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Back to Church Re-Opening Service:

 

Call to Worship (based on Isaiah 41:18-19)

Leader: God promised to make rivers flow on barren heights, and springs within the valleys.

People: God promised to turn the desert into pools of water, and the parched ground into springs.

Leader: God is with us as we start gathering in our sanctuaries once again.

People: God is with us as we go forth to help those in need around us.

Leader: Come, let us worship God!


Scripture Reading: 

You see the trouble we are in: Jerusalem lies in ruins, and its gates have been burned with fire. Come, let us rebuild the wall of Jerusalem, and we will no longer be in disgrace. I also told them about the gracious hand of my God on me and what the king had said to me. They replied, “Let us start rebuilding.” So they began this good work. Nehemiah 2: 17-18

After the wall had been rebuilt and I had set the doors in place, the gatekeepers, the musicians and the Levites were appointed.

Nehemiah 7:1

 

Back-to-Church Sermon: We Need Each Other
by Rev. Frank Schaefer

You've heard me say it many times this morning: Welcome back to church everyone!  It's just such a joy to see all of you after the lock-down. It's been a year, it's been too long. I'm just to happy you're here this morning and that we're here together to worship and fellowship once again. 

I want to start my message by talking about the famous flick “Castaway,” in which the Tom Hanks character survived a shipwreck and ended up on an island in the middle of nowhere. After some time, he became so lonely, he started talking to a basketball that he found washed up on the beach. It’s a little bizarre but he even gave the ball a name. The thing is, we all are created to be in fellowship. We are relational people and we need each other to survive; we need to talk to others, interact with them, we need human touch, love, companionship.

I think we all felt the pinch of social withdrawal and isolation during the pandemic. You would think that now that life is opening up once again, people would celebrate. So, why is it that people seem to go berserk right now? What about all the shootings, stories of road rage, acts of racism, and political unrest? Shouldn’t things get better now that the pandemic is getting under control? Isn’t that what we were all waiting for? What’s going on?

I believe the answer to this question lies in one word: CHANGE

Change is what causes us to experience a tremendous sense of loss and sadness, and it can cause people to feel that things are chaotic and out of control sometimes. After this pandemic, we want our lives to go back to normal but we realize that’s not possible. Our pre-pandemic world is lost, our world is no longer our familiar place, even our home is no longer our familiar home and that is causing us enormous stress. That’s a big part of the reason I believe the world is unhinged right now: Change and the losses that people feel because of it.

I seriously doubt that those people that went crazy and started hurting and killing people had anyone in their life that really cared for them, supported them. If you have people that care for you and that you care about, it’s hard to imagine that you would engage in such inhumane acts of violence.

At this time in our country, in our world, we all feel the losses the pandemic has caused. The loss of a loved one, the loss of a job, a home, a business, the loss of relationships, to mention a few. Yes, the world has changed, people have changed, we have changed. But the thing that remains true is that we need each other.
In fact, as we are re-emerging out of the pandemic, we need each other more than ever. We need to count our losses, but then move on—together. We may never go back to normal again, but we have an opportunity to be part of building a new normal, perhaps a better normal in some ways. We can do it, together, we can build back better as the slogan goes.

In our Scripture reading today we learn about a time when Jerusalem lay in ruins. The prophet Nehemiah coming back from the Diaspora saw the dire situation and scrambled the people of God together saying: “come on folks, let’s rebuild these walls. We can do this together.” I’m sure many of the people had already thought of this, but sometimes it takes one person to say it and everybody else just falls in line.

But, it sure wasn’t easy to rebuild. They actually experienced quite some push-back from among their own ranks and from their enemies. But they continued to rebuild even though at one point only half of the people could work while the other half took up arms to defend those who were working.

And when they finally got done, things did go back to a more normal. They appointed gatekeepers, musicians and priests. And as we read on in chapter 7, many of those who had been in exile, once they heard about the rebuilt Jerusalem, they came back in droves.

They were able to do all this, because of the new vision God gave them and because they united and worked together to make it happen.

And that’s what we need to do, folks! We need to rebuild, build back stronger—our society, our community, our church. What is our specific vision? Let’s rebuild our church community and let’s make it so that all feel accepted, safe, loved and cared for. Let’s reach out to one another with love and compassion. Let’s help those among us who a struggling—emotionally, physically, financially or spiritually.

Let’s rethink what it means to be in relationship with one another in church. Let us take this opportunity to never take our relationships for granted ever again. Let us express our gratitude for one another, let us hug and support one another like we never have before. We are all siblings and beloved children of God and together we can achieve incredible things. This is only the beginning, let’s talk about what we can all do in these coming weeks and months to rebuild. Amen


Closing Song:
We Need Each Other, by Sanctus Real