Welcome & Announcements
Call to Worship We are ambassadors for Christ Fill is with your love We are ambassadors for Christ Fill us with your joy We are ambassadors for Christ Fill us with your peace Hymn 159 – Lord for the years Prayer Almighty God, you spoke and the world came into being, putting chaos and darkness to flight. You have continued to speak through all the centuries, offering a lamp for our path and a faith to live by. We thank you for the ways you speak to us, stirring our imagination, kindling and nurturing our faith, confronting and questioning, yet also renewing and uplifting. Ever open our minds to what you would say to us and help us to listen. Merciful God, we are aware of all that you offer us and we see ourselves as we are: a mixture - of hope and despair, - of joy and sadness, - of love and hatred, - of self-giving and self-seeking. Forgive us when we have neglected your gift of creation. Forgive us when we have gone astray and not let your love flourish within us. Forgive us when we have given into temptation rather than wrestling with it. Forgive us for when we avoid difficult issues or forget to love our enemies. Forgive us when we fail to listen for your word to us. Forgive us and restore us to be the people you want us to be. Hear and believe the Good News: anyone who is in Christ is a new creation. The old life is gone, the new life has come. Know that you are forgiven and so, in Christ, forgive one another. Lord’s Prayer Readings – Isaiah 55: 1-13 (pg 742) Luke 10: 1-12 (pg 1041) Hymn 97- O God, you search me and you know me Weekly Prayer Merciful Lord, as we begin this season of Lent, help us to aim high as we seek to renew the discipline of our discipleship. Send us out with joy, and lead us as your people, like the disciples of old, to share your peace with all we meet. Amen Sermon For our bible readings we usually follow the lectionary, but through this season of Lent we are going to look at the 5 marks of Mission. These have been discussed in the ecumenical setting, in various denominations, as an attempt to define what mission is all about in the 21st century. The 5 marks are evangelism, discipleship, pastoral care, social justice and care of creation. Or, as some churches abbreviate them: Tell, teach, tend, transform and treasure. As Church of Scotland moves forward, we are encouraged to use these 5 marks as we look at how best to be the Church where we are. The first mark is to proclaim the Good News of the Kingdom, to tell, to gossip the Gospel. But if we are called to tell we need to know what to talk about. We need to know the Word of God and, as Paul says in Colossians, let the Word dwell in us richly. Thus we are able to talk from experience we talk about Christ as a friend. For many centuries that Word was in Latin, and only a few could understand it. That’s why stained glass developed, so people could look at the bible stories in picture form. But that changed in the build up to the reformation., when Luther translated the bible into the vernacular, in his case, into German, and with the development of the printing press, it was able to be widely distributed. Influenced by Luther, William Tynedale translated the New Testament into English, but if you had a copy in your possession, you would likely be tortured or even killed and copies would be burned. But Tynedale famously wanted a simple ploughboy to know Scriptures better than the priests and for everyone to have the bible at their fingertips. He used easy-to-remember phrases that rolled off the tongue. It is estimated that 70% or more of the King James Bible, printed 75 years later, was taken from Tynedale. Phrases like ‘the writing on the wall, salt of the earth, thorn in the flesh, fight the good fight, the blind leading the blind, the powers-that-be’ are all from Tynedale and have enriched our language. Tynedale was caught and burned at the stake and most copies of his bibles were burned, but the power-that-be changed their mind, and soon there would be a Bible in the vernacular in every parish and people would be able to read it for themselves and treasure it. It is sad that today so few people read the bible and know the stories, given that so many fought and died for the chance to read scripture in their own tongue. We all have our different approaches to the Bible and its interpretation, but it is a rich treasure house of 66 books and can be our tool to share the good news. For this first mark of mission reminds us that what we are about is sharing Good News. In a world accustomed to bad news, it can be easy to be overwhelmed by all the negatives. Ukraine, earthquake, strikes, Covid, falling numbers at church. But the Gospel means Good news, and that is always something to share – by word and by action. In Isaiah we read that instead of the thornbush there will grow a pine and instead of the briars myrtle, and there is a sense of joy as the prophet invites the thirsty to come and drink and those without money, the poorest, the marginalised, to come and experience the good things of life, for God is the giver of life and wants us to live it to the fullest. In Luke, the disciples were sent out, 72 of them, and their task was to proclaim the Kingdom – the place where God’s reign is experienced, where earth becomes a little more like heaven, where people are affirmed and welcomed, where God’s justice takes root and love and peace, fairness and kindness flourish. They go out unsure and come back brimming with excitement. We are more reluctant to give the hard sell, more embarrassed to share our faith, because we live in a country where Christianity has become a minority and often viewed as somehow outmoded, but our first mark of mission is to proclaim the Kingdom, and we do that as we can. Maybe that means finding other and creative ways to get the Kingdom message across, which may mean going out of our comfort zones. But most of all, living it out in our lives. As a church we are conscious of falling numbers and ageing congregations. Yet there is so much good going on in the church, and we need to share it. The Church of Scotland website or Life & Work magazine are full of stories about what is happening. It is good to share what is good in our congregation with our friends elsewhere and to learn from them. But most of all, let Christ be in our hearts and inspire us to live out the kingdom values in our lives. Hymn 363- We have a Gospel to proclaim Prayers of Dedication and Intercession We offer to you ourselves and all that we have. We dedicate these gifts of money as a token of the dedication of our lives. Receive what we offer and all that we have, and bless us in your service We pray for places of pain and danger in our world, places where the dominion of death seems to reign. We remember the people of Turkey and Syria dealing with the ground moving beneath their feet, causing destruction and misery and finding ways to care for the survivors. Bless those digging, clearing, feeding and nursing. Give wisdom to those who govern and those who investigate why so many homes were built without real care. We remember the people of Ukraine, living with war, destruction, and danger, yet also with hope, determination and dedication. We thank You for audacious leadership, for alliances against aggression and for those who seek peace, even in the midst of war. We pray too, Loving God, for our own nation -that those who can’t afford to heat their homes will find relief, that those who feel they have no option but to strike find productive ways to negotiate. We pray for those in government in Edinburgh and in London that you may guide them, especially as the Scottish Government seek to appoint a new First minister. In this joyful season of Lent we pray for the Church; that we might be bold in proclaiming your kingdom ; that ways will be found to live in peace and unity with justice and loving obedience to Your call. May we delight in being your people. We bring before you all in need of your help -the sick and the anxious, those having operations, families who worry. The bereaved. Amen Hymn 249 – We have heard a joyful sound! Benediction Go and be bold in proclaiming the Gospel, and the blessing of God Almighty, Father, Son and Holy Spirit be with you all. Amen
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Welcome & Announcements
Call to Worship Come as eyewitnesses of God’s majesty! We come and worship. Come and give honour to God in your praise and song We come and worship. Come and praise the one who rises in our hearts like a morning star. We come and worship. Hymn 510 – Jesus calls us here (1,3,4) Prayer Source of light and glory, we worship You. As angels adore You, veiling their eyes to Your presence, we bring You our praise. We yearn for Your justice to come, Your glory to fill the earth, and Your light to shine upon us. You cause the planets to spin around the sun, and the moon to spin around the earth. Time and seasons are marked by you, our rock and redeemer. Yet as we worship we are afraid. As we praise Your holiness we are aware of our sin. As we yearn for justice, we become conscious of the injustice we mete out to others. We long for the light but prefer the dark. You call us to see justice but we are afraid of your judgement. God, the true life of all, give to us, who both blossom and flourish, yet wither and decay, your love, grace, and peace; forgive us our love of the darkness and hatred of the light, our cravings for pleasure coming with the pain of the poor. Give us time, Ancient of Days, to repent. Give us time, Timeless One, to turn our lives around. Give us grace, Fountain of Love, to live in Your light. God is slow to anger and full of compassion. The Most High forgives all who humbly repent and trust in Christ’s faithfulness. There is, therefore, now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. We are a forgiven people! Amen. Readings – Exodus 24: 12-18 (pg 82) Matthew 17: 1-9 (pg 984) Hymn 448 – Shine, Jesus, shine Weekly Prayer Everlasting God help us, not to keep the secret, but to proclaim to all that Jesus Christ is Lord. In the week ahead may we reflect your love in our families, church and community, so that the world can see that we are transformed by Christ and thereby draw others into Jesus’ loving care. Amen Sermon ‘I have been to the mountaintop – I have seen the promised land’, so said Martin Luther King, the day before he was assassinated. There is something about mountain tops, especially on crystal clear days like we had at the beginning of the week. Maybe we climb up the mountain – sometimes we can drive up to a vantage point or even get a cable car up, but there are times when we look at the view and our breath is taken away. We are transported out of ourselves. A mountain top experience when we seem to see things anew. On the mountaintop we gain another perspective. Today is transfiguration Sunday when we remember how some of the disciples accompanied Jesus up a mountain and had this strange, weird, breathtaking, mind-blowing, certainly incredible experience, when Jesus was transfigured, became radiant with light. It had not been an easy time for Jesus and the disciples. They had been bombarded at every turn by people seeking healing or help, and also had begun to be questioned by the religious leaders. There was no place for rest or retreat. Into the midst of this crucible of questions and exhaustion, Jesus had asked his disciples who they believed he was. Peter had said that Jesus was the Messiah. The Lord. But even though Peter had used all the right words, it turned out he still hadn’t really understood what they meant. Because when Jesus began to talk about a cross, Peter crumbled. No longer a cornerstone but a stumbling block. How could someone save and liberate God’s people if he was killed? Peter wondered. It just didn’t make sense. Then Jesus had told his followers that the road to Jerusalem would be a difficult one. And that it would end in a cross. If they wanted to follow him, they too would have crosses to bear. He had been trying to tell his disciples who he really was and why he had come. He had been trying to tell them what it would mean to be the Messiah. But all Peter had wanted was for Jesus to stop talking. He had felt as if the Jesus he had known and loved was slipping through his fingers. Still, when Jesus began to make his way up the mountain in our text for today, Peter, James, and John followed him. It was while they were there, on that mountain, that everything changed. The three disciples had expected an intermission, a pause in the action, but instead they were thrown into a terrifying, mystical experience they could have never predicted and could never fully explain. All through Scripture, prophets and leaders meet God on the mountains. Moses, enveloped in clouds, is given the tablets of the law on Mount Sinai. Elijah hears God in the still, small voice, as powerful as a thundering silence there on a mountain. And here, in this story, Peter, James, and John encounter God as well. In the transfiguration, God knits together the law, the prophets, and the gospel, weaving them into a story and narrative of faith that finds its culmination in the person of Jesus. Moses and Elijah and Jesus stand together at the top of the mountain, clothed in white. It makes sense that Peter wants to stay there on that mountaintop, far away from the world below. Here on the mountaintop he isn’t distracted by the demands of other people and their needs. He didn’t have to think too hard about what Jesus might have meant when he began to talk about a cross and suffering and death. Here on the mountaintop he saw the glorified, victorious Jesus he had always wanted, shining in splendour and glory. So he says, “It would be good to stay here. Together, Jesus. Let’s pitch some tents and stay put.” But then God’s glory pulls back the veil between heaven and earth even more fully and begins to speak: “Look, here is my son. My beloved. Listen to him.” The cloud has dispersed. Moses and Elijah have disappeared. And it is almost as if everything is back to normal. But of course nothing will ever be the same. In the Gospel of Matthew, this moment of transfiguration—this revealing of God’s glory—on the mountaintop serves as a turning point. Jesus, who has been ministering throughout the countryside, now turns his face toward Jerusalem, ready to start down the road to the cross. And the disciples have a decision to make. Will they keep following him on this new leg of the journey? The transfiguration is also a turning point for us. We can look forward, seeing the rocky and winding path to Jerusalem. We can see, from this place the ways that Jesus will continue to open his arms up to the world, reaching out to each of us, until those arms are stretched out across the beams of a cross. At communion today we remember that broken body and shed blood. Like any experience of the divine, the transfiguration is shrouded in mystery—a burning bush that is not consumed; a still small voice; a cloud and pillar of fire—these are ultimately all “You had to be there” type of events. Even for Peter, James, and John, part of the story, part of the meaning eludes them. And they come back down the mountain not quite sure they know what just occurred, but they came down the mountain – somehow strengthened to get on with life. We too have our time of worship and share our communion meal, but are reminded that our journey of faith and our journey to faith are not yet over. There is still more to Jesus than we had allowed ourselves to imagine. There is an African proverb, “Beyond mountains, there are mountains.” And today that is true for us as well. For Jesus is already on his way back down the trail. Back into the crush of people waiting for healing, for vision, and for hope. Back into the middle of all that need and all those questions. Moving forward to what lies ahead. He has put his hand out to us and invites us to come and follow him once more. Statement of Faith Prayers of Dedication and Intercession God of love that transforms lives, we offer our gifts in gratitude for all we have received in Christ, your beloved Son. Take our gifts and transform them into acts of love that will bless the world in his name. Comforting God, We know that the news coming into our homes shocks us, we have watched the rising death toll in Turkey and Syria with a sense of disbelief and pain. We thank you for those who have worked tirelessly to find and help those trapped, we pray for you solace for those who are desperate for news. May those who have died rest in your peace, may those now building lives without them be comforted. Comforting God, we pray for your love. As we pray for the things which are in the headlines, we don’t forget those places and people whose stories are now second page news. We pray for those reliant on foodbanks: especially now the school holidays are here and need has grown. We pray for those who feel unsafe in their own homes, for those who have had to flee for safety - for refugees unsafe again in this country, for those intimidated and hurt for being who they are, for what they believe, for all they long to be. God of relationships and community, we pray for a world that is fairer. We are connected to so many people, locally and far away. In these moments of quietness, we offer to you our own private prayers for people and places needing your love. silence Transforming God, accept these and all of our prayers in the name of Jesus. Amen Invitation to the Table Hymn 666 – Let all mortal flesh Prayer of thanksgiving Lord’s Prayer Communion Peace Prayer Hymn 518 – Jesus calls us here to meet him Benediction We have witnessed Christ, God’s Beloved, on the mountain in glory. Now, go into the world to shine the light of his glory with grace and compassion. May God’s beauty inspire you; May Christ’s brilliance restore you; And may the joy of the Holy Spirit empower you to shine in every place you go. Amen. Welcome & Announcements
Call to Worship How blessed are we when we meditate on God’s teachings; and when we desire God with our whole hearts. Let us praise God with attentive minds and eager spirits, for we are God’s servants, working and praying together. Hymn 127 – O worship the King Prayer God of all life and each life, You are the light of minds that seek to know you. You are strength for those who seek to serve you. You reveal truth to those who search for you. In worship, we pause in your presence, resting from our work and responsibilities, from our worries and distractions. We come to enjoy your presence and praise you for the gift of life in Christ and in creation. Receive our prayers and praise this day, for we open our hearts in love and loyalty to you, O God, our All in All. God who is all in all, you call us to choose life and walk in your ways, but we are tempted by short cuts and easy solutions. You ask us to turn from anger and settle our differences, but we cling to grievances and point fingers at others. You ask us to be true to our word, but we prefer not to rock the boat. Forgive us, O God; and give us courage to follow the paths you set for your people. Lord’s Prayer All age Talk Readings – 1 Corinthians 3:1-9 (pg 1145) Matthew 5: 21-37 (pg 969) Hymn 180 – Give thanks with a grateful heart. Weekly Prayer Everlasting God, we ask you to lead us into the coming week, help us to believe that you are close by us, keep us from making mistakes and help us never to disappoint you through our words and actions. As we have been reminded, we are to plant and water the seed, but only God makes things grow. Amen. Sermon People in Southern Turkey and Northern Syria went to bed at the beginning of the week, looking forward to a good night’s sleep only for disaster to happen, and some wouldn’t see daylight. The pictures on our screens have been harrowing, as we have seen the utter devastation earthquakes have brought to that part of the world. Over a wide area, blocks of apartments have collapsed, and while some have been pulled alive, so many more have died. In Northern Syria, the worst hit area is one where so many were refugees anyway with an infrastructure and a people weakened from years of conflict. The bitter cold in that area makes it all so worse. It was maybe 20 years ago that I had travelled in Eastern Turkey and finished in Gaziantep, near the epicentre. I remember a wonderful archaeological museum, but also a bustling town. It was an area rich with biblical associations. Nearby were monasteries of the Syrian Church and also Haran, associated with Abraham, and Antioch, where Christians were first given that name. But now so many people will have to pick up the pieces and somehow begin life again. Elsewhere in the news, there have been two missing people, but also the death of a family, who seemed to have everything going for it. The mother was head of a big private school, a highflier; the husband in finance, the daughter with so much to look forward to – we don’t know the reasons behind it, but the husband seems to have killed his wife and daughter, before killing himself. Somehow our own worries and anxieties are put into perspective when we see the suffering of others. In the Gospel reading Jesus is addressing the crowd gathered on the mountainside – the sermon on the Mount. He lists a number of the commandments: Do not murder, do not commit adultery, do not bear false witness, but then expands on them. In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus is encouraging his listeners to live the best life possible. In order to live your best, he was saying, it is not enough just to empty all the bad things from life. I don’t swear; I don’t kill; I don’t wash clothes on a Sunday. But rather we need to be proactive and fill our lives with so many good things – joy, the patience, the kindness, so that there is no room for pettiness or jealousy and spite. We have to live the best life possible, thinking of others, praying for others, giving to others, for we don’t know what may be round the corner. In doing this we glorify God. I had some good news this week. Firstly I had the news that the Syrian family I visit have a new baby boy. But also another friend from Israel had been visiting Scotland, though it coincided with my holidays. But I caught up with his presentation at a church in Perth on YouTube. Jamal is in his early 40s and heads an organisation called the House of Grace, and he and his family exemplify living life to its fullest and best. His father was Palestinian and his mother Swiss, but his father had a friend, an Arab, who had been put in prison for some offence. His mother was so affected by it, that she died, and the son, blaming himself, also killed himself in prison. It was tragic, but Jamal’s father was determined to reach out to prisoners and set up a halfway house, to introduce prisoners back to society again – and House of Grace was born. Jamal and his brothers and sister grew up with released prisoners in their home. They moved into an old church, renovated it, but also built a living space where they live along with up to 10 prisoners and also office space. They run youth activities as well for the Arab population. So often when we think of Palestinians we think of Gaza and the West bank, but there are many living in Israel with Israeli passports and citizenship but who feel 2nd class citizens. The young people are given a sense of self-worth and made to feel they belong. They run the equivalent of a Food bank and 2nd hand clothes facility, and it is all the different faith groups who support it – such is the respect in which House of Grace is held in the community. Jamal and his family, have created a real community, but a community which reaches out and takes risks and opens itself up to hurt, because that is what love does. Jamal’s father died, but his Swiss mother is still alive and is the real inspiration now, but for her and Jamal, they have dedicated their lives to helping others, but at Easter and at Christmas they send cards which proclaim their faith in Jesus Christ. Jesus in the Gospels encourages his followers to have the best life possible – and that I think is one dedicated to the well-being of others. We are encouraged to keep the commandments, but more, to place others first and share the sacrificial love of Christ – and give God the glory in all that we do. Hymn 502 – Take my life and let it be Prayers of Dedication and Intercession Gracious and generous God, we bring our gifts to you in thanksgiving. Bless them and surprise us by all the Holy Spirit can accomplish with them. Bless our lives, too, so that our choices will always honour you for Christ’s sake Dear God, in the midst of the world’s need and our hopefulness, hear the prayers we share. As the wreckage of the earthquake in Turkey and Syria reveals and hides lives lost, communities destroyed, families traumatised and the magnificence of rescuers, help all who suffer. We pray for those searching and those grieving, for those organising aid and those tending the injured. Let help come and continue, we pray. pause As war continues between Ukraine and Russia, we pray for justice and for peace. We pray for those fighting and those dying, for those fleeing and those fearing, for those aiding and those searching for an end to conflict. As conflict scars Southern Sudan, we pray for all caught up and all losing much. We pray for the pilgrimage of peace by the Pope, the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Moderator of the Church of Scotland. We pray for those seeking safety and those planning violence, that hearts might be held and transformed through your love. As Myanmar, Afghanistan, Iran and other nations seethe with unrest and persecution, we pray for liberation and for new beginnings. Strengthen all who risk so much to stand for something better, kinder, fairer. Guide the leaders of the nations and bless the work of the United Nations and all who devote themselves to building international community and collaboration in the face of dictatorship, nationalistic arrogance and suspicion. As communities here stagger under threats from rising prices, services at breaking point, work that is undervalued and streets that are unsafe, we pray for all who care for neighbours and seek a better day. We pray for people forced to strike and for people whose lives become even harder on strike days. We pray for negotiators and politicians, for those with power in their conversations and those who feel utterly powerless. As we bring our hopes and fears for those known to us and for ourselves, we pray for all who are sick, all who face fear, all who are lonely, all who long for happiness but bear with depression. We remember those we have lost and all who mourn. In silence together, we pray the prayers of our hearts… [silence] Dear God, in the midst of the world’s need and our hopefulness, hear the prayers we share. All these thoughts, all these words, all the prayers we cannot put into words, we offer in the name of Jesus Christ and in the power of the Holy Spirit. Amen Hymn 519 – Love divine Benediction Welcome & Announcements
Call to Worship We come into this space and time to meet and worship God. We bring our worries and our distractions and lay them down before our God We open our hearts and minds to the promptings of God’s Spirit We are the salt of the earth. We are the light of the world. Let us worship together in Jesus’ name. Hymn 184 – Sing to the Lord a joyful song Prayer Amazing God, on the first day of creation you made light. A light that enables us to see the beauty of your creation. A light that enables plants to grow and flourish. A light that is part of the rhythm of our world and our lives. We thank you for light. When creation was struggling, you sent your Son Jesus, the light of the world. His light illuminated the Scriptures, defeated the powers of sin, and led us back to you. We thank you for Jesus. In the light of flames you sent your Spirit into our world. The Spirit lights our path and shows us your will. She challenges and inspires us; we thank you for your Spirit. In joy and thankfulness we bring you our praise and worship. Merciful God, we have often asked you to judge others while failing to acknowledging that we too have sinned. We have worshipped you with our lips but dishonoured you with our actions. We have prayed for you to end suffering but have not practiced compassion or generosity towards others. We have used our words to hurt and argue rather than testify to your love and grace. Forgive our self-centredness and show us how to love you and our neighbour. Bring us back into your light. O God, your heart is full of mercy. May we hear and trust your words to each of us: ‘Your sins are forgiven.’ May we forgive each other and forgive ourselves. Thanks be to God. Lord’s Prayer All age Talk Hymn 213 – Every new morning Readings – 1 Corinthians 2:1-12 (pg 1145) Matthew 5:13-20 (pg 969) Hymn 252 – As a fire is meant for burning Weekly Prayer Everlasting God send us out into the world, renewed by our worship and strengthened by your power to be a testament to the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. Help us to let our light shine before all we meet in order to bring healing and reconciliation to our wounded world. Amen. Sermon Choir Anthem Prayers of Dedication and Intercession Generous God, We thank you for all that you have given us. Receive these tokens of our love for you, along with our time and talents. Bless our offering for the work of your kingdom in our communities, Loving and Gracious God, you call us to be the salt of the earth and the light of the world. We give you thanks for your gifts and calling and pray that day by day we each may be renewed in your service. Help us to open our eyes to see your presence in our lives, even when we go through the most difficult times. Loving and peace-making God, we pray for the parts of the world that live in conflict and struggle, that your light of hope may come into these struggles: We pray for Ukraine and Russia. We pray for the countries of the Middle East, in particular Palestine and Israel, in the violence that has swept across their land; for the conflicts across Africa, we think of West Africa and elections in Nigeria. May the light of your peace dawn across the world. Loving and healing God, we pray for those who today are suffering stress in body, mind and spirit and find it difficult to see light in their time of darkness. We pray for children who are abused, for young people suffering from mental health issues, for those who find it difficult to find work because of their health issues. In a moment’s silence we name before God those known to us who are suffering. Loving and creator God, we give thanks for your gift of this created world, and pray for a growth in the care for the climate and the environment. We pray for those making decisions with regard to green spaces in this country. May your light open our eyes to see your earthly gifts and take due care of this planet in which we live. Loving God, you brought the Church into being to be a sign of salt and light. We pray for the Church in her struggles with the faith in these challenging times, as we hear about the decrease of the Christian faith in the West. Give us the confidence, wisdom and courage to live out your light in the communities to which you call us to live day by day. Loving and eternal God, we remember those who have died, both recently and over the years, and give thanks for the light that they cast in your world. In a moment’s silence we remember those we have know who have passed. Silence. We give thanks for the example of those who have gone on before us, and pray for those who mourn their loss. Into your hands, O God, we commend ourselves and all our prayers, both silent and spoken, in the name of Jesus Christ, who is salt and light for the world. Amen Hymn 352 – O for 1000 tongues Benediction |
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