North Queensferry Church

2nd October. 2022. Service.

Inverkeithing Parish Church linked with

North Queensferry Church

Worship 2nd October 2022

Seventeenth Sunday after Pentecost

 

 

Prelude: “Morning Song”

Bible Introit 180 “Give thanks with a grateful heart”

Collect: 
Almighty God, we offer you hearty thanks for your goodness and care in giving to us the fruits of the earth in their seasons. Give us grace to use them rightly to your glory, for the relief of those in need and our own well-being. Amen.

 Hymn 229 “We plough the fields and scatter”

 Call to Prayer

In the fading of the summer sun,
the shortening of days, cooling breeze,
swallows’ flight and moonlight rays
We see the creator’s hand

In the browning of leaves once green,
morning mists, autumn chill,
fruit that falls, frost’s first kiss
We see the creator’s hand

Creator God, You have made us stewards of Your earth, You have charged us to tend it and to grow food in season; help us to respect and to use them to Your glory and to cherish all life that comes from You, so that we may share in the labour of all creation to bring relief to those in need and to sustain ourselves in our own well-being; through Jesus Christ Your Son our Lord, who is alive and reigns with You, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

 Prayers of Adoration and confession
God of harvest time we meet today as your people and your church to celebrate and to thank you for the harvest we have been fortunate to share in. Enable us to be joyful in our worship and praise and to be fruitful in your service.

 Steadfast God, As the seasons change, we see that you are still at work in the world,
Renewing hearts and transforming the life of the world.
We praise you for all you do to repair injustice, bringing peace to places of hostility,
Working to create goodness and harmony among neighbours and nations.
You have shown us the true face of power in Jesus Christ who, reaches out with healing and hope, touching unhappy and troubled lives with grace and love.

Show us the face of Jesus in our time of worship and fill us with divine energy and insight this autumn, that we may engage in your work bringing justice and joy into the world you love in Jesus’ name. Amen.

 You have given us a world of beauty and we have spoiled it.

A world to feed us, and so many go hungry.
A world of riches, and we are unwilling to share.
A world to care for, and we think only of ourselves.
Forgive us, gracious God, every time your heart is saddened
by our selfishness, every time we have no thought for others, no cares but ours.
Enable us to see this world as a gift from you that can be shared, and those who live on it as our neighbours.
We ask this that your name may be glorified by the beauty of this world and the service of our lives.

Assurance of Pardon
The prophet Micah declared that God requires of us these three things:
to do justice, to love kindness, and to walk humbly with our God. To all who reject indifference and humbly seek reconciliation with God and neighbour, God offers forgiveness and peace. The peace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all.

Prayer for Understanding
We come with open minds and receptive hearts to hear your word. Give us your Spirit of wisdom, love, and grace that your transforming power may change us into the likeness of Jesus Christ your Son who taught us to pray:

Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come; thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors, and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom, the power, and the glory, for ever Amen.

The Intimations

Coffee Mornings  

There will be a coffee morning in aid of Macmillan Nurses on Tuesday 4th October 10:00-noon in Inverkeithing,

Christian Aid Concert
Saturday 22nd October 2pm Dalgety Bay Church
Tickets £6 under 18’s £4
Entertainers.        Sing It – a group of 30 singers
Ivy Partridge (Ukulele Group)
St Fillan’s Handbells Ringers
Tickets available from Liz Hunter.

On Saturday 8th October Inverkeithing Baptist Church are having a talk by Rev Malcolm MacLeod of Steadfast Global entitled “a Scottish Voice for Persecuted Christians”.  Refreshments will be served at 7.00 the evening begins at 7.30-9.30.
Worship will be led by Garry Downie, an interview with Java and Josephine Kailab from Pakistan and a prayer for persecuted Christians.

The Offering                                                                       
Prophets and parables remind us again and again to share our wealth with those living on the margins. Your contributions to the life and mission of this congregation and to the Church of Scotland help change the world by bringing God’s love and goodness to those standing outside the gate. Let us bless God with our offering.

Prayer of Dedication
Beloved God, who richly provides for our needs and enjoyment,
thank you for your many gifts. You have trusted us with our lives, with this world, and with your love.
May the gifts we offer you today be used for your service and your glory.
Help us store up for ourselves the treasure of a good foundation for the future, that we may take hold of the life that really is life.
We offer these gifts, trusting in our saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.

All Age Talk

Our Bible story today is on thankfulness. It’s a story about Jesus and the thankful leper. Do you know what a leper is? No, it is not an animal with spots on it. That’s a leopard! However, a leper does have spots. A leper is a person who has a disease called leprosy. This disease causes sores all over the body. Leprosy was very common in Jesus’ day, and people who had this disease were thought to be unclean. They were required to stay away from other people because of the fear that they might infect them with their disease.

One day, Jesus was walking through a small village when he saw a group of ten lepers. They stood far away from Jesus and called to him, “Jesus, Master, have pity on us.” Obviously, they knew who Jesus was and that he had the power to heal them. When Jesus heard them, he called back to the lepers and said, “Go, show yourself to the priest.” (Luke 17:11-14)

As the lepers went on their way to see the priest, they looked at their skin and the sores were gone. Jesus had healed their disease. They were so happy that they ran up and down the streets singing and dancing. Suddenly, one of them stopped and went back. Praising God with a loud voice, he threw himself at Jesus’ feet and said, “Thank You.” Jesus said to him, “Weren’t there ten who were healed? Where are the other nine?” (Luke 17:15-17) Only one out of ten remembered to say, “Thank You.”

God does so much for us! Every day he provides everything we need: food, clothing, and a place to live. Do we ever forget to say, “Thank You?” Let’s stop right now and say, “Thank You” and ask God to help us remember to thank Him every day.

Dear Lord, you give us everything we need, but we often forget to say, “Thank You.” We thank you now and ask you to help us to remember to give thanks every day for all that you do for us. In Jesus’ name we pray, amen.

Hymn “God who made the earth”

Reading:   Deuteronomy 26:1-11
When you have entered the land that the Lord your God is giving you as an inheritance and have taken possession of it and settled in it, 2take some of the firstfruits of all that you produce from the soil of the land that the Lord your God is giving you and put them in a basket. Then go to the place that the Lord your God will choose as a dwelling for his Name 3and say to the priest in office at the time, ‘I declare today to the Lord your God that I have come to the land the Lord swore to our ancestors to give us.’ 4The priest shall take the basket from your hands and set it down in front of the altar of the Lord your God. 5Then you shall declare before the Lord your God: ‘My father was a wandering Aramean, and he went down into Egypt with a few people and lived there and became a great nation, powerful and numerous. 6But the Egyptians ill-treated us and made us suffer, subjecting us to harsh labour. 7Then we cried out to the Lord, the God of our ancestors, and the Lord heard our voice and saw our misery, toil and oppression. 8So the Lord brought us out of Egypt with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm, with great terror and with signs and wonders. 9He brought us to this place and gave us this land, a land flowing with milk and honey; 10and now I bring the firstfruits of the soil that you, Lord, have given me.’ Place the basket before the Lord your God and bow down before him. 11Then you and the Levites and the foreigners residing among you shall rejoice in all the good things the Lord your God has given to you and your household.

Hymn 226 “God whose farm is all creation”

Reading: Luke 17:11-19

11 Now on his way to Jerusalem, Jesus travelled along the border between Samaria and Galilee. 12 As he was going into a village, ten men who had leprosy met him. They stood at a distance 13 and called out in a loud voice, ‘Jesus, Master, have pity on us!’

14 When he saw them, he said, ‘Go, show yourselves to the priests.’ And as they went, they were cleansed.

15 One of them, when he saw he was healed, came back, praising God in a loud voice. 16 He threw himself at Jesus’ feet and thanked him – and he was a Samaritan.

17 Jesus asked, ‘Were not all ten cleansed? Where are the other nine? 18 Has no one returned to give praise to God except this foreigner?’ 19 Then he said to him, ‘Rise and go; your faith has made you well.’ Amen, this is the Word of the Lord, to Him be all glory and praise.

Hymn 181 “For the beauty of the earth”

 Sermon

The Lord God said, ” When you come into the land which the Lord your God gives you for an inheritance, and have taken possession of it, and live in it, you shall take some of the first of all the fruit of the ground, which you harvest from your land that the Lord your God gives you, and you shall put it in a basket, and you shall go to the place which the Lord your God will choose, to make his name dwell there.”

I was about to start preparing this sermon when I was reminded by a remark in a book about preaching to read the passage in which the sermon is based at least three times before you start. A bit like teacher’s advice before an exam, “Read the question carefully!”  I am glad I did because I realised that there is more than one reason for thanksgiving in this passage.

The First Thanksgiving was celebrated by the Israelites when they moved into the promised land. God told them as they came into this land flowing with milk and honey, they were to take the first fruits of the ground, place them in a basket and take it to the priest.

Gratitude for the harvest’s yield is the first element.  The second is that as the land belongs ultimately to God, He has the first claim on its fruit, and it must be rendered to Him by sacrifice. The third element is that in their thanksgiving the Israelites were to relive through the words of the speech which begins, “A wandering Aramean was my father; and he went down into Egypt and sojourned there, few in number; and there he became a nation, great, mighty and populous.” This was a reminder of God’s deliverance in their lives.

Because God had delivered and blessed them, God asked them to return to Him the first fruits of the ground, to give thanksgiving to Him for this act of deliverance in their lives.

For the Israelites, their thanksgiving was seen in the action of God as He delivered them from Egypt and brought them into this land flowing with milk and honey. In America where two years ago the 400th anniversary of the voyage of the Mayflower from Plymouth to Cape Cod between September 16 and November 11 1620, caused controversy among the descendants of the indigenous American community.  A year later the Pilgrims gave thanks for the deliverance which came to them during their first year on the North American shore. They were delivered from hunger by a good summer crop, they were delivered from war by peacefully living with the Indians who helped them, they were delivered from cold by building strong sturdy homes, we could go on and on. Deliverance brought thanksgiving into their hearts.

We are taking the third element first as it is a different take on thanksgiving. When we think of this time of Thanksgiving, we usually list all those things we are thankful that we have or have been blessed with. But what about being thankful for all those things we have been delivered from, that we don’t have to experience?

This story illustrates the meaning:

“There was a man who lived with his 6 children in the suburbs of Philadelphia. Just before school was to start all of his children needed new shoes. At the same time the washing machine wore out. To top it all off, because of bad weather, his work as a carpenter had dwindled to almost nothing. How often has that sort of thing happened in your life?

He was able to scrape together enough money to buy the children shoes, but he ran an ad in the paper wanting to buy a used washing machine. One day the phone rang, and it was someone who had a used washing machine to sell. He went to the home and noticed they had all the things he wished for his family. After talking to the man about the washing machine and how he would get it home, the conversation got around to children. Claude, the out of work carpenter, began complaining about how expensive it was to raise six children. Especially when they all needed shoes at the same time. At that he woman of the house ran out of the room crying. Her husband explained that they had only one child who had been paralyzed from birth and he had never needed a pair of shoes.

When Claude got home, he picked up the worn-out shoes, worn out from skipping rope, kicking balls or stone, and jumping puddles, and he went off to be by himself. Kneeling by his bed he gave thanks to God for the worn-out shoes in his house. ” (Tim Zingale).

Here his gratitude was for the deliverance he had been granted, his children could walk, run and skip. They could wear out a pair of shoes. Claude had been delivered from the pain of the other family who could not watch their child run, kick a football jump and wear out shoes. Have you been thankful for the deliverance which has been granted in your life?

Think about all the food each of us will enjoy this week. Are we thankful we have been delivered from the pain of hunger, the sickness of malnutrition when countless men, women and children around the world are now dying a slow and painful death because of the lack of food? What about those who have to use the food bank because they are unemployed or under paid?

Do you ever get tired about the round of things you have to do every day and maybe resent them? How often might a housewife think about all those things she had been delivered from as she works around her house, even as she tackles all the household chores many get tired of doing.

Listen to her thoughts: “Lord, thank You for this sink of dirty dishes, we have good food to eat. Thank you for this pile of dirty laundry, we have nice clothes to wear. I also thank you for these unmade beds, they were all comfortable last night.”

She was thankful in the course of her work because she knew in her heart she had been delivered from hunger. She was delivered from the extremes of the elements with the clothes waiting to be washed. She was delivered from a fitful night sleep as she slept in a warm house and a comfortable bed.

Thankful hearts come as we recall all those acts of deliverance which God brought into our lives. Small ones as much as great and challenging ones. We can and should be thankful for these acts. Could it be that most people take their good fortune, their health, their wealth, their warm clothes, and hardy food for granted or see them as their due. They are not thankful but expect this as something owed to them by life or by God.  Of course, is not owed but given freely by God. When we realise that everything in life, those things we have been delivered from, and those things we do possess, all come from God, we might have a difficult time being thankful, because we realise that we depend on God for everything. And most of us, even if we don’t want to admit it, are self-centred enough not to want to be dependent on anyone, let alone God. We’d like to be independent, and many Christians pride themselves on being “independent” sometimes to their own detriment especially as they get older.

Paul Tillich, a famous theologian, said this about thanks and thanksgiving:

“The reason most of us do not respond to ’thank you’ or do not say ’thank you’ is because we instinctively realise that it makes us somehow dependent on that person. If I thank you, I am saying that I am dependent on you, and I am publicly affirming it before God and people. Gratitude is an action that has its roots in grace, the free undeserved love-action of God. When we are truly grateful, we become starkly aware that we are wholly dependent for everything upon God and upon our fellow human beings who are made in His image. When we are truly grateful, we recognize that God has favoured us, whether we deserve favouring no not.”

Thanksgiving is our acknowledgement that we are dependent on God for all His acts of deliverance and all His blessings in our lives. Thanksgiving now is a twofold time for us. We are “thankful” for being delivered, and we are thankful for the blessings we have.

The third element of our thanksgiving to God is an action commanded by God. Notice in our text, that God commands the people to put the first fruits in a basket and take it to the priest. God mandates a physical act of response, a ritual movement on our part. This is a reminder that nothing on this earth actually belongs to any of us. We won’t take a bit of it with us when we leave. Oh, we may bequeath what we have to our offspring, but they will not own it any more than we did. The First Fruits offering aspect of thanksgiving is an acknowledgment that God has a prior claim on everything we reap, earn, or make.

The beneficiaries of the First Fruits offering were the Levites, the priests who were not permitted to work in the fields, and the foreigners living in the land. We are using God’s resources in order to live. We are to give the first fruits to God symbolically, and through them to others in their need on his behalf. We enter the cycle of grace and providence when we do this.

Thankfulness toward God should not be a self-conscious attitude dutifully displayed in response to the demands of a religious custom. Neither is true thanksgiving just something we say or a gift we bring. True “thanksgiving” is simply the quality of life that we live. Thanksgiving is a daily attitude of gratitude toward God who delivers us from painful situations and who grants to us many blessings. Thanksgiving is an attitude which acknowledges God is indeed in control of life. Without God nothing would be possible. Thanksgiving is an entering into the process of God’s providence for others.

We are a people who have been delivered and blessed. As we look around this world, let us see our deliverance and blessings in a new light and not be jealous, or selfish, or self-centred. Let us truly be a grateful people, dependent on God for all of life. Amen.

Prayers of thanksgiving and intercession

God of all creation, we praise and give thanks for all that You have given to us in our lives. We thank You for the beauty of the Scottish landscape, the beautiful braes, the burns, the highlands and the Islands. We thank You for the orchards, the excellent grazing pastures and the rich soil for cultivation. We thank You for all those who work the land and sea to provide food to feed us; for farmers who grow crops and produce livestock with love and care and those fishing the deep oceans. We thank You God for the rich variety of food that comes from all across the world. We thank You for the enjoyment and pleasure we find in sharing food in celebration and fellowship. We pray for those who grow, prepare and distribute the food we eat.

We pray today for farmers and farmworkers, especially those we know in our parishes. We pray for them in the heat of summer and in the dreich wet and cold of winter, as they tend their stock and cultivate their fields, as they manage the hedges, woodland and waterways.

We pray for safety in a hazardous industry, encouragement for the solitary, and a fair price for their products.

We pray for seasonable weather, good growth and good yields, so that there may be abundant harvests to feed hungry people. For safe work practices and healthy habits for all farmers, so that people and communities may flourish and be strong, For health and happiness in the home life of all farmers, and for families to work together with love, respect and harmony, For wise financial planning, land care and asset management, so that farmers may be confident about the future of their farms, for good communication between country and city, so that we may understand each other’s needs and encourage one another.

We pray for this country to increase its self-sufficiency in food that people and supermarket-buyers will support local growers. We pray for all those who provide seasonal labour at harvest time, for those who clean and process our food – often in tough conditions, for those who transport, inspect and sell our food and for all who cook it for us, remembering particularly all the new school caterers feeding our young children.

We pray for rural and regional networks working to overcome rural loneliness and isolation, the Royal Scottish Agricultural Benevolent Institution and the National Farmers Union Scotland.

Generous God, as we celebrate Your goodness to us in Scotland, we also remember the plight of those whose harvests have failed. We pray for those whose land or crops have been affected by floods, drought, or fire by pests and disease. For those whose families are hungry and for those who have no seed or livestock for the future. We also remember those here and abroad who are dependent on food banks. Help us to be generous givers – of our money, food and time, as Christian disciples in this place, and show us how to be stewards of the resources of Your world, for the benefit of all people.

Hymn 230 “Praise God for the harvest”

The Benediction
May God who clothes the lilies and feeds the birds of the air, who leads the lambs to their pasture and the deer to still waters, who multiplied the loaves and fishes and changed water into wine, lead us, feed us, multiply us, and change us to reflect the glory of our Creator now and through all eternity.

And the blessing of God almighty, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, rest upon you and remain with you now and for ever Amen

May God’s blessing surround you each day

Postlude: “A harvest of thanksgiving”