Fourth Sunday of Advent--The Shepherd Candle

Say: Listen to the words of God from Isaiah 40:9

Read: Isaiah 40:9

Say: We relight the first Advent candle to remind us to look up and center our thoughts on a loving God, who sent his promised Son to us - and who promises his Son’s return.

We relight the second Advent candle, let it remind us to look back 2,000 years to the moment when God’s gift came to us in Bethlehem—and look forward to his coming again.

We relight the third Advent candle, let it remind us to look within ourselves, reflecting on C hrist’s first coming and preparing for his return

As we light the fourth advent candle let it remind us to look out at a lost and needy world, sharing the good news of the Savior’s birth, and warning of the judgment to come at his return.

Read: A reading from Luke 2:15-18

Sing:  O Come All Ye Faithful, Go Tell it on the Mountain

Pray: Father, we glorify and praise you for sending Jesus as our Savior/King.  Thank you for revealing the Good News to us. Help us to respond as the shepherds did, spreading this good news to all we come in contact with. May your Kingdom be expanded in us and through us—for Christ’s sake. Amen.

Third Sunday in Advent: The Messenger Candle

Say: Listen to the words of God from Isaiah 40:3, 4

Read: Isaiah 40:3, 4

Say: We relight the first Advent candle to remind us to look up and center our thoughts on a loving God, who sent his promised Son to us - and who promises his Son’s return.

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We relight the second Advent candle, let it remind us to look back 2,000 years to the moment when God’s gift came to us in Bethlehem—and look forward to his coming again.

As we light the third Advent candle, let it remind us to look within ourselves, reflecting on Christ’s first coming and preparing for his return.

Say: A reading from Luke 2:8-14

Read: Luke 2:8-14

Sing: Angels We Have Heard on High, Angels from the Realms of Glory

Pray: Father, thank you for sending messengers to prepare the way and to proclaim the Savior’s birth. Thank you for making this good news known to us. Help us to take time this season to reflect on the true meaning of Christmas. Help us prepare our hearts to joyfully celebrate Christ’s incarnation and to be ready for his second coming. We ask this in the Savior’s name. Amen.

Second Sunday of Advent

Say: Let us listen to the words of God from Micah 5:2.

Read: Micah 5:2

Say: We relight the first Advent candle to remind us to look up and center our thoughts on a loving God, who sent his promised Son to us - and who promises his Son’s return. As we light the second Advent candle, let it remind us to look back 2,000 years to the moment when God’s gift came to us in Bethlehem—and look forward to his coming again.

Say: A reading from Luke 2:1-7.

Read: Luke 2:107

Sing: O Little Town of Bethlehem, Thou Didst Leave Thy Throne

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Pray: Father, thank you for your promise of a ruler who would be born in Bethlehem. Thank you for sending your Son to fulfill that promise. Help us to take time this busy season to draw closer to Jesus, and to allow him to truly rule in our lives. We pray this in the King’s name. Amen.

For the First Sunday of Advent

First, Advent Defined
Advent begins the fourth Sunday before Christmas. Advent isn’t a rush to the finish line, no matter how much we want 2020 to be over. Advent is a time to reflect and prepare for the coming of Christ as we look back at his first coming and look forward to his return.

The advent wreath helps us rehearse Jesus’ first coming and anticipate his coming again. Each candle represents a different aspect of the Christmas story, and the colors of the candles add to that narrative.

Second Advent Basics—Explanation of the Candles

The purple candles are lit on weeks one, two and four. The color purple is the color of royalty and reminds us that Jesus is king. Purple also is called the color of repentance and reminds us to prepare our hearts for receiving Jesus as king.

Pink is a color often associated with joy. The pink candle, lit on week three, reminds us to look with joy on Christ’s incarnation and joyfully anticipate his second coming.

The center white candle, lit on Christmas Eve, reminds us that Jesus is holy, and he comes to make his people holy.

• The first candle is the promise candle and reminds us that God promised to send a king.
• The second candle is the Bethlehem candle and reminds us where Jesus was born as predicted by the prophet Micah.
• The third candle is the messenger candle and represents the messengers who prepared for and proclaimed Christ’s birth.
• The fourth candle is the shepherd candle and reminds us of the shepherds who found the Christ child, and then went out and spread the news of Jesus’ birth.
• The Christ candle in the center is lit on Christmas Eve, and reminds us that Jesus is holy and he comes to make his people holy.

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First Sunday of Advent—The Promise Candle
Say: We light our first advent candle to remind us to look up and center our thoughts on a loving God, who sent his promised Son to us, and who promises his Son’s return. (Light candle.)

Say: A reading from God’s Word
Read: Isaiah 7:14, 9:6 and Luke 1:68-20
Sing: O Come, O Come Emmanuel, Come Thou Long Expected Jesus

Pray: Dear Father, thank you for promising to send a Savior-King who would free us from the power of sin. Thank you for keeping your promise by sending Jesus, our Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace. Teach us how to live with Jesus as our King. We ask this in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Make your own Advent wreath
You will need
Brass Advent Wreath and candle holders
Candles—three purple, one pink, one white pillar
Boughs—real (pine, boxwood branches) or not
Simple decorations—berries, pinecones, ribbon

A Prayer on Election Day 2020 - from A Pastor Prays for His People by Wendell Hawley

Eternal God, everlasting Father,

Great and marvelous are your works.

When we really contemplate you as Creator and sustainer of all things,

we are overawed by your greatness.

The flowers of the field are of greater beauty than Solomon in all his glory,

The sparrow is the recipient of your provision,

the object of your watch and care.

Nations and rulers are in place at your will and by your decree.

Events totally beyond our control

are subject to your purpose and determined will.

And in between sparrows and nations,

you extend your providential care to your children.

You, O God, asked Abraham: “Is anything too hard for the Lord?”

We need to have such truth reinforced in our thinking—

for the enemy of our souls besieges us with doubts

about your involvement in our lives.

We are overwhelmed with contrary circumstances,

and we are sometimes almost drowning in despair.

We confess that we have almost made security and money our idols,

thinking that investments and governments would see us through.

Now we need to realize there is absolutely no security except in you.

You, Father God, are our secure provision . . . .

May that be our testimony this day.


The Questions I Ask Google by Susan Zimmerman

From early 2014 until mid-2017, I worked as an editor in the marketing communications department of a large corporation. Our department, overwhelmingly comprised of graphic artists, was a newly formed Mac computer island within a corporate sea of PC platforms. So, whenever any of us called corporate IT for help with a tech issue, the answer was usually, “Umm, you’re on a Mac? I don’t know what to do.” Even when the IT person did try to help, there were long delays waiting for an answer.

I’m not the most tech savvy person, so when I ran into inevitable computer problems, it was frustrating not to have ready help from corporate IT. I would privately fume at the slow and sometimes inadequate response.

Then, like everyone else in our department, I discovered Paul. Paul was our image coordinator and a Mac wizard. I joined the line at his desk to get answers, or emailed him, or sent a quick text asking about my latest tech snafu. And Paul was great. He was patient, knowledgeable, and his answers worked! It was like having my own private IT department at my side.

But Paul was a very busy guy. He and the team he led were processing hundreds of images a week. It was unrealistic to expect him to keep up with an unofficial, and unasked for side gig of assisting everyone with their Mac issues. And one day, when I stopped by his desk with yet another query, he looked up, smiled a bit wearily, and said, “Susan, you know you could Google that question and get the answer. That’s what I do sometimes, too.”

Ahh, Google! I felt slightly chastened, but what he said made perfect sense. I went back to my desk and did exactly as Paul suggested. And there it was, the answer to my computer question in five easy steps. Why hadn’t I thought of doing that before? I had used web search for hundreds of other questions, but Googling to unsnarl my Mac hadn’t been one of them.

And now, years later, whenever I encounter a computer issue, I always remember Paul’s advice, “You could Google that.” Unless my computer is actually dying, I can usually find a quick solution.

Yes, Google (or other search engines) is great for all sorts of practical advice. Fixing a Mac. Diagnosing the leak from our dishwasher. Figuring out what’s causing the worrying rattle in the car. Or maybe even discovering how to keep squirrels from digging up bulbs (my latest search).

But wisdom for life’s big questions? Like, how to deal with the current anxiety over the pandemic and all the huge crises in front of our country? Where to invest my time, talent and treasure? How to have a lasting impact on my children and grandchildren? And even more importantly, how to set aside the recurring idols in my life and depend on Christ only for joy and sustenance? For these questions, Google is like my former corporate IT department, “I don’t know what to do.”

Another Paul, the apostle, has something to say about finding wisdom in I Corinthians 1:19-25:

For it is written, “I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and the discernment of the discerning I will thwart.”

Where is the one who is wise? Where is the scribe? Where is the debater of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world?

For since, in the wisdom of God, the world did not know God through wisdom, it pleased God through the folly of what we preach to save those who believe.

For Jews demand signs and Greeks seek wisdom, but we preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles, but to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God.

For the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men.”

It’s all too easy for me having become conditioned by the quick and easy answers from Google to expect the same from “Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God.” As I did when seeking answers to my Mac problems at work, I often privately (or publicly) fume at what I in my limited vision consider a slow or inadequate response. I want five easy steps. And I want them now.

Christ offers a different way to wisdom. James 1:5-6 says, “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him. But let him ask in faith, with no doubting, for the one who doubts is like a wave of the sea that is driven and tossed by the wind.”

In my notes from Pastor Moody’s sermon from August 30 on this passage, I read (my paraphrase of his words): “The great secret of life is to inquire of the Lord. He gives generously, without reproach, in love as a Father. But the condition for this wisdom is faith. Not make believe or positive thinking, but commitment. ‘Without doubting’ means trusting God even if we don’t get it. Trust God and be steadfast.”

I’m slowly learning how this God-given wisdom is so much better than asking Google, or family, or friends, or a self-help article or book. It comes through steadfast commitment, through reading God’s Word, through the daily exercise of faith and dependence on my Lord and Savior. It’s not a quick hit on my computer screen or five simple steps, but it’s ultimately far more satisfying and long lasting. It is the “good gift” and the “perfect gift” that is “from above.” (James 1:17)

A Prayer by Wendell C. Hawley

From his book A Pastor Prays for His People

Blessed Redeemer, beautiful Savior,

Author of all grace and comfort.

We approach you with the deepest reverence—

not with any presumption, nor with servile fear—

but with respectful boldness—because of your gracious invitation.

In the days of yore, you met the invited penitent at the mercy seat.

There the sprinkled blood was a covering for sin.

Today, our needed blessings are to be found at the throne of grace.

Here it is that we find grace in every—every—every! time of need.

It is easy for us to elaborate our needs, as trouble upon trouble piles up on us:

fragmented friendships,

hostile relationships,

adversarial conditions,

financial roadblocks,

family nightmares,

unanswered questions.

Some of these heartburning situations have plagued us without relief,

and we have pled with you to alleviate—

yet still we wait for a divine answer.

Lord, we have nowhere else to go but to you,

and so we again cast ourselves upon your mercy.

Maybe you delay because of the insidious sins

we tolerate or turn a blind eye to!

Galatians tells of good old Barnabas and influential Simon Peter who were

captured by flagrant hypocrisy.

Maybe that’s our sin today—protection of self—

desiring the approval of the crowd rather than God.

Father God, it will take a detergent as strong as the blood of Jesus Christ

to wash away that sin.

We confess with tears all the times we played the hypocrite

and curried the world’s favor—in the world’s place—

and tried some face-saving, self-serving falseness around God’s people.

Forgive us, Lord, as we pray now for deliverance from such sin.

Thank you, Father, help us to never again indulge in hypocrisy.

In the name of Jesus, the way, the truth, and the life.