01/28/2024 = Mark 1:21-28 = “Bread, Bapt & Beyond – Sacraments and Worship 4”                      

(Click HERE to see the FBLive stream of this service – starts at 0:00, sermon at 34:00)

(Click HERE to donate to Lidgerwood Church’s mission and ministry – MANY THANKS to all who give to this church!!)

1                                                                                                                                             Kathy Sandusky, Commissioned Pastor

Mark 1:21-28                                                                                                            

01/28/2024

Bread, Bapt & Beyond – Sacraments and Worship 4”                      

Lidgerwood Presbyterian Church

Good morning, welcome to worship at Lidgerwood Presbyterian Church! We are glad to have you with us in this time of worship.

Especially after last Sunday’s icy streets and super cold weather!

Some of you know I was out of the country last Sunday – 95* temps in Guatemala – suffering for the Lord! I have lots of stories and photos – but that’s for another time. Instead, those of you who are more observant will notice that the bulletins you’re holding have last Sunday’s date on them….  Most of you. We’re just re-using what would have been used last week.

Today is our fourth Sunday in this between Christmas and Lenten series on Worship and Sacraments – what do we do on Sunday mornings, and why do what we do it, and how that impacts how we live every day! Bread, Bapt and Beyond!

In the previous three weeks we talked about CommunionJesus is the Bread of Lifehow we partake of this everlasting-life-bread every time we come to Jesus, every time we start to believe in Him, we talked about Baptismthe Water of Lifehow our recognition of our sin condition and confession and repentance leads to an act of faithful Baptism – demonstrating God’s grace and mercy, and proclaiming our coming to Jesus and belief in His death and resurrection, and we talked about how God calls us, and what God calls us to.

This morning we read the next section in Mark’s Gospel – and Pastor Kathy helps us discover that faith always includes something about what we believe in. 

Today will probably be a little shorter service than what is normal – we have our Annual Congregational Meeting – and a Potluck Lunch – and you are ALL invited to stay – if there’s not enough food, we’ll all survive on a little less – or there might be a miraculous multiplication of the loaves. The Meeting won’t take terribly long, but we want to take the time to honor our 2023, elect our new church leaders, and dream together about how God might be calling us in 2024.

Today, we worship our God in this series:

Bread, Bapt and Beyond – a look at the Sacraments that demonstrate and perform the grace of God, and the worship that develops from them.

2-3 

To invite us into that experience, Scott calls us to worship from Psalm 111:

4-5  And our Prelude of Praise and Worship ––– #17 …  Praise the Lord, O Heavens Adore Him

6  Good morning Friends!  Welcome to worship at Lidgerwood!! Shalom Aleichem! Or as they say in Guatelama: La paz de Cristo esté con vosotros. May the PEACE of Christ be with you!

Welcome, friends, from around the world, to this worshipping community!

Be filled with God’s Holy Spirit presence and power, in your homes, through your phones and computers, in this building here, and in your lives. Pray with us … and hear and be transformed by God’s Word.

7   This morning our Chancel Choir leads us in this beautiful anthem: He Started the Whole World Singing”       

8   Children’s Message

9  Scott, please begin our Prayer time in Confession and Thanksgiving         

10  Gloria Patri

11-14   Praises, thanksgivings, adorations, concerns and prays [The Lord’s Prayer]

15   

16-19  Let’s stand as we are able and sing our Song of Devotion and Preparation to receive God’s Word#26Praise My Soul the King of heaven 

20    

SERMON and SCRIPTURE READING – Pastor Kathy Sandusky – Commissioned Ruling Elder Pastor

21    

22  We have three locations in this Sanctuary where we give out tithes and offerings, our pledges and promises to God’s Kingdom work. If you did not offer your tithes when you entered the room, please do so as we leave in a few minutes. Or give HERE.

Please pray with me: Receive our tithes and offerings as symbols of our very lives and livelihood, given as response to Your life given for us! Bless it, and by it bless the world around us. In Christ’s name, Amen.

23-24    Expedition Song #712 –  The Kingdom of God Is Justice and Joy!    

25   Benediction:   

26  

Announcements

  • Potluck Lunch & Annual Congregational Meeting – in just a few minutes, to receive Annual Reports, Elect new Church officers, listen for God’s call on us in 2024
  • Thru-the-Bible Check-in – TOMORROW at noon
  • Easter Cantata Rehearsals – start THIS Thursday, 6pm!
  • Furnace Fundraiser   

01/14/2024 = Mark 1:14-20 = “Bread, Bapt & Beyond – Sacraments and Worship 3” 

(Click HERE to see the FBLive stream of this service = starts at 10:40, sermon at 39:20)

(Click HERE to donate to Lidgerwood Church’s mission and ministries = THANK YOU for your generous contributions)

1                                                                                                                                        

Mark Wheeler

Mark 1:14-20                                                                                                            

01/14/2024

Bread, Bapt & Beyond – Sacraments and Worship 3”                      

Lidgerwood Presbyterian Church

Good morning, good Church! Welcome to this time of worship.

Today is our third Sunday in this between Christmas and Lenten series on Worship and Sacraments – what do we do on Sunday mornings, and why do what we do it, and how that impacts how we live every day! Bread, Bapt and Beyond!

In the last two weeks we talked about CommunionJesus is the Bread of Lifehow we partake of this everlasting-life-bread every time we come to Jesus, every time we start to believe in Him, and we talked about Baptismthe Water of Lifehow our recognition of our sin condition and confession and repentance leads to an act of faithful Baptism – demonstrating God’s grace and mercy, and proclaiming our coming to Jesus and belief in His death and resurrection.

And this morning, as a part of discovering what this means for us, we will hear a word from the Rev Katie Stark, our Presbytery’s Missional Expeditor, who interprets this into an invitation to hear God’s Word inviting us into His already-at-work ministries.

Bread, Bapt and Beyond – a look at the Sacraments that demonstrate and perform the grace of God, and the worship that develops from them.

To invite us into that experience, Scott calls us to worship from Psalm 62:

2-3  

4-7  And our Prelude of Praise and Worship ––– #227 …  Rock of Ages

8  Good morning Friends!  Welcome to worship at Lidgerwood!! Shalom Aleichem! May the PEACE of Christ be with you!

Welcome, friends, from around the world, to this worshipping community!

Be filled with God’s Holy Spirit presence and power, in your homes, through your phones and computers, in this building here, and in your lives. Pray with us … and hear and be transformed by God’s Word.

9   This morning our Chancel Choir leads us in this invitational Sacramental anthem: Let the Love Shine Through”       

10   Children’s Message

11  Scott opens our Prayer time in Confession and Thanksgiving         

12  Gloria Patri

13-16   Praises, thanksgivings, adorations, concerns and prays [The Lord’s Prayer]

17   

18-20    Song of Devotion and Preparation to receive God’s Word#693We Believe in God Almighty  – a musical arrangement of the Apostles Creed

21    

As we continue in this first chapter of the Gospel According to Mark – let me remind you of a couple of important things to point out:

  • Mark is the only Gospel that has no Christmas mention. Matthew and Luke tell the stories about the angels and the shepherds and the magi; John doesn’t really give a birth narrative, but he says that the Son of God became flesh and moved in with us. Mark does not say anything like that – Mark’s Gospel concentrates on Jesus as the Servant of GodIsaiah’s Suffering Servant prophecies – and, from that perspectivewho cares about a Servant’s birthday? So he just doesn’t mention it. Instead, this Gospel begins simply with a description of the book – which is the second point;
  • Mark is the only book in the Bible that announces itself as a “gospel” (Mark 1:1), “the good news, the gospel, about Jesus…”   Again, there is no word in Mark about the birth or the youth of Jesus. He starts right in with this “good news” of Jesus’ Baptism as the beginning of His ministry. It is the fulfillment of the “messenger” promised by the prophet Isaiah 40:3; a promise stated again by John the Baptist’s own explanation of Jesus’ Baptism, that his Baptism was with water, but “Jesus will Baptize you with the Holy Spirit” (Mark 1:8).

Let’s hear the Word of God, from Mark 1:14-20 …. —-

22

14 Now after John was arrested  [John, the cousin of Jesus, the son of Mary’s relative Elizabeth and Zechariah, John the Baptist], Jesus came into Galilee, proclaiming the gospel of God, 15 and saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel.” [Let me just pause to point out that in just 15 verses Mark has used the word Gospel, Good News, three times! And Jesus uses the same words that John used in his Baptismrepent and believe]

23

16 Passing alongside the Sea of Galilee, he saw Simon and Andrew the brother of Simon casting a net into the sea, for they were fishermen. 17 And Jesus said to them, “Follow me, and I will make you become fishers of people, of men and women.” 18 And immediately they left their nets and followed him. 

24

19 And going on a little farther, he saw James the son of Zebedee and John his brother, who were in their boat mending the nets. 20 And immediately he called them, and they left their father Zebedee in the boat with the hired servants and followed him.

25

Jesus begins His ministry by proclaiming the “Good News” of the Gospel, which is that “the time is fulfilled and the Kingdom of God has come near” (Mark 1:15).

Jesus’ coming was the “fullness of time,” because He is the messenger promised in the Old Testament. And Jesus repeats the message of John the Baptist, “Repent and believe in the Good News.

The emphasis of Mark’s Gospel is that Jesus’ coming is the Gospel.

Today’s passage continues the story from last Sunday, that is, the beginning of Jesus’ ministry as He calls His first disciples. In today’s story Jesus calls four fishermen at the Sea of GalileeSimon Peter, Andrew, James and John.

We don’t really know what there was about Jesus that led Simon, Andrew, James, John, and others to leave their homes and families to follow Jesus. Did they know Him already? Or was this their first contact with Him? Whatever it was, there was something remarkably compelling about Jesus to cause these and others to follow Him into an uncertain, experimental future. The astonishing feature of the story is that they followed Jesus with no idea of where it would lead.

We know very little of the background of any of the disciples whom Jesus calls. The four in today’s story were fishermen. Matthew was a tax collector. What had the other seven done before Jesus came into their lives? We don’t know.

As far as we can tell, the twelve persons Jesus called to be His companions were just ordinary folk. As far as we can tell, Jesus didn’t do background checks to determine IQ levels, financial expertise, professional skills, or temple education. He picked people probably much like you and me. Furthermore, these disciples were anything but perfect. Many times they misunderstood Him. They often hesitated to follow Him. Judas betrayed Him and Peter denied Him.

But these would be the people who would continue Jesus’ work on earth after He left — ordinary people, like you and me. These were the people Jesus called.

Furthermore, Jesus’ first disciples were “northerners,” from the northern province of Galilee.

The capital of Israel was Jerusalem in the former southern kingdom, the religious center with the Temple.

It is no wonder that Jesus was greeted with such skepticism when he travelled to Jerusalem from His home in Galilee with His Galilean friends. The religious leaders in Jerusalem naturally considered Jesus an “outsider.”

As far as we know, every one of the disciples was chosen and called personally by Jesus.

Our Church believes that God calls each one of us. God not only calls us to follow Jesus, but God also calls us into the fields and careers of our lives, into the neighborhoods in which we live and shop and play.

We often speak of “God’s call” far too narrowly, as if Godcalls” people only into ordained ministry. It is true: God does call people to be pastors and church workers. But God’s call is by no means limited to clergy. God calls every single one of us.

In the Middle Ages the clergy was considered a higher status of Christian than laypersons. They had their own regimen of frequent daily worship that laypersons didn’t have. They had church rules to follow, which laypersons didn’t have. They usually lived in communities — monasteries and convents — unlike laypersons.

The Reformation of the 1500s tried to eliminate those distinctions between clergy and lay by affirming that God calls everybody – a priesthood of all believers.

The word for this call to everyone is “vocation,” from Latin vocatio, “calling.” Everyone has a station in life, probably several stations in how society functions, “vocation.” Every job that works to build up and maintain society is a calling — teacher, nurse, car mechanic, grocery store clerk, train engineer, etc. We also have callings within family structures mother, father, aunt, uncle, child, etc. We serve God in these family callings as well.

Way back in the day when I was first exploring the possibility of ordained ministry, one of my best friends, Kirk, the friend that accidentally introduced me to Jennifer, was also exploring his call to ordained ministry. One of the first steps in that process is to seek your church’s elders to “take you under care”, to endorse your sense of call, to walk alongside you into the call-process. Our Elder Council, for Kirk, recommended some further explorations before they would endorse his sense of call. And as a result – he became a high school teacher! And discovered that that was his call, his vocation.

Lidgerwood church, one Summer, had a Whitworth University Summer intern – we’ve had three different Summer interns – this one, Drew Strait, discovered that his call was to teach theology and ecclesiology in a university setting!

That Elder Council, that student intern, understood what it means to follow God’s call in one’s vocation.

The truth is that God’s call is always into an uncertain future. Abraham, the Founder of the Hebrew people, God’s Chosen people, God’s called people, way back in Genesis 12, is called to a very unknown future.

When we enter into our callings we have no idea how it will all end up. We choose our careers and jobs hoping that we can use the gifts and talents God has given us, but there are no guarantees. We step into experiments. Every day is an experiment in living fasithfully.

26    

With that – I invite my friend and colleague, Rev Katie Stark, to come up and share a Moment of Experimental Mission Calling with us – after which there will be a short time for Q & AKatie ….

27  Receive our tithes and offerings as symbols of our very lives and livelihood, given as response to Your life given for us! Bless it, and by it bless the world around us. In Christ’s name, Amen.

Offering (4449 N Nevada St., Spokane, WA, 99207; or Click HERE, or text 833-976-1333, code “Lidgerwood”)

28-31    Expedition Song #712 –  The Kingdom of God Is Justice and Joy!    

32   Benediction:   

 May we Grow in the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ.

Be filled with God’s Holy Spirit.  And give glory to God, today, and forever! Amen.   

“May the Lord bless you and protect you;  may the Lord make His face shine on you and be gracious to you;  may the Lord look with favor on you and give you peace.”

33    

34  

Announcements

  • Potluck Lunch & Annual Congregational Meeting – Sunday, January 28, to receive Annual Reports, Elect new Church officers, listen for God’s call on us in 2024
  • Furnace Fundraiser   

Resources:   

Rogness, Michael; https://www.workingpreacher.org/commentaries/revised-common-lectionary/third-sunday-after-epiphany-2/commentary-on-mark-114-20-3.

01/07/2024 = Mark 1:4-11 = Bread, Bapt & Beyond – Sacraments & Worship 2

(Click HERE to see the Facebook Live video of this services – starts at 15:40, sermon at 47:30)

(Click HERE to donate to Lidgerwood Church’s mission and ministries – THNAK YOU for your support and gifting to this expression of the Body of Christ)

1                                                                                                                                        

Mark Wheeler

Mark 1:4-11                                                                                                              

01/07/2024

Bread, Bapt & Beyond – Sacraments and Worship 2”                      

Lidgerwood Presbyterian Church

On the Thirteenth Day of Christmas my true love gave to me – Wait … what?! The Christmas Season does officially last 12 days – That’s December 25 thru January 6. On the Liturgical Calendar, the Church Year, we celebrate Jesus’ 8th day of life on the Sunday closest to the week after Christmas – this year that was last Sunday – when Simeon and Anna glorified God at the Temple because God had kept His promise that these two very old saints would see the Messiah before they died.

And then a week later Jesus is 30 years old, going to the Jordan River where His cousin John is Baptizing people for their faithful repentance and confession of their sin-nature. This is today’s theme. The day Jesus is Baptized in the Jordan River in His 30th year of life as God Incarnate.

Today is also our second Sunday in this between Christmas and Lenten series on Worship and Sacraments – what do we do on Sunday mornings, and why do what we do it, and how that impacts how we live every day! Bread, Bapt and Beyond!

Last week we talked about CommunionJesus is the Bread of Lifewe partake of this everlasting-life-bread every time we come to Jesus, every time we start to believe in Him.

Today we celebrate Communion and look at the Sacrament of Baptism!

Bread, Bapt and Beyond – a look at the Sacraments that demonstrate and perform the grace of God, and the worship that develops from them.

To invite us into that experience, Pastor Kathy calls us to worship from Psalm 29:

2-3  

4-6  And our Prelude of Praise and Worship ––– #157 …  Good Christian Friends Rejoice

7  Good morning Friends!  Welcome to worship at Lidgerwood!! Shalom Aleichem! May the PEACE of Christ be with you!

Welcome, friends, from around the world, to this worshipping community!

Be filled with God’s Holy Spirit presence and power, in your homes, through your phones and computers, in this building here, and in your lives. Pray with us … and hear and be transformed by God’s Word.

8   This morning our Chancel Choir leads us in this Sacramental Communion anthem: Remember His Love”       

9   Children’s Message

10  Pastor Kathy opens our Prayer time in Confession and Thanksgiving         

11  Gloria Patri

12-15   Praises, thanksgivings, adorations, concerns and prays [The Lord’s Prayer]

16   

17-20    Song of Devotion and Preparation to receive God’s Word#165I Wonder as I Wander 

21    

For these next few Sundays we will be in the Gospel According to Mark – so as we begin this study here are a couple of important things to point out:

  • Mark is the only Gospel that has no Christmas mention. Matthew and Luke tell the stories about the angels and the shepherds and the magi; John doesn’t really give a birth narrative, but he says that the Son of God became flesh and moved in with us. Mark does not say anything like that – Mark’s Gospel concentrates on Jesus as the Servant of GodIsaiah’s Suffering Servant prophecies – and, from that perspectivewho cares about a Servant’s birthday? So he just doesn’t mention it. Instead, this Gospel begins simply with a description of the book – which is the second point;
  • Mark is the only book in the Bible that announces itself as a “gospel” (Mark 1:1), “the good news, the gospel, about Jesus…”   Again, there is no word in Mark about the birth or the youth of Jesus. He starts right in with this “good news” of Jesus’ Baptism as the beginning of his ministry. It is the fulfillment of the “messenger” promised by the prophet Isaiah 40:3; a promise stated again by John the Baptist’s own explanation of Jesus’ Baptism, that his Baptism was with water, but “Jesus will Baptize you with the Holy Spirit” (Mark 1:8).

Let’s hear the Word of God, from Mark 1:4-11 …. —-

22

John [the cousin of Jesus, the son of Mary’s relative Elizabeth and Zechariah] appeared, Baptizing in the wilderness and proclaiming a Baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. And all the country of Judea and all Jerusalem were going out to him and were being Baptized by him in the river Jordan, confessing their sins. Now John was clothed with camel’s hair and wore a leather belt around his waist and ate locusts and wild honey. And he preached, saying, “After me comes He who is mightier than I, the strap of whose sandals I am not worthy to stoop down and untie. I have Baptized you with water, but He will Baptize you with the Holy Spirit.”

23

In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was Baptized by John in the Jordan. 10 And when He came up out of the water, immediately He saw the heavens being torn open and the [Holy] Spirit descending on him like a dove. 11 And a voice came from heaven, “You are my beloved Son; with you I am well pleased.”

24

The Baptism John offers has two components — repentance and forgiveness (Mark 1:4). As John explains what took place with Jesus, he adds that Jesus’ Baptism is not only with water, but with the Holy Spirit. This is still true of Baptism today. The Baptismal liturgy marks the end of the old life (“Do you renounce your sin…? ”) and the beginning of a life lived in God’s grace and forgiveness. Then John adds a new component with the gift of the Holy Spirit, also part of our Baptism service (“ … you have been sealed by the Holy Spirit ”).

Later on, toward the close of His ministry, Jesus Himself makes clear that Baptism leads to a new way of life. When the Apostles James and John ask to be seated next to Jesus in the life to come, Jesus points out that “the Baptism with which I am Baptized, you will be Baptized” (Mark 10:39). To be Baptized in Jesus is to follow him; to come to Him; to have the Bread of Life!

After Jesus ascended into heaven and His followers became the early Christian Church, they developed what Baptism means for us.

The process starts immediately at Pentecost, when God gives the disciples the gift of the Holy Spirit to carry on this new life in Christ.

After his sermon on Pentecost, the listeners ask the Apostle Peter how they should respond, he answers with these same three components of Baptism: “Repent and be Baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ so that your sins will be forgiven; and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit” (Acts 2:38).

As we continue in the New Testament, our understanding of what Baptism means for us continues to unfold. It always follows faith — the faith of the person being Baptized (Acts 8:13,36), or the faith of the parents (Acts 16:15, 30-33; 18:8, 1 Corinthians 1:16).

Remembering that the Christmas celebration we just experienced points us to the death and resurrection of Jesus, Jesus says in Mark 10 that in Baptism we die, as Jesus did, but we are also raised to new life, as Jesus was (Romans 6:3-5, Colossians 2:12, Titus 3:5). This amazing truth has sustained Christians throughout the centuries.

As Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a pastor in Germany during WWII, was led to his death, he said to one of the prison guards, “For some this is the end, but for me it is the beginning.” And there’s an old hymn that sings, “You can’t kill me, I’ve already died.”

We die in Baptism, but we rise up to new life in Christ!

Furthermore, Baptism is more than an individual act. In Baptism we become part of a people. The Apostle Paul emphasizes how “we were all Baptized into one body” (I Corinthians 12:13). Colossians 2:11-12 compares Baptism with the Old Testament rite of circumcision, by which infants were made part of the people of the Covenant.

The question about infant Baptism versus believer’s Baptism is a fundamental division among churches of the Protestant Reformation. However, both sides agree that Baptism is always done in faith — whether the faith of the person being Baptized or the faith of those who bring somebody to be Baptized. We also agree that children who have faith even before the age of their church’s Baptism rite are indeed part of God’s people because of their faith.

And as early as the late first century, or very early second century, the Church fathers told us about the Church’s growth and development of theology – a book called The Didache (a Greek word which means “Teachings” – we get words like “didactic” from this word). In The Didache there’s a section on Baptism which teaches full immersion, unless that is not amenable – then pouring or sprinkling will do; in living, flowing, water, unless that is not available – then standing, or even collected, water is OK. What is required is faith – in Jesus as the incarnate Son of God, our Lord and Savior, in the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

The main point of today’s text and the meaning of Jesus’ Baptism for us is that we are Baptized into something. A fundamental change takes place in Baptism, at whatever age. An adult who is Baptized after accepting faith is changed, and an infant Baptized into a family of faith will be brought up in that faith.

I have heard the argument that we don’t need to be Baptized because we are saved through faith. Baptism, this argument says, “is just a rite; it doesn’t save us.”

It is true, the criminal who died on the cross next to Jesus was never Baptized, and Jesus told him that Jesus would see him in paradise! But it’s also true that to have faith is to follow Jesus, and Jesus tells us to be Baptized, just as he was Baptized. He told his night-time visitor Nicodemus that “unless one is born of water and the Spirit, one cannot enter the kingdom of God” (John 3:5).

In Baptism we become part of Christ’s body. Paul writes that “for by one Spirit we were all Baptized into one body” (I Corinthians 12:13) and that “as many of you as were Baptized into Christ have put on Christ” (Galatians 3:27).

In the letter to the Colossians we read “you were buried with Him in Baptism, in which you were also raised with Him through faith in the working of God, who raised Him from the dead” (Colossians 2:11,12).

In his last conversation with his disciples, Jesus spoke again about Baptism. He told them, “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, Baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you” (Matthew 28:19-20).

We often speak of Baptism as a “means of grace,” that is, one of the ways that God’s grace comes to us. Physically it’s only a small splash of water, or a quick dip in a pool or puddle, but it marks the beginning of a whole new life — of forgiveness, of the presence of God’s Spirit, of our union with Jesus, and our becoming part of the world-wide Christian church!

We celebrate our Baptism every time we come to Jesus – every time we believe in His name – every time we approach the Lord’s Table and partake of the Bread of Life.

25    

I invite our Communion servers to come forward. In our tradition – we invite anyone, of any age, and any level of faith development, everyone who has been Baptized in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit to partake of the “feast” of the Lord’s Table – you do not have to be a member of this church or even Presbyterian. Come to Jesus. Believe in Jesus. The Bread of Life is for you.

As we prepare our hearts and souls for this ritual of Spiritual refreshmentproclaiming the death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus, and declaring our faith in Himannouncing our Baptism – let’s sing our –

26    Communion Hymn #774 –  Bread of the World in Mercy Broken!    

27    Our Servers will bring you the bread and the cup – instructions for receiving and passing – and Pastor Kathy will lead us in this Sacrament of Holy Communion.

28  Receive our tithes and offerings as symbols of our very lives and livelihood, given as response to Your life given for us! Bless it, and by it bless the world around us. In Christ’s name, Amen.

Offering (4449 N Nevada St., Spokane, WA, 99207; click HERE, or text 833-976-1333, code “Lidgerwood”)

29-30    Expedition Song #297 –  Spirit of the Living God!    

31   Benediction:   

 May we Grow in the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ.

Be filled with God’s Holy Spirit.  And give glory to God, today, and forever! Amen.   

“May the Lord bless you and protect you;  may the Lord make His face shine on you and be gracious to you;  may the Lord look with favor on you and give you peace.”

32    

33  

Announcements

  • Potluck Lunch & Annual Congregational Meeting – Sunday, January 28, to receive Annual Reports, Elect new Church officers, listen for God’s call on us in 2024
  • Furnace Fundraiser   

Resources:   

Rogness, Michael; https://www.workingpreacher.org/commentaries/revised-common-lectionary/Baptism-of-our-lord-2/commentary-on-mark-14-11-3.