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LENT 4: MARCH 26 2006
John
3:14-21 (Sermon 1: “No
Condemnation”)
Ephesians
2:1-10 (Sermon 2: “A Word To The
Dead”)
Numbers
21:4-9.
Psalm
107:1-3,17-22
GETTING INTO FOCUS
The
grace of Christ Jesus be with you all.
And also with you.
We
all have a right to be here,
a
right not based on us but on God’s grace.
O give thanks to our God who is good,
whose saving love endures forever.
Let
those who are redeemed by God declare it,
rescued
from trouble and gathered from many lands;
From the east and from the west,
from the north and from the south,
we give thanks to God who is always good,
whose saving love endures forever..
OR
God
so loved the world that he gave his only Son
that
whoever believes in him should not perish
but
have eternal life.
Let
those who know they are redeemed celebrate it!
Those who have been reclaimed from deep trouble!
Though
we were as good as dead,
God
made us alive with the grace of Christ
through
whom we are rescued and healed.
O
give thanks to God for such unswerving
love,
for such wonderful deeds for the children of earth.
DRAWING NEARER
God
of everflowing love, with trust in your overflowing grace we gather together
this day.
By
faith we come before you not as strangers but as friends.
By
faith in your grace we worship you, knowing that you do not belittle our patchy
praise.
By
faith in your grace we expect to hear your Word, and by faith we hope to fulfil
it.
Encourage
us, loving God, to be bold in our trust, enthusiastic in worship, and humble in
our service.
Through
Christ Jesus our Redeemer.
Amen!
FACING SIN AND WELCOMING
GRACE
God
our Saviour, we confess our sins which are numerous, some recognised and some
that go unnoticed by us.
Among
us are ¾
the confused who need to spend more time under your revealing
light,
the ‘nit pickers’ who need a fresh encounter with unqualified
love,
the excuse makers who need to face up to responsibility,
the sceptics who need to put doubts to the test,
the intolerant who need a new appointment with free grace,
the bored believers who need a revival of the first passionate
faith.
Merciful
God, by the vigour of your Holy Spirit, challenge our evasions, expose our
delinquency, forgive our sins, and deliver us from all evil. Through the grace
of Christ Jesus our Saviour.
Amen!
FORGIVENESS
It
is written:
“God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him
should not perish, but have eternal life.”
My
sisters and brothers, this is the gospel of grace. We are a forgiven people.
Believe it, receive it, live it!
Amen!
PRAYER FOR CHILDREN
Dear
God,
how
weird it is that you love us,
such
silly and grubby little earthlings.
The
whole universe is yours,
but
you chose to sent your son
into
this world to save us.
Such
love is awesome.
Megan
awesome!
We
will never be able to repay you,
but
we do love you a lot, God,
and
we want to be your friends forever.
Amen!
PSALM 107: 1-3, 17-22
Thank
God who is always good,
whose
saving love stands firm forever!
Let those who are redeemed declare it,
rescued and gathered from many lands;
from the east and from the west,
from the north and from the south.
Some
have been sickening fools,
caught
in the misery of their own sins,
losing even the desire to eat
and starving themselves to death.
At
last they cried out to God
who
became their deliverer,
speaking the word of healing
to rescue them from hopelessness.
Let
them all thank God for such mercy,
for
the wonderful way they are loved.
Let them offer the sacrifice of thanksgiving
and sing together of all God’s exploits.
SHOULD NOT PERISH?
John
3:16
Perish?
The
die seems cast.
We
are the perishable,
perishable
with all creatures.
Eagles
and rows, koalas and platypus,
all
perish at last,
their
flesh returned to dust.
Homo
sapiens, you and I,
are
more perishable than they,
for
in soul-being we may also perish,
long
before the flesh wears out
and
returns to the clay.
Love
alone is our hope,
life
giving love,
the
imperishable love
of
Someone
whose
love, at high cost,
persists
into death
and
reverses the doom
that
follows the steps
of
the lost.
That
such a love should now be
is
blood-writ in eternity.
Ó B D Prewer 2002
COLLECTING OUR THOUGHTS
Most
wonderful God, you have given us Christ Jesus as master and friend, example and
saviour, teacher and enabler. As he comes to us, may we cleave to him, and in
his vibrant company find both the grace and the strength to share his
sufferings in the cause of the gospel. As we share his sufferings may we also
share his joy and glory. For he lives and loves with you and your Holy Spirit,
one God forever and ever.
Amen!
SERMON 1: NO CONDEMNATION
“God so loved the world,
that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but
have eternal life. For God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the
world, but that the world might be saved through him.” John 3:16-17
Condemnation
creates bondage. Love liberates. That is true in families, in communities and
in our churches.
I
was asked to conduct the funeral service of a young man, Wayne, who died at the
age of 22 from drug abuse. He had lived for periods on the city streets, poorly
washed and fed, and had there a whole network of friends, a community which I
knew little about. At the funeral, as well as grieving family, neighbours and
friends from earlier days with whom he had grown up, there were many of his
street community. These largely outnumbered the other mourners.
As
I commenced that service I felt out of my depth. I felt no common ground with
the street community and they made it obvious they felt none with me. A group
of young men, lay back in the seats, chewing gum, eyes to the ceiling. Their
body language spelt disdain (no more than that; outright rejection) for this
minister bloke, a representative of the good, respectable people who tend to
despise the people of the streets.
I
ploughed on with the service, inwardly praying desperately for help. After a
time I stopped looking in the direction of the young fellows; I could not cope
with my apparent irrelevance to their lives. Somehow I got through the service,
feeling I had been largely useless.
Later,
a member from the mourning family asked me if I had noticed the body language
of the street people. I replied I had, and spoke of how useless I felt. They
responded that what they meant was the change that came over the group
during my address. I answered I had not noticed any change because at that
stage I tried not to look directly at them.
The
mourner then explained how at one point in my talk, they stopped chewing, sat
up straighter, and listened intently. It was the point at which I spoke with
passion of God’s unconditional love for us all, the way each life was treasured
by God no matter what others thought of us or what we thought of ourselves. I
said that it was not our business to judge Wayne, that he remained at all times
God’s child, and that God saw in him something precious enough to die for. I
quoted John 3: 16-17. God was love, love, love and yet more love. Love that
never ended, not even at death.
Evidently that message touched something in them, where nothing else in
the service had.
The
Gospel gives us that same word today. A different setting, a different
congregation, but the same message and the same need. For God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the world, but that
the world might be saved through him.
John 3:17
My
unease is that we here may have heard it so often we might treat it as
“hoh...hum...yawn” stuff. If the utterly amazing Gospel becomes “hoh..hum” we
are in big trouble.
-----OUR
OBSESSION WITH
BLAME------------------------------------------------------------------
Condemnation
is a speciality of human beings. We are always trying to apportion blame or
shift it. It is a nasty game at which most become adept. We see it operating in
a raw way among children, we see it at work in much of what appears in the
popular press. As I have grown much older I regret to say that among some
elderly folk the condemnation game seems to become almost an obsession. I have
been in some groups where maybe 70% of the conversation is condemnation of this
and that; a litany of complaints about what others have done or look like
doing.
Maybe
what we are doing when we condemn others, is trying to build up our own self
esteem by putting others down. Maybe it is a crazy game in which we try to make
ourselves feel superior and better. We say: “I know I have my faults, but that
is really disgusting.” Or, “When we
were young we got into some scrapes, but nothing like this. I don’t know what
young people today are doing. Haven’t they got any morals? Haven’t they got any
brains?”
The
addiction to blame is widespread. It infects every level of life. I have
mentioned especially older folk because I am now one of them. Maybe with older
folk the condemnatory attitude stems from the fact that our self image has
taken extra pounding. We have lost our physical attractiveness, we have lost
our status in the working world, our mental agility and memory may not be as
good as it used to be, and our opinions often raise only smirks on the faces of
the young.
However,
this fault finding is always self defeating no matter what our age. A burst of
condemnation may give us momentary relief. But it does not last; our anxiety
about our own worth soon surfaces again. What is more, if we regularly condemn
others, and accept it as the norm, then we put ourselves in the mode where we
live on edge, suspicious that others may be similarly critical of us. “What are
they saying about me?”
-------CONDEMNATION
IS NOT GOD’S THING----------------------------------------------------
God
is not caught up in our blame addiction. Condemnation is not God’s thing. The
Gospel is about healing and rescue. That is what salvation means: the rescues
and healing of humanity. Christ Jesus did not arrive and add a heavier burden
of condemnation. He came with a remarkable openness to us, seeing our many flaws but not focussing on
them. His focus was mercy, forgiveness, restoration.
That
does not mean that God-love is sweetly sentimental. No condemnation does not
mean marshmallow. There is steel in real love. It can include rebuke,
challenge, protest and discipline. Nothing that can ruin God’s children will go
unchallenged. Nobody is regarded as worthless. No one is dispensable.
There
is a judgement factor in love. When I use that word ‘judgement” some of you
might immediately see a lofty, stern figure handing down a sentence. If so, you are back with condemnation
crew. It does not have to be so. For
example, a physician must make a judgement if he is to help a patient. Healing
involves painfully honest diagnosis, maybe some unpalatable medicine, and
sometimes painful physiotherapy or radical surgery.
Judgement
features a lot in the fourth Gospel. Jesus is the physician who exposes what is
really going on. Just by being there, his loving presence exposes evil.
Judgement is self imposed. Our response to Jesus is the judgement. “And this is the judgement: that the light
has come into the world, yet men loved darkness rather than light because their
deeds were evil.”
Physically,
if we chose to live in darkness we would slowly lose our sight, become blind;
that is the judgement we would bring on ourselves. Spiritually, personally, it
is the same. If we prefer the darkness of evil to the light of God, we lose our
sensitivity to truth and become increasingly spiritually blind. This is the
inescapable judgement. We judge ourselves by our goals, values, decisions,
actions.
The
world has judged itself when it rejected God’s true Son. For John the cross is
a sign of ultimate judgement. Yet is also the ultimate sign of God’s glory. For
God is willing and able to rescue and heal those who have done even the most
dastardly thing. God in Christ heals the blind and the half-blind. God can save
those who appear to be irrevocably lost. God remains redeeming love. Not
condemnation. Love, love, love and yet more love. For God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the world, but
that the world might be saved through him.
------CALLED
TO BE
MEDIATORS-------------------------------------------------------------------
What
God does for us we are also to do for one another.. We are to love others
sufficiently to forgive, uplift, heal and restore. We are called to be merciful
even as God is merciful. We too can break the vicious circles of condemnation
that spin out of control in the world around us, by forgiving each other. We
can bring hope into life where there is frustration and sometimes despair.
In
fact, often we are called to be the mediators of not just our own mercy, but of
God’s mercy. As the only “body of
Christ” visible now on earth, the church has the ministry of making forgiveness
and restoration real to others. It is an awesome privilege and responsibility.
Love, love, love..... and yet more love, is our mission.
This
does not mean we are to be like soft, sweet mush. Love may have to be hard and
sharp. We are to love others enough to expose evil in whatever form. This is
also a part of our ministry in the name of Christ. But it must never slip over
the line into condemnation. Far too
often in the long story of the church, it has debased the name of its Lord by
indulging in condemnation. We have become a part of the vicious circle of
blame. And in doing that, the church has become a part of the disease, not a
part of God’s diagnosis and healing.
-------THE
WAY TO
GO------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
funeral I conducted for Wayne, the victim of the drug culture, was a salutary
lesson for me. I realised acutely how removed the church often is from the
lives of those whom Christ Jesus came to save. A wide and deep gulf is there.
Yet I also learned that it is when we impart something, even a little, of the
passionate love of God in Christ for those whom this world writes off as
useless, that we may bridge the gulf and make connection.
I
have a long, long way to go! God help me! But I have one pivotal starting
point. “God so loved the world, that he
gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have
eternal life. For God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the world,
but that the world might be saved through him.”
SERMON 2: A WORD TO THE DEAD
Ephesians 2: 4-7
Today
God has a Word to the dead.
What’s
the use of that? A word to the dead? We need a message to the living. The dead
are out of reach and deaf to all voices. The living are here, and are capable
of receiving a Word from God..
Not
so. Not so from the Bible view point.
In
the last few years the city of Melbourne has witnessed numerous assassinations
within the ranks of the criminal underworld. There has been a fierce battle
going on for the control of the drug trade. Sadly, we have had to face the
truth that some of our police have been working hand in hand with the
criminals.
One
underworld figure became an informer. He was placed under the high security.
Shortly before he was to give evidence, which included evidence against one
police officer, he and his wife were found executed in their lounge room. Somehow , someone knew the security systems
well enough to enter the house, force the couple to kneel, and shoot them
through the back of their heads.
One
of their daughters later said that her dad had said to her a week before his
death; “I am a dead man walking.” He was absolutely right. He was a dead man
walking. He and his wife were as good as dead.
Left
to our own devices, from the Bible view point, we are all dead men and woman
walking. Not just crims and informers. Not just rapists and thugs. Not just the
greedy and the unjust. Not just the foul mouthed and those who physically abuse
the young and the weak. We are all find
ourselves in the ranks of the walking dead.
God who is always rich in
mercy, draws from the immense love he has for us. Even though we were dead
in our sins, we become alive with Christ. It is by the gift of grace that we are rescued and
healed. We are raise up from death with Christ, and given a seat in the
heavenly family beside him. Throughout the coming ages we will be shown the immeasurable riches of God’s grace
poured out among us in Jesus Christ.”
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DEATH
IS SEPARATION
Dead
in our sins?
Death
is an age-old symbol of the ultimate separation. The ultimate separation from
light and love. For most of their
history the Jews had little hope of any real life beyond the grave. The dead
went to the dark, underworld. To Sheol. They were cut off from the light and
love of this world and their loved ones, and also cut off from the light and
love of God.
As
a rule, the Jews had hope in this life only. As one ancient Jew, feeling hard pressed, argued: “If I go down to
the grave, what benefit is it to you God? Can I praise you from Sheol?”
There
were only a few exceptions to that rule. Only occasionally did bursts of hope
radiate out of the darkness of their gloom. One such bright gleam of light
shone through the beautiful writer of Psalm 139. He claimed that death was not
total separation;
Where shall I hide from your
Spirit?
Where shall I flee from your
presence?
If I ascend up to heaven,
you are there.
If I make my bed in Sheol,
you are there.
Even
in dark death, in dreaded Sheol, the Spirit of God would be present and knowable,
bringing light.
Such
glimpses of hope were rare. In general, for those ancient Jews death was the
bleak terminus. Therefore the word “death” became that enduring symbol for all
that cut people off from light and love.
Therefore,
for Paul (that feisty apostle, the missionary to the non-Jews) all people were
like dead men walking. No exceptions.
Both the self righteous and the self-ashamed were agents of evil, slaves to the
darkness, the walking dead. They were already cut off from the ultimate sources
of light and love. All souls were
corrupted and blinded by evil. They were “dead in their trespasses.” They were
already as good as in Sheol, the dark world of desolation.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOT
PALATABLE?
This
hard word to the dead was not palatable to some people. It seemed excessive.
Have
we changed? I doubt it.
Yet
I don’t reckon Paul’s firm line will impress citizens of our era. The worldly wise,
the sophisticated intellectuals, may think themselves enlightened. The
self-absorbed, self-made men of the world reckon they are a worthy success.
They strut and preen on the stage of public life. To be called dead men walking
is quickly rejected; “We know better than that!”
Paul
was writing to the church at Ephesus, a congregation which he had founded..
Certainly there would have been many in that grand Greco-Roman city (in the
land that is now Turkey) who would have seen themselves as either intellectually
wise or religiously enlightened. Like post-modern humanity in the western
world, they would have prided themselves on living life to the full!
But
from Paul’s viewpoint, what they had without Christ was nothing but a proud
darkness; a separation from the Source of light and love. Death. His Gospel was
a word to the dead.
Paul
would agree with the verse from St John’s
Gospel:
God
so loved the world, that he gave his only son, that whoever believes in him,
should not perish but have eternal life.
For
John, if we are without the Spirit of
God and the healing grace our Christ Jesus, then we are already in the state of
those who are “perishing.” Already as good as gone. Had it. In deep darkness.
Lost. Terminally diseased. The walking dead.
We
find these walking dead everywhere.
Clever and witty, wining and dining at the
best restaurants or having a “big Mac”, enjoying
expensive overseas trips or taking a house boat on the Murray River, building larger houses or buying mobile homes,
wearing the best Italian suits or grabbing a bargain from K Mart; yet dead.
Eagerly attending each Lloyd Weber musical
extravaganza, or high on “speed” and raving
at night at parties, driving a BMW or a lively little Suzuki or Honda, getting
high on adrenalins at a football game
or doing bungie jumps, going to
symphony concert or addicted each
night to soapies on TV; yet dead.
Practising transcendental meditation or
earnestly working out at the local gym, applying make-up to hide one’s wrinkles or having a surgical make-over,
proudly possessing the best wine cellar
in your “set” or buying cartons of stubbies at the drive through, trying exotic religions or brandishing atheism like a
gold medal on your chest; yet dead.
For
Paul, all this frenetic squeezing of daily existence for every drip of juice is
an illusion; the grandiose hallucinations of the dying. The pathetic antics of
dead men walking.
Unless
we are enlightened with the light of God, enlivened with the life of God,
liberated with the love of God, enobled with the beauty of God, we are existing
rather than living. Without exploring
the spiritual level of life, we have not started to really live.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NO
LATER INVENTION
Paul
and John did not invent this theme. Their special guru taught and lived a
similar theme. That ex-carpenter from Nazareth spoke and lived the
message: “Man shall not live by bread
alone.”
The
spirit must be nourished if we are really to live. And as we read in the Gospel
earlier in Lent, it is (paradoxically) in giving away our present level of
life, or “losing it’, that we “find” the true and abundant life; that spiritual
dimension for which we were intended in the long, patient and awesome process
of creation.
“Man
shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that flows from the mouth of
God.” A stern warning to “the walking dead” from the lips of the most alive
person who ever graced this planet.
All
that Paul held most dear, stemmed from Jesus of Nazareth:
God who is always rich in mercy, draws from the immense love he
has for us. Even though we were dead in
our sins, we become alive with Christ. It is by the gift of grace that we are
rescued and healed. We are raised up from death with Christ, and given a seat in the heavenly family beside him.
Throughout the coming ages we will be
shown the immeasurable riches of God’s
grace poured out among us in Jesus Christ.”
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AGAIN
THAT EMPHASIS ON GRACE
Notice
that emphasis on grace. A key note in Paul’s letters. Our redemption comes
gratis. Free. Grace is that uninhibited, unlimited, outpouring of saving love made available to all who accept the
gift of God. It’s that rescuing light and hope freely given by God to whoever
throws themselves on God’s mercy.
The
cross is the measure of such grace. Grace is priceless in human terms. As we
draw closer each week to Holy Week, and Good Friday, we become focussed on the Holy Source of saving grace. Grace comes at an awful Divine cost. A price
we could never raise. God does it for us at Golgotha.
Saving
grace is unearnable by deeds, unwinable by vows and promises, unattainable by
any form of human effort. Faith is letting God be God in our own lives: without
reservation, accepting God’s acceptance without quibble, letting God’s light
and love possess us and make us whole. Grace raises us up from death to life.
Grace performs a resurrection event in our daily lives. The cross of amazing
grace and the jubilant Easter dawn belong together. Death and resurrection.
Life.
Real life. From decay to growth, here and now. By the grace of Christ Jesus,
here and now. In the healing and rescuing love of God we stand tall, here and
now. Eternal life, here and now. We walk boldly and gleefully as those who have
already passed from dismay to serenity, from darkness to light, from death to
life. Here and now.
The
hard line of apostles like Paul and John
(who declare that that we “perish” or are “dead in our trespasses” if we
exist solely on the physical level) is matched by this most generous line of
all: God’s rescuing and healing grace. Life. Real life. Abundant life.
Irrepressible life. Available for the taking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CONCLUSION
A
word to the dead?
Why
is it that so many men and women find it so hard to let go and let God be God
to them? Is it our pride, that original sin of the devil?
Our
obdurate ways are a puzzle. It confounds common sense. The walking dead,
stuffed to the gills with their own human hubris and their lust for
self-sufficiency, seem to prefer lesser
existence to abundant life. Now that is tragedy. The ultimate tragedy.
On
the other hand, wherever a few of us, without any condition, let go and trust
God’s free grace in Christ, then we witness the ultimate success story. We
shake off the weight of death and rise up with Christ and begin to thoroughly
live.
And
even then the best is yet to come:
Throughout the coming ages we will be shown the immeasurable
riches of God’s grace poured out among us in Jesus Christ.”
Praise
God!
CELEBRATING CHRIST
Most
loving God, we thank and praise you for the unspeakable gift of your holy Son,
through whom our eyes are opened to see your glory on every side.
Through
him the sun shines brighter, the moon sails more serenely, and the midnight
stars beckon more kindly.
The whole world is full of your glory.
thanks be to you, most holy Friend.
Through
him the music of mountain streams is more delightful, the singing of birds
becomes sweeter, and the leaping of the red kangaroo more majestic.
The whole world is full of your glory.
thanks be to you, most holy Friend.
Through
him the best architecture is ennobling, a Van Gogh peach tree is beautiful, and
a Mozart serenade more haunting.
The whole world is full of your glory.
thanks be to you, most holy Friend.
Through
him loved ones are more precious, strangers become lovable, and our enemies are
made worthy of respect.
The whole world is full of your glory.
thanks be to you, most holy Friend.
Through
him prayer is a pleasure, the Scriptures are opened up to us, and your guiding
hand becomes more discernible.
The whole world is full of your glory.
thanks be to you, most holy Friend.
Through
him the church is constantly renewed, our gifts become more serviceable, and the
talents of others are our joy as well as theirs.
The whole world is full of your glory.
thanks be to you, most holy Friend.
Through
him all things are possible, no loving deed is ever wasted or lost, and the
mysterious heaven becomes a home to our hearts.
The whole world is full of your glory.
thanks be to you, most holy Friend.
SHARING GOD’S CONCERN
Today, Christian friends, I ask you to
especially pray for those people for whom we hold scant respect. The ones we tend to write off as no hopers. I ask
you to pray for them because God loves
each one of them just as much as each of us, and it is not God’s desire that even the worst rogue should perish.
Let us pray.
God
of the whole human family, we pray for drug addicts, dealers, alcoholics,
gamblers, those who cheat and rob their own families, and those who mug
vulnerable passers-by.
In your mercy, gracious God,
Hear our prayer
We
pray for violent teenage gangs, for rebellious kids who run away for good
homes, those who milk the social welfare system, and respectable business men
who cheat the elderly out of their life savings.
In your mercy, gracious God,
Hear our prayer
We
pray for prostitutes, pimps and their customers, for paedophiles, those who
exploit children to make porn movies, and those who employ illegal immigrants
in sweat shops.
In your mercy, gracious God,
Hear our prayer
We
pray for terrorists in many lands, for underworld bosses, minders and hit men;
for rapists, stalkers, seducers, and those who commit domestic violence.
In your mercy, gracious God,
Hear our prayer.
We
pray for bank robbers and tax evaders,
shop lifters and vandals, con-men, pickpockets, computer criminals, and
burglars who bash the elderly in their homes.
In your mercy, gracious God,
Hear our prayer.
We
pray for people who gravely abuse their positions of trust or power; corrupt
lawyers, doctors, politicians,
teachers, police officers, prison officers and ministers of religion.
In your mercy, gracious God,
Hear our prayer
Most
loving God, please do not allow us to become defeatist and bitter. Make us more
eager for redemption rather than retribution, and encourage us to employ the
tough love of Christ in the affairs of our neighbourhood and nation. For your
names sake.
Amen!
FOR OURSELVES
Through
Jesus your true Word, speak to us that we might live abundantly.
Speak to our minds that we
may see a truth beyond human knowledge.
Speak
to our hearts that we may experience a joy beyond all other pleasure.
Speak to our wills that we
may possess a discipline beyond human effort.
Speak
to our bodies that we may honour them beyond common custom.
Speak to our souls that we
may treasure a likeness beyond human compare.
Through
Jesus your true Word, speak to us that Our lives may declare your glory.
Amen!
WORD OF MISSION
Go
out into the world in peace.
Be intolerant of evil but treat no person
as worthless trash.
Bless those who curse you and pray for
those who abuse you.
Trust not your own goodness but the grace
of God.
In every situation give thanks.
The grace of our Lord Jesus
Christ,
the love of God, and the
fellowship of the Holy Spirit
will be with us now and
always.
Amen!