Thursday, October 24, 2013

Year A, Advent 1, Children's Sermon

Year A, First Sunday of Advent
Children’s Sermon: “Where You Got Your Shoes”
Psalm 122
Object: shoes, a shoe box, a bag from a shoe store, or even point out the shoes the children are wearing.

            I have a friend (it was me) who went on a mission trip to New Orleans when he was in college.  He and his fellow missionaries met a man on a street in the French Quarter.  They had been warned to watch out for people who would play tricks on them.  The man presented them with a challenge, “I bet you a dollar that I can tell you where you got your shoes.  I can tell you the city, state and address where you got your shoes.”  This seemed impossible, so the students told him to go ahead, feeling strongly that there was no way this stranger would have any clue about where they were from or the shoe stores where they shopped.  The man replied, “You got your shoes on your feet, in New Orleans, Louisiana, on St. Peter Street near Jackson Square!”  They gave him a dollar.  They could not argue with him, because he was exactly right.  Their shoes were right there on their feet.
            Take a look at where we’ve got our shoes today.  We are inside a church building.  We are inside a sanctuary.  We are inside a place of worship.  Take a look around.  It’s the first Sunday of Advent.  The sanctuary is decorated with greenery, candles, purple cloth and symbols because we are celebrating the coming of Jesus Christ and living in hope that he is coming again.  Our shoes have brought us into a very special place today.
            The psalm (Psalm 122) for today begins by saying, “I was glad when they said to me, ‘Let us go to the house of the Lord!’  Our feet are standing within your gates, O Jerusalem.”  This person had been invited to go to the temple in Jerusalem for an important time of worship.  When he set his feet—when he “got his shoes”—inside the temple, he was ready to spend time celebrating what God had done for him and for everyone.
Advent is a very special time of year.  We might say it is an important time for worship.  We are counting the days leading up to Christmas, and at the same time we make our days count because Jesus is coming again.  Perhaps these Sundays during Advent are times when we really need to be here in worship.  Maybe we can say to each other and to God, “Our feet are standing inside the Lord’s house, and we are glad to be here.”
Have you ever heard of the church building and the sanctuary being called “the Lord’s house”?  That is one way that we can honor God.  We can worship God and show respect to God by remembering that this place of worship is the Lord’s house.
But you know what?  Haven’t you also heard people say that God is everywhere?  Of course, you have!  Earlier in the Psalms we can read this verse, “The earth is the Lord’s and all that is in it (Psalm 24:1).”  That tells us the whole world is God’s house.  Wherever we go, God is there.  Wherever we are, we are in God’s presence.
Advent is about Jesus coming into the world.  He came to be God with us.  Because of Jesus, we always get to be in the presence of the God who sees us, knows us and loves us.  That is true, and that is something to celebrate no matter “where you got your shoes”!

Dear Lord,

It is good to be in your house as we worship together, but, God, it is good to be in your house wherever we are.  Please guide our feet as we walk through this season of Advent.  Bless each step we take that we would remember that you are there wherever we go.  We pray in Jesus’ name.  Amen.

Year A, Advent 1, Candle Lighting

Lighting the First Advent Candle
From Psalm 122, Isaiah 2 and Romans 13

Reader 1:  Advent begins with a bidding prayer.  The worshiper is invited to come into God’s house. 

Reader 2:  The psalmist said he was glad to have been invited.  Certainly, once he arrived at the temple, he gave thanks for being able to be there in the place where God’s presence dwelled.  But there is more to his story than simply showing up, being there in body. 

Reader 1:  The prophet Isaiah preached that worship attendance and participating in the rituals would never be enough.  The people learned in the presence of God, and then they were further challenged to “walk in the light of the Lord.”

Reader 2:  Advent is about the coming of Christ.  We prepare to celebrate his first coming as these days lead toward Christmas, and this is our opportunity to be reminded that Christ will come again.

Reader 1:  There is more to the coming of Christ than simply his showing up in bodily form.  We describe the incarnation declaring, “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us.”  Because of Jesus, we are held to a higher standard.

Reader 2:  This is a season in which we could wonder, “What does the coming of Christ have to do with us?”  To rearrange the question offers its own challenge, “What do we have to do with the coming of Christ?”  The easy answers are salvation and witness.  We know what Christ has done for us and therefore we respond.

Reader 1:  We “lay aside the works of darkness and put on the armor of light” as the apostle Paul says.  We “walk in the light of the Lord”. 

Reader 2:  Walking in the light of the Lord turns swords into plowshares and spears into pruning hooks. 

Reader 1:  Walking in the light of the Lord makes peace much more than an overused worship theme for one dedicated Sunday of Advent, but the peace of Christ is the redeemed focus in which we live and work. 

Reader 2:  Walking in the light of the Lord is not a passive experience, as if peace could be achieved through inactivity.  Through Christ the weapons of war and darkness have been transformed into valuable tools which must be used in order to make peace.

Reader 1:  Neither hope, peace, joy nor love have any meaning unless God’s people actually work for their reality. 

(Light the first candle in the Advent wreath.)

Reader 2:  Come let us walk in the light of the Lord.

Unison Prayer:  We pray for peace, O God, but as surely was our feet are within your house today, we pray that we would also walk for peace and work for peace.  Help us to live honorably, to seek the good of our neighbor in need, and through Christ, bless us to lay aside darkness and put on light.  We pray in the name of the One who has come to be our Light and our Salvation.  Amen.


Mama's Advent Sweater

Here's a short sketch for the First Sunday of Advent.  One key prop is Mama's purple Advent sweater complete with battery operated lights.
If you use this, I would love to see some pictures from your performance.
Enjoy.

Mama’s Advent Sweater
The scene opens on Mama sitting in her living room after a long weekend of entertaining most of her family.  She’s wearing a gaudy, purple sweater which is decorated with greenery, wreaths, trees, holly and chrismons.  The doorbell rings.  Mama opens the door to see her son Raymond coming for a holiday visit.

Mama: Oh, Raymond!  What a surprise!  So good to see you!

Raymond:  Happy Thanksgiving, Mama!

Mama: Thanksgiving was Thursday, son.  Now I know you had to go with your wife to visit her parents this year, but the Mayflower has sailed here, so let’s put that behind us and move on.

Raymond:  Thanks, Mama.  Uh… you got anything to eat?

Mama:  Nope.  We ate the last of the turkey this morning in some kind of a hash your brother dreamed up using the leftover dressing and green bean casserole.  But speaking of turkey, how is your father-in-law?

Raymond:  He’s fine, Mama, but let’s put that behind us and move on, OK?

Mama:  I’ll leave it alone if you can, son.

Raymond (noticing the sweater): Wow, Mama, that sure is some Christmas sweater!

Mama (offended): It is not a Christmas sweater.

Raymond: Yes it is.

Mama: No, it isn’t.

Raymond: Stop teasing, Mama.

Mama: I am not teasing.

Raymond: I don’t think I’ve ever seen a purple Christmas sweater.

Mama: It is not a Christmas sweater.

Raymond:  Sure it is.

Mama: No. It. Is. Not.

Raymond: How can you say that, Mama?  It’s got wreaths and holly and a tree… and I even see a few snowflakes—

Mama: Those are not snowflakes! They’re chrismons.

Rayond: Chris-whats?

Mama (pronouncing the word): ChriSSS-mAAAhns.  They’re symbols that teach us something about Jesus, and the same goes for the wreaths, the holly and the tree.

Raymond: Oh, Mama, couldn’t you just go with a nice, red “Reason for the Season” Christmas sweater like everyone else?

Mama:  Well, I’m not everyone else, and this is not a Christmas sweater—it’s an Advent sweater.

Raymond: Ad-what?

Mama:  Now why did I even blink at the notion that you’d know what Advent is—that church you go to?  Y’all probably sang a whole bunch of Christmas carols this morning, didn’t you?  I wouldn’t be surprised if you did “Here Comes Santa Claus” before the children’s sermon—

Raymond (offended): We did not sing “Here Comes Santa Claus” in church… (embarrassed) It was “Jolly Old Saint Nicholas”.

Mama: That’s the problem with folks.  They don’t know how to be patient.  They don’t know how to wait.  It won’t be long  before y’all start crankin’ up “Away in a Manger” as soon as you see a Christmas tree next to the candy corn display in Wal Mart in September.

Raymond:  Now, Mama, you’re exaggerating… I think…  besides, what’s waiting got to do with Christmas anyway?

Mama:  Advent!  Aaaad-veeent, son.

Raymond:  What’s Advent?

Mama:  In my church, we take the four weeks leading up to Christmas as a time to prepare and wait with 
hopeful expectation.

Raymond:  What are you waiting for?

Mama:  Well, Jesus, of course.

Raymond:  But Jesus already came, Mama.

Mama: Exactly!

Raymond:  Huh?

Mama:  The church year begins with this anticipation of the celebration of Christmas, but while we’re focusing on the first coming of Jesus, it’s a very good time to remember that Jesus is coming again.  That’s Advent.

Raymond:  But when do you celebrate Christmas?

Mama:  Why December 25, just like everyone else, unlike those heathens who want to sell you a nativity scene along with your back-to-school supplies.  Except, I guess, we do cheat a little.  We get very Christmassy on Christmas Eve, but I reckon that’s so the pastor can enjoy Christmas Day getting woken up by his children at 4:30 a.m. like the rest of us normal folks.

Raymond:  OK, Mama, so it’s Advent.  What’re you supposed to do during Advent?

Mama:  Get ready, of course.  You know, “prepare the way of the Lord”!

Raymond:  You mean Christmas shop and wrap presents?

Mama: No, you bozo!  It’s not about that!  If we’re taking this time to point ahead to when Jesus comes again, then we’re supposed to be getting ready for that.  Christmas day doesn’t catch anyone by surprise—it’s December 25th just like it was last year.  By the way, what day is my birthday?

Raymond:  Uh…

Mama:  Exactly!

Raymond:  Could you get back to the Advent stuff?  Please?

Mama:  Sure.  So, we take the time while the whole world’s remembering the first coming of Jesus, and we look forward to the second coming—a little taking advantage of an opportune time.  It kind of makes you think, you know?

Raymond:  What do you mean?

Mama:  Well in the gospel of Matthew it says, “But about that day and hour, no one knows… therefore you also must be ready.”  Sometimes I worry Jesus might pop back in on us when I’m having “one of those days”.

Raymond:  You mean like when you start screaming at the people who wave you through the 4-way stop even though they were supposed to go first?

Mama:  Now, there are things even Jesus wouldn’t put up with—if it’s a tie the car to your right goes first.  How hard is that to remember?  You pull up to the stop signs at close to the same time, and for some reason it turns folks into complete idiots.  It’s a simple enough solution, but then they give you that little “come on” wave…

Raymond:  Mama, I believe you we’re filling me in on Advent and being ready?

Mama:  Oh, yes, of course.  Excuse me, Raymond.  Christians live in hope that Jesus is coming again, and that will be a glorious day, a day when God sets the world right.  But, you know it is also referred to as judgment day, don’t you?

Raymond:  You don’t want to get caught unprepared for that.

Mama:  Exactly, son.

Raymond:  So, what do you do to get ready?

Mama:  Well, I like what old Paul has to say about it.  Kind of poetic.  Here, read this (hands Raymond an open Bible).  Romans 13:11-12, read that for us.

Raymond: "Besides this, you know what time it is, how it is now the moment for you to wake from sleep.  For salvation is nearer to us now than when we became believers; the night is far gone, the day is near.  Let us then lay aside the works of darkness and put on the armor of light."

Mama:  Do you understand that?

Raymond:  Yes.  It’s like what Isaiah says in the Old Testament, “Cease to do evil; learn to do good.”  And John the Baptist told all those folks that repentance was about sharing, not being greedy, and making things right.  That sounds to me a lot like laying aside the works of darkness and putting on the armor of light.

Mama:  I think you've got it, son.

Raymond:  Mama?  Do you mind if I ask you one more Advent related question?

Mama: Shoot.

Raymond: What if Jesus comes back and catches you wearing that awful, purple sweater?


Mama:  To each his own, son.  Besides, I’m sure it separates me from the whole “Reason for the Season” crowd.  Oh, and speaking of putting on the armor of light… (Mama flips a switch under the sweater’s waistband and the whole thing lights up).