Tuesday, April 16, 2024

WCC News: During prayer for Ukraine, reflection asks: “Has the promised Kingdom not come yet?”

During a World Council of Churches morning prayer—focusing on the churches and people of Belarus, Moldova, Russia, and Ukraine – a reflection by Prof. Dr Dmytro Tsolin focused on both the pain of the war in Ukraine as well as how we hang onto hope.
Russian military equipment destroyed during the Russian invasion of Ukraine is displayed at the Mykhailivska Square in Kyiv, Ukraine, August 2022. Photo: Ivars Kupcis/WCC
15 April 2024

Tsolin, pastor of the German Evangelical Lutheran Church of Ukraine and professor at the Department of Biblical Studies of the Ukrainian Catholic University in Lviv, asked the question: “Has the promised Kingdom not come yet?”

He noted that we live in a world that still follows the laws of sin. “Often, we feel our depressing helplessness from the fact that we cannot fundamentally change anything,” he said. “The kingdom of Christ, which lives through faith in Christ in our hearts, only increases this pain, because we feel the contrast between sin and holiness more acutely than the rest of people.”

He further noted that we acutely feel this pain now, during the war in Ukraine. “We feel pain from the daily deaths of our compatriots, from the unceasing artillery and rocket shelling of our cities and villages by the Russian army,” he said. “We cannot stop it.”

He added: “We feel pain because of the brutal and reasonless aggression against our country from the side of Russia. We pray but we cannot change the cruel reality of this world.”

But the Lord is acting now, said Tsolin. “He hears our prayers and answers them, although sometimes it seems to us that He is silent,” he said. “What should we do now? We invoke the name of Jesus Christ in our lives and experience the presence of His Kingdom right now, in us, among us and around us.”

We see that God is still working, he concluded. “His name and His power are with us now, and we believe that the Day will come when the Kingdom of God will be revealed in all its glory.”

Reflection on Acts 4:5-12 by Prof. Dr Dmytro Tsolin, the German Evangelical Lutheran Church of Ukraine

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 352 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

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Sunday, April 14, 2024

Prayers for Our Community, Our Nation and Our World

We can offer specific daily prayers for our community, nation and world. Between Monday, April 15 and Sunday, April 21, we'll lay before God the needs listed below.

  • Monday, April 15, 2024 - That teachers and administrators would be open to God's Word and God's will.
  • Tuesday, April 16, 2024 - That those in the entertainment industry recognize any negative influences within their media creations.
  • Wednesday, April 17, 2024 - That World Vision be able to address real human need around the world.
  • Thursday, April 18, 2024 - That those in the media and government would report facts accurately and without any bias.
  • Friday, April 19, 2024 - That young people are able to grow into their potential.
  • Saturday, April 20, 2024 - That the people of Ukraine be protected.
  • Sunday, April 21, 2024 - That all racial divisions be healed.

Friday, April 5, 2024

Looking into the lectionary - The ecumenical future of camps and conferences

April 14, 2024
Third Sunday of Easter
Luke 24:36-48

“You guys, it’s really me! I’m not a ghost, I promise!” says Jesus, after walking through a wall or somehow otherwise miraculously appearing before his disciples. Of course, they are startled and terrified. Corporeal beings are not known for entering rooms without using the door — nor for rising from the dead, for that matter. But Jesus is eager to show the eleven and their companions that he is present with them in his body.

The gathered disciples have just heard from Cleopas and his fellow traveler how Jesus appeared to them on the road to Emmaus. Then suddenly Jesus himself is there, right in front of them. They think he must be a ghost, but Jesus quickly dispels their fears. He shows them his hands and feet. He encourages them to touch him, to see and feel his flesh and bones. And then, in case they are still unconvinced, he asks for something to eat. Ghosts don’t need dinner. It really is Jesus! He is risen. His body is not quite his old body, but it is still a real body, one that they can touch. He can share a meal with them, as he has countless times before.

The disciples have a mixed reaction to all of this. Jesus asks them for something to eat “while in their joy, they were disbelieving and still wondering.” The disciples take joy in Christ’s presence, in recognizing that their Lord is risen and with them in body. I imagine they felt a sense of surprise and excitement while also feeling comforted; Jesus was back at the center of their fellowship. But Luke tells us that their joy is mingled with disbelief and wonderment. They do not yet understand how it could be that their Lord is risen from the dead. And they do not yet understand what this means for their lives. They would not be returning to the way things were during Jesus’ life. Instead, they were about to be commissioned by Jesus to witness his resurrection to all nations.

2,000 or so years later, on the third Sunday of Easter, we find ourselves with similarly mixed emotions. We are still calling and responding that the Lord is risen — he is risen indeed! We are still singing Easter hymns and giving thanks for the resurrection. We have Easter joy, but we are also disbelieving and still wondering. We have many questions about how Jesus could appear in a real body and eat real food, but mysteriously appear and disappear from the view of his disciples. We have doubts about Jesus’s resurrection and ascension — Did those things really happen? And if so, why is the world still such a mess? And we wonder what it means that we are called, along with the disciples, to proclaim the gospel of repentance and forgiveness.

Our joy is mingled with doubts and questions. And in this time of great turmoil, death and destruction, war and famine, and division and fear, we long for a sign of the resurrection. We long for assurance that Jesus really is alive, working to make all things new. ...

Read the rest of the commentary on the website.

Thanks to this week's writer Ellen Williams Hensle.

Order of worship for April 14, 2024. These liturgies are free to use.
Thousands of churches will likely close down. What happens to all that real estate? by Bob Smietana
Mutual interdependence (April 14, 2024) by Sheldon Sorge
Figuring out Jesus — Weekly Christian ed lesson by Joelle Brummit-Yale
Want the worship resources for April 7, 2024? You can find them here.

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Prayers for Our Community, Our Nation and Our World

We can offer specific daily prayers for our community, nation and world. Between Monday, 
April 8 and Sunday, April 14, we'll lay before God the needs listed below.
  • Monday, April 8, 2024 - That international tensions decrease and all nations learn to live in peace with one another.
  • Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - That we put aside our self-interest for the sake of our neighbors.
  • Wednesday, April 10, 2024 - That our church leaders have the strength and faith to stand up for the truth.
  • Thursday, April 11, 2024 - That our community, state and national leaders would be presented with the Gospel and a loving Christian witness.
  • Friday, April 12, 2024 - That we listen to those who have experiences different from our own.
  • Saturday, April 13, 2024 - That our judges and Supreme Court justices would adjudicate with godly wisdom.
  • Sunday, April 14, 2024 - That college students feel God's love and support.

WCC News: During prayer for Ukraine, reflection asks: “Has the promised Kingdom not come yet?”

During a World Council of Churches morning prayer—focusing on the churches and people of Belarus, Moldova, Russia, and Ukraine – a reflectio...