Howard C. Wilkinson - "I Hurt and I Heal" (June 18, 1978)
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- | Duke University chapel service of worship, | 0:05 |
Sunday, June 18th, 1978. | 0:08 | |
(organ prelude) | 0:16 | |
♪ Now God be praised in heaven above ♪ | 9:01 | |
Praised be He for His great love, | 9:07 | |
Wherein all creatures live and move, | 9:13 | |
♪ Hallelujah, hallelujah, hallelujah ♪ | 9:20 | |
(organ music drowns out congregation singing) | 9:36 | |
Man | Be seated, please. | 12:17 |
To be open to God | 12:28 | |
to know life in all its fullness, | 12:31 | |
and to help bring life to others, | 12:36 | |
we must be honest with ourselves no matter how difficult | 12:41 | |
or painful this may be. | 12:44 | |
We have both, by what we have done and what we have left | 12:49 | |
undone, missed the mark of our high calling in Christ Jesus, | 12:52 | |
our Lord. | 12:59 | |
Therefore, let us now confess our sin | 13:02 | |
before one another and to God. | 13:07 | |
Let us pray. | 13:11 | |
We confess that we are not worthy of the riches of life | 13:14 | |
for which the generations before us have labored | 13:18 | |
that we might enter into this heritage. | 13:22 | |
We confess the confusion of our common life, | 13:26 | |
the greed which disfigures our collective life | 13:30 | |
and sets us against our brothers and sisters. | 13:33 | |
We confess the indifference and callousness with which | 13:37 | |
we treat the sufferings and the insecurity of the poor, | 13:41 | |
and the pettiness which mars the relations between us. | 13:45 | |
May we with contrite hearts seek once more to purify | 13:50 | |
our spirits and to clarify our reason, so that a fair temple | 13:54 | |
for the human spirit may be built in human society. | 14:00 | |
Hear our prayers, Oh Lord, amen. | 14:06 | |
Let us continue with our words and prayers | 14:10 | |
of personal confession. | 14:14 | |
My dear friends, let us know and believe that the God who | 14:41 | |
creates us can also re-create us. | 14:46 | |
The psalmist tells us that God is never far from us. | 14:53 | |
Let us now rejoice in this truth that God has loved us, | 14:59 | |
is loving us, and will always love us no matter where we are | 15:06 | |
or what we do, God is with us, loving us still. | 15:14 | |
This is the good news that brings us life. | 15:22 | |
Let us give thanks for God is good | 15:29 | |
and God's love is everlasting. | 15:32 | |
Congregation | Thanks be to God who creates us. | 15:37 |
Thanks be to God whose tender love redeems us. | 15:41 | |
Thanks be to God for His presence sustains us. | 15:45 | |
Man | Amen. | 15:49 |
On this very special day, Alumni Sunday for Alumni Weekend, | 15:53 | |
may I welcome you to this service of worship. | 16:01 | |
May I welcome you alumni back home again. | 16:05 | |
Those of you who are having class reunions, | 16:09 | |
I trust that it has been a most enjoyable time for you | 16:12 | |
in fellowship with friends and with acquaintances of | 16:16 | |
bygone days. | 16:19 | |
We trust that the program has been satisfying | 16:21 | |
and enjoyable to you, and that this event, the last event, | 16:25 | |
except for the oldest class reunion which will have dinner | 16:30 | |
following the service of worship, | 16:35 | |
this event, which closes Alumni Weekend, this service | 16:38 | |
of worship will be a time of renewal in spirit and in truth | 16:42 | |
for you as you have come back home to worship here | 16:48 | |
and to share in this special time of worship together. | 16:52 | |
It is our pleasure to have the President of the | 16:57 | |
Alumni Association share in the leadership of this service, | 17:01 | |
Mr. John Sharoll from Greenwood, South Carolina, | 17:05 | |
who serves as elector for today. | 17:08 | |
For those of you who are going to be in Durham and around | 17:12 | |
the campus through tonight, I have just learned that there | 17:15 | |
are some 100 tickets still available for the American | 17:19 | |
Dance Festival program tonight. | 17:23 | |
It is a beautiful, beautiful program | 17:26 | |
and you are invited to come. | 17:29 | |
Tickets are still available and will be on sale at the | 17:31 | |
Page box office beginning at four o'clock. | 17:34 | |
The program tonight begins at seven o'clock. | 17:37 | |
We are pleased today to welcome back to Duke University, | 17:43 | |
the Rev. Dr. Howard Wilkinson. | 17:48 | |
Dr. Wilkinson served as chaplain to the university here | 17:52 | |
for 15 years until 1972 when he resigned and went to | 17:56 | |
Greensboro College where he now serves as President | 18:02 | |
of Greensboro College. | 18:05 | |
He has served a number of leading churches in the western | 18:08 | |
North Carolina conference and in many ways is back home | 18:12 | |
there now serving as President of Greensboro College | 18:15 | |
in that conference, but he also comes back home here today. | 18:19 | |
So, we welcome you Howard and Nita, his wife, and one of | 18:24 | |
their daughters, Melinda, back to Duke and to this very | 18:28 | |
special service. | 18:33 | |
I notice some of you are probably not quite as cool as you | 18:35 | |
would like to be. | 18:39 | |
We may as well let today be the day to begin a special fund | 18:41 | |
to air condition the chapel. | 18:47 | |
(congregation laughing) | 18:49 | |
I'll be around for any contribution. | 18:52 | |
If you would like to make yourself comfortable, | 18:56 | |
please feel free to remove your jacket or whatever so that | 18:58 | |
you can be as comfortable as possible during the remainder | 19:01 | |
of the service. | 19:05 | |
We are glad to have you worship God with us here this day. | 19:07 | |
John | Let us pray. | 19:21 |
Prepare our hearts, Oh Lord, to accept Your Word. | 19:25 | |
Silence in us any voice but Your own, that hearing we may | 19:30 | |
also obey Your will through Jesus Christ our Lord, amen. | 19:37 | |
The Old Testament lesson is selected verses from the 32nd | 19:45 | |
chapter of Deuteronomy. | 19:49 | |
Readings taken from the Reynolds Price articles. | 19:52 | |
Yahweh will judge His people and will have mercy | 20:01 | |
on His slaves when He sees their strength is vanished, | 20:04 | |
that there is no savior bound or free, | 20:11 | |
then He will say, "Where are their gods? | 20:15 | |
"Rock where they hid? | 20:20 | |
"Who ate fat of sacrifice? | 20:22 | |
"Drank poured wine? | 20:24 | |
"Let them stand and help you. | 20:27 | |
"Let them be your shelter. | 20:29 | |
"See now that I, I am He. | 20:31 | |
"No gods with me. | 20:35 | |
"I kill and I raise. | 20:37 | |
"I hurt and I heal. | 20:39 | |
"No flight from my hand. | 20:41 | |
"I raise my hand to sky and say I live forever. | 20:44 | |
"When I whet lightning of my sword | 20:50 | |
"and my hand sees vengeance, I will pay my foes, | 20:53 | |
"hurt my haters. | 20:57 | |
"I will make my arrows drunk with blood, | 20:59 | |
"my sword swill flesh, blood of the slain and prisoners, | 21:03 | |
"the heads of their princes." | 21:08 | |
Shout joy, oh nations. | 21:10 | |
He avenges the blood of His slaves, pays His foes, | 21:13 | |
is good to the ground of His people. | 21:17 | |
Here ends the reading from the Old Testament. | 21:23 | |
(organ playing) | 21:31 | |
(choir sings in foreign language) | 22:18 | |
Will the congregation stand for the reading of | 24:17 | |
the gospel lesson? | 24:19 | |
The lesson is from Matthew 10:26-33. | 24:28 | |
So have no fear of them, for nothing is covered | 24:35 | |
that will not be revealed or hidden that will not be known. | 24:38 | |
What I tell you in the dark, utter in the light | 24:44 | |
and what you hear whispered, proclaim upon the housetops | 24:48 | |
and do not fear those who kill the body, | 24:53 | |
but cannot kill the soul. | 24:56 | |
Rather, fear Him who can destroy both soul and body in Hell. | 24:58 | |
Are not two sparrows sold for a penny and not one of them | 25:05 | |
will fall to the ground without Your Father's will? | 25:10 | |
But even the hairs of your head are all numbered. | 25:14 | |
Fear not, therefore, you are of more value | 25:18 | |
than many sparrows, so everyone who acknowledges me | 25:23 | |
before men I also will acknowledge before my Father | 25:27 | |
who is in Heaven, but whoever denies me before men, | 25:32 | |
I also will deny before my Father who is in Heaven. | 25:36 | |
Here ends the reading from the gospel. | 25:43 | |
All praise and glory be to God, amen. | 25:46 | |
(organ playing and congregation singing) | 25:52 | |
Dr. Wilkinson | Good morning. | 27:14 |
Let me digress for a minute | 27:16 | |
from the purpose of divine worship | 27:21 | |
to express appreciation | 27:24 | |
for a valuable job well done | 27:26 | |
by the president of the university | 27:30 | |
on whose campus I stand at this hour. | 27:34 | |
President Sanford has been an intelligent | 27:39 | |
and vigorous chairman | 27:43 | |
of the private sector of higher education | 27:45 | |
in this state. | 27:50 | |
And for 38 private colleges | 27:52 | |
and universities, | 27:55 | |
what he has done | 27:57 | |
will be of tremendous benefit. | 27:59 | |
His representations before the legislature | 28:04 | |
and in the public forum | 28:08 | |
are of great benefit | 28:12 | |
to the entire private sector of higher education. | 28:13 | |
While I'm convinced that his activities | 28:19 | |
have been in the interest of Duke University | 28:21 | |
and also that the proposals he has advocated | 28:26 | |
are directly saving all of the North Carolina tax payers | 28:30 | |
a large sum of money, | 28:35 | |
it remains true | 28:38 | |
that all 38 of the private institutions | 28:40 | |
will reap a nice harvest from his leadership. | 28:44 | |
As president of one of those other colleges, | 28:50 | |
I wish to use this occasion | 28:54 | |
to pay public tribute | 28:56 | |
where tribute is due, | 28:58 | |
and now to the sermon. | 29:04 | |
One of the famous graduates of Duke University is the | 29:08 | |
writer, Reynolds Price, whose publications have received | 29:12 | |
very widespread recognition | 29:17 | |
in the literary world. | 29:21 | |
I've been personally intrigued with the last two of some | 29:24 | |
10 volumes that he has published | 29:29 | |
because they consist of narratives | 29:32 | |
translated from the ancient languages of the Bible. | 29:36 | |
Although Reynolds Price would rate good marks | 29:42 | |
for his biblical scholarship, | 29:45 | |
these translations benefit us more | 29:48 | |
by reason of Mr. Price's skill as a novelist | 29:51 | |
than by his skill as a scholar. | 29:56 | |
Both of these two last books | 30:00 | |
contain narrative sections from the Bible. | 30:02 | |
Their titles are Oracles, | 30:06 | |
which was published by the Friends of the Duke Library | 30:09 | |
and may be obtained in the Rare Book Room, | 30:13 | |
and A Palpable God, | 30:17 | |
P-a-l-p-a-b-l-e | 30:20 | |
which is available in your local bookstore. | 30:23 | |
Now, since these narratives | 30:28 | |
were originally the work of biblical storytellers, | 30:30 | |
it perhaps is as valuable to have them rendered | 30:34 | |
by a novelist as by an exegete, | 30:37 | |
but in this instance what we have is the work of a novelist | 30:43 | |
who made constant use of exegesis, | 30:48 | |
thus providing for the reader | 30:52 | |
the best of two worlds. | 30:54 | |
In the first book, Oracles, | 30:58 | |
there appears the translation of portions | 31:01 | |
of the very lengthy | 31:04 | |
32nd chapter of Deuteronomy, | 31:06 | |
which was read a while ago | 31:11 | |
by the President of the Alumni Association, | 31:13 | |
and which G. Ernest Wright has called, | 31:18 | |
"The Song of Moses." | 31:21 | |
Now in that chapter, | 31:25 | |
Jehovah is talking to His people | 31:28 | |
and He is explaining to them what His resources are | 31:32 | |
and the methods by which He deals with those | 31:37 | |
whom He has created. | 31:40 | |
One sentence stands out in bold relief, | 31:43 | |
"Jehovah said, | 31:49 | |
'I hurt | 31:52 | |
and I heal.'" | 31:54 | |
A number of translators use the word "wound" | 31:59 | |
which can be either accidental or intentional, | 32:03 | |
but I prefer Reynolds Price's choice | 32:07 | |
of the more aggressive word, | 32:10 | |
the transitive verb, "hurt" | 32:13 | |
as a translation of the Hebrew word, | 32:18 | |
"mashatzi" | 32:22 | |
in the context of this narrative. | 32:25 | |
My good friend, Rabbi Arnold Task, | 32:29 | |
tells me that the root meaning of "mashatzi" | 32:31 | |
is to smite severely, | 32:36 | |
and he said that if someone using that verb promised to | 32:39 | |
do it to you, it would be a threat you should | 32:44 | |
take seriously. | 32:47 | |
"I hurt and I heal," | 32:51 | |
said Jehovah. | 32:55 | |
The thought that God may intentionally hurt us is | 32:59 | |
disturbing, isn't it? | 33:03 | |
With few exceptions, | 33:05 | |
we do not enjoy being hurt. | 33:08 | |
Those few who do enjoy it | 33:11 | |
are described by our psychiatrist friends | 33:14 | |
as being abnormal and are called masochists. | 33:16 | |
Milton Moss tells about a group of masochists who formed | 33:21 | |
a society and planned a meeting. | 33:25 | |
They decided to have a speaker. | 33:28 | |
They invited a psychiatrist to address them. | 33:30 | |
This was a bit unusual, but seeing himself on that occasion | 33:35 | |
as a speaker rather than as a doctor, the psychiatrist | 33:39 | |
decided to try to please his audience | 33:44 | |
rather than to cure it. | 33:47 | |
So he began by saying, | 33:50 | |
"Dear friends, I have today good news "and bad news. | 33:53 | |
"The good news is, | 33:57 | |
I definitely have some bad news." | 33:59 | |
Most of us, however, prefer not to hear bad news | 34:05 | |
or to be pained in any other way. | 34:10 | |
And so this announcement of Jehovah, | 34:14 | |
taken as a whole, | 34:17 | |
jars our sensitivities, | 34:19 | |
shakes us out of our chosen complacency. | 34:22 | |
Frankly, most of us would like to reject the concept | 34:26 | |
out of hand if we could. | 34:30 | |
We don't have any difficulty hearing God tell us | 34:33 | |
that He heals, for in that case, | 34:36 | |
Revelation agrees with human contentedness. | 34:40 | |
We like the promise that God will heal. | 34:44 | |
We have no objection to His doing | 34:48 | |
all of that He wants to do. | 34:51 | |
We would even be willing to give occasional thanks for it, | 34:54 | |
but God hurts? | 34:58 | |
That's a different matter altogether, we think. | 35:03 | |
Why would He wish to hurt us? | 35:09 | |
Does God imagine that He must hurt us | 35:13 | |
so that there will be a need for Him to heal us? | 35:16 | |
Well, I should say not. | 35:20 | |
We inflict enough damage upon ourselves and upon our fellows | 35:23 | |
to keep the Lord constantly employed on a wide front | 35:27 | |
in the vocation of healing. | 35:31 | |
Moreover, the unsettling idea of God hurting us runs counter | 35:35 | |
to the popular image of Jehovah as a cosmic Santa, | 35:41 | |
always dropping largess down our chimneys from above. | 35:45 | |
I remember very well hearing Dr. H. Shelton Smith | 35:51 | |
say in class years ago | 35:54 | |
that the theme song of a lot of easy-going church members is | 35:57 | |
He walks with me and He talks with me | 36:02 | |
and He chuckles me under the chin. | 36:06 | |
Some churchmen today who like to think of religion | 36:09 | |
as divine support for comfortable complacency | 36:12 | |
have adopted a theology | 36:17 | |
which tells the man of the world something like this, | 36:19 | |
"God loves you" | 36:24 | |
"He forgives and accepts you just as you are" | 36:26 | |
"The only thing you need to do to find happiness | 36:32 | |
and peace of mind is simply to accept | 36:36 | |
your total acceptance." | 36:41 | |
Now, there's a great deal of good in that statement, | 36:45 | |
but there is a thin and important line drawn between | 36:49 | |
that point of view on the one hand | 36:53 | |
and a theology of the Bible on the other hand. | 36:58 | |
Biblical theology tells the man of the world | 37:03 | |
something like this: | 37:05 | |
"God loves you, just as you are, | 37:07 | |
and He will accept you just as you are, | 37:13 | |
and forgive you | 37:18 | |
provided you are sincerely dissatisfied | 37:20 | |
with your evil ways | 37:25 | |
and are resolved by God's help | 37:27 | |
to live a righteous life of unselfish service | 37:30 | |
to God and man." | 37:34 | |
Now, this added ingredient of human repentance | 37:37 | |
and a rejection of sin and evil is necessary | 37:41 | |
if healing and redemption are to take place. | 37:46 | |
As an aid to our understanding | 37:52 | |
the significance of this fine line of distinction, | 37:54 | |
let me describe an imaginary conversation | 37:57 | |
on North Mangum Street in Durham. | 38:01 | |
Suppose a patient weighing 400 pounds | 38:05 | |
walks into Dr. Kempner's Rice House on North Mangum Street. | 38:11 | |
The patient tells Dr. Kempner that members of his family | 38:17 | |
have suggested he may have a health problem | 38:21 | |
and that he should place himself | 38:26 | |
in the hands of Dr. Kempner. | 38:28 | |
"The only thing I ask," | 38:32 | |
he tells the physician, | 38:38 | |
starting the conversation, is "don't hurt me." | 38:40 | |
Now let us suppose that Dr. Kempner replies in this fashion, | 38:47 | |
"You unfortunate man, please know that I love you. | 38:53 | |
"I accept you just as you are | 38:59 | |
and the only thing you need to do to be whole | 39:03 | |
is to accept my acceptance of you just as you are." | 39:07 | |
Well, whatever theology you may hear in your particular | 39:15 | |
church, you will not hear that doctrine preached in | 39:19 | |
the Rice House on North Mangum Street | 39:23 | |
or in the medical center. | 39:26 | |
Dr. Kempner would put that 400 pound man | 39:30 | |
on a very hurting diet | 39:34 | |
and he would instruct him to do other things which would | 39:39 | |
stab his comfort for weeks on end, | 39:42 | |
things which would chafe, grate, | 39:46 | |
sting, torment, | 39:50 | |
spoil, damage, and give pain in general. | 39:52 | |
I know, I've talked to a lot of his patients in the past. | 39:56 | |
Dr. Kempner would insist | 40:02 | |
that all of that pain and hurt | 40:06 | |
is an outgrowth of his acceptance of | 40:10 | |
and love of that patient | 40:15 | |
and that any other prescription than the one he gave | 40:19 | |
would be foreign to a loving acceptance. | 40:23 | |
The alliteration of Reynolds Price's translation, | 40:29 | |
"I hurt and I heal" suggests a connecting unity | 40:34 | |
between the activities of hurting and healing, | 40:39 | |
which is true to the reality. | 40:43 | |
The two often go together and in their joining we find | 40:46 | |
not only sequence but consequence. | 40:50 | |
God hurts us in order that He may heal us. | 40:55 | |
Early on in the book of Deuteronomy, Moses tells | 41:01 | |
the children of Israel that Jehovah has said, | 41:05 | |
"You shall consider in your heart | 41:09 | |
that as a man chastens his son, | 41:13 | |
so Jehovah your God chastens you." | 41:17 | |
When Dr. Elizabeth Locke asked the distinguished writer, | 41:23 | |
William Styron, to reflect upon his experience | 41:28 | |
as an undergraduate at Duke, | 41:32 | |
he chose to recount what happened | 41:34 | |
when Professor William Blackburn | 41:37 | |
gave him his first assignment to write a theme. | 41:39 | |
Describing how proud and how pleased he was | 41:44 | |
when he gave the professor the theme, | 41:50 | |
Styron then contrasted this | 41:52 | |
with the abject misery he experienced | 41:54 | |
when Blackburn handed the theme back. | 41:59 | |
The theme was veritably marinated with red ink | 42:03 | |
and its margins were choked with devastating questions. | 42:08 | |
Styron was painfully pushed almost to the brink of despair | 42:13 | |
but not quite. | 42:20 | |
He was deeply hurt, but he was also | 42:24 | |
resoundingly provoked and challenged. | 42:27 | |
Listen now to Styron's description of the result | 42:33 | |
of Dr. Blackburn's painful criticism. | 42:37 | |
I quote, "Before too long, my work got much better | 42:40 | |
"and as it did, I was so eager to meet | 42:46 | |
"his demanding standards. | 42:50 | |
"He possessed that subtle, ineffable, magnetically | 42:54 | |
"appealing quality. | 42:58 | |
"A kind of invisible rapture which caused | 43:00 | |
"students to respond. | 43:03 | |
"He was unquestionably a glorious teacher. | 43:09 | |
"I deeply miss him because ultimately | 43:14 | |
"he became more than a teacher to me." | 43:18 | |
I hurt and I heal. | 43:24 | |
Thad Stem, Jr. has pointed out | 43:31 | |
that the great negro scientist, Booker T. Washington, | 43:34 | |
delivered the first address he ever was permitted to give | 43:37 | |
to a southern white college right here, | 43:41 | |
on the campus of Trinity College. | 43:46 | |
Many theologians in the years since then have attributed | 43:50 | |
President Kilgal's invitation to Washington | 43:53 | |
and Washington's acceptance of that invitation | 43:57 | |
to the promptings of the spirit of God. | 44:01 | |
If so, | 44:04 | |
God chose to hurt on that occasion | 44:07 | |
because the resulting furor | 44:11 | |
created by the speech of a black man | 44:14 | |
on a southern white campus | 44:17 | |
divided families into warring factions, | 44:20 | |
brought down the wrath and scorn of a great newspaper | 44:23 | |
upon Trinity College | 44:27 | |
and some of the college's fair-weather friends | 44:29 | |
deserted it forever. | 44:32 | |
Without question, | 44:34 | |
there was deep hurt. | 44:36 | |
Yet out of this hurt came healing. | 44:41 | |
Moreover, looking back from the vantage point of history, | 44:45 | |
we conclude that the healing which has come about | 44:48 | |
would not have occurred in our lifetimes | 44:53 | |
except for the pain. | 44:57 | |
At least two major blessings have followed in the wake | 45:01 | |
of that trauma. | 45:04 | |
One was the pioneer act of the Trinity trustees | 45:07 | |
in guaranteeing academic freedom in the famous Basset case. | 45:10 | |
The other was the raising of the issue of human equality | 45:15 | |
uncompromised by race, color, or | 45:19 | |
previous condition of servitude. | 45:23 | |
Looking from our perspective of 1978 and reviewing | 45:27 | |
a long series of events which began with President Kilgal's | 45:31 | |
invitation to Booker T. Washington, | 45:36 | |
we can today, | 45:39 | |
almost audibly, | 45:41 | |
hear Almighty God say, | 45:43 | |
"I hurt and I heal." | 45:47 | |
Now, what I conclude from this is that the conditions | 45:51 | |
in American life | 45:55 | |
which reflect a continuation | 45:57 | |
of the moral and spiritual sickness | 45:59 | |
are of concern to our God because | 46:02 | |
He loves us. | 46:06 | |
And because He is more interested in our character than | 46:08 | |
He is in our comfort, we may expect Him to hurt us if | 46:11 | |
necessary in order to heal us. | 46:16 | |
In response to His past promptings, we have made much | 46:21 | |
progress in many areas of American life | 46:26 | |
and for these achievements we are most thankful. | 46:30 | |
However, we are concerned by a lack of such progress | 46:34 | |
in other areas. | 46:38 | |
We see our people rapidly becoming a drunken nation | 46:40 | |
and the age of drunkenness gets lower every year. | 46:44 | |
We see family life, marriage vows, and sexual integrity | 46:51 | |
diminish speedily. | 46:57 | |
Every day's newspaper tells a story of yet | 47:00 | |
another public official who has been corrupted. | 47:02 | |
Our hope as a people lies in the promise of God | 47:08 | |
that He will discipline us, | 47:14 | |
that He will bring hurt to our land if | 47:17 | |
necessary so that He may heal us. | 47:22 | |
So you see, actually, this verse in Deuteronomy | 47:26 | |
is not an isolated text. | 47:31 | |
The teaching we have from the beginning to the end | 47:34 | |
of the Scripture is the same. | 47:38 | |
In Genesis, the story of Jacob is told when he was | 47:42 | |
at Jabbok, he wrestled with what appeared to be a man, | 47:47 | |
but later Jacob knew that in wrestling with that man | 47:51 | |
he had wrestled with God. | 47:55 | |
And in the struggle, Jacob was injured in the hip | 47:58 | |
by his divine opponent, | 48:02 | |
but in that struggle he also became a new man. | 48:07 | |
He ceased being Jacob the Supplanter and became Israel, | 48:12 | |
a new man, | 48:19 | |
and then in the last book of the Bible, we are given a view | 48:21 | |
of all the people of God as they are to be gathered | 48:26 | |
before the presence of the Almighty. | 48:30 | |
An elder asks the question, | 48:35 | |
""Who are these that are arrayed in white robes | 48:39 | |
and whence came they?" | 48:42 | |
And the answer comes immediately, | 48:44 | |
"These are they who came out of great tribulation. | 48:47 | |
"Therefore, are they before the throne of God." | 48:53 | |
Heavenly Father, help us to trust You. | 49:01 | |
Help us to trust Your intelligence | 49:04 | |
as much as we trust Your love | 49:07 | |
so that we will obey Your Word and be healed | 49:10 | |
through Jesus Christ our Lord, | 49:16 | |
Amen. | 49:19 | |
(organ playing) | 49:28 | |
♪ Now thank we all our God with heart and hands and voices ♪ | 50:14 | |
♪ Who wondrous things has done, in Whom this world rejoices ♪ | 50:27 | |
♪ Who from our mothers' arms has blessed us on our way ♪ | 50:40 | |
♪ With countless gifts of love, and still is ours today ♪ | 50:51 | |
♪ O may this bounteous God through all our life be near us ♪ | 51:04 | |
♪ With ever joyful hearts and blessed peace to cheer us ♪ | 51:17 | |
♪ And keep us in His grace, and guide us when perplexed ♪ | 51:30 | |
♪ And free us from all ills, in this world and the next ♪ | 51:42 | |
♪ All praise and thanks to God the Father now be given ♪ | 51:55 | |
♪ The Son and Him Who reigns with Them in highest Heaven ♪ | 52:08 | |
♪ The one eternal God, whom earth and Heaven adore ♪ | 52:21 | |
♪ For thus it was, is now, and shall be evermore ♪ | 52:33 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 52:46 | |
Man | Let us affirm what we believe. | 52:56 |
We believe in God who has created and is creating | 53:00 | |
who has come in the truly human Jesus | 53:05 | |
to reconcile and make new. | 53:08 | |
Who works in us and others by the spirit, | 53:11 | |
we trust God who calls us to be the church | 53:15 | |
to celebrate life in its fullness, to love and serve others, | 53:20 | |
to seek justice and resist evil, to proclaim Jesus crucified | 53:26 | |
and risen, our judge and our hope in life, in death, | 53:33 | |
in life beyond death, God is with us. | 53:40 | |
We are not alone. | 53:45 | |
Thanks be to God. | 53:47 | |
The Lord be with you. | 53:49 | |
Congregation | And with you. | 53:51 |
Man | Let us pray. | 53:53 |
O God, hear us now as we pray. | 54:09 | |
And not because of our goodness, not because of our merit, | 54:18 | |
not because of our many words and vain utterances, | 54:25 | |
but hear us because of your mercy and your love. | 54:31 | |
We give thanks to You, oh loving God, for this time of | 54:38 | |
worship for surely it is good to go into the house | 54:42 | |
of the Lord to hear Your Word in music, in Scripture, | 54:46 | |
in prayer and in sermon, | 54:53 | |
To be close to friends and family and neighbors, | 54:57 | |
and to celebrate this day and all that it means. | 55:02 | |
We give You thanks for this university for its love of | 55:08 | |
religion and learning, of the arts and sciences, | 55:14 | |
the concern to heal and to help, the desire to make life | 55:21 | |
more whole and more real, which we do experience here. | 55:27 | |
We give You thanks for beautiful memories of persons, | 55:34 | |
of places and of experiences all cherished and held very, | 55:38 | |
very dear. | 55:44 | |
We give You thanks for the hope of a better world tomorrow | 55:47 | |
because of this place and its people. | 55:53 | |
Oh God, bless us in our remembering and in our hoping. | 55:58 | |
Oh God, we give thanks now for life. | 56:07 | |
Life, which offers us days never lived before so that we may | 56:12 | |
share and not hoard our lives, choose joy over pleasure, | 56:18 | |
peace over ease, truth instead of safety, and above all | 56:27 | |
else, find love. | 56:35 | |
And now oh God, we pray in the name of the Christ who loves | 56:40 | |
us and gives life and hope and promise to us | 56:43 | |
and to all persons, may we be healers of others through | 56:47 | |
Your love and power. | 56:53 | |
Be our guide through all that is dark and doubtful. | 56:57 | |
Be our guard against all that threatens our integrity. | 57:01 | |
Be our strength under pressure and our | 57:06 | |
consolation in sadness. | 57:09 | |
Be our joy in celebration and our comfort in disappointment. | 57:13 | |
Keep us always open to You and thus open to one another. | 57:20 | |
Hear us now as we pray, as our Lord has taught us to pray | 57:27 | |
saying, our Father, who art in Heaven, hallowed be Thy name. | 57:31 | |
Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it | 57:39 | |
is in heaven. | 57:44 | |
Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our | 57:46 | |
trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us. | 57:49 | |
And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. | 57:56 | |
For Thine is the kingdom, the power, | 58:01 | |
and the glory forever, amen. | 58:04 | |
(organ plays) | 58:11 | |
(organ and choir perform "Laudate Dominum" by Mozart) | 1:00:46 | |
(organ plays doxology) | 1:05:50 | |
♪ Praise God from whom all blessings flow ♪ | 1:06:08 | |
♪ Praise Him all creatures, here below ♪ | 1:06:15 | |
♪ Alleluia, alleluia ♪ | 1:06:21 | |
♪ Praise Him above ye heavenly hosts ♪ | 1:06:28 | |
♪ Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost ♪ | 1:06:34 | |
♪ Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia, alleluia, alleluia ♪ | 1:06:40 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 1:07:00 | |
Man | And now, oh God, we present ourselves to You, | 1:07:14 |
our work and our leisure, our joys and our sorrows, | 1:07:17 | |
our thoughts and our deeds just as we are to be used | 1:07:23 | |
by You in the world. | 1:07:28 | |
We pray that You will accept our offering as a personal | 1:07:31 | |
giving of ourselves for the good of others and for the doing | 1:07:35 | |
of Your will. | 1:07:39 | |
As we give our gifts, may we also give ourselves through | 1:07:42 | |
Jesus Christ, our Lord, amen. | 1:07:49 | |
(organ plays and congregation sings) | 1:07:55 | |
Man | And now without bowing heads or closing eyes, | 1:11:16 |
from one Christian to another, | 1:11:20 | |
may I offer you this benediction, this blessing: | 1:11:24 | |
the grace of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, | 1:11:29 | |
the love of God and the communion and fellowship of the | 1:11:33 | |
Holy Spirit, be with you and with those whom you love | 1:11:38 | |
this day and forever. | 1:11:45 | |
(choir sings amen) | 1:11:55 | |
(organ plays postlude) | 1:13:00 | |
(indistinct crowd noise) | 1:17:37 |