Easter Sunday Festival Service Online

Stripped of traditions and rituals, this Easter service may remind us that the promise at the heart of the gospel is that God is both with us and for us at all times and through all conditions. In sorrow or joy triumph of tragedy, in gain our loss, in peace or fear, in scarcity or plenty, in sickness or in health. God is present. And because of Christ’s love, all harsh realities of this life do not have the last word. God’s light is more powerful than darkness. God’s love is stronger than hate. God prevails over all things- even death. So this day, even this day, we may rejoice because Christ is risen! 

He is risen! 

He is risen indeed!

The sermon and children’s sermon videos are posted below.

Pastor Cress Darwin delivers a message for Easter Sunday 2020.

Stay home, stay healthy and let’s flatten the curve! Sermon videos will be posted online for 10:30 a.m. on Sundays as we worship together from home.

Sarah Craven delivers a children’s message for Easter Sunday 2020.


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SERMON SNAPSHOT: Sunday, April 12, 2020

Dr. Bill Brown of Columbia Seminary sent a lovely commentary on these times – “The Life-giving Emptiness of Easter.” The truth is that the narrative we celebrate today, and on which we hang our very lives, “began with an ‘empty tomb’ and three fearful women – a tomb emptied of death.”

Brown reminds us that we’ve shuttered our sacred spaces “not in despair, but in testimony that lives are being saved in doing so.” 

We are not abandoning the gospel, but bearing witness to the fact that Christ is not constricted nor contained within the walls, but lives in the hearts of believers. And Christ calls us to join him in meeting folks where they are.    

In Christ -

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For over 70 years, One Great Hour of Sharing has provided Presbyterians a way to share God’s love with our neighbors in need around the world. The three programs supported by One Great Hour of Sharing - Presbyterian Disaster Assistance, the Presbyte…

For over 70 years, One Great Hour of Sharing has provided Presbyterians a way to share God’s love with our neighbors in need around the world. The three programs supported by One Great Hour of Sharing - Presbyterian Disaster Assistance, the Presbyterian Hunger Program, and Self-Development of People - all work in different ways to serve individuals and communities in need. From initial disaster response to ongoing community development, their work fits together to provide people with safety, sustenance, and hope.

Our session has approved the time for our congregation's giving to this offering to be during Holy Week. You can mail to the church a check marked 'OGHS' or you can go online and click on 'Give' and choose "One Great Hour".

Source: sermons

Virtual Good Friday Service

Good Friday Service of Tenebrae


Tenebrae (Latin for "darkness") is an ancient Christian tradition that takes place in the days leading up to Easter. This somber Good Friday service is characterized by gradually diminishing light to symbolize the darkness of Jesus' death and the hopelessness in a world without God. In years past, the service has concluded in darkness and worshipers then leave in silence to ponder the impact of Christ's death and await the coming resurrection and the festival service of Easter morning.

This year we gather in the shadows, as it were, surrounded by the darkness of COVID-19. Despite this virus' impact on our lives, our families and our communities, we are children, not of darkness, but of the light. There is a light that saves us and we can come together in spirit to ponder the impacts of a world gone dark knowing that the light will return- that Sunday's coming!

If you'd like, you can recreate aspects of a Tenebrae service at home by arranging 7 candles to be extinguished one at a time as the service progresses. If you don't have candles, you can begin with all the lights on so that the room is as bright as possible and you can dim the lights after each prayer so that you are left to end the service in darkness.

The video will be posted here Friday, April 10th at 7:00 p.m.

A Good Friday message from Pastor Cress Darwin. Special thanks to Dr. Julia Harlow, Lee Lingle, Clarissa Rider and Joel Dettweiler for contributing haunting choral music (at safe social distance).


“Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing."  - Luke 23:24


PRAYER                                                                                                                                                       

Dear Lord, though we would that you have forgiven us, this truth needs to penetrate our hearts in new ways.  Help us to know with fresh conviction that we are fully and finally forgiven, not because of anything we have done, but because of what you have done for us.  May we live today as forgiven people, opening our hearts to you, choosing not to sin because the power of sin has been broken. Amen.


 

 “Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in Paradise.”  - Luke 23:43

 

PRAYER

Lord Jesus, how we wonder at your grace and mercy!   When we cry out to you, you hear us.  When we ask you to remember us when you come into your kingdom, you offer the promise of paradise.  Your mercy exceeds anything we might imagine.  It embraces us, encourages us, it heals us.  O Lord, though our situation differs from the criminal who cried out to you, we are so like him – in need of mercy.  Today we live, trusting you and you alone.  Our lives, now and in the world to come, are in your hands.  And so we pray: Jesus, remember us when you come into your kingdom!  Jesus, remember us today as we seek to live within your kingdom!  Amen.


 

 “Woman, here is your son.”  - Mark 19:26


PRAYER                                                                                                                                                       

Lord, the presence of your mother at the cross breaks our hearts.  You are dying for the love of your created, yet you are also fully human -- a son with a mother.  Thank you for loving us to your death.  Because you have given us all that you are, we give you our praise, our love, our hearts . . . all that we are.  All praise be to you, dear Jesus, fully God and fully human, Savior of the world.  Amen.


 

“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” - Mark 15:34

PRAYER

Lord Jesus God, though we can never fully grasp the horror of your isolation, every time we read this phrase we are overtaken with gratitude.  We thank you for how you loved us.  What can we do but to offer ourselves to you in praise and in gratitude?  Thank you for loving us so.


 

“I am thirsty.”   John 19:28

                                                                                                                                                                                   

PRAYER

Lord God, we acknowledge the searing thirst you endured as you assumed our humanity that you might take away our sin.  Sweet Jesus, we, too, are thirsty for the new wine of your kingdom to flood our souls that we might be refreshed by your living water.  We yearn for your Spirit to fill us once again.  Amen.


 

“It is finished.” -  John 19:30

                                                                                                                                                                                   

PRAYER

Jesus, God - You did it.  You finished that for which you had been sent, faithful in life, faithful in death.  You accomplished that which no one else could, you bore the sin of the world upon your sinless shoulders.  All praise be to you, gracious Lord.  All praise be to you, dear Jesus, for redeeming us!  Alleluia!  Amen.


 

“Father, into your hands I commend my spirit.”   Luke 23:46

PRAYER

Gracious Lord, even as you once entrusted your Spirit into the hands of the Father, so we give our lives to you.  We trust you and you alone.  We submit to your sovereignty and will live for your glory. Because of your love we no longer despair. In your strength and compassion we live in hope. Amen.


Stay home, stay healthy and let’s flatten the curve! Services will be posted at the time we would usually gather so that we can come together in spirit as much as possible.

Source: sermons

Virtual Maundy Thursday Service

Join us for our annual Maundy Thursday Community Communion Service. While we miss being together and the community atmosphere of having the participation of multiple churches and choirs, we are excited to invite you to join us for this special service virtually.

This is a communion service, so please prepare bread or crackers and juice or wine so that you are ready to take part in communion.

A Maundy Thursday message delivered by Pastor Cress Darwin. Special thanks to Dr. Julia Harlow, Lee Lingle, Clarissa Rider and Joel Dettweiler for contributing haunting choral music for this Holy Week (at safe social distance) and to Ken Carrington who has produced all of our online worship services with help from SaSa Darwin.


CALL TO WORSHIP

All:         God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, not counting their sins against them, and has commissioned us with the message of reconciliation.

Leader:   Praise the Lord.

People:  The Lord’s name be praised.


 

PRAYER OF CONFESSION & DECLARATION OF PARDON

O God of mercy: you sent Jesus Christ to save lost people. Judge us with love, and lift the burden of our sins. We confess that we are twisted by pride. We see ourselves pure when we are stained and great when we are small. We have failed in love, forgotten to be just, and have turned away from your truth. Have mercy, O God, and forgive our sin, for the sake of Jesus your Son, our Savior. Amen.  Almighty God: You love all Your children and do not hate them for their sins. Help us to face up to ourselves, admit we are in the wrong, and reach with confidence for your mercy; in Jesus Christ the Lord.


 

Scripture reading, Sarah Craven: John 13:1-17

Second Scripture: John13:31B-35


 

Christianity produced an earthy, human set of texts by which we set our lives. In the Gospels, Jesus pulls apart fish on a hillside. A woman breaks her best oil jar over his feet, massaging ointment into his worn soles. In another story, Jesus takes earth and his own spit, making holy mud that washes away the stigma of sin from a blind man. The Gospels are stories of bodies that hunger and long, fight and weep, rest and toil, drink and bleed. And the center of Christian worship is a meal in which we claim to ingest God, the body of Jesus becoming part of our bodies.


Stay home, stay healthy and let’s flatten the curve! Services will be posted at the time we would usually gather so that we can come together in spirit as much as possible.

Source: sermons

Palm Sunday: Sustenance for these pandemic days

This is Communion Sunday, please prepare bread or crackers and juice or wine so that you are ready to take part in communion.


SERMON SNAPSHOT: Sunday, April 5, 2020

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Dear Friends in Christ –

Well, for this Sunday, the lectionary offers two texts: the account of Christ’s entry into Jerusalem fulfilling the scriptures or the narrative of his passion. The dilemma is this: shall I emphasize the seeming joy and celebration with which the crowds welcome Jesus into Jerusalem? Or dangle a shoe about to drop in the days as Jesus is betrayed, arrested, (deserted by his closest) to be tried, beaten and crucified? 

Palm Sunday celebration? Or Holy week Passion?

The biblical witness of these events of 2000 years ago speak in tandem. And the living word as it was lived then instructs us for the living of today

Join us Sunday online at 10:30 a.m. We’ll engage the texts again in light of these days and I guarantee we’ll discover the courage, the resolve, the humility of the one we proclaim as Savior. 

This Sunday we celebrate communion. Have before you elements that are handy – juice, wine, fresh bread, or crackers. We’ll share them together and they will become the body broken and the blood shed in the mystery of the words spoken by our Christ. 

Sustenance for these pandemic days. 

Stay home, keep distance, trust God – and wash your hands:)

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Stay home, stay healthy and let’s flatten the curve! Sermon videos will be posted online for 10:30 a.m. on Sundays as we worship together from home.

Source: sermons