Sunday, June 27, 2010

Sunday, June 27

I'm often struck, when I enter the church, with how familiar some things are. This morning, we sang Saviour, like a shepherd lead us, (a hymn we often sang in the church I grew up in) and we recited the 23rd Psalm. Both are embedded deep in my soul and it is comforting to hear the words again.

Rev. Johnston is starting a new series over the summer on Philippians, today it was the first few verses in Chapter 1. These words aren't new to me, and it's a comfort to be reminded that God's grace is his promise to us - it's nothing earned on our own merit.

However, the problem with familiar words is just that - the are comfortable. I love the traditional worship at St. Andrew's because there are rarely any surprises. I find I can focus on worship without worrying about what's going to happen next. But that's a two edged sword - it's not always good to be comfortable in the pews. It could be easy just to turn off your brain and just go with the flow, not bothering to take anything new from the old, old story. Not bothering to remember that Christianity is love in action, not just old hymns and familiar Psalms.

What about you? Were the words sung and spoken this morning familiar to you, or were they new? Do you find comfort in the familiar, or do you look for new ways to learn about the old promises?

Maureen.

3 comments:

  1. I must admit that I haven't read Philippians for many many years: since Sunday School! When I remember that Paul's words are in the form of letters, I think, can you imagine opening up the mail one day and receiving this message?
    The ideas of grace and peace in the passage were emphasized in the sermon, and made me think how simple, and yet so involving these words are.
    I was sitting with a friend who has just recently decided to come to St. Andrew's, and her main feeling both times that she has worshipped here is the feeling of peace: what a wonderful thing to feel!
    "Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ" will carry me this week and hopefully for many weeks to come.
    E.

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  2. I've often thought about how different the Presbyterian, or more generally Reformed, experience is compared to that of the denominations with greater orthodoxy, such as the Roman Catholic church, specifically in regards to the use of structure, prescribed prayer. People praying the rosary are praying words that have been prayed, precisely in that manner, for centuries. They are words the faithful learned as children, that they will know for the entirety of their lives (my lapsed-Catholic friends can all still recite the prayers in their sleep). There is comfort in that constancy.

    But I think that constancy, that repetitiveness, is, as you say, a little dangerous. Repetition and predictability should be a tool, not a crutch, a means to help us feel connected with God, not disconnected from worship.

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  3. Thanks, E. And I definitely agree - my heart warmed on Sunday when Andrew ended his sermon with, "Grace to you and peace."

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