vase, construction paper, scissors, writing tools, hole punch, string (alternatively, use real leaves that aren’t too dry and brittle, and write on them with Sharpies)

Sunday Worship Service - October 3, 2021

BELLS CORNERS UNITED CHURCH

WORLD COMMUNION SUNDAY / AGAPE MEAL (COMMUNION)

October 3, 2021

The video recording of this service can be found here.
You can also dial-in by phone to listen to the audio recording at 613-820-8104

Gathering Music: There’s A Spirit in the Air   VU 582

(Words: Brian Wren, 1969; Music: John Wilson, 1969)

1 There's a spirit in the air,
telling Christians everywhere:
"Praise the love that Christ revealed,
living, working in our world."

2 Lose your shyness, find your tongue,
tell the world what God has done:
God in Christ has come to stay.
Live tomorrow's life today!

3 When believers break the bread,
when a hungry child is fed,
praise the love that Christ revealed,
living, working, in our world.

4 Still the Spirit gives us light,
seeing wrong and setting right:
God in Christ has come to stay.
Live tomorrow's life today!

5 When a stranger's not alone,
where the homeless find a home,
praise the love that Christ revealed,
living, working, in our world.

6 May the Spirit fill our praise,
guide our thoughts and change our ways.
God in Christ has come to stay,
live tomorrow's life today!

Acknowledgement of Territory         Rev. Lorrie Lowes

As we begin our worship today, we remember that, in this congregation, we live and work on the unceded traditional territory of the Algonquin and Anishinaabe Peoples. We give thanks for their stewardship of the land and the water, the plants and the animals, through many generations. We also acknowledge their story, and our place in it, with sorrow. As we continue to live on this land with respect for it and for its people, may we commit to working toward truth, justice and reconciliation. All my relations.

Welcome & Announcements         Rev. Kim Vidal

Good day everyone! On behalf of BCUC, I welcome and greet you in the name of Jesus Christ on this Fourth Sunday of Creation Time in the Season of Pentecost. Today, we are celebrating World Communion Sunday with an Agape Meal. Wherever you are, whether you are joining us via online, or onsite, or even reading the printed text of the service in the comfort of your homes, we are glad that you have joined us today.

We continue worshipping in the sanctuary on Sunday mornings at 10 am with a maximum number of 50 people. Due to the Covid variants that continue to pause some health threats to the community, the Public Health recommends staying at home, but if you wish to attend the service, you are most welcome. As a faith community called to love and serve others, let us be mindful of the health protocols such as masking, social distancing, hand sanitizing and staying home if you feel unwell. It is also highly recommended to get vaccinated as one of the best precautionary measures to protect yourself and others.

During this time of pandemic, the work of the church carries on. Please take time to keep in touch with each other through prayers, phone calls, emails or via Zoom. Check also the many announcements on our website including Sunday School resources for your children at bcuc.org to keep you informed and give you opportunities to respond.

Friends, on this World Communion Sunday, as we gather around the table of grace and partake the bread and the cup, may God the Creator nourish us by the sacrament of a welcoming and inclusive love.  Let us now gather in worship.

Lighting of the Christ Candle              Acolytes: Kim Family

We light this candle to remind us of God’s love and light, and that the Risen Christ is always with us. As we gather for communion, let us be reminded of these words from the Apostle Paul: “Let no one deceive you with empty words. For once you were like night, but now in Christ you are light. Love as children of light- for the fruit of light is found in all that is good and right and true.” (Ephesians 5:8-10)

*Call to Gather & Opening Prayer              Rev. Lorrie Lowes

(Inspired by the prayer of Kate Crawford, Gathering, Pentecost 2, Year A, 2014. Use with Permission.)

In the presence of loaves and drink on our table,
and in the company of all the saints in the world,
we gather in this sacred place to prepare an earthly feast.
Yeast and flour and oil combine, freshly pressed wine,
like hope and love and joy.
The bread of faith rises in our midst.
The cup of grace touches us with hope.
God calls us to come and dine this day
with our brothers and sisters of the global village.
We come and dine in the presence of God whose Spirit ministers to us. 

Let us pray:
Loving God, as we gather to share bread around this table,
we pause to remember other tables, other times, other hands.
We come remembering the taste of bread and wine.
We come acknowledging the freedom of forgiveness and the strength of your presence.
Gather us in to be your people: in love, in faith, in service. Amen.

Hymn:   Come In, Come In, and Sit Down   VU395

(Words & Music: James K. Manley, 1984)

Refrain:
Come in come in and sit down,
you are a part of the family.
We are lost and we are found,
and we are a part of the family.

1 You know the reason why you came,
yet no reason can explain,
so share in the laughter and cry in the pain,
for we are a part of the family. R

2 God is with us in this place,
like a mother's warm embrace.
We're all forgiven by God's grace,
for we are a part of the family. R

3 There's life to be shared in the bread and the wine, we are the branches Christ is the vine. This is God's temple, it's not yours or mine, but we are a part of the family. R

4 There's rest for the weary and health for us all, there's a yoke that is easy, and a burden that's small. So come in and worship and answer the call, for we are a part of the family. R

Storytime      Rev. Lorrie

Welcome, everybody!

I know that Rev. Kim already welcomed everyone to this morning’s worship service – but I want to make sure that you know that message of “Welcome!” was meant especially for you… yes, you! Each and every one of you.

I really miss seeing you all in person on Sunday morning. I miss saying good morning to each of you as you arrive with your families or walk past my office door. Saying it on a video just isn’t the same as when I see you in person. I miss you soooo much! But, we have to keep each other safe until this pandemic is over, and that means our welcomes can’t include hugs, even our smiles are hidden behind masks. A video is about the closest thing I can offer you for now. So, “WELCOME!!!” and I hope you feel all the love and excitement I am trying to put into that word.

I’ve been thinking about that word, “welcome” this week. You see it on welcome mats at people’s front doors. You see it on signs as you enter a new town or city. I’m not sure that’s the kind of welcome I’m trying to send to you though… It’s missing something… and, know what? I think our Bible story gives us a hint about that missing piece!

It’s a story you are familiar with – one I usually read at baptisms. The disciples are trying to keep the children from bothering Jesus and when he notices this, he tells them “No, don’t stop them! Let them come to me.” And then it says, “he took them up in his arms, laid his hands on them, and blessed them.” He didn’t say, come over here kids and sit quietly while I talk to the grown-ups. “He took them up in his arms.”

When I read that last part, I picture Jesus crouching down with his arms wide open and a big smile on his face. He wouldn’t even have to say the word “Welcome!” It’s the kind of welcome you get from your grandma when you knock on her door. It’s the kind of welcome that says, “I love you so much!”

That’s the kind of welcome I want to give each and every one of you this morning. And I think that’s the kind of welcome God wants to give us every day. So, next time you say a prayer, I hope you picture God with arms wide open, ready to scoop you up in love.

Now, when Grandma or Grandpa opens up their arms to welcome you, I bet you open your arms for that hug… so, this morning, when we say our prayer, let’s open our arms to receive that hug from God. Ready?

Dear God,

Thank you for loving us. Thank you for welcoming us with open arms.

Thank you for the love of our faith family at BCUC and keep us safe until we can welcome each other again in person. Amen.

Hymn:  I’m Gonna Shout   MV183

(Words & Music: Bruce Harding, 1998)

1 I’m gonna shout, shout, shout out my love
for Jesus, for Jesus!
I’m gonna shout, shout, shout out my love
for God’s most holy child!
For whatever I might do today,
at home, at school, at work, at play,
I’ve got Jesus’ love deep down inside of me! 

2 I’m gonna raise, raise, raise up my hands
for Jesus, for Jesus!
I’m gonna raise, raise, raise up my hands
for God’s most holy child!
For whatever I might do today,
at home, at school, at work, at play,
I’ve got Jesus’ love deep down inside of me! 

3 I’m gonna dance, dance, dance all around
for Jesus, for Jesus!
I’m gonna dance, dance, dance all around
for God’s most holy child!
For whatever I might do today,
at home, at school, at work, at play,
I’ve got Jesus’ love deep down inside of me!

Prayer for Illumination          Reader: Rick Morrison

Gracious God, be with us now as we turn to the pages of your Word.
We ask for your Spirit of Wisdom, to help us understand your will for us. Amen. 

The Reading:   Mark 10:13-16 (NRSV)

Jesus Blesses Little Children

13 People were bringing little children to him in order that he might touch them; and the disciples spoke sternly to them. 14 But when Jesus saw this, he was indignant and said to them, “Let the little children come to me; do not stop them; for it is to such as these that the kingdom of God belongs. 15 Truly I tell you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God as a little child will never enter it.” 16 And he took them up in his arms, laid his hands on them, and blessed them.

May the Light of Christ dwell where the Word is spoken. Thanks be to God!

Sermon:   “Bring the Children to the Table”       Rev. Kim Vidal

I still remember the first communion I received as a child. In the United Methodist tradition, we gathered around and knelt on a rail when we receive the elements from the pastor.  At age 11, I was so excited to join the other children as we anticipate the snack of the day! A small bread cut in 1 by 1 inch and grape juice poured in mini cups. At that young age, I may have never understood what it meant to participate in a communion but for me, it certainly was the highlight of the service which was far better than listening to the long-winded sermon!

Today, Christians, particularly those from the mainline Protestant denominations who are members of the World Council of Churches, are celebrating World Communion Sunday – that’s right! It’s worldwide – not just here in Canada but all over the world. Originally named as Worldwide Communion Sunday, this special Sunday was first introduced in 1933 by a Presbyterian minister, the Rev. Hugh Thomson Kerr who ministered at that time in a large church in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  It takes place every first Sunday of October, the purpose of which is to bring Christian churches together in a service of unity and ecumenical cooperation. This is one Sunday every year for many Christians around the world to experience God’s invitation to feast together, affirming their journey with Jesus Christ, the Bread of Life. Although we are celebrating this sacrament in the context of a global community, reality is - there are still some Christian denominations who makes the sacrament of communion an exclusive privilege for the few. Some churches have some boundaries or policies regarding who can or cannot take communion. There are some churches who will only offer communion to their members or those of the same denomination.  Other churches have a special card like a passport for those who can take communion. Some churches do not even serve communion to children or those youth who have not been confirmed.

In our gospel story today, the disciples displayed an unwelcoming behaviour. They were shooing away the parents who brought their children to be touched by Jesus. But Jesus got upset with the disciples for doing this. Let’s be honest—sometimes children drive us crazy. For modern readers like us, this particular story sounds like a case of annoyed disciples rolling their eyes because a disruptive child is making it impossible to hear the sermon during a worship service. Why do you think the disciples stop people from bringing the children to Jesus? Several reasons come to mind. In Jesus’ time, children were considered nobodies. They were powerless. It could be that the disciples were trying to protect Jesus from the crowds in general, trying to give their leader some breathing space. Jesus had far more important things to do than entertaining these nobodies. Or perhaps the disciples were just applying the norm of the day - cultural values that deny children a meaningful place in society. Another possibility is that these children were sick, diseased, even gravely ill. After all, their parents are bringing them to Jesus “that he might touch them,” a phrase in Mark that is almost always associated with healing. The desperate parents want Jesus to reassure them that things will get better for their children. Children embody a particular kind of heartbreak when they are ill because they are so innocent, young, and vulnerable. And so perhaps the disciples were trying keep at bay the possible endless stream of parents who would bring their sick and diseased children to him.

There might be other hundreds of reasons for the disciples doing wat they have done but what we do know is that Jesus will have none of it. Jesus scolds his disciples’ snobbish attitude and welcomes the children as guests and friends. Jesus takes a step further by saying that it is “to such as these that the kingdom of God belongs.” Think about that, for a moment. God’s reign belongs to the children – those who have no voice, the weak, the ill, the marginalized, the most vulnerable. If this is true, it is like no other kingdom or reign we’ve ever heard of. Not only that, but Jesus also says that only those who receive the Kingdom of God like these children will enter it. I like what Rev. David Lose has to say about this: “When we look to our strengths or power or possessions to secure our future and good, we will be disappointed. Only those aware of their brokenness and need, after all, can receive help…Those who are confident of the kingdoms of the world will look upon this spectacle as foolishness. But those who are broken, hurting, alone or ill will look and see God there…eager to gather them into God’s healing arms and embrace them in redemptive love.”

Sometimes we are just like the disciples. We get irritated when children run around the sanctuary or make some noise during the service. We want the children to act like adults when they should act like children. If Jesus so welcomes the children to come to him and be blessed by him, who are we to put a stop to them? Why do some churches bar children from taking communion? Communion is a sacrament of grace.  In the holy moment of eating and drinking, one can feel the presence of God.  God welcomes people of all ages, colour or faith at this table of grace, so why would we get in the way of that sacred meeting? We also need to remind ourselves that this table is not our table. It is God’s table. This is not a Bells Corners United Church table. It is a table for everyone who accepts the invitation to eat and drink together remembering Jesus as the gracious host. Communion is like a family meal time where everyone – children and adults alike gather to eat and share the stories of the day There’s no children’s table that is separate from this table. Some parents say, “We don’t let our children partake communion until they fully understand what’s going on.”  Children might not fully understand what’s going on, but they know what it means to be left out.  And I will never tolerate having a child feel that way in any congregation I am called to minister. For me, it’s OK if we let our children think that communion is like a snack time.  We have the responsibility as adults to teach them as we journey together.  Children will eventually understand the meaning of communion when we teach them and let them experience this sacrament of remembrance.  Instead of saying to the children, “the bread and grape juice is the body and blood of Christ” why don’t we say to them “with this bread and juice, Jesus wants you to remember how much God loves you.”  That’s all they need to know. That’s all any of us need to know.

We are the body of Christ. We are all God’s children who gather around God’s table of grace. Jesus shared a simple meal of bread and wine to have his disciples remember him, something he had shared with them countless times before, and something they would share together after he was gone.   Together they would sit, share the stories of Jesus, break the bread, share the wine in remembrance, in fellowship and in thanksgiving.

Today, Christians from Canada, the United States, Philippines, Brazil, South Africa, England, Ireland, Scotland, South Korea, Australia - all over the world are gathering to be fed.  They gather in cathedrals, churches, urban and suburban places of worship.  They gather in small buildings, in chapels, outdoors, indoors, in Zoom, wherever two or three are gathered. God’s children, like you and I, people of different race and economic means, of different political persuasion, people of different abilities, those who know freedom, those who do not, migrant workers, peasants, royalty, all gather today to be fed with the bread and wine - to appease their deep physical, spiritual and moral hunger for God.

Friends, on this World Communion Sunday, when we remember that God comes to us in the caring acts of the community gathered, let us return our gratitude for the grace offered to us in Jesus the Christ. And let us find, at this table, strength for our journey. Let's recommit ourselves to the Good News, welcoming such as these children as Jesus taught us. Thanks be to God. Amen.

Sources used:

  • BCUC Lectionary Group

  • David J. Lose, Reflections on Mark 10:13-16, davidlose.net

Prayers of the People and the Lord’s Prayer        Rev. Lorrie Lowes

(written by Rev Abi and posted on A Place for Prayer, http://revgalprayerpals.blogspot.ca/)

Lord as we gather around this wonderful meal 
everywhere and in every place; 
bless us all your children. 

As we eat this bread and drink this cup 
linking arms around the world,
pour your grace into us all. 

Grace us with your presence 
as we quietly and loudly pray to you. 

May we see in each other 
your light, your love and you.
May it not matter our differences, 
our names, our languages,
our looks, and our way of doing things.
May what matter today and everyday be that we are one in you. 

And as we pray many we call to mind our brothers and sisters
who are unable to be with us today whether in body or spirit.
May you bring comfort to those who are grieving, lonely,
heartbroken, ill or broken of spirit. 

May you strengthen those whose lives feel shattered,
don’t make sense, in crisis, and experiencing loss.
May you say the healing word to those who need it.
May you bring the human touch of love 
to those who have not been touched.
May you love the unloved through us. 

May you shine your light 
into those whose world is covered in darkness.
May you use us to feed the hungry, 
clothe the ones who need clothes,
give a cup of water to those who are thirsty,
shelter the homeless, visit the sick and those in prison. 

May lives be awakened to you, Lord, 
to your love and to your kingdom 
whose door is always open to all. 

Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kin-dom come, thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread, And forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.
For thine is the kin-dom, the power and the glory, Forever and ever, Amen. 

Communion Hymn: We Gather Here VU 469

(Words & Music: Bryan Jeffery Leech, 1984)

We gather here in Jesus' name,
his love is burning in our hearts like living flame; for through the loving son God fashions us as one: Come take the bread, come drink the wine, come, share the Lord.

No one is a stranger here,
- everyone belongs;
finding our forgiveness here,
we in turn forgive all wrongs.

He joins us here, he breaks the bread,
the One who pours the cup is risen from the dead; the One we love the most is now our gracious host:
Come take the bread, come drink the wine,
come, share the Lord.

We are now a family of which Christ is the head; though unseen he meets us here
in the breaking of the bread.

We'll gather soon where angels sing;
we'll see the glory of our Lord and coming King; now we anticipate the feast for which we wait:  Come take the bread, come drink the wine, come, share the Lord.

The Agape Meal         Rev. Kim Vidal & Rev. Lorrie Lowes

I now invite you for an agape meal. Please make sure you have a piece of bread or crackers and a cup or a glass of your favourite drink.

“Agape” is the New Testament Greek word for “self-giving love”. The kind of love that comes from God and models God’s loving choice for our well-being and all of Creation. In the Christian tradition, agape is also the name for informal meals and times of togetherness and mutual sharing which remind us of all those meals Jesus shared with his friends and the unity that his Spirit continues to give us even today.

Invitation (Kim)

(Gord Dunbar, The Gathering, Pentecost 2, 2021 (Year B). Used with permission)

The table is for everyone, a table of new light and of generous welcome.

To this table we bring our fears and our dreaming.

The risen Christ invites the whole human race to become light and love.

With hundreds of millions of our siblings worldwide – we are gathered by God’s invitation – in all our diversity and in all our difference.

The call to this table is for each person: doubtful or uncertain, broken or whole, stranger of friend, neighbour or foe. No one is barred. All are welcome to be nourished in Christ’s name.

Prayer of Consecration (Lorrie)

Loving friend and companion, we welcome your presence with us. May these gifts of bread and cup, nourish our bodies, hearts and minds. And may our spirits be refreshed as we live in the light of your presence, with us now, and at all times and places. Send now your Holy Spirit upon this bread and this cup, O God that they might be our remembrance and our proclamation of the presence of Jesus Christ with us, through us and in us.  Amen.

The Sharing of the Bread and the Cup (Kim)

Let us now share and partake the bread and the cup reminding us of God’s unconditional love.
This is the bread – food for the journey. Take, eat and be nourished by God’s love.
This is the cup – drink for the journey. Take, drink and be sustained by God’s grace.

Prayer after the Meal (Lorrie)

For the bread we have eaten, for the wine we have tasted, for the life we have received, we thank you, loving God. Empower us to live as Jesus has lived, to bring new life to others and to give light to the world. Amen.

Invitation to Offer           Rev. Kim Vidal

I now invite you to offer your gifts of time, talents and resources as expressions of your gratitude to God’s blessings.  If you are not on PAR and wish to send in your offering and donations, you can drop them in the slot by the kitchen door of the church or mail them to BCUC. You can also send in your support through e-transfer. Thank you for your continued love and support to BCUC.

Offertory Prayer

God of the global village, we bring this offering to join the gifts of others around the world.
We offer these gifts and our lives in your service. Amen.

Sending Forth    Rev. Kim Vidal

On this World Communion Sunday,
we have tasted God’s goodness,
we have seen God’s generosity and fairness.
we have been blessed with a legacy of faith,
we have welcomed children to the table.
Go out to live love, to serve others, to rejoice in our communion,
in the name of God, Creator, Christ and Companion. Amen. 

Hymn:  Christ Has No Body Now but Yours   MV171

(Words adapted by Stephen S. Warner, 2003 from St. Teresa of Avila; Music: Rick Gunn, 2006)

Refrain
Christ has no body now but yours
no hands but yours.
Here on this earth, yours is the work,
to serve with the joy of compassion. 

1.       No hands but yours to heal the wounded world, no hands but yours to soothe all its suffering, no touch but yours to bind the broken hope of the people of God. R

2.       No eyes but yours to see as Christ would see, to find the lost, to gaze with compassion; no eyes but yours to glimpse the holy joy of the city of God. R

3.       No feet but yours to journey with the poor, to walk this world with mercy and justice. Yours are the steps to build a lasting peace for the children of God. R

4.       Through ev’ry gift, give back to those in need; as Christ has blessed, so now be his blessing, with ev’ry gift a benediction, be to the people of God. R

Departing Music: He Shall Feed   (Handel)

Zoom Fellowship will be held on Sunday, October 17, 2021 at 11 am.

Sunday school activities - October 3, 2021

Theme Discussion

Mark 10: 13-16 - Jesus Blesses Little Children

13 People were bringing little children to him in order that he might touch them; and the disciples spoke sternly to them. 14 But when Jesus saw this, he was indignant and said to them, “Let the little children come to me; do not stop them; for it is to such as these that the kingdom of God belongs. 15 Truly I tell you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God as a little child will never enter it.” 16 And he took them up in his arms, laid his hands on them, and blessed them.

This is a familiar story, one that we often use at baptisms in our church. It’s a message that Jesus welcomes everyone – even little children – with open arms.

Why do you think the disciples tried to keep the children away from Jesus?

Do you feel welcome or unwelcome at church? What makes you feel that way?

Do you think there might be some people who don’t feel welcome at church? What things can we do to change that?

In this story, Jesus tells the people gathered that you need to receive that welcome to God’s kin-dom the way a little child does. Let’s unpack that a bit…

When someone welcomes you with arms wide open, how do you react? Is it different if that person is someone you know well or someone you have just met? What makes that difference?

Trust, love, and acceptance are all important parts of being able to open your arms to receive a welcome like that – and they are all important parts of being open to God.

Do you think this is easier for children than it is for adults? Why?

Response Activity Ideas

Loving You THIS Much

Materials: construction paper, scissors, colouring tools, glue/tape

Trace your hands on construction paper and cut out.  Cut out a long strip of paper (glue or tape 2 strips together to make it longer if you wish) and accordion-fold it. Attach a hand on each end of the strip.  Finally, write a message on the hands and/or paper strip that reflects your ideas about this Bible passage, maybe:

“Jesus Welcomes Us with Open Arms” OR “God Loves Me THIS Much – and more!”  OR “All Are Welcome Here!” OR “I love you SO much!”

Jesus Loves Me Song – Rock You version

Tap twice on your legs and then clap once.  You’re ready to listen and sing along with the CGS and Bell Canto camp version of Jesus Loves Me!

Challenge!  Can you write a new verse about Jesus welcoming everyone in place of the ‘Jesus loves me, this I know’ section?

JESUS LOVES ME/WE WILL ROCK YOU

Jesus loves me this I know for the Bible tells me so, little ones to him belong in his love they will grow strong.

Singing Na na na na na na na na na Whoo! Na na na na na na na na na Na na na na na na na na na Whoo! Na na na na na na na na na

Sing about his love, His love is what we sing about Sing about his love, His love is what we sing. Sing about his love, His love is what we sing about Sing about his love, His love is what we sing.

Singing Na na na na na na na na na Whoo! Na na na na na na na na na Na na na na na na na na na Whoo! Na na na na na na na na na

Yes, Jesus loves me (clap, clap) (2X) Yes, Jesus loves me, the Bible tells me so

Jesus loves me when I'm good, when I do the things I should. Jesus loves me when I'm bad, even though it makes him sad.

Singing Na na na na na na na na na Whoo! Na na na na na na na na na Na na na na na na na na na Whoo! Na na na na na na na na na

Sing about his love, His love is what we sing about Sing about his love, His love is what we sing. Sing about his love, His love is what we sing about Sing about his love, His love is what we sing.

Singing Na na na na na na na na na Whoo! Na na na na na na na na na Na na na na na na na na na Whoo! Na na na na na na na na na

Yes, Jesus loves me (clap, clap) (2X) Yes, Jesus love me, The Bible (clap) tells me (clap) so.

Word Search

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

BCUC Outdoor Market: October 16

Saturday October 16, 10am – 1pm

Since our 2020 Outdoor Market was a success and an indoor bazaar does not seem feasible, we are planning our second outdoor market similar to last year’s. There will be tables with Baking, Crafts, Deli, Books, Plants and Gifts. If you have ideas for other sales areas and/or wish to volunteer to help please contact the church office at (613) 820-8103 or office@bcuc.org

Sunday Worship Service - September 26, 2021

 BELLS CORNERS UNITED CHURCH

CREATION TIME 3

September 26, 2021

The video recording of this service can be found here.
You can also dial-in by phone to listen to the audio recording at 613-820-8104.

Gathering Music:  You Raise Me Up (BCUC Choir)

Welcome & Centering for Worship     Rev. Kim Vidal

Good day everyone! On behalf of BCUC, I welcome and greet you in the name of Jesus Christ on this third Sunday of Creation Time in the Season of Pentecost. Wherever you are, whether you are joining us via online, or onsite, or even reading the printed text of the service in the comfort of your homes, we are glad that you have joined us today.

As we enjoy the beauty of God’s creation all around us, please take time to keep in touch with each other through prayers, phone calls, emails or via Zoom. Check also the many announcements on our website including Sunday School resources for your children at bcuc.org to keep you informed and give you opportunities to respond.

We continue worshipping in the sanctuary on Sunday mornings at 10 am with a maximum number of 50 people. Due to the Covid variants that continue to pause some health threats to the community, the Public Health recommends staying at home, but if you wish to attend the service, you are most welcome. As a faith community called to love and serve others, let us be mindful of the health protocols such as masking, social distancing, hand sanitizing and staying home if you feel unwell. It is also highly recommended to get vaccinated as one of the best precautionary measures to protect yourself and others.

Friends, this day, we offer our gratitude for the gifts of the earth lavishly offered to us by a loving Creator. May we do so with praise and thanksgiving and a commitment to care for the earth and to serve each other. Let us now gather in worship.

Lighting of the Christ Candle         Acolytes: David Stafford & Barbara Bole

As we light this Christ candle,
Let us remind ourselves that God, the Creator,
lit the light in the darkness and breathed life into all of creation.
We are created in God’s image and Jesus calls us to be a light to the world
and the salt of the earth.

Call to Gather & Opening Prayer      Rev. Lorrie Lowes

(Tony Tuck, The Gathering, Pentecost 2, 2021, Year B. Used with permission)

In the name of God, the Creator, the Son and the Holy Spirit,
We gather, marvelling at the beauty of creation
as we breathe in the splendour of life.
We are surrounded by all the signs of God’s creation;
God’s fingerprints are all around us.
Praise be to God!

Let us pray.

We are surrounded by life, and we are related and connected
to all the created world through you, O God.
Let us dwell respectfully in this amazing creation,
remembering that in this wondrous world,
we are not alone.
We are all part of heaven and earth.
In gratitude we declare, God is good
and everything God makes is good.
In Jesus’ name we pray. Amen.

Hymn:    “Morning Has Broken” VU 409

(Words – Eleanor Farjeon, 1931; Music – Gaelic melody)

1 Morning has broken like the first morning,
blackbird has spoken like the first bird.
Praise for the singing! Praise for the morning!
Praise for them, springing fresh from the Word!

2 Sweet the rain’s new fall sunlit from Heaven,
like the first dewfall on the first grass.
Praise for the sweetness of the wet garden,
Sprung in completeness where God’s feet pass.

3 Ours is the sunlight! Ours is the morning,
born of the one light Eden saw play!
Praise with elation, praise every morning,
God’s re-creation of the new day!

Storytime  Rev. Lorrie

You may have heard that Neil and I have moved to a new house! Did you know that we have moved in with the Kelly family? One of the very best things about moving to this property is that our grandchildren live right next to us and we can see them every day!

This year, we were here for all the excitement of going back to school. They shopped for school supplies and new clothes and they couldn’t wait to see who their teacher would be and who would be in their class. And they picked out a special outfit to wear on the first day of school. I bet you were excited too.

I want to share a story with you about a little girl who was going to school for the very first time. Her name is Phyllis Jack and she lived on a reserve in northern British Columbia with her Granny. When she was 6 years old, she went to the Mission School. Just like you, she was really excited about going to school. Her family didn’t have very much money but somehow her Granny managed to buy her a new outfit to wear to school. She remembers that day clearly. Here’s what she says:

“I remember going to Robinson’s store and picking out a shiny orange shirt. It
had eyelets and lace, and I felt so pretty in that shirt and excited to be going to school!”

She sounds like every little girl and boy I know who is excited about starting school – especially with a brand-new special outfit.

But, Phyllis’ first day of school was very different from yours. It was a Residential School, a place where she stayed night and day. The teachers spoke a different language and she couldn’t understand what they were saying. On that first day, all of the students had their clothes taken away and they were given different clothes to wear. Phyllis never saw her special orange shirt again. She couldn’t understand why they wouldn’t give it back to her. It was her shirt, a special shirt, a gift from her Granny that she had picked out herself.

So, that little girl who was so happy and proud to be going to school, didn’t feel happy or cared for anymore. She didn’t want to stay at this school. She wanted to go home – and she wanted her orange shirt back. Phyllis wasn’t just feeling sad on that first day of school. She felt sad and unloved for much of her life. The colour orange always reminds her of that feeling.

Canada has named September 30 – this Thursday – as the Day for Truth and Reconciliation. We’ve heard a lot of upsetting stories in the news this year about Residential Schools and the terrible experiences of the children who went to them. This day is meant to remind us of the many ways the indigenous people of Canada have been treated over the years. It is a day for us to think about how we can change this and how we can help to heal the hurt they have experienced in the past and still live with today.

You may have heard this day called “Orange Shirt Day”. That’s because we can wear orange to remember this story about Phyllis Jack. This is a simple way for us all to say, “You are important and we love you,” not just to Phyllis but to all of the children who went to residential schools and all of the people who have lived their lives in the shadow of the trauma they caused.

You might notice that the stole I am wearing today is orange. If you were in the sanctuary at BCUC, you would see that the whole chancel is decorated in orange too, and that Rev. Kim is wearing an orange robe – not just for one day or one week. Orange is the colour of the season of Creation in the United Church. Isn’t that great coincidence? We can be reminded every day in this season that God created this beautiful world for everyone. We can remember Phyllis Jack’s special orange shirt and how her happy spirit was broken on that first day of school. It’s a reminder to us all to treat everyone we meet with love.

Will you be wearing orange on Thursday? I will. Let’s turn this reminder of sad times back into the happy colour orange was meant to be.

Let’s finish with a prayer:

Creator God, the Residential School stories make us sad and we are sorry that so many children were hurt over the years. Help us to show love to everyone we meet, whether they are like us or different in some way. Help us spread the kind of joy that the colour orange brings to our world with orange sunsets, orange leaves, orange pumpkins, and even orange shirts. Amen

Hymn:     “Roll Over the Ocean”         (CGS)

1. It's me, it's me, it's me who builds community
It's me, it's me, it's me who builds community
It's me, it's me, it's me who builds community
It's me who builds community (clap, clap, clap)

Chorus
Roll over the ocean, roll over the sea,
Roll over the ocean in the deep blue sea (Hey!)
Roll over the ocean, roll over the sea,
Go and do your part and build community.
2.  It's you...
3.  It's love...
4.  It's Christ..

Prayer for Illumination  Reader: Ellen Boynton

(Beth W. Johnson, The Gathering, Pentecost 2, 2013, Year C. Used with permission)

O God, you call us to new beginnings to explore our faith
with your Word that sustains us.
Inspire us as we search out new opportunities
for our learning and reflection. Amen. 

The Gospel Reading: Mark 9 :38-50 (NRSV)

Another Exorcist
38 John said to him, “Teacher, we saw someone casting out demons in your name, and we tried to stop him, because he was not following us.” 
39 But Jesus said, “Do not stop him; for no one who does a deed of power in my name will be able soon afterward to speak evil of me. 
40 Whoever is not against us is for us. 
41 For truly I tell you, whoever gives you a cup of water to drink because you bear the name of Christ will by no means lose the reward.

Temptations to Sin
42 “If any of you put a stumbling block before one of these little ones who believe in me, it would be better for you if a great millstone were hung around your neck and you were thrown into the sea. 
43-44 If your hand causes you to stumble, cut it off; it is better for you to enter life maimed than to have two hands and to go to hell, to the unquenchable fire. 
45-46 And if your foot causes you to stumble, cut it off; it is better for you to enter life lame than to have two feet and to be thrown into hell. 
47 And if your eye causes you to stumble, tear it out; it is better for you to enter the kingdom of God with one eye than to have two eyes and to be thrown into hell, 
48 where their worm never dies, and the fire is never quenched.
49 “For everyone will be salted with fire.
 50 Salt is good; but if salt has lost its saltiness, how can you season it? Have salt in yourselves, and be at peace with one another.”

May we find ourselves renewed through this difficult story of faith. Thanks be to God!

Sermon:   “Stumbling Blocks or Stepping Stones?”

I would like to begin my sermon with a poem written by American writer Robert Lee Sharpe entitled: “A Bag of Tools”
Isn't it strange how princes and kings,
and clowns that caper in sawdust rings,
and common people, like you and me,
are builders for eternity?
Each is given a list of rules;
a shapeless mass; a bag of tools.
And each must fashion, ere life is flown,
A stumbling block, or a Stepping-Stone.” 

 “Teacher, we saw someone casting out demons in your name and we tried to stop him! We tried to stop him, because he is not one of us – he is of another circle – another tribe, he’s different.” That’s how a lot of religious prejudices and biases start, don’t they? Not one of us! Not in our circle! Not in our denomination! The condescending attitude of the beloved disciple, John, struck a chord in me. There had been times when I was just like him. I sneered at those street preachers with microphones who were preaching about the end times and the second coming of Jesus. I detest attending conservative Christian churches who cried loudly when praying and those who believed in speaking in tongues. I am very cautious of those two people who knocked on my door to discuss about faith and spirituality. Growing up Methodist, I was shunned to dance, to smoke, and to listen to “worldly music.” I was even taught that the Roman Catholics were not “true” Christians. I was just like John and the disciples! And perhaps, many of you felt the same way too.

Thank goodness, Jesus did not listen to him. John’s tattletale will not get far with Jesus.  “I don’t think you should stop him, John – he is doing something good in my name! And, I know what you want to do next! You want to put a stumbling block in his way. Not only do you want to exclude him, you want to make sure he fails!” Jesus immediately turns the tables on the disciples, warning them that they are the ones in danger of doing harm. It's as though Jesus was saying, "The problem is not the folks outside our group. Don't worry about them -- they are not the problem. Rather, check yourselves and see if you are stumbling blocks. Look at how you exclude people who live, believe, worship, serve, and practice differently than you do.  Look at how smug and superior you feel when others fail.  Stop being stumbling blocks.”  Jesus’ words pierced like an arrow pointed to my heart.

The words “stumbling block”, according to American theologian Ched Meyers has its roots from the Greek word skandaliso- to scandalize. To scandalize, usually translated as ‘to cause to stumble,’ is a term used by Mark to denote rejection of God’s message or desertion of Jesus’ way.  Think about the diversity of Christianity in our modern world and the way Christianity have caused this “scandalizing.”  We, who claim as the body of Christ, we who claim to follow Jesus, I’m sure, have done many scandals or placed stumbling blocks in the way of following Jesus or in proclaiming the best intent of the gospel. Karoline Lewis writes: “Stumbling blocks have many manifestations when it comes to faith: excuses, blame, doubt, rejection, disbelief. They thrive on rules and stipulations, adjudications and manipulations, judgment and expectation. Whose faith is greater; who seems to believe more. Who follows the rules better than I do. As if Jesus came to set up a competition.”

I almost did not preach on today’s gospel reading. I find this text blunt and repulsive. This is one of the many biblical texts that should not be taken literally. Else, most of us would have been maimed, amputated and blind.  It’s difficult to read these words about demons, hell, and mutilation!  And what about this reference in wearing a millstone around your neck and throwing yourself into the sea? Is Jesus proposing to better kill ourselves than being scandalizers? Tell me if you are comfortable listening to these verses. I’m not. These Markan words - from the same Jesus, who only last Sunday, took a little child into his arms and taught his disciples about serving others! But I don’t think this passage is about condemnation. Rather, they make us realize of our human nature.  We exclude.  We judge.  We condemn.  We compare.  We put others down.

In our lectionary group discussion last Tuesday, it was pointed out that these verses were disjointed. They seemed to be taken from small chunks of writings that were put together but not in a chronological order. Traditional interpretations regard these jumbled sayings as hyperbole or exaggeration. The hand, the foot and the eye were considered by 1st century Jews to be sources of sinfulness and temptations. The hand was associated with theft, fraud, forgery; the foot with robbery or runaway slaves; the eye with adultery and sexual misconduct. For centuries, preachers and scholars have used this text to underscore the individual Christian notion of personal sin and the doctrine of hell. While I find these texts very disturbing, I feel strongly that Jesus was teaching his disciples something of highly importance. Why would Jesus speak so harshly about “causing one of these little ones – those of other circle – of other tribe - of other faith, who believe in me to stumble”?  Because Jesus wants his disciples to be radically welcoming and inclusive. He wants them not to make a big deal of who’s out or in, who belonged or excluded. Jesus wants them to move away from the “us-them” mentality and be gracious hosts to one another specially those who are not in the same circle. Jesus was not in favour of what Debie Thomas calls “bouncers” of faith – of those who provide tight security, refuse entry to people who aren’t members or allowed inside, and “bounce” or throw out those who doesn’t follow rules.  In a broader sense, a bouncer’s job, according to Debie Thomas, is “to serve as gatekeepers for the institution they serve.  They screen who is an insider and who is an intruder. They make sure they only allow those who deserves entry to come in and reject those who are not in the circle.” So here’s the good news. Jesus wants his disciples and us to be God’s generous and welcoming hosts.  Hosts who throw the doors wide open.  Hosts who understand that there’s enough divine goodness, mercy, justice and to go around.  Hosts who believe that God delights in diversity. Hosts who respond with joy and gratitude whenever acts of love and kindness are done in Jesus’s name. 

The symbolic meanings of hand, foot, and eye are an invitation to discern any behaviour, self-conception, or world view that hinder anyone in attaining a fuller relationship with God and with all of creation, humans included. This is a reminder to remove any stumbling block that obstructs an open path to God and what God stands for: be it love, justice, peace, compassion. Jesus here is warning us against tripping up others and stumbling ourselves. Instead of us becoming stumbling blocks, Jesus calls us to be stepping stones –to pave the way for God’s love to flourish in the world, to be able to have a dialogue with people of other denominations or faiths instead of arguing who owns the “real” truth.

I was a stumbling block. It took me many years of self-reflection, discernment, study and practice for me to become a stepping stone. I am evolving - still in the process of transformation and I realize it’s a difficult process but with God’s help, I know it is possible. I just have to push myself really hard!  And if you ask me what made me change from a stumbling block to a stepping stone? It’s none other than this radical teaching of Jesus to be welcoming and inclusive. What about you? How are you getting in the way of the Good News? Are you a stumbling block or a stepping stone?

Today’s reading ends with another hyperbole: “…everyone will be salted with fire. Salt is good but if salt has lost its saltiness, how can you season it? Have salt in yourselves, and be at peace with one another.” For the ancient Hebrews, salt is a symbol of the covenant – a symbol of right relationships. Salt is a valuable commodity for preserving, purifying, and adding flavour to foods. Salt preserves good relationship - our acts of generosity, our care for each other, our gestures of friendship, our acts of kindness, that spice up our life together and keep it from spoiling. We are to be salted with fire to be stepping stones. Being salted with fire is to “be at peace with one another” - about right relationships – about welcoming others – about being radical hosts. Be salted with fire. Be a stepping stone. Reach out. Invite. Welcome. Include. You are in the right path.
As you reflect further on this difficult passage, let me close with a poem written by Andrew King entitled: “If Your Foot Causes You to Stumble”
These words of seeming mutilation:
how strange to us, the exaggeration for heightened effect.
The need for change is what they’re about –
to rearrange one’s attitudes, actions, use of speech, habitual ways.
If what we reach for is not to serve someone in love
but to serve ourselves (choosing to shove aside another’s dignity or need),
then it’s our selfishness and greed that cause us from the path to fall (forgive the feet);
it is the stubborn call of pride that just won’t bend
(and not the hand) that most offends.
If our path from God’s has swerved,
look well inside, to that which serves the will.
There - seek healing.
And maybe start with where most hurting dwells – the heart. Amen.

Sources that helped me with my sermon:

1.     BCUC Lectionary Group
2.     Karoline Lewis, On Seeing Yourself, www.preaching.org., Sept 20, 2015.
3.     Travis Meier quoting Ched Meyers, http://www.thebartimaeuseffect.com/the-gospel-of-mark/mark-938-50, 2015.
4.     Debie Thomas, “Hosts, not Bouncers”, Journey with Jesus. Net
5.     Andrew King, A Poetic Kind of Place

Prayers of the People & the Lord’s Prayer   Rev. Kim

Let us gather our hearts in prayer… Like gentle rain from above, so are your gifts of life to us, great God. In your mercy you move our hearts from anxiety to an act of gratitude. Like the sun that rises in the morning so is the steadfastness of your love that provides for us. In your mercy, you move us from trust in things we’ve made to trust in your goodness and promises. Like a surprise gift, you offer us possibilities and a chance to breathe again. In your mercy, you move us from fear to courage in your ways. In your love, you transform us from being stumbling blocks to stepping stones.

Generous and merciful God, move us to be companions to the sick, the lonely and those who experience life’s harsh challenges. Give us the opportunity to feed those in the world who are hungry and to give water to the thirsty. Give us the awareness that you are present even in our most vulnerable, fearful places.

O God, bless us now with this Franciscan blessing as we hope to become stepping stones, welcoming and inclusive hosts, salted with fire:

May God bless us with discomfort,
At easy answers, half-truths,
And superficial relationships
So that we may live
Deep within our heart.

May God bless us with anger
At injustice, oppression,
And exploitation of people,
So that we may work for
Justice, freedom and peace.

May God bless us with tears,
To shed for those who suffer pain,
Rejection, hunger and war,
So that we may reach out our hand
To comfort them and
To turn their pain to joy

And may God bless us
With enough foolishness
To believe that we can
Make a difference in the world,
So that we can do
What others claim cannot be done
To bring justice and kindness
To all our children and the poor.

These we ask in the name of Jesus Christ, our good and wise teacher, who taught us to trust in God as we recite this prayer together…

Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kin-dom come, thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread, And forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.
For thine is the kin-dom, the power and the glory,
Forever and ever, Amen.

Invitation to Offer        Rev. Lorrie

In this season of harvest when we are blessed with nature’s amazing bounty, we are called to share the gifts we have been given with our neighbour. Time, talents, and resources are all wonderful ways to further the mission of this church and the building of God’s kin-dom in the world. If you are not on PAR and wish to send in your offering and donations, you can drop them in the mailbox by the kitchen door of the church or mail them to BCUC. You can also send in your support through e-transfer. Thank you for your continued love and support to BCUC.

Offertory Prayer

(Ali Smith, The Gathering, Pentecost 2, 2017 Year A. Used with permission.)

Creator God, you give us our daily bread
so that we might have all we need to survive and to thrive.
In return, receive here our offering
so it can be used to nourish others and the world. Amen.

Sending Forth  Rev. Kim

(Bob Root, The Gathering, Pentecost 2, 2021 Year B. Used with permission.)

May the blessing of God,
who made us in love and for relationship
with one another and all creation;
the blessing of Jesus,
whose footprints are deep on our earth
and deep in our hearts;
and the blessing of Spirit,
who blows through us and around us,
go with us this day and always.
Go and be a blessing. Amen.

Hymn:   “Go Make A Diff’rence”        MV 209

(Words & Music: Steve Angrisano and Tom Tomaszek, 1997)

Refrain:
Go make a diff’rence.
We can make a diff’rence.
Go make a diff’rence in the world.
Go make a diff’rence.
We can make a diff’rence.
Go make a diff’rence in the world. 

1- We are the salt of the earth,
called to let the people see
the love of God for you and me.
We are the light of the world,
Not to be hidden but be seen.
Go make a diff’rence in the world.   R 

2- We are the hands of Christ
reaching out to those in need,
The face of God for all to see.
We are the spirit of hope;
We are the voice of peace.
Go make a diff’rence in the world.   R 

3 – So let your love shine on,
let it shine for all to see.
Go make a diff’rence in the
world. And the spirit of
Christ will be with us as we go.
Go make a diff’rence in the world!    

Departing Hymn: Go Now in Peace (Besig/Price)

Sunday school activities - September 26, 2021

September 30 has been designated as a “Day for Truth and Reconciliation”. You might know it as “Orange Shirt Day”. This morning, in the church service, we heard the story about Phyllis Jack’s orange shirt that sparked the “Every Child Matters” movement. It’s a story about how one little girl’s experience on her first day of school made her feel that she didn’t matter, that her feelings weren’t important, and that no one cared about her. Here’s the story again, in case you missed it:

“I want to share a story with you about a little girl who was going to school for the very first time. Her name is Phyllis Jack and she lived on a reserve in northern British Columbia with her Granny. When she was 6 years old, she went to the Mission School. Just like you, she was really excited about going to school. Her family didn’t have very much money but somehow her Granny managed to buy her a new outfit to wear to school. She remembers that day clearly. Here’s what she says:

“I remember going to Robinson’s store and picking out a shiny orange shirt. It
had eyelets and lace, and I felt so pretty in that shirt and excited to be going to school!”

She sounds like every little girl and boy I know who is excited about starting school – especially with a brand-new special outfit.

But, Phyllis’ first day of school was very different from yours. It was a Residential School, a place where she stayed night and day. The teachers spoke a different language and she couldn’t understand what they were saying. On that first day, all of the students had their clothes taken away and they were given different clothes to wear. Phyllis never saw her special orange shirt again. She couldn’t understand why they wouldn’t give it back to her. It was her shirt, a special shirt, a gift from her Granny that she had picked out herself.

So, that little girl who was so happy and proud to be going to school, didn’t feel happy or cared for anymore. She didn’t want to stay at this school. She wanted to go home – and she wanted her orange shirt back. Phyllis wasn’t just feeling sad on that first day of school. She felt sad and unloved for much of her life. The colour orange always reminds her of that feeling.

This story reminded me of another one that we have used at church: “Have You Filled a Bucket Today?” You can listen to it here:

Can you give some examples of when your bucket was filled?

Have you ever felt that someone was dipping into your bucket?

How are some ways you can fill someone’s bucket?

Think about Phyllis’ story.

When was her bucket filled?

Who dipped into her bucket?

Phyllis’ story is her personal one, but the way she was treated and the way she felt was experienced by all the First Nations children who were sent to Residential Schools. They grew up with empty buckets.

Can you think of some ways that we can help to fill the buckets of First Nations people in Canada?

Response Activity Ideas

Fill the Bucket

Let’s Collaborate! – Visit this document and add a text box or two to the bucket on page 1 with your ideas for filling the buckets of Indigenous Peoples of Canada.  Read the ideas others have posted as well!

            OR

On your own – Print out the bucket template on page 2 of the above presentation and fill it with your own ideas.

First Nations Schools

How does your school experience compare to that of Phyllis and some of the other residential school survivors whose stories you’ve heard?  Write or draw about some of the differences and similarities in your school experience and what you know about theirs.

Many current First Nations schools are not well-funded enough to provide the resources and safe spaces the students need to learn.  Find out more by reading about Shannen’s Dream and learn about ways to respond.

Colouring Sheets – by Michelle Stoney, Gitxsan artist

Feather – “First of all the feather represents so much in our culture. Maybe too much to even explain so I’ll just say what it means to me in the hand and this one. To me it means strength and healing, we really value the feather and it means so much to us. I know we use it for smudging, and to me that represents cleansing .

Inside the feather is the spirit of the 215 children. The face on the bottom is not an animal. That is how I draw people , and I wanted to make long flowing hair, that they were forced to cut.”

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Leaf – “This is a truth and reconciliation day colouring page I made…I don’t really have a story behind it, but this is what I was thinking … September 30th is the first truth and reconciliation day, it takes place in the fall. The tree these trees fall from represent their nation to me. And these are the children that left and didn’t come back. I added the same things I added to the feather I did last year. And added some hearts, because we will never forget them.”

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

See more of her work and find other generously-offered colouring images for personal use at: www.facebook.com/mstoneyart/photos/

Sunday Worship Service - September 19, 2021

 BELLS CORNERS UNITED CHURCH

CREATION TIME 2

September 19, 2021

The video recording of this service can be found here.
You can also dial-in by phone to listen to the audio recording at 613-820-8104.

Gathering Music: “O Beautiful Gaia”   MV41

(Words & Music: Carolyn McDade; Arr., Lydia Pedersen, 2006)

Refrain:
          O beautiful Gaia, O Gaia,
          calling us home.
          O beautiful Gaia,
          calling us on. 

1.       Soil yielding its harvest,
          O Gaia, calling us home.
          Soil yielding its harvest,
          calling us on. R 

2.       Waves crashing on granite,
          O Gaia, calling us home.
          Waves crashing on granite
          calling us on. R 

3.       Pine bending in windstorm,
          O Gaia, calling us home.
          Pine bending in windstorm
          calling us on. R 

4.       Loon nesting in marshland,
          O Gaia, calling us home.
          Loon nesting in marshland,
          calling us on. R 

Welcome & Centering for Worship     Rev. Lorrie Lowes

Good morning and welcome to this service of worship at Bells Corners United Church on this second Sunday in the Season of Creation. At this time, we continue to offer our Sunday services through, video and audio on our website, and by telephone. The church is also open for modified in-person worship each week and we are happy to see people in the pews on Sunday morning. The Public Health folks warn that we still need to follow precautions as the new Covid 19 variants are still with us so we take distancing, masking, and sanitizing very seriously. While we are doing our best to avoid transmission of the virus, please remember that getting vaccinated is one of the best protections you can give yourself and those around you. If you are not comfortable gathering in this space or you feel unwell, the best precaution is still to take part in worship from home. 

As we settle in to the routines of life that September brings, let’s not forget to enjoy the wonder this time of year holds for us – cool nights for sleeping, days that are not too hot or too cold, the changing colours of nature, and the opportunities to reconnect with friends and colleagues. This year, we are also celebrating the gradual re-opening of the church building and the rhythm of Sunday morning worship that so many of us have missed over the past year and a half of the pandemic. Let us think of this time of year – especially this year – as a season of hope and refreshing renewal. Now let us centre ourselves for worship with the lighting of the Christ candle.

Lighting of the Christ Candle        Acolytes: The Berard Family

(Scott Martin, Pentecost 2 2021, p 30. Used with permission.)

There once was a wonderful man who did wonderful things and they said, “He is the light of the world.” In his light, the light of Christ, we gather.                     

Call to Gather & Opening Prayer (Based on Psalm 19: 1-6)     Rev. Kim Vidal

(Rod Sykes, Gathering Pentecost 2 2015, p30. Used with permission)

Honour the child.
The child within,
the spirit that echoes from our youth,
yearns to dance in the light.
Honour the child.
The child in our midst,
the silent one who dares not speak,
longs to sing a song of praise.
Honour the child.
The Child of God, Jesus the Anointed One,
touches our spirit, welcomes little ones,
leads us all to worship our God. 

Opening Prayer

(Richard Bott, Gathering Pentecost 2 2015, p26. Used with permission)

In the rush of the wind, in the laugh of a child,
in the beat of our hearts, speak to us, God.

In the purr of a kitten, in the lap of the waves,
in the warmth of our hands, speak to us, Christ.

In the cry of the moment, in the dance of our feet,
in the crackle of the flame, speak to us Holy Spirit.

We are listening. Amen.

Hymn:    “It’s a Song of Praise to the Maker”    MV30

(Words: Ruth Duck, 1992; Music: Ron Klusmeier, 1992)

1.    It’s a song of praise to the Maker,
The thrush sings high in the tree.
It’s a song of praise to the Maker,
The gray whale sings in the sea. 

Refrain:
And by the Spirit, you and I
Can join our voice to the holy cry
And sing, sing, sing to the Maker too.

2.    It’s a call of life to the Giver
When waves and waterfalls roar.
It’s a call of life to the Giver
When high tides break on the shore. R 

3.    It’s a hymn of love to the Lover;
The bumble bees hum along.
It’s a hymn of love to the Lover;
The summer breeze joins the song. R 

4.    It’s the chorus of all creation;
It’s sung by all living things.
It’s the chorus of all creation;
A song the universe sings. R 

Storytime  Rev. Kim

Who among you wants to be the best? I do, sometimes. I want to have the best marks in school, win at competitive games or look my best. Admit it – we love to win. We love to be on top of everything. We want to be the greatest. We want to be the best. But how do you know who is the best or the greatest? Do we always have to aim for the best? What would happen if we fail?

Let me share a story that I learned when I was young. This is an indigenous story about the legend of the Rainbow written by Anne Hope in 1976.[1]

“Once upon a time the colors of the world started to quarrel: all claimed that they were the best, the most important, the most useful, the favourite.

Green said: “Clearly I am the most important. I am the sign of life and of hope. I was chosen for grass, leaves, trees–without me, all animals would die. Look out over the countryside and you will see that I am in the majority.”

Blue interrupted: “You only think about the Earth, but consider the sky and sea. It is the water that is the basis of life and drawn up by the clouds from the deep sea. The sky gives space and peace and serenity. Without my peace, you would all be nothing.”

Yellow chuckled. “You are all so serious. I bring laughter, gaiety, and warmth to the world. The sun is yellow, the moon is yellow, the stars are yellow. Every time you look at a sunflower, the whole world starts to smile. Without me, there would be no fun.”

Orange started next to blow her trumpet. “I am the color of health and strength. I may be scarce but I am precious for I serve the needs of human life. I carry the most important vitamins. Think of carrots, pumpkins, oranges and mangos. don’t hang around all the time, but when I fill the sky at sunrise or sunset, my beauty is so striking that no one gives another thought to any of you.”

Red could stand it no longer. He shouted out: “I am the ruler of all of you. I am blood! Life’s blood. I am the color of danger and of bravery. I am willing to fight for a cause. I bring fire to the blood! I am the color of passion and of love, the red rose, the poppy and the poinsettia. Without me, the earth would be as empty as the moon!”

Violet rose up to his full height. He was very tall and spoke with great pomp: “I am the color of royalty and power. Kings, chiefs, and bishops have always chosen me for I am a sign of authority and wisdom. People do not question me. They obey.”

Finally, Indigo spoke, much more quietly than all the others but with just as much determination: “think of me. I am the color of silence. You hardly notice me, but without me, you all become superficial. I represent thought and reflection, twilight and deep water. You need me for balance and contrast, for prayer and inner peace.”

And so all the colors went on boasting and quarreling, each convinced of their own superiority. Soon, their quarreling became louder and louder. Suddenly there was a startling flash of bright lightening! Thunder rolled and boomed! Rain started to pour down relentlessly. The colors crouched down in fear drawing close to one another for comfort.

In the midst of the clamor, Rain began to speak: “You foolish colors, fighting amongst yourselves, each trying to dominate the rest. Don’t you know you were each made for a special purpose, unique and different? Join hands with one another and come to me.”

Doing as they were told, the colors united and joined hands. The rain continued: “From now on, when it rains, each of you will stretch across the sky in a great bow of colors as a reminder that you can all live in peace. The rainbow is a sign of hope for tomorrow.”

And so, whenever a good rain washes the world and a rainbow appears in the sky, let us remember to appreciate one another”.

In our Gospel story today, Jesus heard the disciples arguing about which one of them was the best.  So, Jesus stepped in to end the argument. Jesus tells his disciples that if they want to be the best, they have to think of others first before themselves. They have to help others and serve those in need.  Likewise, Jesus wants us to put others first before ourselves. Greatness or being the best according Jesus, is about loving and welcoming others and showing them that we care. It is not about competition. Greatness is about encouraging others and making them feel special.  Jesus wants us to win at helping others.

I’m sure it was a hard lesson to learn for the disciples, so it will be difficult for us too.  But just like learning anything else, we have to put what we have learned to action.  Look for ways to serve others in your own simple way.  And even though you won’t get an award, a prize or a round of applause, God will be cheering you on, and that’s better than any reward you could ever get. Imagine how the world will be like if we do just that!

Let me close with a prayer:

Dear God, thank you for Jesus who taught us about the meaning of being great. Help us to remember that to be the greatest, we must be willing to love and welcome others. Amen.

Hymn:     “There is Room For All”     MV62

(Words & Music: Bruce Harding, 2004; French Trans., David Fines, 2006)

English:
There is room for all in the shadow of God’s wing;
There is room for all, sheltered in God’s love.
And I rejoice and sing, “My refuge and my rock, in whom I trust.”
There is room for all, there is room for all. 

French:
Chacun a sa place a l’abri sous l’aile de Dieu;
Chacun a sa place en l’amour de Dieu.
De joie, je chanterais: “Mon refuge  en lequel je me confie.”
Chacun a sa place, chacun a sa place. 

Prayer for Illumination  Reader: Keith Bailey

Creator God, let your words speak in each heart.
Let the truth set each one free.
Let the gospel story inspire us for justice.
Let the Spirit’s presence fill us with joy. Amen. 

The Gospel Reading: Mark 9 :30-37 (NRSV)

Jesus Again Foretells His Death and Resurrection
30 They went on from there and passed through Galilee. He did not want anyone to know it; 31 for he was teaching his disciples, saying to them, “The Son of Man is to be betrayed into human hands, and they will kill him, and three days after being killed, he will rise again.” 32 But they did not understand what he was saying and were afraid to ask him.

Who Is the Greatest?
33 Then they came to Capernaum; and when he was in the house he asked them, “What were you arguing about on the way?” 34 But they were silent, for on the way they had argued with one another who was the greatest. 35 He sat down, called the twelve, and said to them, “Whoever wants to be first must be last of all and servant of all.” 36 Then he took a little child and put it among them; and taking it in his arms, he said to them, 37 “Whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me, and whoever welcomes me welcomes not me but the one who sent me.”

May we find ourselves renewed through this story of faith. Thanks be to God!

Sermon:   “How to Be First: A Christian’s Guide to Greatness”  Rev. Lorrie

There once was an anthropologist who was studying a tribe in Africa. One day, he called the children together and told them they were going to play a game. He showed them a big basket of fruit and then hung that basket from a tree at the other end of the meadow. “When I say, ‘go’ everybody run to that tree,” he told them. “The first one to get there wins the basket of fruit!” The children were very excited. He had them all stand up in a line… “Ready… Set… GO!”

With glee, the children all joined hands and ran to that tree together and then sat down to share the fruit. Well, this surprised the anthropologist! “Why would you do that? You could have had that whole basket of fruit for yourself!”

The children were confused. “How can we be happy if one of us is sad?” they asked.

This story is a familiar way to illustrate the concept of “ubuntu”, a philosophy that is central to many African cultures.

I can’t help thinking that I don’t know many children in our culture who would have done the same thing – maybe a few individuals would consider the idea, but would they be able to convince a whole group to buy in? Would they be able to convince the fast runners, the ones with long legs, the hungriest?

Competition and the desire to be the best, the first, the richest, the most loved, the most beautiful, the fastest… seems to be ingrained in us. I wonder, is this concept of ubuntu particular to African cultures or is competitiveness something that is unique to western society? Is it innate or is it learned?

In our reading from the book of Mark this morning, Jesus is trying to find some private time with his disciples. He wants some time away from the crowds to teach them, to delve deeper into the things they have seen and heard.

In the verses preceding today’s passage, Jesus has taken Peter, James, and John up the mountain – it’s the story of the transfiguration, when these three disciples get a glimpse of who this man they follow really is. The others are left below, dealing with the crowds. A boy, possessed by a spirit is brought to them for healing but they are unsuccessful in casting the spirit out of him. An argument has ensued with the scribes, the crowd is not happy. Jesus calms the situation by healing the boy and then moves on with his disciples.

It seems that he is lost in his own thoughts on this trek. He has tried to bring up the topic of how bad things are going to get once more – that he will be betrayed into human hands and they will kill him, but that he will rise again. They don’t engage. They don’t understand and are afraid to ask him about it. Perhaps they just don’t want to have to deal with such a scary thought. So, it seems that Jesus moves apart from them. I imagine him thinking this through, looking for a way to get his friends to listen to the reality he sees coming, to plan next steps.

As they continue along the road, he can tell that they are arguing about something but he isn’t part of the conversation. Once they stop and are alone together in the house in Capernaum, he asks them, “What were you arguing about back there?” and they don’t want to tell him because they were arguing about who was the greatest.

Now here, I think is where our competitive North American mindset might influence our understanding – even without us noticing it! I would wager that most of us read that line and assume that the disciples were engaged in a battle of “I’m better than you!” I’m the favourite, …the oldest, the smartest, … any of a myriad of superlatives. It makes sense, of course. They wouldn’t want to tell Jesus that’s what they were arguing about because they knew it was something he wouldn’t like, something that wouldn’t please this man they had grown to know and love.

So, what if we turn off our western minds for a minute and look at this statement through a different lens… What if, rather than fighting for bragging rights, these men were holding each other up as examples of greatness? Maybe the argument would go like this…“I think it’s obvious, Peter, that you are the greatest. You are the one who can talk to him as an equal”…  “Oh, no, not me! It’s obvious how much he loves you, John.” “But Andrew was the first one he called, I think he is the greatest.”…

Makes some sense, doesn’t it? After all, were these men following Jesus because he was famous? … Or was it because of his message and his way of being in the world? Would they really have left their lives behind and headed out into the unknown just to gain some fame and glory by hanging on his coat tails? Would they have stuck with him through the hard road and not considered heading home to family and comfort – especially when he keeps telling them that it’s going to get harder, that he facing rejection and danger, even death? Had they really not learned anything from him all this time? Did any one of them believe that he was capable of leading the others into this scary future?

Jesus seems to sense that this is what they were arguing about on the road. And so, he talks to them about what it means to be great when you are a follower of the Way.

“Whoever wants to be first must be last of all and servant of all.” It seems counter intuitive, doesn’t it? We know that Jesus teaches humility – but what can be gained in the work toward God’s kin-dom if we all allow ourselves to be humble servants? Would the corrupt powers of the world topple because they had obedient servants, ready to meet their every need or would they be strengthened because we all bowed to them?

I don’t think this is what Jesus had in mind. And I think the writer of Mark has left a lot out of Jesus’ lesson. Maybe that’s because we are expected, like the disciples, to understand, if we’ve been paying attention on this journey we’ve been on with Jesus, on the meaning of his ministry.

We know that Jesus was not the Messiah the people were expecting. He wasn’t there to raise a large angelic army who would beat the oppressors with violence. So, how did this humble man, a man who preached love, who healed the sick, who cared about everyone, even the outcasts of society… how did he think this could change the world?

I believe his solution was to empower the oppressed, not to overpower the oppressors. How do you change the world as a Christian, a follower of Jesus? Can it change by exchanging an existing power with a new one, with a new victor who raises his sword over the dead and wounded bodies of his enemies and shouts, “I win! I am now the greatest!” Or do you change the world by ensuring that everyone – the weak, the sick, the poor, the oppressed, and even the enemy and the oppressor – that everyone has what they need, physically and emotionally, to face the world with dignity. Perhaps, as Jesus teaches, you change the world by opening eyes and hearts to lift the gaze from “me and mine” to care for each other in the spirit of ubuntu. Jesus wasn’t out to humiliate the powerful. He didn’t want to change places with them. He proposed a new world view where we acknowledge that each person has gifts from God – powers that can be used to make the world a better place.

If you want to be first, you need to be last, according to Jesus. You need to be moving those with the gifts needed at the moment, to the front of the line; you need to be willing to support from the back. This doesn’t just apply to the disciples. It doesn’t just apply to followers of Jesus. If we want the world to change in the way God dreams, everyone needs to be willing to take their place at the back. If we want to make the greatest change, we need to get rid of the notion that the line from first to last is fixed in place. It’s not about using our power to reach back and give someone else a hand up, we need to give them the space and the support to move up to join us.

And then Jesus brings a child into their circle. Is this a signal that he’s moving on to a new topic to ponder, or is this child connected to what he’s been saying? We know that children were not considered important members of society in Jesus’ time. They were loved, they were nurtured, they were taught – but they weren’t consulted when decisions needed making in the family or in the world. Remember the story I usually read at a child’s baptism? The disciples try to keep the children from bothering Jesus. They aren’t as important as adults. They don’t know or understand as much. But Jesus gathers the children in. He says we need to be more like them if we want to enter the kingdom of heaven. I wonder if he was thinking along the same lines as the children in our story about ubuntu…

So, here in this house in Capernaum, Jesus pulls a little child close. Right in the middle of this serious discussion with his disciples, in a moment when he finally has their undivided attention and can do some teaching, he puts the child among them.

“Whoever welcomes one such child in my name, welcomes me.” One such child… That word, “such” stands out to me… Jesus could have left it out: “Whoever welcomes one child in my name, welcomes me…” What made this child different? What made this child stand out? Why was this the child he wanted the disciples to pay attention to?

I think about all the pictures I’ve seen of Jesus with children. Think about it… They are always sitting quietly at his feet, listening intently or smiling as he hugs them. Sweet, well-behaved, quiet, engrossed in what Jesus is saying to the crowd… Is that realistic? For those of you who have any experience with kids, is this what you would expect? You might hope for it, of course. You might lecture them before Jesus arrives and tell them not to misbehave, and some would comply… for a little while, anyway.

“One such child …”  This child caught Jesus’ attention in the middle of a serious discussion with his disciples, a teaching moment that he had been trying to organize for a while… I am imagining a child who has gotten tired of being quiet and still, a disruption but not because they were trying to be bad, just trying to be heard – and I think this child is an integral part of the lesson.

Jesus is offering a guide to greatness – be humble, don’t push your way to the front of the line, empower others to take the lead, … acknowledge that others have gifts to offer – not just the lovable ones but also the difficult, the troublemakers, the misfits, the down and out, the ones who are not even part of the line. Listen. Listen to the wisdom around you – even from someone as low and as helpless – even as disruptive as this child was in the society of that time.

Does this version of greatness ring true for you? Think about the “great” people you have known in your life. Where did their power lie? Were they the ones at the top of the ladder or the ones supporting it from the base?

If you were having an argument about who is the greatest, would you want to be the one at the top with the power to do what you want, or would you want to be the one empowering from below? Which position of power feels most dangerous and scary to you? Which seems harder? Which one do you think might continue to affect the world when you’re gone?

Tomorrow we are faced with choosing leaders for our country. It’s a time to look past our own greatness and to elect those who have the power to make our country great. It’s a hard decision for each one of us. Does it help to think in terms of ubuntu, to think about who can make life better for all of us rather than just ourselves or our small circle? Does Jesus give us any guidance here to help us choose who should be first?

These few short verses in our reading from Mark this morning give us so much to think about… Sometimes I wish the Bible or God would just give us a clear answer but Jesus warns us, over and over again, it’s just not that simple to follow him. Amen.

Prayers of the People & the Lord’s Prayer:   Rev. Lorrie

(With inspiration from Joe Milner, St. Louis University, https//liturgy.sluhostedsites.org)

God of us all, As the season changes once again and we move from summer freedom back to the regular routines of life – work, school, clubs, and committee meetings, help us to remember to look beyond our own busy-ness to both the beauty and the needs around us.

Jesus challenges us to look at the world with new eyes, to put our egos aside and consider the deeper meaning of greatness – the greatness to which you call each of us. As we strive to become the people you need us to be, in the world as you envisioned it:

We pray: For this church that we may be servants of one another, particularly of those in need, and that this church be an example of love lived out in the world.

We pray: For greater awareness, that we may recognize our common humanity in spite of differences in race or culture, or status, and that we strive to accompany one another along the journey of life.

We pray: For a spirit of humility, that we may recognize all our gifts as gifts from God, gifts to be used and shared. And we pray that we may recognize our need for one another in our quest to become our fullest selves.

We pray: For a clearer recognition of healthy and unhealthy ambitions, that we may be aware of the motivations that stir our hearts, and respond to those that lead us closer to God and toward greater wholeness in ourselves, our communities, and the world.

We pray: For the poor and powerless in our society, that we may hear their voices, understand their pain, and humbly walk alongside them through life’s challenges, that we use our privilege to empower others rather than to lift ourselves.

We pray: For all who have been impacted by hurricanes, floods, earthquakes, or wildfires, that God will strengthen them, remove the obstacles which they encounter, and guide them to the assistance they need.

We pray: For healing and strength, that the Good News of Jesus may bring hope to the sick and strength to those who care for them. We pray especially for those in our faith family who are facing illness, injury, and grief. Let them feel the love with which we hold them.

We pray: For all of the burdens in our hearts, voiced or held in silent thought, and through these ancient words we repeat together with followers of Jesus throughout the world…

Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kin-dom come, thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread, And forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.
For thine is the kin-dom, the power and the glory,
Forever and ever, Amen.

Invitation to Offer         Rev. Kim

We are called to plant seeds of grace, hope, and justice; to wait for God’s mystery to work in the hearts and minds of others. The gifts we offer are seeds that reap a harvest beyond our imagining. I now invite you to offer your gifts of time, talents and treasures as our response to God’s abundant love. If you are not on PAR and wish to send in your offering and donations, you can drop them in the mailbox by the kitchen door of the church or mail them to BCUC. You can also send in your support through e-transfer. Thank you for your continued love and support to BCUC.

Offertory Prayer

(Kate Gregory, Pentecost 2, Gathering 2017, Year A)

Creator God, you gave us gifts and we have used them:
we offer them now to you in love and wonder.
Be pleased to accept our gifts in Jesus’ name. Amen. 

Sending Forth  Rev. Lorrie

(Jamie Miller, Gathering Pentecost 2 2021, p39. Used with permission.)

As Jesus called the children to come to him
and the disciples to follow him, we too have a calling,
a calling to live out the word,
to be the love and do the work of Christ’s church.
May you feel rooted by your faith in God,
inspired by the stories of Jesus,
and lifted by the Guiding Spirit along your way. Amen.

Hymn:   “May the God of Hope”         VU 424

(Words – v1 Alvin Schutmaat, 1984; v2 Fred Kaan, 1993; Music – Argentine Folk Melody)

1 May the God of hope go with us every day,
filling all our lives with love and joy and peace.
May the God of justice speed us on our way,
bringing light and hope to every land and race.

Refrain:
Praying, let us work for peace,
singing, share our joy with all,
working for a world that's new,
faithful when we hear Christ's call.

2 May the God of healing free the earth from fear,
freeing us for peace, both treasured and pursued.
May the God of love keep our commitment clear,
to a world restored, to human life renewed. R 

Departing Hymn: This is God’s Wondrous World VU 296 

(Words: Maltbie Davenport Babcock, 1904; Music: English traditional melody, adapt. Franklin L. Sheppard 1915; adapt. Stanley Oliver 1929.)

1 This is God's wondrous world, 
and to my listening ears 
all nature sings, and round me rings 
the music of the spheres. 
This is God's wondrous world; 
I rest me in the thought
 of rocks and trees, of skies and seas,
God's hand the wonders wrought. 

2 This is God's wondrous world: 
the birds their carols raise,
the morning light, the lily white,
declare their Maker's praise.
This is God's wondrous world:
God shines in all that's fair;
in the rustling grass or mountain pass,
God's voice speaks everywhere.

3 This is God's wondrous world:
O let me ne'er forget
that though the wrong seems oft so strong,
God is the Ruler yet.
This is God's wondrous world: 
why should my heart be sad? 
Let voices sing, let the heavens ring:
God reigns, let earth be glad.

Zoom Fellowship – 11 am

[1] Based on an Indian Legend by Anne Hope – 1978

Sunday school activities - September 19, 2021

Theme Discussion

Reading: Mark 9: 30-39

Do you always like to be first in line? What about being first in games or contests? Would you like to receive an award or a prize for being the first? I’m sure most of us do. The person who ran the fastest, or sang with the most beautiful voice, or shot the most goals wins the prize. That’s normally how it works, right? But if we think about it, we cannot be first or the greatest or the best all the time.

In our Bible story today found in Mark 9: 30-39, Jesus heard his disciples arguing about which one of them was the best or the greatest. Jesus stepped in to end the argument. Jesus said that those who are last will be first and those who are first will be last. This really sounds weird and confusing, doesn’t it? What do you think Jesus means by this verse?

Well, I think Jesus was saying that greatness is not about being the first all the time although that is very good in many ways. Greatness or being the best means to think of others first before ourselves. When you help those in need or when you care for others or reach out to those who are lonely, you are actually putting others first before you.

Have you let someone go first in line? Have you given your seat to someone in the bus? Or let your brother or sister take the first pick of freshly baked cookies? Have you shared your favourite toy with someone that is not a close friend? How did you feel?

Jesus wants us to win by loving others and showing that you care. When you make others feel special, that is also being a winner. Do you think this makes sense? Do you agree with Jesus?

There’s also another part of the Bible story which is really neat. Jesus took a child and showed the child to his disciples and said: “Whoever welcomes this small child welcomes me and whoever welcomes me, welcomes God who sent me.” Children were not very important at the time of Jesus. They had no rights. They were not considered the greatest members of the society. But Jesus thought otherwise. Why do you think Jesus uses a child as a model of teaching greatness to his disciples and to us?

Jesus upholds that children are very special.  To be the greatest or the best, you have to pay attention to children, to notice them and give them love. Do you think children are special? Why?

Response Activity Ideas

Great People

If you were asked, who are some of the greatest people in history, who comes to mind?  What is it that has made them ‘great’?  Do an internet search to learn more about some great people.  There are some ideas below. What can we learn or copy from their life and experiences?

https://kids.kiddle.co/Mahatma_Gandhi

https://kids.kiddle.co/Nelson_Mandela

https://kids.kiddle.co/Kublai_Khan

https://kids.kiddle.co/Marie_Curie

Topsy-turvy

This is another one of Jesus’ teachings where things seem backwards – the last shall be first – which can seem confusing until we think about it for awhile.  It’s like an optical illusion – it seems one thing at first, but when you study it, or change your view point, something else becomes clear. 

Follow the tutorial here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B29Y-fkPVTY to draw a double-sided person – one that is happy on one side and sad at the other.  Try modifying it by adding more details (eyebrows/mustache?) to make it your own.  As you view from the ‘happy’ direction, think of ways you and your family can be great by putting others first!

Rainbow

Did you hear Rev. Kim’s Storytime this week?  If not, check out the video or text version of it on the BCUC website.  Using watercolours, (or other colouring tools on hand), illustrate the story she tells of all the rainbow colours arguing, but learning that they are all important and valued.

Sunday Worship Service - September 12, 2021

 BELLS CORNERS UNITED CHURCH

CREATION TIME 1

September 12, 2021

The video recording of this service can be found here.
You can also dial-in by phone to listen to the audio recording at 613-820-8104.

Gathering Music: This is God’s Wondrous World - arranged by Phil Keveren       Abe:piano

Welcome & Centering for Worship:     Rev. Kim. Vidal

Good day everyone! On behalf of BCUC, I welcome and greet you in the name of Jesus Christ on this first Sunday of Creation Time in the Season of Pentecost.  The liturgical colour of Creation Time is orange which is a warm colour associated with creativity, enthusiasm, fruitfulness, fall and harvest and the changing of seasons. Orange is the red of passion tempered by the yellow of wisdom. Wherever you are, whether you are joining us via online, or onsite, or even reading the printed text of the service in the comfort of your homes, we are glad that you have joined us today.

As we continue to be under pandemic restrictions, please be reminded that the work of the church carries on. Please take time to keep in touch with each other through prayers, phone calls, emails or via Zoom. Check also the many announcements on our website at bcuc.org to keep you informed and give you opportunities to respond.

Our sanctuary has re-opened for in-person worship service on Sunday at 10 am with a maximum number of 50 people. The Public Health recommends staying at home but if you wish to attend the service, you are most welcome. The usual health protocols will be in place which include masking, social distancing, hand sanitizing and staying home if you feel unwell. Take note too that our worship service will still be offered via Youtube, by email and by telephone.

Friends, this day, we offer our gratitude for the gifts of the earth lavishly offered to us by a loving Creator. May we do so with praise and thanksgiving and a commitment to care for the earth and to serve each other. Let us now gather in worship.

Lighting of the Christ Candle        Acolytes: Monica Peck, Dave & Samantha Jones

(Richard Bott, The Gathering, Pentecost 2, 2016 Year C. Used with Permission)

All creation is made of star stuff.
From the basic building blocks of the universe,
come fire, air, earth and water.
All creation sings praise to the Creator of all.
Warmed by this flame, we go where Christ’s light shines!

Call to Gather & Opening Prayer: (Based on Psalm 19: 1-6)   Rev. Lorrie Lowes

(Gord Dunbar, The Gathering, Pentecost 2, 2021 Year B. Used with permission)

Listen!
Wow! The music of the spheres without words,
sings to our hearts of God’s glory.
Look!
Incredible! The myriad mysteries of deep space,
light years of complexity,
blaze with God’s majesty.
Notice!
Amazing! The intricate weaving of life’s rhythms,
the pulse of creation,
dances with joy in God’s love.
Come! We come to celebrate God’s goodness in our lives!

Let us pray:

Our hearts fill with awe, O God,
For your Spirit works within us all.
You gift us as Christ’s body to become one,
In wholeness, one with all of creation.
Empower us for that purpose this morning,
We pray, that we may heed, hope and heal in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Opening Hymn:   Called by Earth and Sky – More Voices #135   BCUC choir

Refrain:
Called by earth and sky,
promise of hope held high.
This is our sacred living trust,
treasure of life sanctified,
called by earth and sky.

1 Precious these waters, endless seas,
deep ocean’s dream, waters of healing,
rivers of rain, the wash of love again.

Refrain: (French)
Du-ciel et de la terre,
Nous entendons l’appel’
Nous de-vons ché-rir l’univers,
é-crin de vie, pré-cieuse et belle;
du-ciel et de la terre.

Verse 2 (French)
Pré-cieux est l’air que l’on respire,
libre est le vent; Es-prit qui souffle,
viens nous in-struire, de grâ-ce
nous com-blant.

Refrain: (French)

3 Precious these mountains, ancient sands;
vast fragile land. Seeds of our wakening, rooted and strong, Creation’s faithful song.

Refrain:

4 - Precious the fire that lights our way,
bright dawning day. Fire of passion,
sorrows undone, our faith and justice one.

Refrain:

Words & Music © 2005 Pat Mayberry, Arranged © 2005 Marg Stubington, Translation: 2006 David Fines
Song#119776 Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved
.

Storytime  Rev. Lorrie

Read Aloud – “The Doorbell Rang” by Pat Hutchins

Mom bakes a dozen cookies for Sam and Victoria to share – yummy ones that look and smell as good as Grandma’s! Just when they are about to eat them, the doorbell rings and two more children arrived. This happens over and over again until there is just enough for one cookie each – and the doorbell rings again…

Did you wonder what the children would do when the doorbell rang that last time? Mom thought they should just gobble up their cookies before she opened the door but those children decided to wait and see who was there. I was surprised! Were you? This was a hard decision to make, wasn’t it? It was pretty easy to share when there were enough cookies for everyone, but those kids were still willing to share the cookies, even if it meant they might not get one for themselves. What a nice surprise when it was Grandma at the door with more!

In our Bible reading today, Jesus tells his disciples that following him will sometimes be very hard to do but, if they are going to be true followers of his teaching, they will make the difficult choices – and they will feel better about it in the end. Of course, he was talking about choices a lot harder than sharing cookies but the idea is the same. Jesus says there is no point in just making yourself happy if it turns you into a selfish person who is not very nice. He says you will be rewarded for sticking to his teaching about showing love to everyone. It might not always mean that you get more cookies – but it will make you feel better about the person you are growing to be! I think these children were good followers of Jesus, don’t you?

Hymn: Will You Come and Follow Me? -Voices United #567  TeGrotenhuis family Jan 2020

Will you come and follow me if I but call your name?
Will you go where you don't know and never be the same?
Will you let my love be shown, will you let my name be known,
will you let my life be grown in you and you in me?

Will you leave yourself behind if I but call your name?
Will you care for cruel and kind and never be the same?
Will you risk the hostile stare should your life attract or scare?
Will you let me answer prayer in you and you in me?

Will you let the blinded see if I but call your name?
Will you set the prisoners free and never be the same?
Will you kiss the leper clean and do such as this unseen,
and admit to what I mean in you and you in me?

Will you love the "you" you hide if I but call your name?
Will you quell the fear inside and never be the same?
Will you use the faith you've found to reshape the world around,
through my sight and touch and sound in you and you in me?

Christ, your summons echoes true when you but call my name.
Let me turn and follow you and never be the same.
In Your company I'll go where your love and footsteps show.
Thus I'll move and live and grow in you and you in me.

Words: © 1987 John Bell, Music Scottish traditional
Song #
87129  Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved

Prayer for Illumination         Reader: Tamara Glanville

Creator God, let your words speak in each heart. |
Let the truth set each one free.
Let the gospel story inspire us for justice.
Let the Spirit’s presence fill us with joy. Amen. 

The Gospel Reading: Mark 8:27-38 (NRSV)        Who Do You Say That I Am?

27 Jesus went on with his disciples to the villages of Caesarea Philippi; and on the way he asked his disciples, “Who do people say that I am?” 

28 And they answered him, “John the Baptist; and others, Elijah; and still others, one of the prophets.” 

29 He asked them, “But who do you say that I am?” Peter answered him, “You are the Messiah.” 30 And he sternly ordered them not to tell anyone about him.

31 Then he began to teach them that the Son of Man must undergo great suffering, and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests, and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again. 

32 He said all this quite openly. And Peter took him aside and began to rebuke him. 

33 But turning and looking at his disciples, he rebuked Peter and said, “Get behind me, Satan! For you are setting your mind not on divine things but on human things.”

34 He called the crowd with his disciples, and said to them, “If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me. 

35 For those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake, and for the sake of the gospel, will save it. 

36 For what will it profit them to gain the whole world and forfeit their life? 

37 Indeed, what can they give in return for their life? 

38 Those who are ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation, of them the Son of Man will also be ashamed when he comes in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.”

May we find ourselves renewed through this story of faith. Thanks be to God!

Sermon:   “When Fine Print Matters”       Rev. Kim

          Have you ever found yourself excited about something - only to find out that you literally have sold your soul by not reading the fine print?  Admit it – most of us do not read the fine print. Maybe, we should! Here are some ridiculous true-to-life stories about people who found themselves at a losing end because they didn’t bother to read the fine print.

In 2014, FSecure, a cyber security company based in London UK ran an experiment to see if people are reading the fine print by offering a free Wi-Fi access. Before they could get on the Internet, users had to check a box agreeing to "assign their first-born child to FSecure for the duration of eternity." Still, 6 people signed up, but the company providing the Wi-Fi said the clause likely wouldn't be enforceable in a court of law.

Few years later, Manchester-based Wi-Fi company, Purple, promoted a similar experiment by offering a free public Wi-Fi for two weeks. The company inserted a clause in its agreement "to illustrate the lack of consumer awareness of what they are signing for when they access free WiFi." About 22,000 people who signed up, inadvertently agreed to 1,000 hours of community service — including cleaning toilets, scraping chewing gum on the streets and "relieving sewer blockages."

          How many of us have been tricked by fine prints that somehow quashed our expectations or have given us high hopes leading to other information that make us “not buy into it”? We are so engrossed in reading the big bold letters and we sometimes forget to ask the question, “what’s the catch?” The catch is a disclosure that is almost always penned in tiny mouse print that we easily ignore. That happened to Peter and the other disciples in this Gospel story.

          Jesus wondered how he was being perceived by people. What was the big bold letters that advertise his presence to those, whom he healed, touched, spoken to. Was he being seen as one among them? a healer? a preacher? a revolutionary leader? or a nut case?? He asked the disciples, "When you're out there, when you're talking to people or drawing water at the well or helping those in need, what are the people saying about me?” The disciples began to answer in big, bold claims -- familiar names in large print that are popular among the people in those days: JOHN THE BAPTIST…ELIJAH…A PROPHET. The disciples were filled with such hope and expectation. Like them, it was so easy for us today to identify Jesus in large prints as: REFORMER, LEADER, THE WAY, THE HEALER, TRUTH-TELLER, LIBERATOR, ACTIVIST. We think Jesus might be flattered to hear those big bold titles he was associated with. But Jesus was looking for more. So Jesus challenges his disciples and asks them: “But, who do you say that I am?” Peter rose to the occasion – just like all those times when he just opens his mouth without even thinking and said: “You are the MESSIAH”.

          Peter was one who understood church marketing. Fun and entertainment is always in style and sacrifice or sweating it out is always a put down. Talking about bearing burdens ad discomfort are in no way to promote the church. Church marketing is one strategy nowadays to lure people to come to church. One rich church mailed a glossy advertisement to each household in the neighbourhood with big bold large print poster telling the public that their church is a 3-C church: “casual, creative and contemporary.” On a fine print, they listed five reasons for people to “Come and check them out”: (1) jeans and t-shirts, no suits and ties; (2) no guilt. Leave your wallet at home; (3) positive sermon you will enjoy; (4) awesome programs for kids and teens; (5) pop, rock, country—our band rocks.  Another church promises “we won’t make you listen to organ music; the service won’t take more than an hour; we won’t visit your home unannounced; we will let you remain anonymous; we serve espresso drinks, free cotton candy to children 12 and under!” Sales gimmicks might draw a big crowd, but so does Lady Gaga. But promoting God the way we promote business is not what Jesus had in mind.

The large print of Jesus as the Messiah was obvious to Peter. He believed that when he left his career as a fisherman, when he dropped his fishing nets, left his family and the security of home and had followed Jesus--Peter had found the Messiah - someone powerful who will put down the Roman oppressors. Someone like King David who trampled down the enemies of Israel. And as he followed Jesus with the other disciples, Peter began to see the signs of the in-breaking of God’s reign--the sick was healed, the lepers were cleansed, the blind regained vision, the crippled walked, a tax collector became a disciple, people were fed. So when asked who Jesus was, he exclaimed, "You are the Messiah!" Peter understood messiahship in the tradition of the return of a David-like king, of a mighty, conquering hero, not one who will be put to death.

          Jesus doesn't deny the truth of what Peter says, but there is more to that large print. When Jesus points to Peter and the other disciples the fine print of suffering, rejection, and death, the disciples do not want to hear it. Peter rebukes Jesus. He taps Jesus on the shoulder and motions for a word in private: “Jesus, what are you talking about? Your popularity is skyrocketing. You don’t need to talk about suffering or dying.” Peter was ticked off – he could not sign off the fine print of following his hero, Jesus, the Messiah – all his dreams were shattered in one big explosion.  Peter was so hopeful -- he was so excited. Jesus was the one -- he was the one who would restore Israel to its former glory. He was the one he had been waiting for since the time of King David. Peter was not expecting a Messiah that would be defeated. Peter was looking for a Saviour who was stronger than anyone -- who would take care of all the threats and who would overpower all opposition -- someone who would rescue him and the people from the mess they were in. Peter rebukes Jesus for talking nonsense... suffering and rejection and being killed. That was not part of Peter's agenda for the Messiah. And Jesus took his turn, rebukes Peter, and calls him Satan! As if saying, “Peter, stop being a deceiver. I’ve had enough of this in the wilderness! What you’re thinking is the complete opposite of what God calls me to do and to be.”

Jesus continued talking about the fine print -  the hard stuff of being a disciple which we do not want to read, much more buy into it. "If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves, take up their cross and follow me." What does it mean to deny oneself and to take up one’s cross? What does it mean to follow someone who has been crucified by the ruling power? Are we expected to die for what we believe? Do we have to give up our personal ambitions?  forget about our own comforts?  speak and listen to people we do not find interesting? care about people who wronged us? Who doesn’t already have enough suffering in their lives without looking for more? What will we have left if we give ourselves away?

          But come to think of it. Why did the disciples continue following Jesus? Why didn’t Peter and the rest of them leave and go home after knowing what it takes to be a Jesus’ follower? Why are we still here following Jesus and his way of life?  Because Peter and the disciples knew in their hearts that Jesus lived the way God wills every human being to live, which is a life of love, humility, justice and compassion. A life lived in putting others first. Because Jesus initiated a movement that believes in God’s power to change and transform lives. Because the God revealed in Jesus shows up even in broken places of our lives and in the world. Because in Jesus, we discover, not the God we may want, but the God we desperately need. This God will meet us in the places of our brokenness and wholeness and will embrace us with grace and love. Because life is never the same after Jesus showed us the way to God.

          A few years ago, in one of our lectionary group discussions, Peggy Aitchison shared a story about a Norwegian man her family hosted one summer. On Sunday morning, Peggy invited him to go to church and he said, shall I bring a sacrifice? Peggy was surprised to hear this but then she came to realize that in Norway, sacrifice means the Sunday offering.  This story made me think seriously about my faith. What does my offering - my sacrifice - say about my commitment in following Jesus? Our day-to-day choices are not likely to lead to martyrdom, but each day we have to decide how we will spend our time, our resources, our talents, our lives.

          Denying ourselves and bearing our own crosses may mean so many things. It could mean walking the extra mile, standing with the people who are losing, doing good that will receive no applause, building homes and partnerships in far-flung Nicaragua or Zambia, treating marginalized and disabled people as children of God, shopping for someone else’s groceries, reading stories to someone else’s children, taking flowers to someone who’s not a friend, visiting someone else’s mother in the nursing home, talking about faith when we would rather be silent, doing good for people who will do not good to us in return, praying not for an easier life but for strength to give our lives away, marching with the blacks, the indigenous people, or the climate change activists in their pursuit of a just society . I could go on and on... And what do you get in return? Nothing fancy - just a dose of tremendous comfort and peace of mind knowing that you have made a difference in someone’s life and in the world. Denying oneself reminds me of the song, Put a Little Love in Your Heart and when you do, the world will be a better place for you and me!

          As we continue to journey as the body of Christ in this season of creation time, Jesus invites us to be his followers. It never means that we give up our dignity, but it does mean that we will take on the mantle of faithfulness and life-giving commitments. We will speak as Jesus speaks. We will act as Jesus has come to act. There will be times in our lives when we realize that in losing our agenda, our power, our resources, our relationships, we find our true identity, our call and our purpose. It's not that nothing is lost. It's that something more important is gained. Read the fine print, put it to heart and live in good faith. Thanks be to God. Amen.

Prayers of the People & the Lord’s Prayer   Rev. Kim

Come all of you who seek a sanctuary and a time to listen to God within. Bring your heart, your needs and your acknowledgement of the sacred in your midst. Let us join our hearts in prayer.

O Great Love, we give thanks for this cycle of surprising life, its challenges, its beauty and its delights... informed by your presence in and through it all. And yet, some days, words fail us when we wish to speak of love or life or hope. No words come - instead we shed tears, feel our brokenness and an outburst of despair. Those times we turn wordless from the world and from you. Take our hands, show us how to return with hope renewed, with energy to love others and work for change, with attention to the beauty that lives in all our lives.

Help us to see the blessings each day brings. Help us to see the thoughtful gestures of those around us. Help us to see the beauty of the earth and to commit ourselves to be good stewards of the whole of creation. Help us to see the richness of our Christian heritage taught and lived by Jesus. Help us to see the satisfaction in doing something well. Help us to see the workings of your hand in our lives. Give us the far-off vision of things yet unseen.
Like Peter and the other disciples, help us to have the courage to understand what it means to follow Jesus and to present our questions or even our doubts. Help us to be faithful to your way of life and know you richly as our God.

Giver of Life, we pray for your healing and comforting presence in the lives of those needing care, giving thanks for all those who opened their hearts to pray for them and are present with them.  We pray for those in need of healing, relief from symptoms of diseases, and wholeness of mind and spirit. We pray for those in retirement homes and nursing facilities, for those recovering at home and for those hoping that each day new mercies will come. We pray for those who are alone, who are alienated from their families, those who are grieving the loss of a loved one. We also remember those who are celebrating wonderful occasions and milestones in life. And now in silence, hear the deepest concerns of our hearts.

God of peace, we pray for the storms battering our communities in many forms; the wars and conflicts that never seem to reconcile; the continuing global economic fears. We feel afraid and powerless. We pray for refugees and many displaced people in the world. We pray for all the leaders of the world that they may make wise choices for everyone and that they may lead us to honour one another and serve the common good.

When you call our names, Creator God, you call us into a journey of faith following the example of Jesus. May we treasure your words in our hearts in whatever we say and do, so that our lives may reflect your way of light and love to others. These we ask in the name of Jesus who taught his disciples this prayer.

Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kin-dom come, thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread, And forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.
For thine is the kin-dom, the power and the glory,
Forever and ever, Amen.

Invitation to Offer        Rev. Kim

God invites us to take part in God’s caring for the earth and for one another. The gift of creation reminds us of God’s abundant generosity and invites us to live with gracious offering of our time, talents and treasures. If you are not on PAR and wish to send in your offering and donations, you can drop them in the mailbox by the kitchen door of the church or mail them to BCUC. You can also send in your support through e-transfer. Thank you for your continued love and support to BCUC.

Offertory Prayer

God of earth and sky, in response to your abundant love that you offer us, we offer our gifts: time, talent and treasures for the life of this congregation and the lives of many in the world. Amen.

Sending Forth  Rev. Lorrie

(Sheryl McLeod, Gathering Pentecost 1 2021, p53. Used with permission.)

God blesses us in so many ways.
As God’s beloved, we know God’s love,
we follow Christ’s way,
and we are sustained by the Holy Spirit’s persistence.
Now go into the world extravagantly
scattering God’s seeds of love. Amen. 

Hymn:   Praise with Joy the World’s Creator – Voices United #312    Keith, Sheryll, Angela

1 Praise with joy the world's creator,
God of justice, love and peace,
Source and end of human knowledge,
God of grace shall never cease.
Celebrate the Maker's glory,
Power to rescue and release.

2 Praise the Christ who feeds the hungry,
Frees the captive, finds the lost,
Heals the sick, upsets religion,
Fearless both of fate and cost.
Celebrate Christ's constant presence -
Friend and Stranger, Guest and Host.

3 Praise the Spirit sent among us
Liberating truth from pride,
Forging bonds where race or gender,
Age or nation dare divide.
Celebrate the Spirit's treasure -
Foolishness none dare deride.

4 Praise the Maker, Christ and Spirit,
One God in Community,
Calling Christians to embody
oneness and diversity.

This the world shall see reflected
God is One and One in Three.

Words © 1985 The Iona Community, alt.; Music: John Goss, 1868
Song #40528 Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved

Departing Music: Great is the Lord – Michael W. Smith                     Abe:organ

Zoom Fellowship – 11 am

Sunday school activities - September 12, 2021

Theme Discussion

Hello!  What’s your name?  Nice to meet you!  There’s more to a person than just their first name, though, isn’t there?

Go around the room taking turns with your family talking about each other: What are some (kind!) names and adjectives you have to describe the others?  (Sister, helper, reader, best cupcake baker, etc.)

If other people were asked to describe you, would they all say the same thing? What they say about you will depend on how they have experienced you. Your parents, your siblings, your friends, your teacher, your coach – each one would likely describe you in a different way. Who do you think knows you best?

Today’s Bible story, Mark 8:27-38, has two parts to it:

In the first part, Jesus asks the disciples, “Who do people say that I am?” They give many different answers. They have heard people say Jesus is John the Baptist, or a prophet like Elijah, or Jeremiah, come back to life. When Jesus asks, “Who do you say that I am?” Peter says, “You are the messiah.” Jesus tells them that they must keep this a secret because the people coming to see him wouldn’t understand.

The disciples have spent more time with Jesus than most other people and so they are beginning to understand that God has given him a very special role to play in the world. I think Jesus might be worried that if they call him the Messiah or the Saviour to other people who don’t know him so well, they will expect him to be like a king or a great military leader.

How does the way someone describes you change the way they act with you, or expect you to act? 

Next, Jesus tells his disciples that there are going to be some hard times ahead and that the leaders will not like what he does and says. He tells them he will suffer and even die. Peter isn’t happy with this kind of talk. He takes Jesus aside and tells him to stop scaring everybody with this negative talk. Jesus gets cross with Peter and tells him that they all need to hear these things because they need to know what they are getting into by following Jesus. It will be hard and even sometimes scary and dangerous.

What do you think it would have been like to travel with Jesus as the disciples did?

What do you think is the hardest thing Jesus asks us to do as his followers?

How do people around you react when you do those things? How do you feel about yourself when you do them?

Response Activity Ideas

Jesus is like…. I am like…

Gather colouring tools and print out the worksheet (or use blank paper).  At the top, draw a picture that represents the name or image you have for Jesus, and fill in the sentence to explain what you drew.  At the bottom, think about yourself.  What skills, qualities, gifts can you share with others?  What are you like for the people around you?  Again, draw a picture and explain with words.

Doing the Right Thing Poster (WWJD?)

Choose an inspirational quote or Bible verse that could remind you to consider what the right thing to do in a situation might be, even it’s not the easiest choice or the option you’d prefer.

Using markers, paint, or crayons OR working on the computer with different fonts and colours, make a small poster to put up at home or get tucked into your planner or a binder at school.

Here are some ideas to consider:

Integrity is doing the right thing even when no one is watching. – C.S. Lewis

Do the right thing. It will gratify some and astonish the rest. – Mark Twain

When in doubt, don’t. – Benjamin Franklin

Knowing what’s right doesn’t mean much unless you do what’s right. - Theodore Roosevelt

Wordsearch

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Sunday Worship Service - September 5, 2021

 BELLS CORNERS UNITED CHURCH

15th SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST

September 5, 2021

The video recording of this service can be found here.
You can also dial-in by phone to listen to the audio recording at 613-820-8104.

Gathering Music: I Have a Dream – ABBA (Ulvaeus/Andersson)      Abe:instrumental

I believe in angels Something good in everything I see
I believe in angels When I know the time is right for me
I'll cross the stream, I Have a Dream             © 1979 Universal Music Pub All rights reserved

Acknowledgement of Territory           Rev. Lorrie Lowes

As we begin our worship today, we remember that, in this congregation, we live and work on the unceded traditional territory of the Algonquin and Anishinaabe Peoples. We give thanks for their stewardship of the land and the water, the plants and the animals, through many generations. We also acknowledge their story, and our place in it, with sorrow. As we continue to live on this land with respect for it and for its people, may we commit to working toward truth, justice and reconciliation. All my relations.

Welcome & Centering for Worship    Rev. Kim. Vidal

Good day everyone! On behalf of BCUC, I welcome and greet you in the name of Jesus Christ on this 15th Sunday after Pentecost. Wherever you are, whether you are joining us via online, or onsite, or even reading the printed text of the service in the comfort of your homes, we are glad that you have joined us today. On this Labour Day weekend, we remember and give thanks for all those who shoulder the tasks of human labour, both active and retired—in the farms, marketplaces, in factories and offices, in schools and churches, and in family living. We also lift up all the students and teachers who are returning to school in the coming week.

As we continue to be under pandemic restrictions, please be reminded that the work of the church carries on. Please take time to keep in touch with each other through prayers, phone calls, emails or via Zoom. Check also the many announcements on our website at bcuc.org to keep you informed and give you opportunities to respond.

Our sanctuary has re-opened for in-person worship service on Sunday at 10 am with a maximum number of 50 people. The Public Health recommends staying at home but if you wish to attend the service, you are most welcome. The usual health protocols will be in place which include masking, social distancing, hand sanitizing and staying home if you feel unwell. Take note too that our worship service will still be offered via Youtube, by email and by telephone.

Friends, let us come as a welcoming people, centering ourselves in a loving, welcoming God as we worship together.

Lighting of the Christ Candle        Acolytes: Fowler Family

"No one lights a lamp and then covers it with a jar or puts it under a bed, but puts it on a lampstand so that those who come in can see the light.” (Luke 8:16)

May the light of Christ shines on!                                                                  

Call to Gather & Prayer of Confession     Rev. Lorrie

(Kate Crawford, The Gathering, Pentecost 2, 2014. Used with permission)

Come, people of dancing waves and burning sun!
Come to worship God!
Come, people of refreshing rains and growing things!
Come to this place of prayer and praise!
Come to sing! Come to deepen faith!
Come to rest in God’s love!
Come and we are strengthened!
We are lifted up in this community of friends!
Come, let us worship and give thanks!
People of God, the Spirit calls.
The Spirit calls us to a life of responsive relationship.
Sometimes we ignore or forget this call.
Let us not be afraid to seek healing for our brokenness and pain.
Let us confess and draw once again in the relationship that is truly life-giving.

Let us pray:

Broken, we turn to you.
Hurting, we look to you.
Mourning, we lean on you.
Failing, we beg of you.
Hear our confession as we offer our silent prayers.

(Moment of Silence)

You call us blessed and so we are blessed,
for this and for all your mercies, thanks be to God!

Hymn:   Come, Let Us Sing of a Wonderful Love – Voices United #574           Mary Schmieder

1 Come let us sing of a wonderful love,
tender and true, tender and true,
out of the heart of the Father above,
streaming to me and to you:
wonderful love, wonderful love
dwells in the heart of the Father above.

2 Jesus, the Saviour, this gospel to tell,
joyfully came, joyfully came,
came with the helpless and hopeless to dwell, sharing their sorrow and shame,
seeking the lost, seeking the lost,
saving, redeeming at measureless cost.

3 Jesus is seeking the wanderers yet;
why do they roam? why do they roam?
Love only waits to forgive and forget;
home, weary wanderers, home!
Wonderful love, wonderful love
dwells in the heart of the Father above.

4 Come to my heart, O thou wonderful love!
Come and abide, come and abide,
lifting my life till it rises above
envy and falsehood and pride:
seeking to be, seeking to be
lowly and humble, a learner of thee

Words: Robert Walmsley, 1900, Music: Adam Watson
Song reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved

Storytime  Rev. Lorrie

“This Is Our House” by Michael Rosen, illustrated by Bob Graham

Read by Rev. Lorrie, Katie, Owen, Bree & Jack Kelly and their friend Barrett Burgess

This is a story about some children who find a big cardboard box and use it to make a playhouse. One child, George, decides that it is his house and makes up reasons to exclude all the other children – no girls allowed, or small people, or twins, or people who wear glasses, or who like tunnels. When George leaves to go to the bathroom, the other children all go in the house and exclude him when he comes back because he has red hair. George throws a tantrum but then stops and thinks… he declares that everyone is welcome in the house because “This Is Our House!”

George learned a big lesson, didn’t he? The other children showed him that excluding others makes everyone unhappy and that welcoming everyone is a lot more fun.

In our Bible story today, a Syrophoenician woman asks Jesus to heal her daughter. We would expect Jesus to do this for her, wouldn’t we? - but this woman is from another country. She looks different and sounds different from the people Jesus knows. Jesus was brought up amongst people who said that people like this woman were no good and so he says he can only help the Jews. He excludes her! This woman, a stranger, teaches Jesus a lesson about inclusion. Jesus listens to what she has to say and realizes that God would not want him to exclude anybody, not even someone so different. Jesus changes his thinking and the woman’s daughter is healed.

Jesus learned from the Syrophoenician woman, just like George learned from the children in the book we heard this morning. Both of them came to understand what the situation looked like from the other people’s view and realized that excluding them made no sense at all.

There are so many things we can learn if we take the time to listen. Sometimes what we hear can change our thinking and make life better for everyone.

Hymn:    Seek Ye First the Kingdom - Voices United #356      Ellen, Chris, Bernice & Angela

1 Seek ye first the Kingdom of God,
and God’ righteousness;
and all these things shall be added unto you.
Hallelu, hallelujah!

2 Ask and it shall be given unto you;
seek and ye shall find;
knock and the door shall be opened unto you.
Hallelu, Hallelujah!

3 We do not live by bread alone,
but by every word
that proceeds from the mouth of God. 
Hallelu, Hallelujah!

Words & Music © 1972 Karen Lafferty, maranatha music
Song reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved
 

Prayer for Illumination         Reader: James Eaton

Be with us, O God, as we reflect on your Word.
Open our eyes, our ears and our hearts
to listen to your voice and make of us
witnesses and doers of a living faith in Christ. Amen. 

The Gospel Reading: Mark 7:24-37 (NRSV) - Jesus & the Syrophoenician Woman’s Faith

24 From there he set out and went away to the region of Tyre. He entered a house and did not want anyone to know he was there. Yet he could not escape notice, 
25 but a woman whose little daughter had an unclean spirit immediately heard about him,
and she came and bowed down at his feet. 
26 Now the woman was a Gentile, of Syrophoenician origin.
She begged him to cast the demon out of her daughter. 
27 He said to her, “Let the children be fed first, for it is not fair to take the children’s food and throw it to the dogs.” 
28 But she answered him, “Sir, even the dogs under the table eat the children’s crumbs.” 
29 Then he said to her, “For saying that, you may go—the demon has left your daughter.” 
30 So she went home, found the child lying on the bed, and the demon gone.

May we find ourselves renewed through this story of faith. Thanks be to God!

Sermon:   “Who Deserves the Crumbs?” Rev. Kim

In our partnership visit to Nicaragua in 2015, there were two kinds of dogs that caught my attention. One was the street smart and the other, the upper class.  It was impossible to ignore the street-smart dogs that roamed around the city of Managua especially in the barrios or villages on which we did our work. Everything about these dogs’ demeanor and appearance were so different from the dogs we are accustomed to seeing here in Canada. The street-smart dogs were unbelievably skinny with ribs and hipbones sticking out, almost disturbingly in some cases. Most likely they have no owners and no families and no particular people to take care of them. They scavenge food wherever they can find it: in garbage, from the sewers, on the streets and scraps from people. The upper-class dogs, on the other hand, were properly fed and well taken care of. They were owned by the host families and the middle class, those who live in rich neighbourhood where we stayed. 

If there is a wide gap between the rich and the poor in Nicaragua, likewise, dogs have similar fate there. I remember Elly Crow’s comments one night when we gathered for reflection. She said: “I feel sad looking at the dogs on the streets. In Canada, we feed our dogs with human food and are considered family members. But here, they are left on the streets to survive on their own.” Nicaragua is one of the poorest countries in the western hemisphere.  And I certainly understand that getting enough to eat and basic survival are real concerns for a considerable proportion of the population. Nicaraguans, like other people everywhere, choose to feed their children first. Only when poverty is adequately addressed by the worldwide community can the lives of individuals of all species, including dogs, be expected to improve.

How would you feel if someone calls you a dog? If you answer this question in Jesus’ time, you will realize that calling someone a dog is an outright insult and a put down. Let’s admit it. In this particular story in Mark, Jesus uttered a racial slur by calling the Syrophoenician woman and her sick, dying child, “dogs”. Calling Gentiles "dogs" was a form of verbal abuse. We call it racial prejudice in our modern language. Although the term “race” was a human construct brought about by the slavery of Africans in the 17th century, we can say that “racism” is already present in Jesus’ time as verbal and physical abuse, but also in less explicit ways, more hidden, covert and unconscious. Perhaps “racism” in the Bible is closer to the word “prejudice.” As a Jewish man, Jesus was brought up in a tradition that taught a covenant theology where Jews were the only people on earth who deserves God’s mercy and grace. This is absolutely one of those difficult gospel moments with which Christians must wrestle. Who is this Jesus, portrayed in this Markan story, who seemed to be scornful of other ethnic groups? How are we to understand such an indifferent and prejudiced Jesus? 

In this story, a Syrophoenician woman, challenges Jesus to practice what he preaches. The woman nagged and begged Jesus to heal her daughter who was diagnosed with an unclean spirit. In those days, it was unseemly for any woman to approach Jesus directly, but she was also a Syrophoenician, a Gentile, a foreigner, an intrusion into the holy boundaries set by Mosaic laws. This woman, living in Tyre, which is modern-day Lebanon, just beyond the borders of Israel, is a descendant of those who were the most outcasts of the outcasts. The Markan Jesus barely listened to her plea and then uttered an odd remark: “it is not fair to take the children's food and feed it to the dogs.”

If one is familiar with Mark’s agenda of showing Jesus as being sent first to the Jewish people, the children in this story refers to the Jewish people, the one whom God favoured above all others and the dogs were the Gentiles, the pagans, the unclean, the outsiders. Jesus turns the woman away by using a metaphor that implies a limited supply of food that only the privileged – the children of God - may eat while those in the margins – the dogs - go hungry.  Now isn’t that something? Surely Jesus of all people should know that God's goodness is extravagant - that there is more than enough food for everyone. And this is essentially what the Gentile woman points out to Jesus. She believes that in God’s abundant grace, there's plenty of food for everyone – children and dogs alike.

The woman does not back down. She had a crumb of confidence and that was enough to make her persist. The woman answers Jesus’ remark point-blank: "You are right, Sir, but dogs eat the children’s crumbs under the table. Yes, Sir. I agree that you were sent first to the house of Israel. Yes, I understand that we may not be your first priority. But I also believe that there is more than enough to feed us all. If we are dogs, then at least let us have a dog's rations. You have more than enough to feed us with the crumbs, some scrap of grace for someone a dog like us that are left under the table.” Karoline Lewis interprets the woman’s response like this: "What are you going to do, Sir? Judge me by my race and colour -- or judge me by my heart? Who are you to reject me when the God of justice, the God beyond borders said yes to me. God said yes to me when you came here in Tyre, this pagan land instead of spending all your time in Jerusalem. It’s okay to be me, so get over yourself, Sir”. Jesus was mesmerized, awestruck by her remark. Her response stopped Jesus from his tracks. It was a learning moment for him. Jesus realizes that the woman tells the truth. And when the truth gets told? The world changes. Her world changed. Same for Jesus. The rest of Jesus’ ministry was never the same again because of her.  Jesus learned a lesson from this outsider, this non-Jewish, marginalized woman. Her faith astounds Jesus: "Woman, you have made an excellent point. You’re right- You get the same food as all of God's other children anyway, so why not have a seat at the table?" In that historic encounter, the "dog" becomes a dinner guest and gets to sit at the table with the "children.” And Jesus healed her dying daughter!

This story should stop us also in our tracks. David Henson comments that this story “presents Christians with some difficulty, particularly if we understand ethnic prejudice and racism as the systemic sins they are. When faced with the complexities of personal and systemic sin, it is much easier to think of Jesus as transcending them all and loving all peoples regardless of skin color or culture of origin. We want Jesus to be the simple, easy answer to all our problems and to all of society’s problems. Perhaps part of the difficulty of this passage…is that we want Jesus to be colorblind. We want Jesus to be colorblind because that’s what many of us want to be or think we should be.”  Don’t you find this story encouraging and challenging? I do.  Jesus, the rabbi, the leader of a movement, the Jewish man from Nazareth became a learner just like many of us. His teacher was a woman, an outsider, a Syrophoenician, a gentile. From his encounter with this woman, Jesus realizes that God’s love was for all people, that there were no outsiders, no distinction of ethnicity, colour or creed. From this point on, Jesus does not hold his healing power to only those in the inner circle, but expands the circle of God’s mercy and grace to include those once considered outsiders. Jesus opens himself to the whole world Jews and non-Jews alike.

Does anyone deserve only the crumbs? Or should we all have a seat at God’s table of grace no matter how poor or rich we are, no matter what faith we possess, no matter if we are children or dogs? Jews or non-Jews? Does God have boundaries regarding those receiving God’s grace? I strongly believe that the day the good news went to the “dogs” was the day it came to all of us. We are the recipients not of the crumbs under the table but a whole feast laid for us on the table. No one deserves the crumbs. We deserve to eat real food, real grace, real blessings from God. Through the Syrophoenician woman’s faith and persistence, Jesus fully understood that in God's love, there was more than enough food to go around!

How can we not pay attention to this story when the world is in a mess?  When millions of refugees, migrants and immigrants across the world come to ask persistently for sanctuary and shelter in a new country, who come seeking the crumbs from the bounteous table of richer nations? This week, the world continues to be in horror as thousands of Afghans are fleeing their beloved country because of a change of government that dehumanizes particularly women, children and those of ethnic and religious minorities. This crisis has revealed so many failings and injustices. It highlights the evils of war, violence and persecution that desecrates humanity.

Dear friends, how do we respond as the body of Christ on the issue of racism?  Are we willing to be an ally and to have our boundaries pushed back and to let go of the walls that divide people and communities? We don't have to go far to have our boundaries pushed back. We can proclaim Jesus and act like Jesus to a lonely new neighbour, to change our behaviour towards whites and non-whites and those of other faiths, to support and advocate for the refugees and immigrants that knocks on our doors for safety and refuge. The opportunities to serve are limitless. Where ever we are tempted to draw back, to judge, to turn away, to avoid someone's eyes, to tighten our protective circle - that's where God is calling us to let go of our limits, to a right relationship with someone outside our boundaries, our comfort zones. Who deserves the crumbs? No one - because God’s grace is outrageously abundant for all. We can all eat together on God’s table of grace. Thanks be to God! Amen.

Sources that helped me with my sermon:

  1. Rev. Peter Lockhart, Does Jesus learn a lesson? A Different Heresy.

  2. Heidi Husted, Christian Century, August 16, 2000

  3. David R. Henson, “Crumbs: Jesus and the Ethnic Slur”, Lectionary Reflection, Mark 7:24-37, September 2, 2015, patheos.org.

  4. Alyce Mackenzie, Jesus Is In the House! Reflections on Mark 7:24-37. patheos.org.

  5. Commentaries of Karoline Lewis, preaching.org.

  6. Elly Crow’s reflection – Mission Trip to Nicaragua 2015.

Prayers of the People & the Lord’s Prayer   Rev. Lorrie

Holy One,

We marvel at the wonders of Creation and all the blessings we have been given.

We know that this planet and all life that inhabits it are suffering, in great part because of the way we humans have used earth’s resources without thought about how it affects the beautiful balance of nature. We know that many people around the world are suffering due to exclusion because of perceived differences – race, skin colour, sexuality, economic status, or differing abilities. We know that change is necessary to ensure that we, and all living things, can continue to thrive as you intended – but we also know that change is difficult.

Help us to learn. Help us to be open to new ways of living in respect with each other and with the ecosystem that supports all life. Help us to look at our way of life through new eyes, with the new information and wisdom that is available to us, with new understanding, and with your dream for creation as our focus and goal.

We pray for those who are dealing with the terrible effects of climate change – fires, floods, earthquakes, and ravaging storms. Move us to provide immediate relief and move us to action that will keep these things from worsening in the future.

We pray for all who are suffering today from illness, injury, grief, or loneliness. Help us to listen with open hearts and minds, that we can be a source of compassion and comfort.

We pray for all those living with fear and violence, for those experiencing the terrors of war, oppression, and abuse. We pray for all who have suffered from this pandemic – physically, economically, emotionally, and mentally. Help us to be agents of justice and a source of help and hope.

As Jesus was open to the wisdom of the Syrophoenician woman, may we be open to the voices of wisdom around us. Help us to look past our cultural assumptions and our fear of change so that we can transform our lives in a way that transforms the world.

All these things we ask in the name of Jesus, who urges us to see the world through the eyes of compassion and justice, and in the words he taught his disciples:

Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kin-dom come, thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread, And forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.
For thine is the kin-dom, the power and the glory,
Forever and ever, Amen.

Invitation to Offer        Rev. Kim

Engaging the wholeness of life is what God is all about. Our ministry as a church is to accompany others in this journey toward wholeness and so we offer our time, talents and treasures knowing that we are all God’s beloved children. If you are not on PAR and wish to send in your offering and donations, you can drop them in the mailbox by the kitchen door of the church or mail them to BCUC. You can also send in your support through e-transfer. Thank you for your continued love and support to BCUC.

Offertory Prayer

Teach us God to offer the very best of who we are. Through these gifts, may we offer hope, joy and healing to a world so much in need. Receive what we offer in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

Sending Forth  Rev. Kim

Go from this place like the Syrophoenician woman:
bold, daring, ready to take a risk.

Go to be a blessing!
Be people of courage!
Be people of healing and love!

Go to bless others because you have been blessed
and tell the world that God: Creator, Redeemer, Sustainer
loves us all! Amen. 

Hymn:    “Bless Now O God the Journey”  - Voices United #633

1      Bless now, O God, the Journey
that all your people make,
the path through noise and silence,
the way of give and take.
The trail is found in desert
and winds the mountain round,
then leads beside still waters,
the road where faith is found.

2      Bless sojourners and pilgrims
who share this winding way,
whose hope burns through the terrors,
whose love sustains the day.
We yearn for holy freedom
while often we are bound.
Together we are seeking
the road where faith is found.

3      Divine Eternal Lover,
you meet us on the road.
We wait for lands of promise
where milk and honey flow.
But waiting not for places,
you meet us all around.
Our covenant is written
on roads, as faith is found.

Words © 1989 Sylvia Dunstan, GIA pub,  Music: 1898 Basil Harwood
Song #08081 reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved 

Departing Music: Thank You for the Music – ABBA                 Abe:instrumental

So I say Thank you for the music, the songs I'm singing
Thanks for all the joy they're bringing
Who can live without it? I ask in all honesty
What would life be?
Without a song or a dance, what are we?
So I say thank you for the music
For giving it to me

Songwriters: Benny Andersson & Bjorn Ulvaeus © 1978 Universal Music Publishing
All rights reserved

 

Zoom Fellowship – 11 am 

Sunday school activities - September 5, 2021

Reading of the story: God sends the holy spirit

Theme Discussion

In today’s story we see the Holy Spirit giving the apostles the ability to talk in all languages so that they can share God’s teachings with everyone. When they were filled with the Holy Spirit, they were capable of performing miracles to help people and open their hearts. 

When the people heard the apostles speaking in their own language, they became believers, and many wanted to be baptized.

The Holy Spirit is always around us and helping us and we often don’t notice. It can help you get the confidence to talk to new people, or do scary things. It can help when you’re having trouble remembering something. You can also give the gift of the Holy Spirit to others. This happens when you can help someone who’s hurt or sad, or when someone’s lost and you tell them where to go. 

How do you think the apostles felt when they were able to talk to everyone and spread God’s teachings to everyone?

How has the Holy Spirit helped you or your friends and family?

How have you shared the Holy Spirit with people?

Craft

For today’s craft you’ll need one of the colouring pages, colouring tools, scissors, string or yarn, and glue or tape. 

Colour the kite shaped colouring page however you like, then cut out the kite. Next cut 3 pieces of string or yarn about 8 inches long, attach them to the longest point to make a tail for your kite. You can continue to add tails or decorate your kite however you’d like.

Have you ever thought about how kites fly? They get lifted up by the wind, we can’t see the wind but we can see it working. In this way the wind is similar to the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is always around us and with us and we just can’t see it. We can’t see the wind but we can see it’s great power, we also can’t see the Holy Spirit but we can see the good that it does.

If you attach another string to the front of your kite and find an open place you can try to fly it, it will have to be a very windy day to fly since it’s just a paper kite.

Colouring sheets

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Sunday Worship Service - August 29, 2021

 BELLS CORNERS UNITED CHURCH

14th SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST

August 29, 2021             Celebration of Baptism

The video recording of this service can be found here.
You can also dial-in by phone to listen to the audio recording at 613-820-8104.

Gathering Music: Out of Deep Unordered Water – Voices United #453          Instrumental

Words © 1965 Fred Kaan, Hope Publishing, Music © 1974 Ron Klusmeier
Song #44009 & 80440 Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved

Welcome & Centering for Worship     Rev. Kim. Vidal

Good day everyone! On behalf of BCUC, I welcome and greet you in the name of Jesus Christ on this 14th Sunday after Pentecost. Today we are happy to welcome the families of Elly Crow and Conor Morris as we celebrate the baptism of their child, Cian James Morris during the onsite service in the sanctuary. Wherever you are, whether you are joining us via online, or onsite, or even reading the printed text of the service in the comfort of your homes, we are glad that you have joined us today.

As we continue to be under pandemic restrictions, please be reminded that the work of the church carries on. Please take time to keep in touch with each other through prayers, phone calls, emails or via Zoom. Check also the many announcements on our website at bcuc.org to keep you informed and give you opportunities to respond.

Our sanctuary has re-opened for in-person worship service on Sunday at 10 am with a maximum number of 50 people. The Public Health recommends staying at home but if you wish to attend the service, you are most welcome. The usual health protocols will be in place which include masking, social distancing, hand sanitizing and staying home if you feel unwell. Take note too that our worship service will still be offered via Youtube, by email and by telephone.

Friends, at the font and at the table, in the church and in the world, in our tears and in our laughter, we meet Christ. Let us come as faithful people, centering ourselves in God as we worship together.

Lighting of the Christ Candle       Acolytes: Mandy & Meighen Crow

Friends, as we light this Christ candle, remember the promise expressed by these words: “The voice of God is over the waters; the God of glory thunders, God’s spirit over mighty waters. The voice of God is powerful; the voice of God is full of majesty.”   (Psalm 29: 3-4)

Call to Gather & Opening Prayer     Rev. Lorrie Lowes

(Inspired by the writing of Gord Dunbar, Gathering ACE 2016-17. Used with permission)

Come and listen: to the beat of water in your veins,
the very stuff of life within us all.
Come and drink: the beauty of rain-washed earth,
the awesome wonder of God’s holy glory drawn in light.
Come and see: the baptismal waters of promise and of covenant,
The proclamation of God’s power in humble relation.
Come let us worship God who calls us by our name! 

Let us pray…
Holy God, you have fashioned and formed us in your image, calling us by name.
You fire in us a shining glaze that reflects your tender loving care.
We ask that you pour your love upon us, a refreshing, cleansing water
calling out all that is Christ in us, shining into our world.

Remind us in our gathering today that we are your beloved,
for we see your love reflected in ourselves and in one another.
In the name of God: Creator, Redeemer, Sustainer, we pray. Amen.

Hymn:   Worship the Lord - Voices United #401    Ellen, Chris, Bernice & Angela

Refrain:
Worship the Lord (worship the Lord)
praise the Creator, the Spirit, the Son,
raising our hands (raising our hands)
in devotion to God who is one!

1 Raising our hands as a sign of rejoicing,
and with our lips our togetherness voicing,
giving ourselves to a life of creativeness,
worship and work must be one! R

2 Praying and training that we be a blessing,
and by our workmanship daily confessing:
we are committed to serving humanity,
worship and work must be one! R

3 Called to be partners with God in creation,
honouring Christ as the Lord of the nation,
we must be ready for risk and for sacrifice,
worship and work must be one! R

4 Bringing the bread and the wine to the table,
asking that we may be led and enabled,
truly united to build new communities,
worship and work must be one! R

5 Now in response to the life you are giving,
help us, Creator, to offer our living,
seeking a just and a healing society,
worship and work must be one! R

Words © 1972 Fred Kaan, Hope Publishing, Music © 1977 Ron Klusmeier
Song #59171 & 80567 Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved

Storytime  Rev. Lorrie

Summer is almost over for another year and school will be starting soon! Have you had a good summer vacation? I know that my grandkids found it better than last year because there were more activities open – like day camps and even sleepover camp!

I think kids all over the world really missed those kinds of activities last summer when everyone was locked down because of the pandemic. You might remember hearing about a day camp that happens in the little village of Chipembi in Zambia – the village we are in a three-way partnership with – BCUC, Emmanuel UC in Ottawa, and the church in Chipembi. For several summers, young adults from Ottawa traveled to Zambia and worked with young adults in the village to plan a day camp that was a bit like our Camp Awesome. More than 100 children went to the camp from Chipembi and from other villages in the area. It was a highlight of the year for them! Well, last summer, the pandemic meant that there was no Camp Chipembi there, just like there were no day camps here in Ontario. Well, this summer, Camp Chipembi was back – a little bit different but still lots of fun. Our partners at Emmanuel made a little video to show us how it went. You might see a familiar face in here!

Camp Chipembi 2021 video   

Preparations

In April 2021, it was decided that, after a year off due to the pandemic, Camp Chipembi would proceed this year.  With the disruption of life in general and school in particular for the children in Chipembi, Omega Bula, our prime contact in Chipembi, felt that it was important to hold the camp.

One thing for certain was that, given the situation with COVID 19, we would not be sending young people to participate as leaders in the camp this year and possibly for several years to come.  We would, however, continue to provide financial support for the camp and explore ways of having “virtual leaders” participate in the camp.

In early June, Emmanuel started a fund raising campaign to provide t-shirts, face masks and lunches for the children at the camp.  Funds for other elements of the camp had been raised previously and events such as the online Christmas Market – Just Gifts.

Between some folks at Emmanuel and others at Bells Corners United (a third member of the partnership), we created a number of virtual leader videos with stories, songs and crafts.  Due to the uncertainty of the internet in Chipembi and the size of the files transmitted, only a small number of the videos were received successfully.

Planning

From July 3 – 6, 2021, Omega held a Camp Leaders’ Planning and Training session at her farm in Chipembi.  Because Omega was going to be back in Canada for cancer treatments during the camp, Muyunda Zileni was recruited to be the Camp Director.  In all, there were 12 leaders planning and running the camp.

The main goal of the camp was to rebuild the community from the effects of COVID and mining activities nearby and as such the theme was “Together We Can Overcome”.

COVID 19 had created havoc in the community and, at the time, very little vaccinating had been done.  The mining activities had started in nearby villages within Chipembi and were having a negative effect on the community.  People had relocated to the mining areas to earn a living, leaving their children unattended.  In the camp planning, the leaders had to consider that many of the participants would be arriving unkempt, late and hungry.

In the planning of the camp, the usual COVID precautions were to be followed with crafts and games being done in small groups.  Only morning devotions, held in the church sanctuary, would include the camp as a whole.

The Camp

The camp was held from August 2 – 6, 2021.  With 100 kids in attendance.

(video from Day 1 in the sanctuary)

Over the course of the 5 days, the children listened to stories, made crafts, sang songs and played games (pictures of the crafts) (videos of the group singing and playing games).

Winners never quit.  Quitters never win
Oh oh ooooh - We can win
By Acting together, acting together
Oh oh ooooh - We can win 

Celebration of Baptism: Cian James Morris

Parents: Elly Crow & Conor Morris
Godparents: Meighen Crow & Joseph Cacoilo

In our onsite worship service, we welcome Cian James Roy Morris, child of Elly Crow and Conor Morris, grandson of Mandy & Pete Crow, Jan and John Blagg, Frank Morris and Tracy Bankley Morris, and great grandson of Ruth & Ian Howes and Marion and Roy Blatherwick.  Today we welcome him into our church family through the sacrament of baptism. We also welcome the godparents, Meighen Crow and Joseph Cacoilo. Let our offer our support, our prayers and our congratulations to Cian and his family on this momentous occasion.

Hymn:  I Have Called You by Your Name – More Voices #161 – BCUC Choir

1 I have called you by your name, you are mine;
I have gifted you and ask you now to shine.
I will not abandon you; all my promises are true.
You are gifted, called, and chosen; you are mine.

2 I will help you learn my name as you go;
read it written in my people, help them grow.
Pour the water in my name, speak the word your soul can claim,
offer Jesus’ body given long ago.

3 I know you will need my touch as you go;
feel it pulsing in creation’s ebb and flow.
Like the woman reaching out, choosing faith in spite of doubt,
hold the hem of Jesus’ robe, then let it go.

4 I have given you a name, it is mine;
I have given you my Spirit as a sign.
With my wonder in your soul, make my wounded children whole;
go and tell my precious people they are mine.

Words and Music © 1998 Daniel Charles Damon
Song #54619 Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved

Prayer for Illumination        Reader: Sue Morrison

God of Wisdom, as we ponder on your Word, remind us again that we are your beloved children. Open us to receive your spirit of grace and inspire us to embrace your life-giving Word. Amen.

Readings from the New Testament: (NRSV)   The Baptism of Jesus – Mark 1: 9-11

9 In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. 10 And just as he was coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending like a dove on him. 11 And a voice came from heaven, “You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.”

All are Children of God– Galatians 3: 26-29

26 for in Christ Jesus you are all children of God through faith. 27 As many of you as were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. 28 There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus. 29 And if you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s offspring, heirs according to the promise.

May we find ourselves renewed through these ancient words of faith. Thanks be to God!

Sermon   “Affirmed by Love: Immersed in Grace!” Rev. Kim Vidal

At first, I thought it was for real. But I was relieved to learn that it actually was just a staged photo that meant to be funny! I’m referring to the photo of Fr. Stephen Klasek of the Diocese of Nashville, TN that went viral using a water gun to baptize an infant when the COVID-19 pandemic was on its rise. The photo received many criticisms – both good and controversial. The parish facebook post went to explain that the family had requested for Fr. Klasek to do this pose as copied from several posts of priests circulating around the internet. It was not his original idea. He agreed because he thought it was funny. The water in the water gun is not holy water and was squirted towards the dad and not the baby for humor impact.

The photo garnered millions of views and was posted in several websites and memes. While some took this story to be lighthearted and funny, others criticized the photos, suggesting they seemed to make light of the sacrament of baptism or underestimate clergy ministry. Today we have witnessed the baptism of Cian James Morris and aren’t you glad I did not use a water gun to baptize him? (But great grandpa Ian might try it with Cian at home!)

          In our gospel reading this morning, Jesus was baptized by John the Baptizer at Jordan River. Here he makes his first public appearance on the stage of human history.  The baptismal account of Jesus was the opening act in the book of Mark. Mark introduces us to Jesus as a thirty-year-old something, and we don’t have a clue as to what happened prior to his baptism. When Jesus stands up, according to Mark, the waters of the Jordan dripping down his face, he saw the heavens torn apart. Torn apart! Mark uses a form of the Greek verb schitzo – the same root we find in the word schism and schizophrenia. It is a more violent and dramatic word than just the word “open”. Its message tells us that through Jesus’ baptism, God ‘s presence and power are on the loose in the world, nothing will be the same again. There was also the presence of the Spirit descending like a dove that rested upon Jesus’ head. The Spirit comes, not as an all-consuming fire of judgment, but in a form of a dove, with the flutter of hopeful, unfurled wings, the symbol of shalom – God’s vision of peace. And a voice from heaven addresses the crowd: “You are my Son, the Beloved, with you I am well pleased.”

          For most of us, one thing that brings us to church on Sunday is the fact that we were baptized through the symbol of water. Since ancient times, water is a symbol of cleansing, healing and renewal.  Water, as we know, is one of the most powerful elements on the face of the earth. But many people do not have a clue as to why baptism is an important sacrament that we still do. Let me share with you a funny story. Before celebrating a baptism, the minister approached the young father and said solemnly, “Baptism is a serious step. Are you sure you’re prepared for it?” "I think so,” the man replied. “My wife has made appetizers and we have a caterer coming to provide plenty of cookies and cakes for our guests.” “I don’t mean that,” the minister replied. “I mean, are you and your wife prepared spiritually?” “Oh sure,” came the reply. “I’ve got a keg of beer and a case of whiskey." Kidding aside, how many of us really understand the meaning of baptism?

The Greek word for baptism is baptizo which means: "To dip, to immerse, to submerge—and the best one for me—to saturate." Someone even said “baptism is like a marinade. We are marinated with water, with light, with God’s grace and blessing.”  "You’ll know it when it happens" says the preacher Caspar Green. He notes that “Baptism might just get you wet. Or it might just change your life. In itself, there’s nothing magical about it. Even if it’s a religiously motivated one, with a formal liturgy, with water, with candle, godparents, and the whole works. What makes baptism special is what you do with it after you get out of the water…” Jesus began his ministry on earth after his baptism! He went about doing good as the song says – healing the sick, affirming the marginalized, teaching the Good News, socializing with his friends. Baptism is a revelation of God’s grace and abounding love.  It is a sacrament through which we become part of the family of faith.  The symbol of water becomes the tide that sweeps us into God’s love; that washes us in to receive the nurture and support of a Christian church, and then washes us out to do the work of Christ in the world.  This water tells us who we are. It tells us that we are affirmed by loved and immersed in grace - that we belong, and that we are connected.  It tells us who we might become.

The apostle Paul’s letter to the Galatians encourages us to look at a deeper meaning of baptism. Paul says that “In Christ Jesus, you are all children of God through faith. For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ.”  Obviously, for Paul, baptism is a sign affirming our identity and relationship to Christ.  Putting on Christ literally means to “clothed yourself with Christ.” Be like Christ to others – no matter who they are. Jesus taught us to be a loving neighbour to both friend and stranger beyond religion, colour of the skin, language, race, status or sexual orientation. Paul went on to say that our baptism makes us all brothers and sisters – siblings in faith. And “in Christ’s family”, according to Eugene Peterson in The Message, “there can be no division into Jew and non-Jew, slave and free, male and female. We are all equal.”

          Some people believe that baptism is an exclusive privilege and a necessary requirement in receiving God’s grace. I don’t think so. I believe that whether one is baptized or not, everyone is welcome in God’s love. Everyone is God’s beloved child. Through baptism, we are provided with the opportunity to commit ourselves to live a life of being in right relationship with God, with others and with ourselves. Yes - baptism offers us to become a member of a faith community with a commitment to follow the ways of Jesus Christ to guide us in making life’s choices. Parents profess their faith on behalf of their children with the hope that their children will later profess their faith after undergoing the rite of confirmation. Through the waters of baptism, we proclaim that our lives can be transformed and renewed over and over again. Water is the visible symbol of God’s grace reminding us that we are affirmed intimately in a relationship of love - a love that is not distant, but real, alive, tender and completely present in that very moment. 

          In the United Church tradition, infant baptism is the primary baptismal practice, but we certainly encourage adult baptism as well which we sometimes call the “believer’s baptism”. We sprinkle candidates with the baptismal water. Other traditions utilize pouring or immersion. I once read a facebook illustration entitled: “Babies’ Perspective on Baptism”. The photo shows a toddler on the phone talking to his friends. The toddler with his big “I’m not kidding you” eyes said: “So today at church, a man wearing a suit dunked me in the water trying to drown me! No! I am not joking! My family just stood there taking pictures!” While sprinkling is part of our United Church tradition, whatever the practice or mode, no matter how much water is used, and regardless of the location of the event -- the Spirit, like the dove descending on Jesus in Mark, is present in the act of baptism and infusing the baptized with the possibilities of a new beginning to follow Jesus’ way of life. And that is more powerful than any flowing water on the face of the Earth.

Baptism is not just a sentimental ritual that we perform because it makes for Kodak moments. Baptism is a human, physical ritual to remind us of the divine transformation soon to take place in us through our connection with Jesus’ baptism. Theologian and preacher Walter Brueggemann wonderfully capture this connection in his book, Prayers for a Privileged People. This is what he says: “We become aware, out of Jesus’ baptism, of a new world, a world of grace and goodness, a world of freedom and opportunity, a world of justice and mercy and forgiveness, all from that moment of water . . . and the dove and the name and the power. And we remember our own baptism when we were named and claimed, and called to newness. In our moment of water… our world began again: we are grafted to God’s new governance; we are summoned into new obedience; we are rooted in fresh goodness and forgiveness. We hear the splash of water and pause, and begin again . . . not burdened by what is old, not bewitched by what is failed, not cowed by what threatens us. Now is our time for newness and hope and love and forgiveness, and we, after him, reenter your newness yet again.”  

          Today, baby Cian, his mom, Elly and dad, Conor, his whole family from both sides and his godparents came with him to these waters, filled with expectations and hopes. But the one that bubbles up for us today is the expectation that in these waters, Cian was sprinkled in the life of God through the story of God’s people. This water is full of our very own stories. Today, Cian becomes one with our stories that will help him grow in hope, in faith and in love.

       Baptism does not protect us from the harsh realities of life. Like all human beings, we will pass through the waters of life's difficulties. We will cross the rivers of life's pains, and we will walk through the joys and challenges of being human. But we also recognize that God will go with us, and calls us by name as God called on Jesus that day of his baptism. As the prophet Isaiah proclaims, God says to you and me:

“When you pass through the waters, I will be with you.
When you pass through the rivers, they shall not overwhelm you.
When you walk through the fire, the flame shall not consume you.
I have called you by name, and you are mine.”

Mark added to Isaiah’s words. God declares: “You are my child, my beloved; with you I am well pleased.” We need to hear this affirmation over and over again. These are life-giving words that transform our lives forever. Jesus heard them and his life was changed forever. They will do the same for Cian. We are affirmed by God’s love. We are forever immersed in God’s grace. Thanks be to God! Amen.

Sources of my sermon:

Debbie Thomas, Thin Places, Deep Water. http://www.journeywithjesus.net/
Rev. Dr. Scott Black-Johnston, Sermon “How’s the Water?” Day1.org.
Walter Brueggemann, Prayer for a Privileged People.
Facebook illustration

Prayers of the People & the Lord’s Prayer   Rev. Kim

Let us gather our hearts in prayer.

Gracious God, your spirit moves over the waters to bring forth life. Your Spirit rains and pours and floods in rivers, in oceans, in baptismal fonts - cleansing, purifying, anointing all creation, to live your goodness and love.

Like Cian, you have called us by our names and we respond with joy, knowing that we are your beloved children. We come to your font of grace to celebrate and to give thanks for calling us your beloved. Open our hearts as we pray, and call us to a new faithfulness in our baptism. Inspire each one of us to show forth our loving kindness in our hurting world, and bring healing and peace to all your people.

Loving God, baptize us with the water of love, service and hospitality. Empower us to be your bringers of good news to others. May our feet move in directions of service. May our hands seek to do the work of justice. May our hearts be shaped to see love and connection.

Healing God, baptize us with the waters of compassion and wholeness. We pray for those who seek healing and recovery from illnesses, from grief, from despair. We pray for those for those who are in the midst of health challenges; for those awaiting surgery and other medical procedures; for those who are recovering in hospitals and in home; bring comfort for those who are grieving the loss of loved ones. We pray for those in long-term care facilities and nursing homes, those who are still affected by the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic and the many of us who seek your healing grace. And now in silence, hear the deepest concerns of our hearts. (Moment of Silence)

Compassionate God, we pray for our communities, the neighbouring places, our city, our province and our country as a whole. Baptize us with the waters of justice so that the poor, the lonely and grieving, the homeless and all those pushed to society’s margins can once again be gathered into the heart of neighbourhood. 

Justice-seeking God, baptize our world with the waters of compassion, hope and strength so that evil systems and acts of terror will come crashing down replacing them with systems of sharing, of peaceful endeavours and acts of grace. We pray for the people in Haiti especially those who are suffering due to the massive earthquake that destroyed livelihood and killed many people. We pray for peace in the world particularly in Afghanistan as terror, violence and fear sweep the country. We pray for the Afghan people facing great uncertainty, displacement and death particularly for women, girls and ethnic and religious minorities. We pray for the peacekeepers from many parts of world and the families of the US service members and Afghan citizens who died. We pray safety for those who are fleeing from the country that they may find refuge.

Ever-Present God, affirm and baptize us with the water and spirit and fire of your love We, whom you call as your beloved may spread the good news of Jesus through our words and our actions. Implore us to rekindle hope, transform our ways and offer fresh possibilities. These we ask in the name of Jesus Christ, baptized in the waters of Jordan, who taught us this ancient prayer that we recite together:

Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kin-dom come, thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread, And forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.
For thine is the kin-dom, the power and the glory,
Forever and ever, Amen.

Invitation to Offer         Rev. Lorrie

On a morning like this, when we celebrate the blessing of a new baby and the joy of baptism, we are reminded to share our many blessings with others. And so, we take this time to offer our gifts of time, talents and treasures. If you are not on PAR and wish to send in your offering and donations, you can drop them in the mailbox by the kitchen door of the church or mail them to BCUC. You can also send in your support through e-transfer. Thank you for your continued love and support to BCUC.

Offertory Prayer    (Glad Faith Klassen, Gathering, Pentecost 1, 2021 Year B. Used with permission)

God our Creator, giver of all good and perfect gifts, we bring our praise for who you are, the one who is and was and is to come. You continue the work of creating, of giving and forgiving, and we give thanks for it all, embracing your grace and love. Help us on our journey to live the mystery of being born of water and spirit. Be patient with us as we learn to embrace your grace and extend it to others. We offer up to you all we are, all we have, and all we are becoming, in the name of Jesus, our perfect example. Amen.

Sending Forth  Rev. Kim        (Inspired by the prayers of Rev. Dawn Hutchings and Rev. Beth Johnson, Gathering 2016-17. Used with permission)

Let the waters of baptism sooth you, nourish you,
and sustain you for all the possibilities yet to come!
We are the beloved children of a Creator who rejoices with us!
Listen closely. Hear the flapping of the wings of a dove
as the Holy Spirit alights upon you.
We gladly receive the blessings of possibility!
Go forth as God’s baptized people,
knowing that the refreshing waters
will sustain you in your journey. Amen.

Hymn:   Let All Things Now Living - Voices United #242      BCUC Quartet, Erin:flute

Let all things now living a song of thanksgiving
To God the creator triumphantly raise.
Who fashioned and made us, protected and stayed us,
By guiding us on to the end of our days.
God’s banners are o'er us, pure light goes before us,
A pillar of fire shining forth in the night.
Till shadows have vanished and darkness is banished
As forward we travel from light into Light.

By law God enforces, the stars in their courses
And sun in its orbit obediently shine;
The hills and the mountains, the rivers and fountains,
The depths of the ocean proclaim God divine.
We, too, should be voicing our love and rejoicing;
With glad adoration a song let us raise
Till all things now living unite in thanksgiving:
To God in the highest, hosanna and praise!"

Words and Descant © 1939 Katherine Davis, traditional Welsh melody
Song #06098 Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved

Departing Music: Take Up This Song - More Voices #213       Ellen, Chris, Bernice & Angela

Take up this song of *peace and go into the world.
Take up this song of *peace in ev’ry moment.
In ev’ry moment of the journey, we’re laying down our lives,
Lay them down, in *peace lay them down,
And take up this song.
*hope, faith, love

Words & Music © 2005 Laura Herman; Arr. © 2006 Robin King;
Song # 84482 Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved  

Zoom Fellowship – 11 am

Sunday school activities - August 29, 2021

Song about the story: Deuteronomy 6:4-9 song

Story and Discussion

Today’s story is about Moses and the most important commandment that God gave him. When Moses was wandering through the desert with the Israelites God gave him commandments to follow. Moses told the Israelites about all the commandments and he made sure to tell them all about the most important one, Moses said “Listen up, everybody! God is our God, the one true God! And here’s what we’re asked to do: Love God with everything we’ve got, love God with your whole heart, with all your soul, with every ounce of strength you’ve got. Remember what God asks of you, memorize it. Tell God’s words to your children. Talk about God’s words when you wake up in the morning, when you’re sitting still or walking around, when you go to bed at night. Write them down and tie them to your finger, to your forehead. Write them at the doorway of your home, and at the entryway to your town, so whenever you’re going in or out, you see God’s words, and you remember to love God.”

That commandment was followed by Moses and the Israelites and we should follow it too. It’s such an important commandment because if you follow it then you’ll be following the other commandments too.

How do you think the Israelites felt when they heard this commandment? How did you feel?

Why do you think loving God with our whole self is what God wants most from us?

How can you follow this commandment at home, in school, or with friends and family?

Craft

For this craft you’ll need Post it notes and something to write and draw with.

God told the Israelites to remember what God asked of them. To help us remember what God asks of us we’re going to write on the Post it notes, you can write things like “Love God” or draw a heart, whatever helps you remember. 

God told the Israelites to put their reminders on their doorways and on their foreheads. Can you think of any good places to put your reminders? You could put them on the mirror in the bathroom or on your bed.

These Post it notes will remind you, your family, and your friends to love God.

Colouring sheets

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Sunday Worship Service - August 22, 2021

 BELLS CORNERS UNITED CHURCH

13th SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST

August 22, 2021

Worship Leader: Rev. Lorrie Lowes
Music: Abe TeGrotenhuis 

Sermon Theme: Shake the Dust From Your Feet 

The video recording of this service can be found here.
You can also dial-in by phone to listen to the audio recording at 613-820-8104.

Gathering Music: Be Thou My Vision – arr: Mark Hayes     Ellen, Chris, Bernice & Angela

1.      Be thou my vision, O joy of my heart
Naught be all else to me, save that thou art
Thou my best thought, by day or by night
Waking or sleeping, thy presence my light

2.      Be thou my wisdom, my calm in all strife
I ever with thee and thou in my life
Thou loving parent, thy child may I be
Thou in me dwelling and I one with thee

3.      Be thou my battle shield, sword for the fight
be thou my dignity, thou my delight
thou my soul’s shelter, thou my high tower
raise thou me heavenward, O power of my power

4.      Riches I heed not, nor vain, empty praise
Thou mine inheritance, now and always
Thou and thou only first in my heart
Great God of heaven, my treasure thou art

5.      Great God of heaven, after victory won
May I reach heaven's joys, O bright heaven's sun
Heart of my own heart, whatever befall
Still be my vision, O ruler of all

Song #117636 Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved

Welcome & Centering for Worship

Good morning! On behalf of BCUC, I welcome you to our worship service in the name of Jesus, our guide and companion, on this 13th Sunday after Pentecost. I’m so glad that you have joined us for worship!

As we continue to be under pandemic restrictions, please be reminded that the work of the church carries on. Take time to keep in touch with each other through prayers, phone calls, emails or Zoom. As well, don’t forget to check the many announcements on our website at bcuc.org to keep you informed and give you opportunities to respond.

Our sanctuary has re-opened for in-person worship service on Sunday at 10 am with a maximum number of 50 people. If you wish to attend the service and feel safe and comfortable doing so, we will be happy to see you! For the safety of all attendees, the usual health protocols will continue to be in place including masking, social distancing, hand sanitizing and staying home if you feel unwell. Take note too that our worship service will still be offered via YouTube, by email, and by telephone.

Friends, whether you are joining us in the sanctuary on Sunday morning or connecting through the wonders of technology at a different time or place, together, we are the church, united in faith. Let us join our hearts as we centre ourselves for worship.

Lighting of the Christ Candle      Acolytes: Rick and Sue Morrison

 Throughout these days when “gathering” for worship does not always mean that we are together in one place, let us pause to remember that we are connected by God’s love, no matter how scattered around the world we may be. We light this candle as a reminder that God is always with us, and to centre our hearts and minds for worship.

Call to Gather & Opening Prayer

We gather now to worship God: Kind Creator, Compassionate Friend, Ever-present Spirit.

God’s promise is to meet us here and to go with us as we journey onward, helping us to be faithful disciples of Jesus, empowered by the Spirit, here in this holy place and to the ends of the earth.

With love and gratitude, let us worship God.[1]

Let us pray:

Holy One,
Renew us again in worship. Renew us with the strength to conquer all that is ahead this week. Renew us. Fill us. Bless us with your spirit so we may touch your world with a heavenly kiss. Amen.[2]

Hymn: God, We Praise You for the Morning -  Voices United #415   Susan, Mary & Bram

6.    God we praise you for the morning;
Hope springs for with each new day,
New beginning, prayer and promise,
Joy in work and in play. 

7.    God, we praise you for creation,
Mountains, seas, and prairie land.
Waking souls find joy and healing
In your bountiful hand.

8.    God, we praise you for compassion,
All the loving that you show;
Human touching, tears, and laughter,
Help your children to grow. 

9.    God, we praise you for your Spirit,
Comforter and daily friend,
Restless searcher, gentle teacher,
Strength and courage you send. 

10.God, we praise you for the Saviour,
Come that we may know your ways.
In his loving, dying, rising,
Christ is Lord of our days. 

11.Hallelujah, hallelujah!
Hallelujah, hallelujah!
Hallelujah, hallelujah!
Christ is Lord of our days!

Words & Music © 1984 Jim and Jean Strathdee, Desert Flower Music
Song #59964 Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved

Storytime:  Erin Berard

Guess what?! We're leaving on a camping trip this afternoon!  I’m very excited.  I'm just checking that we've got everything we need packed.  The cooler, sleeping bags, stove and cooking tools, our clothes, and tent are already in the van.  And in this bag I've got the flashlights, sunscreen, bug spray, towels, some books and games.  Yes, I think I'm good to go!

You know, though, in today's Bible passage we'll hear how Jesus sends the disciples out to teach and heal in the nearby villages and basically tells them not to take any provisions with them - no food, no tent, no money!  Wow - they'd really have to trust that God had their backs.   But really, where would they stay?  How would they get food? 

I guess Jesus' plan was that without any supplies, they'd have to actually talk to people and get to know people in these other villages, so the villagers would trust the disciples and welcome them in.  Just like, I suppose, if I'd forgotten matches or dish soap or something, and I'm out at the campground, I could ask someone at a neighbouring campsite.  I think Jesus did a lot of important teaching just being with people, hearing about their worries or illnesses, and especially sharing a meal.

I suppose, though, that some people might not be willing or able to share what they have or be nervous around strangers (Covid sure makes that even harder).  Actually, Jesus tells his disciples to expect that, but not to stress out about it, and just move on and try to make a connection with someone else. When Jesus travelled to the town where he grew up and tried to teach them about God's kin-dom, most of his old neighbours just saw him as 'Mary and Joseph's' kid, and didn't really listen to his message and weren't willing to be helped and healed.  So Jesus and the disciples just picked up and moved on.

I wonder how you'd react if a new kid in the neighbourhood approached you looking to talk, wanting to play, or asking for help?  How can I be welcoming to the new students in classes this Fall?  When I meet new people, do I sometimes jump to conclusions about what they’re going to be like? And, I wonder, what am I missing out on if I do turn people down or don't bother getting to know them?

Hmmm… some things to think about when I'm out on a hike later today…

Hymn:  “One More Step”   -  Voices United  #639                   BCUC choir

1.One more step along the world I go;
one more step along the world I go,
From the old things to the new,
keep me traveling along with you.
And it’s from the old I travel to the new,
keep me traveling along with you. 

2.‘Round the corner of the world I turn,
more and more about the world I learn;
all the new things that I see;
you’ll be looking at along with me.
And it’s from the old I travel to the new,
keep me traveling along with you.

3.As I travel through the bad and good,
keep me traveling the way I should;
where I see no way to go,
you’ll be telling me the way, I know.
And it’s from the old I travel to the new, keep me traveling along with you.

4.Give me courage when the world is rough;
keep me loving though the world is tough;
leap and sing in all I do,
keep me traveling along with you.
And it’s from the old I travel to the new,
keep me traveling along with you. 

5.You are older than the world can be,
You are younger than the life in me,
Ever old and ever new,
keep me traveling along with with you:
And it’s from the old I travel to the new;
keep me traveling along with you.

Words and Music; Sydney Carter        © 1971, Stainer & Bell Ltd          Song # 03216
Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved

Prayer for Illumination        Reader: John Boivin

May the reading of your word, O God, give us inspiration, hope, and confidence. Amen.

Reading: Mark 6: 1-13 The Rejection of Jesus at Nazareth

6 He left that place and came to his hometown, and his disciples followed him. 2 On the sabbath he began to teach in the synagogue, and many who heard him were astounded. They said, “Where did this man get all this? What is this wisdom that has been given to him? What deeds of power are being done by his hands! 3 Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary and brother of James and Joses and Judas and Simon, and are not his sisters here with us?” And they took offense at him. 4 Then Jesus said to them, “Prophets are not without honor, except in their hometown, and among their own kin, and in their own house.” 5 And he could do no deed of power there, except that he laid his hands on a few sick people and cured them. 6 And he was amazed at their unbelief.

The Mission of the Twelve

Then he went about among the villages teaching. 7 He called the twelve and began to send them out two by two, and gave them authority over the unclean spirits. 8 He ordered them to take nothing for their journey except a staff; no bread, no bag, no money in their belts; 9 but to wear sandals and not to put on two tunics. 10 He said to them, “Wherever you enter a house, stay there until you leave the place. 11 If any place will not welcome you and they refuse to hear you, as you leave, shake off the dust that is on your feet as a testimony against them.” 12 So they went out and proclaimed that all should repent. 13 They cast out many demons, and anointed with oil many who were sick and cured them.

May we find wisdom for today in these ancient words.

Sermon:  “Tough Crowd!”

It all started out well.

Way back when, I was accepted at McMaster University into a program where I earned two degrees concurrently – a Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor of Social Work. It was a tough program to get into and my family was really proud of me.  My parents hadn’t had the opportunity to go to university so you can imagine how excited they were and how interested in the work I was doing. They loved to hear stories about the families and the kids I was working with. Well, sometime after graduation, I was visiting home when my brother was going through a period in his life that was causing grief for those around him, including my parents. Looking through my new eyes as a Social Worker, I made some observations and probably even suggested some places where he might get help.

Whew! Big mistake!

Just who did I think I was? Just because I worked with people who needed help, doesn’t mean that everybody needs that kind of help – and certainly not anyone from our family!

Much as we love our families, sometimes it’s hard to go home again. Even though we grow up and manage careers and families, we will always be that same “child” in the eyes of our parents, our siblings, and Mrs. Smith next door. Most of the time, that’s a good thing, a comforting thing.

Don’t get me wrong, they were all still proud of me – as long as I didn’t try to challenge their view of the world.

When I read this story from the Gospel of Mark, I can empathize with Jesus. He had been creating quite a stir in the area with his charismatic leadership, his teaching – and of course all those healing miracles! He headed home to Nazareth, maybe for a little break. There’s nothing like mom’s home cooking and time amongst family and friends to help recharge your batteries.  I bet they were really happy to see him and excited to hear all about his new ministry, his new career as a rabbi. Their small town boy had really done big things! The stories of his mission would certainly have made their way to this town ahead of him.

We hear in this passage today that his disciples followed him to Nazareth. What a great time they would have! He would have been happy to introduce them to his family and friends. I can imagine they spent a few days sharing stories of Jesus as a little boy. Mary would have been fussing around, making all of his favourite dishes.  What a great visit!

Now, the custom of the time was that visiting teachers would be asked to read and interpret scripture in the synagogue if they were there on the Sabbath.  So, it makes perfect sense that Jesus would have been asked to do this. And they were amazed at his eloquence – “astounded” is the word the NRSV Bible uses. He was so wise! He had done so many marvelous things! And he was just “one of us”.

It all started out well.

Mark doesn’t tell us what happened to change the attitude of the congregation that day, just that, suddenly, they “took offense at him.” The story is told the same way in the book of Matthew. Luke also tells the story but he adds some details. Perhaps we can borrow from Luke to give us a possible explanation. I am reading from Luke 4: 16-22:

“When he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up, he went to the synagogue on the sabbath day, as was his custom. He stood up to read, and the scroll of the prophet Isaiah was given to him. He unrolled the scroll and found the place where it was written:

“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour.”

And he rolled up the scroll, gave it back to the attendant, and sat down. The eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed on him. Then he began to say to them, “Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”

Well, that caused quite a stir! “Isn’t this the carpenter? He’s that kid who grew up down the street from us - Mary’s boy (notice they don’t call him Joseph’s boy, which would have been the usual custom at the time). We know his whole family, they are just like us. What makes him think he’s so special?”

Tough crowd!

So tough, in fact that he is unable to do much there. He laid hands on a few sick people and cured them. “And he was amazed at their unbelief,” says the author of Mark. It was a strong case of “familiarity breeds contempt.” The people in Nazareth were unable to hear the word of God because it came from the mouth of a carpenter’s son, the boy who grew up down the road, the son of Mary - whose parentage was questionable.

We might think that’s crazy! This was Jesus speaking! How could they not know that they were hearing the Word of God? But then, I wonder, would we have been any different? Are we any different today? Is God speaking to us today? Would we recognize it if He did?

I met a young woman, recently, who is going through a difficult period in her life. She is a single mom and has had to make some pretty significant changes in the past while. Sometimes, when she is faced with hard decisions, she tells me, she prays to God, “Just give me a sign! What should I do?” And there are times when she realizes after the fact that she had been given many signs - an advertisement for a job right below the announcement of an event she wanted to attend… a chance meeting with a friend of a friend who just happened to know about that job opening … her mother telling her, “You would be really good at a job like this…”  And still she asked God to give her a sign. Sometimes, she told me she prays to God “You know I’m really stupid God, I’m just not seeing the signs. You’re going to have to make it really hit me over the head.” She couldn’t hear the voice of God because it wasn’t coming in the way she expected to hear it. It was happening in everyday conversations with ordinary people.

She applied for the job, by the way - and got it. She is really happy in this new position and laughs when she looks back at the “signs” that she missed.

And then there is the story - perhaps you’ve heard it - about the man living through an incredible flood in his area. Everyone was told to evacuate but he insisted on staying put. “God will provide!” was his response when they came knocking on his door with the evacuation order. The flood waters rose to the point where the man had to go out on his roof. Some folks came by with a boat and said, “Get in! We will take you to safety.” but… “God will provide!” was his only response. A while later he was clinging to the very peak of his roof while the water swirled around him and a helicopter flew overhead. “We are going to lower a rope and harness to you! Strap yourself in and we will get you out of here.” Nope… he wasn’t budging, “God will provide!”

Well, that man eventually drowned clinging to his house and when he arrived in heaven to meet God, he said, “Why did you desert me? I waited for you to save me and you let me drown in that flood!”

And God answered, “I sent you an evacuation notice, a boat and a helicopter, what more did you want?”

He couldn’t hear the Word of God because it came from an ordinary worldly source.

The people of Nazareth didn’t recognize God in their midst because that Spirit was housed in the ordinary carpenter who grew up just down the road.

Can you imagine how Jesus must have felt at that moment? This was his home! These were people he loved. He could have gotten angry - maybe tossed a few tables? - or maybe he felt hurt. He might have felt defeated or that he was a failure. I mean, if you can’t help out the folks in your own home town, what chance do you have to change the world? Perhaps he might have stayed on, tried to convince them…

But that wasn’t his reaction at all. Instead, he and his disciples moved on. This time he sent them out, two by two. That must have been a scary thought, having just witnessed what Jesus went through!

But he sent them well prepared. He had a pretty simple set of instructions for them:

Travel in pairs - This way you can support each other and be safe.

Travel light - You have everything you need to do this work - you have the tools for the job within you and the authority over evil. You don’t need to carry extra money or food or clothing. Just a walking stick and a couple of pairs of good walking shoes because you won’t be staying in one place too long.

Live simply - Stay in the first place that welcomes you, don’t go looking for luxury hotels!

And if you experience what I just experienced here in Nazareth, just shake the dust off your feet and move on.

He didn’t send them out to fail but he also didn’t send them out with the unrealistic expectation that everyone would welcome their message with open arms. He showed them, first-hand, how to carry on in the face of failure. And he even gave them a ritual for when it might happen. “Shake the dust off your feet.”

In today’s world it seems hard to tell people around you that you are a Christian, let alone to share the Word of God!  Many people equate that label of “Christian” with the extreme fundamentalist views they read about in the media. Many people believe that “truth” is the same thing as “fact” and that, because the Bible’s stories can’t be proven as historical fact or because some of the books in the Bible contradict each other, then it’s all a pack of lies - no “truth” here.

Tough crowd!

We are blessed to be part of a community of faith that sees the Bible as a collection of books written by people who were trying to make sense of the world with the knowledge they had at the time. A collection of stories that try to make sense of that Great Mystery of creation and community and spirituality and living in right relation with all of it, that Great Mystery that we call God and Spirit and Jesus. We know the people of Old Testament times, or even New Testament times, didn’t have it all figured out. I don’t think we have it all figured out yet - and that’s ok.

We do know that there is a lot of “truth” in those ancient stories - truths that are as important today as they were thousands of years ago.

So, what message does this story from Mark and Matthew and Luke have for us in the 21st century? What “truth” is there for us today?

Let’s take another look at the instructions Jesus gave those disciples as he sent them off to spread the Word:

Travel together - support each other, treat each other with respect, keep each other safe. that’s one of the wonderful benefits of coming here on a Sunday morning - that supportive community we have built together.

Travel light - you have everything you need to bring the Kingdom of God to the world around you. You have the tools for the job within you.

Live simply - you don’t need a flashy light show or a big orchestra to take the Message out there. It’s all about how you live your life, how you are in the world.

If you face a tough crowd - and of course you will from time to time - don’t worry. Don’t fight back. Just shake the dust off your feet and carry on.

Simple instructions for a very powerful life.

Thanks be to God.

Prayers of the People & the Lord’s Prayer

God of us all,

We give thanks for all the blessings in our lives – for summer days, for celebrations, and for the gradual reopening of the world and long-awaited opportunities to spend time with friends and loved ones.

We pray for this planet and for the many situations in the world that are making life scary and difficult for many – forest fires, floods, and earthquakes caused by climate change, oppression, war, and violence caused by human greed for power and possessions. Be with us as we take your message and your Way out into the world as disciples of Jesus. Help us to be steadfast in your message of love, even when faced with tough crowds.

There are so many in this world who are suffering.
We pray for all those who hunger for food – in their bodies or in their souls.
We pray that they will be filled.
We pray for those who suffer injustice, oppression, and discrimination
That they may be lifted.
We pray for all those dealing with grief, sorrow, and loss.
That they may be comforted.
We pray for our families, our friends, and our neighbours, near and far,
That they may be strengthened by your love.
We offer up to you all the blessings and concerns that we share aloud or hold silently in our hearts,
Knowing that you hear each one.
We ask all this as we continue in these familiar words together:

Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kin-dom come, thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread, And forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.
For thine is the kin-dom, the power and the glory,
Forever and ever, Amen.

Invitation to Offer

We take time now to offer our gifts of time, talents and resources to further the mission and ministry of our church.

If you are not on PAR and wish to send in your offering and donations, you can drop them in the mailbox by the kitchen door of the church or mail them to BCUC. You can also send in your support through e-transfer. Thank you for your continued love and support to BCUC.

Offertory Prayer

Take what we offer this morning, O God:

Take our caring for neighbours from a distance; take our phone calls, texts, and social media greetings with our families; take our action of staying home and physical distancing; take all we offer this morning in word, in action, and in donation, blessing us and our giving in Jesus’ name. Amen.[3]

Sending Forth

God send you from here in the power of love.
God keep you filled with the Holy Spirit.
God build in you the reign of Christ.
Amen.[4]

Hymn:   “Go Make a Diff’rence”      - More Voices #209         Music Team

Refrain:  Go make a diff’rence. We can make diff’rence.
               Go make a diff’rence in the world. (2x) 

1.    We are the salt of the earth, called to let the people see,
the love of God for you and me.
We are the light of the world, not to be hidden but be seen.
Go make a diff’rence in the world. 

2.  We are the hands of Christ reaching out to those in need,
The face of God for all to see.
We are the spirit of hope; we are the voice of peace.
Go make a diff’rence in the world.  

3.    So let your love shine on, let it shine for all to see.
Go make a diff’rence in the world.
And the spirit of Christ will be with us as we go.
Go make a diff’rence in the world! 

Words and Music © 1997 Steve Angrisano and Tom Tomaszek                  spiritandsong.com
Song # 82988 Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved

Departing Music: Go Now in Peace – Besig & Price       Ellen, Chris, Bernice & Angela

Song #78821 Reprinted with permission under ONE LICENSE #A-733214. All rights reserved

 

Zoom Fellowship – 11 am

[1] from: Phil Hobbs, Gathering Pentecost 1 2021, p42. Used with permission.

[2] From: Elaine Bidgood Sveet, Gathering Pentecost 1 2015, p33. Used with permission.

[3] Gord Dunbar, Gathering Pentecost 1 2021, p51. Used with permission.

[4] Robin Wardlaw, Gathering Pentecost 1 2021, p53. Used with permission.

Sunday school activities - August 22, 2021

Reading of the story: Lydia is baptized

Theme discussion

Today’s story is a story of hospitality, Lydia showed hospitality in a number of ways. She opened her heart to God and she opened her home to Paul. Hospitality is more than having people over to your house though. It’s opening our lives and making space in our hearts for others. It’s helping people around us feel welcomed and important. Paul showed Lydia hospitality by baptizing her and Lydia returned the hospitality by inviting him into her house. God wants all of us to show hospitality to each other, just like Paul and Lydia did. How can you show hospitality to people around you?

Why do you think God wanted Paul and Lydia to meet?

Why do you think Lydia wanted to be baptized? Have you been baptized?

Craft

Today’s craft is making a baptism scene where characters can be baptized. This craft requires two white paper plates, scissors, markers, and something to attach the plates. If you don’t have plates you can also use pieces of paper.

The first step is to cut waves and a sky out of the plates, you can use the picture below as inspiration for how to cut it.

Second step is to attach the waves and sky to the second plate. I recommend stapling around the outside but you could also glue around the outside or use tape.

Once the plates are attached you can draw on them to make it look like a sea and sky.

You now have a baptism scene, you can baptize objects or you can make characters. I recommend making a Paul out of paper and having him baptize things.

Colouring sheets

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

Click to print PDF

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Click to print PDF