William H. Willimon - "The Pointlessness of Praise" (October 23, 1988)
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
(choir singing) | 0:09 | |
(choir singing) | 0:37 | |
(drums pounding) | 0:56 | |
(choir singing) | 1:29 | |
(drums pounding) | 2:11 | |
(choir singing) | 2:43 | |
- | Morning and welcome to this service of worship, | 3:35 |
homecoming Sunday here in Duke Chapel. | 3:38 | |
We're glad to have all of our alumni back, | 3:41 | |
and we welcome those of you who worship with us | 3:44 | |
by the Duke television system in the Duke hospital. | 3:47 | |
We're glad to have you with us. | 3:52 | |
We remind you, excuse me, that all of today's offerings | 3:54 | |
goes to the work of Habitat for Humanity, | 3:59 | |
and the new Habitat for Humanity chapter, | 4:03 | |
which has been founded here at Duke University. | 4:05 | |
And now, let us continue our worship. | 4:09 | |
(organ music) | 4:13 | |
(congregation singing) | 4:50 | |
(organ music) | 7:27 | |
(choir and congregation singing) | 8:47 | |
- | Let us pray. | 9:31 |
Almighty and everlasting God, | 9:35 | |
In Christ you have revealed your glory among the nations. | 9:37 | |
Preserve the works of your mercy, | 9:42 | |
that your church throughout the world | 9:45 | |
may persevere with steadfast faith | 9:47 | |
in the confession of your most holy name, | 9:50 | |
through your son, Jesus Christ our Lord, amen. | 9:53 | |
- | Let us pray. | 10:06 |
Open our hearts and minds, O God, | 10:08 | |
by the power of our Holy Spirit, | 10:12 | |
so that as the word is read and proclaimed, | 10:15 | |
we might hear the joy, what you say to us this day, amen. | 10:19 | |
The first lesson is taken from the book of Jeremiah. | 10:27 | |
For thus says the Lord, sing aloud with gladness, | 10:31 | |
for Jacob, raise shouts for the chiefs of the nation, | 10:35 | |
proclaim, give praise, and say, | 10:39 | |
the Lord has saved his people, | 10:42 | |
the remnant of Israel, behold I will | 10:44 | |
bring them from the north country | 10:48 | |
and gather them from the farthest parts of the earth. | 10:50 | |
Among them the blind and the lame, | 10:53 | |
the woman with child and her who is in travail together, | 10:56 | |
a great company, they shall return here. | 11:00 | |
With weeping them shall come | 11:04 | |
and with consolations I will lead them back. | 11:06 | |
I will make them walk by brooks of water, | 11:09 | |
in a straight path in which they shall not stumble. | 11:12 | |
For I am a father to Israel, | 11:16 | |
and Ephraim is my firstborn. | 11:18 | |
This ends the reading of the first lesson. | 11:22 | |
(organ music) | 11:25 | |
(choir and congregation singing) | 11:41 | |
(male soloist singing) | 11:51 | |
(choir and congregation singing) | 12:19 | |
(female soloist singing) | 12:25 | |
(choir and congregation singing) | 12:37 | |
(male soloist singing) | 12:43 | |
(choir and congregation singing) | 13:13 | |
(female soloist singing) | 13:19 | |
(choir and congregation singing) | 13:44 | |
- | The epistle lesson is taken from | 14:06 |
the book of Hebrews, chapter five, verses five and six. | 14:08 | |
So also Christ did not exalt himself | 14:15 | |
to be made a high priest, | 14:18 | |
but was appointed by him who said to Christ, | 14:20 | |
thou art my son, today I have begotten thee. | 14:24 | |
And as he says also in another place, | 14:29 | |
thou art a priest forever, | 14:33 | |
after the order of Melchizedek. | 14:35 | |
(organ music) | 14:42 | |
(female soloist singing) | 15:12 | |
(choir singing) | 15:34 | |
(organ music) | 17:02 | |
- | Let us stand for the reading of the gospel. | 17:16 |
And they came to Jericho, | 17:22 | |
and as he was leaving Jericho with his disciples, | 17:24 | |
and a great multitude, Bartamaeus, a blind beggar, | 17:27 | |
the son of Tomas, was sitting by the roadside. | 17:30 | |
And when he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, | 17:34 | |
he began to cry out and say, | 17:37 | |
Jesus, son of David, have mercy on me. | 17:39 | |
And many rebuked him, telling him to be silent, | 17:42 | |
but he cried out all the more, | 17:46 | |
son of David, have mercy on me. | 17:48 | |
And Jesus stopped and said, call him. | 17:51 | |
They called the blind man, saying to him, | 17:54 | |
take heart, rise, he is calling you. | 17:57 | |
And throwing off his mantle, he sprang up | 18:01 | |
and came to Jesus, and Jesus said to him, | 18:03 | |
what do you want me to do for you? | 18:07 | |
And the blind man said to him, | 18:09 | |
Master, let me receive my sight, | 18:12 | |
and Jesus said to him, go your way, | 18:15 | |
your faith has made you well, | 18:18 | |
and immediately he received his sight | 18:20 | |
and followed on the way. | 18:23 | |
This ends the reading of the gospel. | 18:26 | |
(organ music) | 18:29 | |
(choir and congregation singing) | 18:52 | |
- | I suspect that many of you | 21:40 |
by training, if not by natural inclination, | 21:44 | |
expect something useful to happen now. | 21:49 | |
We've come to the point of the service | 21:55 | |
where the preacher stands up and | 21:57 | |
with luck, manages, when, in about 20 minutes, | 22:01 | |
to say something useful. | 22:05 | |
To say something that makes sense. | 22:09 | |
To say something that's reasonable. | 22:10 | |
You presume that this is the point of preaching. | 22:16 | |
To get to the point. | 22:20 | |
To give you something you can take home with you. | 22:22 | |
Some interesting thought or idea, | 22:26 | |
perhaps some uplifting sentiment. | 22:29 | |
The students are now saying to themselves, | 22:35 | |
"only the alumni are thinking that | 22:38 | |
"something useful is going to happen now, | 22:40 | |
"they've not heard Willimon's sermons." | 22:42 | |
You know, it's a great challenge | 22:46 | |
to be a preacher at a university pulpit. | 22:48 | |
Because, my hunch is that many of you | 22:51 | |
are trained by years of schooling, | 22:55 | |
to listen for a point. | 22:58 | |
A message, a word. | 23:01 | |
And I'm going to take this opportunity | 23:05 | |
to thank those of you who've been good enough | 23:06 | |
to point out to me when my sermons | 23:09 | |
have been illogical, impractical, or just nonsensical. | 23:11 | |
But I want this morning to be honest. | 23:16 | |
To admit up front that I have | 23:19 | |
absolutely nothing useful to say to you today. | 23:21 | |
As far as I know, there is no moral to my remarks. | 23:26 | |
No subliminal message, no thought for the day, | 23:32 | |
no pearl of wisdom, no helpful hints for homemakers. | 23:35 | |
I do not expect you to do anything, | 23:40 | |
go anywhere, work on, campaign for or against | 23:43 | |
anybody, by the end of this sermon. | 23:47 | |
I wanted to be up front about that. | 23:49 | |
Now, the most suspicious of you | 23:54 | |
are on guard at this moment. | 23:57 | |
This is probably one of those | 24:01 | |
preacher tricks, you're thinking. | 24:02 | |
Beware of any preacher who comes to you | 24:06 | |
claiming not to want to | 24:08 | |
put the make on you in a sermon. | 24:09 | |
For what else could be the point of preaching? | 24:12 | |
We're probably going to be told | 24:17 | |
a bunch of silly little stories | 24:18 | |
from Willimon's childhood and, | 24:20 | |
then there'll be a poem, a tear jerking poem, | 24:22 | |
and then, just when our defenses our down | 24:26 | |
and there's a tear in our eye, whap! | 24:29 | |
Come down to the altar as the aeolian plays softly, | 24:35 | |
and make a contribution to the chapel development campaign. | 24:39 | |
Don't lie to me, that's what you're thinking. | 24:43 | |
This is just a preacher trick, | 24:46 | |
a kind of soft sale come-on before | 24:48 | |
the bone crushing blow at the end of the sermon, | 24:51 | |
that's what you're thinking. | 24:56 | |
And you think this of course, | 24:59 | |
because you're all busy, intelligent, | 25:01 | |
achievement orientated people. | 25:04 | |
Slouches do not get into Duke. | 25:08 | |
Come on, you're saying, get on with it. | 25:11 | |
I have not got all day. | 25:13 | |
I've already sat through a long organ prelude, | 25:16 | |
a number of pieces by the choir, | 25:18 | |
a couple of readings, a couple of prayers, | 25:20 | |
it's nearly 11:30, would you get on with it | 25:22 | |
and get to the point? | 25:25 | |
And of course, lot's of people | 25:28 | |
think this is what religion is all about. | 25:29 | |
A student told me just the other day, | 25:34 | |
that while he likes my preaching, | 25:37 | |
I don't hear from those who don't, | 25:40 | |
but while he liked my preaching, | 25:42 | |
he said he didn't come to the chapel that often, | 25:44 | |
because he said, you've always got | 25:46 | |
those banners and those processions | 25:48 | |
and all that other preliminary stuff. | 25:50 | |
He just didn't like all those other preliminaries. | 25:56 | |
All that other stuff, could we go ahead | 25:59 | |
and get to the point. | 26:02 | |
Imagine, you can't imagine, | 26:08 | |
tomorrow morning, going into botany class, | 26:11 | |
professor beginning the lecture by saying, | 26:14 | |
"class, today before I begin my lecture | 26:16 | |
"on the vascular system of coniferous trees, | 26:19 | |
"I want all of you to go out, | 26:23 | |
"and roll in the grass and lie on your back | 26:24 | |
"and look up into the branches | 26:27 | |
"and become intimate with a pine." | 26:29 | |
"Would you get to the point," you'd say. | 26:34 | |
"We're not paying the kind of tuition we pay here | 26:36 | |
"for this kind of poetic dribble. | 26:38 | |
"Go ahead and get to the point." | 26:39 | |
That's what you'd say. | 26:44 | |
And that explains why a number of you are getting edgy, now. | 26:47 | |
Could we skip these long lead-ins, | 26:52 | |
these peripatetic preliminaries please, | 26:53 | |
could we go ahead and get to the point. | 26:56 | |
And of course you're not alone in this way of thinking. | 27:00 | |
As I said, lots of people think | 27:04 | |
this is what religion is all about. | 27:05 | |
We Americans are a no-nonsense, | 27:10 | |
practical, utilitarian, pragmatic people. | 27:14 | |
We approach every human experience | 27:19 | |
always with a question, | 27:21 | |
"well what good will this do?" | 27:23 | |
Principally, what good will this do me? | 27:27 | |
How can I use it? | 27:29 | |
Will it also dice onions and make julienne fries? | 27:31 | |
Will it fold out into a bed? | 27:34 | |
What good will it do? | 27:36 | |
Little wonder then, that we should approach religion, | 27:39 | |
the same way we approach life. | 27:44 | |
That we should think religion | 27:49 | |
is to be judged on the basis of its utility. | 27:52 | |
I don't go to church all that often, | 28:00 | |
but I, I do try to live a good life, | 28:02 | |
and I do try to help people when I can, | 28:05 | |
and after all, I mean, isn't that | 28:08 | |
really the point of religion? | 28:11 | |
Now the scandalous truth can be told. | 28:16 | |
No, that's not the point of religion. | 28:19 | |
That isn't what religion is all about. | 28:23 | |
I bring home a loaf of bread every night, | 28:28 | |
and I allow her to use the remote control on the TV. | 28:30 | |
And after all, isn't that what marriage is all about? | 28:33 | |
No. | 28:39 | |
She said, "George, I love you. | 28:42 | |
"I love you more than words can say. | 28:46 | |
"I love you more than the grains of sand | 28:48 | |
"on the seashore, I love you more | 28:51 | |
"than the stars in the heavens. | 28:53 | |
"I love you," and he said, | 28:56 | |
"Martha, I find you very useful. | 29:00 | |
"Since I have met you, I have | 29:07 | |
"lowered my carbohydrate intake, | 29:09 | |
"and my GPA is up two points." | 29:12 | |
No, no, that's not marriage, | 29:16 | |
that's not love, | 29:21 | |
that's not religion. | 29:24 | |
Religion, religion, religion is one of the most | 29:28 | |
counter-cultural things you can do | 29:33 | |
in this society of utility. | 29:35 | |
Because religion at its very best | 29:38 | |
is so scandalously useless. | 29:41 | |
Every spontaneous amen, | 29:47 | |
every loud raucous hallelujah, | 29:51 | |
every tear that forms in the eye | 29:53 | |
or lump that comes in the throat unexpectedly, | 29:56 | |
that is religion at its purest, | 29:59 | |
most holy, most pointless form. | 30:03 | |
Religion, is an utterly gratuitous affair, | 30:09 | |
before it is anything useful. | 30:15 | |
My text today is from the prophet Jeremiah. | 30:21 | |
And normally, if you know anything about Jeremiah, | 30:26 | |
you know that Jeremiah can be counted on | 30:29 | |
to be one of the crabbiest preachers you've ever met. | 30:31 | |
Jeremiah, a book full of prophetic fire and brimstone, | 30:35 | |
curses, and condemnation, "thus sayeth the Lord, | 30:40 | |
"return, backsliding, wayward adulteress, Israel, | 30:44 | |
"and I will not cause my anger to fall upon you | 30:48 | |
"any longer, turn away backsliding children, | 30:50 | |
"sayeth the Lord of Hosts." | 30:54 | |
And that's very typical of Jeremiah, the prophet of doom. | 30:58 | |
We even have a word for such | 31:03 | |
fire and brimstone laced fulmination. | 31:05 | |
We call it a jeremiad, a, | 31:09 | |
a prophetic cursing, scornful speech, | 31:12 | |
delivered by someone like Jeremiah. | 31:18 | |
But within the book of Jeremiah, | 31:23 | |
there is a break about chapters 30, 31. | 31:25 | |
The prophet who has so harshly criticized Israel, | 31:30 | |
now calls God's people to praise. | 31:36 | |
"For thus says the Lord, sing aloud | 31:42 | |
"with gladness for Jacob, | 31:47 | |
"the Lord has saved his people." | 31:50 | |
Here is the context. | 31:55 | |
Israel has been on exile, Israel has been | 31:57 | |
deported, taken away, one of the many | 32:00 | |
pogroms and deportations and holocaust | 32:03 | |
suffered by God's chosen ones. | 32:07 | |
There has been horrible suffering and sadness. | 32:10 | |
But now at about chapters 30, 31, | 32:16 | |
the prophet announces God is going to reach out | 32:18 | |
and bring God's chosen but oppressed people back home. | 32:22 | |
Including the blind, the lame, | 32:28 | |
pregnant women, even those in labor, | 32:32 | |
who find it hard to travel. | 32:35 | |
God is going to make the road straight. | 32:37 | |
There will be plentiful water along the way. | 32:39 | |
The speech is unqualified, unadulterated, | 32:44 | |
unrestrained good news. | 32:48 | |
This is homecoming, sixth century B.C. | 32:50 | |
Good news! | 32:55 | |
Good news, and I tell you, | 32:58 | |
that doesn't fit our stereotype | 33:00 | |
of the way prophets are supposed to talk, does it? | 33:01 | |
We expect prophets to speak like most preachers. | 33:06 | |
Sermons just chalk full of should, and ought, and must. | 33:10 | |
The gospel presented as imperative. | 33:14 | |
Sunday, oh Sunday, Sunday's a day | 33:19 | |
to heap on ever increasing burdens of responsibility. | 33:21 | |
Sunday, a time for the preacher to tell us | 33:26 | |
all the ways we've gone wrong | 33:29 | |
and what we need to do now to get it right. | 33:31 | |
As Jesus said to some preachers of his day, | 33:34 | |
"you exist to heap burdens on people's back, | 33:38 | |
"you won't lift a finger to take a burden off." | 33:41 | |
But here, is a prophetic word which | 33:46 | |
invites people to praise, only to praise! | 33:48 | |
And I tell you, this is sort of a tough text | 33:54 | |
for a preacher. | 33:56 | |
Sing aloud with gladness, raise shouts of praise! | 33:58 | |
Because the preacher's conditioned | 34:03 | |
just like you, to ask, "okay, okay, | 34:06 | |
"good, but what am I to do with that?" | 34:09 | |
What good will that do? | 34:14 | |
Here's some possibilities. | 34:15 | |
Friends, have you ever wanted to sing? | 34:19 | |
By coming to Duke chapel and following along | 34:24 | |
in your hymnals, our chapel choir | 34:26 | |
can give you a sense of rhythm. | 34:28 | |
Or, you self-satisfied Americans, | 34:31 | |
you ought to be ashamed of how | 34:35 | |
rarely you praise God for all your blessings. | 34:37 | |
Or, medical research has shown | 34:40 | |
that if you just get out of bed each morning | 34:44 | |
and have yourself a good praise session, | 34:46 | |
it'll lower your blood pressure! | 34:48 | |
No, no, no, no. | 34:52 | |
This is not something we should, or ought, or must do. | 34:53 | |
Praise, like joy, is responsive, it's reflexive. | 34:57 | |
You can't decide to be joyful. | 35:05 | |
Joy is rather, the fitting response | 35:11 | |
of the action of someone else upon us. | 35:14 | |
Blind Bartamaeus did not have to be told | 35:17 | |
to be joyful when Jesus touched him | 35:20 | |
and he could see again. | 35:24 | |
Israel didn't have to have instructions | 35:25 | |
on celebration, when the announcement | 35:27 | |
of homecoming was made in Babylon. | 35:30 | |
Praise is like that. | 35:33 | |
Praise, and I don't care whether it's praise of God | 35:36 | |
or any other kind of praise, | 35:41 | |
it is always responsive, reflexive. | 35:42 | |
And in that sense, praise is not pointless. | 35:47 | |
It is the fitting response of good news. | 35:51 | |
I tell you when you've met the right person, | 35:56 | |
and you've spent the perfect evening, | 35:59 | |
and you are on your way back home, | 36:02 | |
you don't have to be told, | 36:04 | |
go out and find a good love song and hum it. | 36:06 | |
You'll be humming. | 36:11 | |
Love is like that. | 36:14 | |
Joy is like that. | 36:16 | |
Love, like Sunday morning worship, | 36:20 | |
is so beautifully non-utilitarian. | 36:25 | |
So liberatingly pointless. | 36:30 | |
Then why do we do it? | 36:35 | |
Let us let 1 John 4:19 give us an answer, | 36:37 | |
if answers be needed. | 36:41 | |
We love, John says, | 36:44 | |
because he first loved us. | 36:47 | |
Praise, holy praise is reflexive. | 36:54 | |
Those all too rare but delicious, holy invitations | 36:58 | |
to join all the company of heaven in unending praise. | 37:03 | |
As C.S. Lewis says, "Joy is the serious business of heaven." | 37:10 | |
The most important job of the church is doxology. | 37:16 | |
I like the way the old Calvinists put it | 37:22 | |
in their catechism, the little child | 37:24 | |
is made to ask, "what is my chief end | 37:27 | |
in life, and in death?" | 37:30 | |
And the response, "my chief end is to | 37:33 | |
glorify God and to enjoy God forever." | 37:38 | |
I like that. | 37:42 | |
That's utilitarian. | 37:45 | |
I like that, that strikes me as so un-Methodist. | 37:46 | |
I think, if we think of Sunday morning, | 37:51 | |
I mean, the image I have is, | 37:54 | |
you've come with your little notepads | 37:55 | |
and the preacher works on you for about 20 minutes. | 37:57 | |
"Okay church, this morning I want | 38:00 | |
"everybody to go out of here and | 38:02 | |
"work on your sexism, your racism, | 38:03 | |
"be nice to people in the cafeteria, | 38:05 | |
"come back next week, I'll give you another assignment. | 38:07 | |
"Let's stand for the benediction." | 38:10 | |
No, no, no, that's really not worship at its best. | 38:13 | |
That's not Sunday at its best. | 38:18 | |
That's too much like Monday to be Sunday. | 38:21 | |
Sunday is a time for ecstasy! | 38:25 | |
Ecstasy, the word comes from the Greek | 38:28 | |
ekstasis, which means literally, | 38:30 | |
to stand outside oneself. | 38:33 | |
To stand outside yourself, to be beside yourself. | 38:36 | |
And I tell you, I don't know about you, | 38:40 | |
but I can't think of anything more difficult | 38:41 | |
for modern, self-conscious, self-absorbed people | 38:44 | |
than to just for one moment on Sunday morning, | 38:48 | |
stand outside of ourselves. | 38:51 | |
We are so busy with ourselves. | 38:55 | |
So self-absorbed. | 38:57 | |
But sometimes, oh sometimes, | 39:01 | |
you know, there you are, wondering, | 39:04 | |
what am I doing here, I, maybe I should've gone | 39:07 | |
to the library, done something useful, | 39:10 | |
rather than sitting here in church singing. | 39:12 | |
How do I look? | 39:15 | |
What am I going to do tomorrow? | 39:16 | |
What about this decision in my life? | 39:18 | |
Where do I go from here? | 39:20 | |
There you are, worrying about all that, | 39:21 | |
anxious, and then, then, sometimes, | 39:23 | |
by the grace of God, something gets hold of you. | 39:27 | |
And suddenly all those self-absorbed questions | 39:32 | |
are just quite beside the point. | 39:35 | |
You, even you, get ecstatic. | 39:37 | |
And you find yourself in the words of the old hymn, lost, | 39:40 | |
in wonder, love, and praise. | 39:44 | |
Now, all of your problems and projects | 39:51 | |
and preoccupations become quite beside the point, | 39:53 | |
and you praise. | 39:57 | |
I tell you, that is enjoyment of God. | 40:01 | |
At its purest, most basic, most enjoyable. | 40:05 | |
Tell me, at the end of this service, | 40:13 | |
if you didn't get the point, | 40:15 | |
my feelings won't be hurt, | 40:17 | |
tell me you got ecstatic, | 40:20 | |
and Greg Fountain and I will be well pleased. | 40:24 | |
Well this past summer this chapel | 40:30 | |
was filled to hear a sermon by Millard Fuller. | 40:31 | |
Alabama born lawyer, who gave away | 40:37 | |
all of his money and went out with his wife | 40:40 | |
to found Habitat for Humanity. | 40:42 | |
Fuller told us about the worldwide work | 40:47 | |
of Habitat, they've built a couple of thousand homes | 40:49 | |
for poor people this year, they plan | 40:53 | |
to build four thousand next year. | 40:55 | |
Fuller was telling us about the presentation | 40:59 | |
of one of his homes. | 41:01 | |
He said, "we're up in New London, Connecticut, | 41:04 | |
"where we presented a house to a woman | 41:07 | |
"and her children who had never had a house of her own. | 41:10 | |
"Well, as usual, we had a little presentation ceremony, | 41:15 | |
"we gave her the keys to the house, | 41:18 | |
"we gave her a bible, then we asked her | 41:20 | |
"if she'd like to say anything to the workers. | 41:23 | |
"But she was just so overcome with joy, | 41:26 | |
"she couldn't say anything, | 41:28 | |
"but on her way back to her seat, | 41:30 | |
"she just began to shout." | 41:33 | |
Fuller said, "now, I don't know whether | 41:36 | |
"any of you people have ever been in a church | 41:38 | |
"where people sometimes shout, | 41:40 | |
"where sometimes they just get so | 41:43 | |
"full of the Holy Spirit and joy | 41:44 | |
"and all that, they just gotta shout. | 41:46 | |
"I doubt that happens," he said, | 41:48 | |
"very often in Duke chapel." | 41:49 | |
But he said, "anyway, she started shouting, | 41:53 | |
"she started shouting," and Fuller said, | 41:55 | |
"there were a lot of New England white folks up there, | 41:58 | |
"they'd never heard this before. | 42:02 | |
"And they didn't know what was | 42:05 | |
"gonna happen next, maybe whether Jesus would come | 42:06 | |
"or something, they was scared." | 42:08 | |
Fuller said, | 42:19 | |
"it was wonderful." | 42:22 | |
(organ music) | 42:25 | |
(choir singing) | 42:57 | |
(organ music) | 43:47 | |
(choir singing) | 43:58 | |
- | The Lord be with you. | 45:15 |
Congregation | And also with you. | 45:17 |
- | Let us pray. | 45:18 |
Spirit of God, the fountain of beauty and goodness, | 45:28 | |
from whom stream all things excellent | 45:32 | |
and life and nature. | 45:34 | |
Open our eyes to see your wonder working | 45:36 | |
and the world and to rejoice in you. | 45:39 | |
Congregation | Bless the Lord of my soul, | 45:41 |
and forget not all of God's senses. | 45:45 | |
- | For the constancy and beauty of creation, | 45:48 |
for the breath of wind, the scent of flowers, | 45:52 | |
the racing clouds, the glory of the trees, | 45:55 | |
for the procession of days and nights, | 45:59 | |
the rhythm of seasons, and the wonder of stars. | 46:02 | |
Congregation | Bless the Lord of my soul, | 46:06 |
and forget not all of God's senses. | 46:09 | |
- | For all beauty and human thought and deed. | 46:12 |
For poet's song and prophet's word, | 46:16 | |
the gift of music and the grace of art. | 46:19 | |
For an ability of character, | 46:22 | |
for the loveliness of friendship, | 46:24 | |
and for the fragrance of souls nourished in peace. | 46:26 | |
- | Bless the Lord of my soul, | 46:30 |
and forget not all of God's senses. | 46:33 | |
Woman | Calm our too easily disquieted spirits, | 46:36 |
that they may reflect your presence | 46:40 | |
in all things excellent and of good report. | 46:41 | |
Take the dimness of our souls away, | 46:45 | |
free our hearts from lethargy. | 46:48 | |
Our spirits from discouragement, | 46:50 | |
and our lips from complaining, | 46:53 | |
that we may rejoice in you. | 46:55 | |
- | Bless the Lord of my soul, | 46:58 |
and forget not all of God's senses. | 47:00 | |
- | For every inward intimation that we are your children. | 47:04 |
For hours of insight, when we have clearly seen | 47:09 | |
your living presence and have been persuaded of your love. | 47:11 | |
For that we cannot live by bread alone, | 47:16 | |
nor find rest until we rest in you. | 47:18 | |
- | Bless the Lord of my soul, | 47:22 |
and forget not all of God's senses. | 47:25 | |
- | For all victories of good over evil. | 47:28 |
Wisdom over ignorance, love over hate. | 47:31 | |
We praise you. | 47:35 | |
For ancient superstitions over past, | 47:37 | |
and ancient oppressions done away. | 47:40 | |
For the evident working of your purpose | 47:43 | |
in the breaking of bondage. | 47:45 | |
The enlargement of opportunity, | 47:47 | |
the victories of peace and the diffusion of light. | 47:49 | |
- | Bless the Lord of my soul, | 47:53 |
and forget not all of God's senses. | 47:56 | |
- | For courage to endure hazard and hardship, | 47:59 |
we praise you, for the tutelage of your spirit, | 48:02 | |
teaching us how trials are to be born, | 48:06 | |
and with what answer they are to be beaten back. | 48:08 | |
For spiritual valor to face life's adventures. | 48:12 | |
Neither seducing others nor ourselves seduced by fear. | 48:15 | |
For strength to do what is appointed, | 48:20 | |
and for faith to leave the unsolved mysteries in your care. | 48:22 | |
- | Bless the Lord of my soul, | 48:27 |
and forget not all of God's senses. | 48:30 | |
Woman | May all our livings speak your praise. | 48:33 |
By faithful work and wholesome leisure, | 48:36 | |
by daily kindliness, by truthfulness of life | 48:39 | |
and tongue, by secret living in your sight, | 48:42 | |
and outward service for the good of all. | 48:46 | |
- | Bless the Lord of my soul, | 48:49 |
and forget not all of God's senses, amen. | 48:51 | |
- | Let us now worship God by the offering | 48:56 |
of ourselves and our gifts. | 48:59 | |
(organ music) | 49:04 | |
(choir singing) | 50:13 | |
(organ music) | 54:53 | |
(choir and congregation singing) | 55:15 | |
- | We give you thanks, O God, | 56:23 |
for revealing your power in the creation of the universe, | 56:25 | |
and for your providence in the life of the world. | 56:28 | |
For the revelation of your kingdom | 56:32 | |
in our midst, by your son Jesus Christ, | 56:33 | |
who came on earth to manifest | 56:36 | |
and to accomplish your will. | 56:39 | |
For his humble birth, and his holy life, | 56:41 | |
and for his words and miracles. | 56:44 | |
For his sufferings and death, | 56:47 | |
and his entry into kingship by | 56:49 | |
his resurrection and ascension. | 56:51 | |
For the founding of the universal church | 56:54 | |
spread to the ends of the earth, | 56:56 | |
and for the coming of your kingdom within us, | 56:58 | |
by the gifts of your holy spirit. | 57:01 | |
For all these good and gracious gifts, | 57:04 | |
and for the unique gifts we now acknowledge | 57:07 | |
before you in our hearts, | 57:10 | |
we bless your holy name, | 57:12 | |
and praise our Lord taught us saying, | 57:14 | |
"our Father, who art in heaven | 57:17 | |
"hallowed be your name. | 57:20 | |
"Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, | 57:23 | |
"on earth, as it is in heaven. | 57:26 | |
"Give us this day, our daily bread, | 57:29 | |
"and forgive us our trespasses, | 57:32 | |
"as we forgive those who trespass against us. | 57:34 | |
"and lead us not into temptation, | 57:38 | |
"but deliver us from evil. | 57:40 | |
"For thine is the kingdom, | 57:43 | |
"and the power, and the glory, forever, amen." | 57:44 | |
(organ music) | 57:50 | |
(choir and congregation singing) | 58:43 | |
(organ music) | 1:00:22 | |
(congregation singing) | 1:02:08 | |
- | Now may the grace of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, | 1:02:46 |
the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit | 1:02:49 | |
be with you and among you, always. | 1:02:52 | |
(choir singing) | 1:02:57 | |
(organ music) | 1:03:15 |