Sermon of the Week
The Lord’s Prayer:
Thank You.
A meditation preached at The Kirk of Kansas City, Missouri, on October 28, 2018.
The fifth and final of a multi-part Sermon Series on The Lord’s Prayer. #pcusa
Keywords: Tree of Life, Pittsburgh Synagogue Shooting, The Lord’s Prayer, Thine is the Kingdom, Fred Rogers, Love Wins.
Scripture readings (which you may wish to read prior):
Luke 1:46-53
and Philippians 4:4-9 (also included in the text below)
This is our final Sunday exploring in more detail the Lord’s Prayer.
When we started, we observed how
this Prayer is one of those things that unites us
pretty much with every Christian everywhere.
Protestants, Catholics, Orthodox
Pentecostals, Coptics,
non-denominational big-box
high-roller prosperity gospel on the television
you name it,
just like in this Presbyterian church
and the other 10000 Presbyterian Churches
across this country
this prayer is there somewhere
playing an important role in our life and practice.
That’s something amazing, when you think about it.
But Jesus taught us to pray this prayer in this way
and so we do, not only here
but around dinner tables and in hospital rooms
and whenever we seek to center ourselves on God.
Maybe this sermon series has helped focus for you
some of what Jesus was trying to do for all of us
when he gave us this prayer.
Jesus first focuses our attention on God, and God alone.
God the father, but also Abba God, the intimate one
who, like a good and caring and doting parent
is there right beside you,
hurting when you hurt
encouraging and supporting you in your dreams
marveling at your warmth and creativity and compassion.
We ask for THAT God to bring about her Kingdom,
the reality of God’s shalom here on earth:
a promised time of peace where lion and lamb and kid
all can co-exist,
where people will no longer harm or destroy one another
because God will be in the midst of them.
We ask for God to give us daily Bread
reminding us of how God brought the Hebrews,
our forebears in the faith,
out of slavery with a mighty hand
and through it all, provided for what they needed–
food and clean water and a community with purpose.
We ask for our Daily Bread, and we know with certainty
that God wants all of us to have what we need to thrive.
Thoughts then turn to forgiveness
and to temptation, an understanding of our brokenness
a longing for the good, and our being drawn to so many things
that look enticing
but which don’t satisfy in the end.
In the end, God reminds us,
there is a better way
God’s way, the way of love and light and peace.
Finally, when we get through those four important steps
we end with a few words of praise about God:
For Thine is the Kingdom, and the Power, and the Glory. Amen.
This is called a “Doxology.”
If you’ve been around the church a while,
tou might have seen that word on a bulletin or two.
We use it here, for instance,
to describe what we do after our offering
when we dedicate our gifts to God.
A doxology is a shared expression of God’s amazing generosity.
It is the way we respond to what God is doing, by saying “wow, thank you.”
Today is our Be the Church Sunday,
and so we’ve planned a slightly shorter service,
(meaning a shorter sermon,)
so we can move to our outreach activities quicker,
but, truly, all of our giving back, all of our service,
is an act of doxology,
When we give thanks to the one who made us, who loves us,
through our own deeds of loving kindness.
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