Out of the brokenness into the light of love

22 12 2017

In the light and the bustle of the day we have looked for you. 

In the darkness and the stillness of the night, we have longed for your presence. 

We have waited for your coming, we have anticipated your being.

And now you come into the world this Christmas Day, yet you have always been here.

Your hope, peace, joy and love overflows.  We wait no longer.  You are here.

 

We pray for your broken world, for our broken world.

We have examined our place within the garden of creation.

You gave us dominance over all creation, but we have abused that power.

We have seen the damage we as humans have done and are doing to our planet,

We have seen the animals, birds and insects we have eliminated, the fish and sea creatures we have endangered.

We have allowed economic greed and personal wealth to dominate sustainability.

We have kept your natural riches for ourselves instead of sharing with the poor and the weak.

 

As a people who have walked in the darkness of this broken world for so long,

We have seen a great light; our eyes have been opened.

In the light of your justice we see hope for our natural world.

In the light of your word we desire peace for our natural world.

In the light of your presence we find joy in caring for your beautiful world.

In the light of your love we embrace your forgiveness and find a desire within us to change.

Your hope is our hope,

your peace is our peace,

your joy is our joy,

your love is our love.

 

We pray for your broken church, for our broken church.

We have examined our place within the walls of your church.

You have given us the power to bring peace to places of conflict and turmoil, but we have abused that power.

We have allowed others to find terror instead of sanctuary within your church.

We have allowed rules and regulations to prevent us from taking love to the world.

We have seen the damage we, as your people, have done to others, driving them away from you instead of embracing them within the wings of love.

 

As a people who have walked in the darkness of this broken church for so long,

We have seen a great light; our eyes have been opened.

In the light of your justice we see hope for your church.

In the light of your word we desire peace within your church.

In the light of your presence we find joy in rebuilding your church.

In the light of your love we embrace forgiveness and find within us a desire to change.

Your hope is our hope,

your peace is our peace,

your joy is our joy,

your love is our love.

 

We pray for broken people everywhere; we pray for our broken selves.  

We have examined our place with the peoples of the world.

You give us opportunities to take love to the world, but we have overlooked those opportunities.

We have allowed our personal time and resources to become more precious than love.

We have allowed our personal desires for comfort and security to overtake our willingness to help others.

We have allowed ourselves to be silenced by those who spread intolerance and hate.

We have allowed ourselves to hide in the study and analysis of your word to the point we have made ourselves blind to injustice inflicted by governments and leaders in our name.

We do not live justly, we do not love kindness.  So how can we walk humbly with you?

 

As a people who have walked in the darkness of brokenness for so long,

We have seen a great light; our eyes have been opened.

In the light of your justice we see hope for ourselves.

In the light of your word we embrace peace for peoples everywhere.

In the light of your presence we find joy in helping others.

In the light of your love we find forgiveness and a desire within us to change.

Your hope is our hope,

your peace is our peace,

your joy is our joy,

your love is our love.

 

You have come into the world this Christmas Day, yet you have always been here.

In the light and the bustle of the day we find you. 

In the darkness and the stillness of the night, your presence comforts us. 

Your hope, peace, joy and love overflows.  We wait no longer.  You are here.





A Broken People and the Gift of Joy

22 12 2017

We are broken, we are joyless.  Where is your joy, O God?

 

Like Adam and Eve in the garden, we take your creation for granted,

We take the apples of creation without considering the consequences.

We dig up minerals and we cut down trees,

We watch as the world cracks and dries,

We create useful things but then we discard them,

polluting the water we drink and the air that we breathe.

While destroying our home world, we will never be free.

 

We weep for our future and shed tears for our land.

We feel powerless to change so in silence we live.

Creator God, we are a broken people. Where is your joy?

 

Like Israelites of old, we feel captive in a foreign land,

Our people, our leaders don’t reflect the values you want.

Injustice, intolerance and disrespect are in abundance.

Compassion and kindness remain to be found.

Greed and power are the keys to success,

Like captives who lay down by the rivers of Babylon and wept,

We mourn for our country and the direction it follows.

 

We weep for our future and shed tears for our children.

We feel powerless to change so in silence we live.

Just God, we are a broken people.  Where is your joy?

 

Like the disciples before us, we hide from the storm.

We struggle with life, and we hide our true form.

We selfishly guard our treasured possessions,

We live in our boxes, community locked out.

While people are homeless, and the old are alone,

we walk by attached to a phone.

 

We weep for our future and shed tears for ourselves.

We feel powerless to change so in silence we live.

Comforting God, we are a broken people. Where is your joy?

 

Like the prophets of old we can be filled with your spirit,

we can experience your joy.

Within our brokenness we become like gold,

Out of our brokenness comes everlasting joy.

As we seek to live justice, to love kindness and walk humbly with you,

you heal our brokenness, you give us hope for the future, you give us peace in our world,

 

Help us to be just in the use of the world’s resources,

and put sustainability ahead of economic gain.

Encourage us to bring release to those who feel oppressed,

and offer strength and encouragement to those who suffer and grieve.

Give us words to pray with those who are ill,

and courage to hug those who are lost,

Help us to comfort the lonely

and love the unloved,

Embolden us to stand with those who seek liberation, freedom and love,

and remind our leaders and governments of the values we keep.

Let us find justice for those who are detained without crime,

and let us welcome the stranger and share what we have.

Fill us with your spirit that we may be as Christ to our broken world.

 

In the light and the bustle of the day we look for you.

In the darkness and the stillness of the night, we long for your presence.

In our waiting and anticipation, your joy overflows.

 

Give us grace to actively live justly in your world.

Grant us courage to be the people you would have us be.

Provide us with wisdom to walk humbly with you and in everlasting joy may we work to heal our broken world.

Come Lord Jesus, come.  We share your joy.

 

 

 

 





The Broken Church and the Gift of Peace

9 12 2017

I heard the bells on Christmas Day

Their old familiar carols play

And wild and sweet the words repeat

Of peace on earth, good will to all. *

Comforting God, so often we become complacent in our faith,

The words of our liturgy, the singing of our songs,

Whilst wild and sweet the words repeat,

we find comfort and complacency within.

We avoid change, we seek not the challenge.

For it’s easier to keep the comfort of the boat than to walk upon the sea.

 

I thought how, as the day had come, The belfries of all Christendom

Had rolled along the unbroken song

Of peace on earth, good-will to all! *

Shepherd God, we are called to be your sheep and to follow you, our shepherd.

Yet too often we allow those in positions of leadership and power within your church to become the shepherd,

We blindly follow not realising we are straying from your path.

We sit in silence as your broken church unravels.

We fail to test the words of the church against the words of Jesus.

Perhaps we are blind, perhaps we see,

But it’s easier to keep the comfort of the boat than to walk upon the sea.

 

And in despair I bowed my head; “There is no peace on earth,” I said;

“For hate is strong, and mocks the song

Of peace on earth, good-will to all!” *

Just God, we are called to be like John, the voice crying in the wilderness,

Yet too often we opt for the easy approach.

We find it easier to say, ‘We don’t want your kind in here’ instead of ‘Stranger, Welcome’!

We find it easier to dismiss those of other cultures, other faiths,

than to discern your word within their beliefs, your love within their hospitality.

We allow our doctrine and regulations to limit our ability to love.

We are right, they are wrong,

For it’s easier to keep the comfort of the boat than to walk upon the sea.

 

Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:

“God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;

The wrong shall fail, the right prevail,

With peace on earth, good-will to all.”  *

Eternal Herald – we are your voice in the wilderness, we are your John.

We know your church is not perfect, we are not perfect, but it is in you that we trust and hope.

Let us speak out from within our broken church, and make straight your paths.

For in the reality of the broken church we find opportunities for healing, for grace, for hope, for peace.

Let us leave the comfort of the boat, let us walk upon the sea.

 

In the light and the bustle of the day we look for you.

In the darkness and the stillness of the night, we long for your presence.

In our waiting and anticipation, we seek your peace.

 

Give us grace to actively live in harmony within your church.

Grant us courage to be the church you would have us be.

Provide us with wisdom to find ways of healing your church as we take your gift of peace to our broken world.

Come Lord Jesus, come, for in you, we will find peace.

  • * Words by Henry Longfellow




A Broken World and the Gift of Hope

2 12 2017

As we look around our world, your world, we see beauty and majesty in the living, breathing natural world around us.

We walk the bush paths and feel the wind as it blows gently through the trees,

We hear the fluttering of the wings of birds,

We see spiders and their intricate webs glistening in morning mist.

We see creatures scurrying through the bush looking for shelter and protection. 

We walk along the beaches and feel the golden sun on our backs

We feel the crinkly sand between our toes,

We hear the gentle lapping of the waves on the beach,

We see mighty creatures rise from the depths with a rush of spray,

We see joy in their eyes as they crash back into the sea. 

For the beauty and majesty of your world, our world, we give you thanks.

 

Yet when we look further, we see a world that is in crisis.

We see temperatures rising along with the seas;

We see the brown haze of smog in the air.

We see droughts and floods and cyclones and fires.

We see coral that is dying,

We see scars on the land where we have ripped apart your creation;

We see forests disappearing;

We see islands of plastic in the sea;

We see animals in pain, choking on the rubbish we have left behind;

We see species disappearing because of our neglect.

We see the tears of your world as it begs us to stop.

Creator God, your world, our world, is hurting.  We have broken your world. 

 

As we look around our world, your world, we see we have done well.

We see great cities we have built;

We see dams that provide our water;

We see farms that provide our food;

We see people of different faiths, different ethnic backgrounds, different genders living together in harmony going about their daily lives;

We see people making advances in science;

We see people who want to go to Mars and beyond;

We see Popes and Archbishops, Rabbis and Muftis working and praying together;

We see police and fireman and doctors and nurses working to make our lives comfortable and safe. 

For the diversity of our humanity, for those who care and provide in your world, our world, we give you thanks.

 

Yet when we look further, we see a world that is suffering and in pain.

We see people playing with nuclear toys;

We see leaders who put power ahead of their people;

We see extremists using terror to conquer;

We see cities destroyed in anger;

We see people without limbs in make-shift hospitals wondering what just happened;

We see people fleeing in fear, from war, from persecution;

We see people without a crime living in detention;

We see people without justice;

We see people longing for someone, anyone, to care.

Just and compassionate God, your world, our world, is hurting.  We have broken your world. 

 

As we look around our world, your world, we see happiness and joy.

We see our friends and neighbours,

We wave and say Gidday.

We see the people seated next to us in church.

we rejoice in the friendship and the fellowship we share together. 

We shake hands and share your peace,

We sing psalms and we praise your name. 

We sing carols in the park;

We ‘Ooo’ and ‘Arrr’ as the fireworks light up the sky.  

We look forward to our coming together at Christmas, the laughter and joy of family. 

For the joys of family and friends, for the laughter and the fun, for the food on our tables, for the homes in which we live, for the churches in which we worship, we give you thanks.

 

Yet when we look further, we see communities in pain.

We see people who are suffering though illness;

We see people doing it tough, struggling to pay bills;

We see strangers in the street who smile as they walk by,

strangers who behind the smile are wondering how they can give their kids any sort of joy this Christmas;

We see lives destroyed by drugs and alcohol;

We see people who have gambled away their lives, their families;

We see people who will be lonely this Christmas, alone in their homes;

We see people sleeping in the streets who have no home;

We see people without a future,

We see people who fear what the future will bring.

Loving and merciful God – your world, our world, is hurting.  We have broken your world. 

 

Eternal Potter, we are your clay, you mould us.  Isaiah told us that.

In this broken world, you give us hope.

in the light and the bustle of the day we look for you. 

In the darkness and the stillness of the night, we long for your presence. 

In our waiting and anticipation, you give us hope. 

 

Give us grace to live in harmony with your world.

Grant us courage to be the people you would have us be.

Provide us with the wisdom to find ways of taking your gift of hope to our broken world. 

Come Lord Jesus, come, for our hope rests in you.