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The Transforming Power of Easter
Fourth Sunday of Easter

2 Peter 1:3-11

Sermon Notes
Music Notes
Liturgy Notes

Theme of the Service

This service explores the way in which our lives serve as a reflection of Christ's transforming power in a broken world.

Christ's Easter victory over sin and death has transformed our lives as God's elect. Peter explains that the triumph of the cross has given us the power to live in accordance with the virtues to which God's people are called. We often fail to see the ways in which we fall into ineffective and unproductive faith. Just as the prophets foreshadowed the power of Christ in a broken world, so also Peter calls Christians to recognize this orientation towards God's power at work in their lives and in the world around them. God has given us everything we need to live in the power of the coming kingdom of heaven.

WE GATHER IN THE PRESENCE OF GOD

Prelude [see music notes]

The Call to Worship

* Our Declaration of Trust and God's Greeting
     Let us worship the eternal God,
     the source of love and life, who creates us.
     Let us worship Jesus Christ,
     the risen one, who lives among us.
     Let us worship the Spirit,
     the holy fire, who renews us.
     To the one true God be praise
     in all times and places,
     through the grace of Jesus Christ.
(TWS, p. 53)

*Song: "Uyai Mose/Come, All You People" SNC 4, WOV 717

WE ARE RENEWED IN GOD'S GRACE

The Call to Confession

Our Corporate Confession

The Assurance of Pardon
     While we were still weak,
     at the right time Christ died for the ungodly.
     Indeed, rarely will anyone die for a righteous person-
     though perhaps for a good person someone might actually dare to die.
     But God proves his love for us
     in that while we still were sinners Christ died for us.
     Much more surely then, now that we have been justified by his blood,
     will we be saved through him from the wrath of God.
     For if while we were enemies,
     we were reconciled to God through the death of his Son,
     much more surely, having been reconciled, will we be saved by his life. (TWS, p. 290)

God's Will for Grateful Living: Colossians 3:1-17

Song of Praise: "May the Mind of Christ My Savior" PsH 291, RN 285, TH 644, TWC 560

GOD SPEAKS TO US THROUGH HIS WORD   

The Children's Moment

The Prayer for Illumination

The Old Testament Reading: Isaiah 11:1-9
     The Word of the Lord.
     Thanks be to God!

The New Testament Reading: 2 Peter 1:3-11
     The Word of the Lord.
     Thanks be to God!

Sermon: "The Transforming Power of Easter"

Song of Response: "Fill Thou My Life" PsH 547, RL 147, TH 589

WE RESPOND TO GOD'S WORD

The Prayers of the People

The Offering
The Offertory [see music notes]

*Song: "Give Thanks" RN 266, SNC 216, TWC 496

*Charge and Benediction
     When you leave this place, thousands of gods will compete for your attention. Resist them,
     and as you do, be confident that the true God, the One who created you, is with you.

*The Doxology
     Hear now these words from the apostle Jude: To him who is able to keep you from falling, and
     to present you before his glorious presence without fault and with great joy, to the only God
     our Savior be glory, majesty, power, and authority, before all ages, now and forevermore.
     Amen!

*Song: "Praise God, from Whom All Blessings Flow" PH 591/592, PsH 637/638, RL 556, RN 83, SFL 11, UMH 95

Postlude: "Old Hundredth" [see music notes]

     * you are invited to stand

Sermon Notes:

  1. Though it may seem at first that 2 Peter 1:3-11 proclaims the transforming power of Christian living, it is important to read these verses in the context of verse 1, which announces that we receive our faith "through the righteousness of our God and Savior Jesus Christ." The divine power and precious promises come from him alone. But note that this power has been given to us for a purpose: "for life and godliness" (v. 3). Some act as if the knowledge of Christ's resurrection does not have any effect on their lives beyond the intellectual realm. Peter's insistence here sounds much like James's statement that faith without deeds is dead (James 2:17).
  2. The qualities listed in verses 5-7 do not necessarily give us a hierarchy of spiritual virtues. Rather, Peter here lists examples of a lifestyle characterized by the transforming power of Easter. You may want to consider how these virtues help us understand what it means to live as a Christian in light of our Easter faith-what Peter here calls "effectiveness" or "productivity" for the sake of Christ. We live as Christians in light of the remembrance that we have been cleansed from our sins. How do our lives change once they have been touched by the power of this knowledge? The message should help the congregation understand what this means.
  3. Human cooperation does not cause righteousness, but confirms the "call and election" of believers, as verse 10 indicates. We have been called into righteousness through the victory of Christ's death and resurrection. Look for examples of how Christian belief and Christian living go hand in hand. The passage from Isaiah gives us some indication of this when it speaks of "righteousness" and "justice," two words which have a close connection to following God's law. God's redeemed people live according to the divinely revealed pattern for human life.
  4. Our contemporary culture focuses quite properly on the importance of transformation in this world. But Peter points out that this transformation extends beyond this world into the next. It is as if the outposts of God's eternal kingdom have taken hold on earth because of the victory of Easter. We should consider, though, how the power for Christian living and transformation come from God (see 2 Tim. 4:18). It might be useful to note how virtuous living points beyond itself to the vision of the new heaven and new earth presented in Revelation 21 and 22.

Music Notes:

Glossary of Hymnal Abbreviations:
PH        The Presbyterian Hymnal (Presbyterian Church USA; Westminster/John Knox Press)
PsH      The Psalter Hymnal (Christian Reformed Church; Faith Alive Christian Resources)
RL        Rejoice in the Lord (Reformed Church in America; W.B. Eerdmans Publishing Company)
RN        Renew! (Hope Publishing Company)
SFL      Songs for LiFE (children's songbook; Faith Alive Christian Resources)
SNC     Sing! A New Creation (Calvin Institute of Christian Worship, Christian Reformed Church,
              Reformed Church in America; Faith Alive Christian Resources)
TH        Trinity Hymnal (Orthodox Presbyterian Church, Presbyterian Church in America; Great
              Commission Publications)
TWC     The Worshiping Church (Hope Publishing Company)
UMH     The United Methodist Hymnal (United Methodist Publishing House)
WOV     With One Voice (Augsburg Fortress)

1. Following are music suggestions for prelude, offertory, and postlude:

"Give Thanks"
Piano:

Handbells:

GROSSER GOTT ("Holy God, We Praise Your Name")
Organ:

Handbells:

OLD HUNDREDTH/GENEVAN 134 ("Praise God, from Whom All Blessings Flow")
Organ:

Piano:

Handbells:

UPP, MIN TUNGA ("Praise the Savior, Now and Ever")
Organ:

2. Notes about the congregational songs within the service:

Liturgy Notes:

  1. The service begins with a reminder of the certain knowledge we have that we are God's people and calls us to speak our praise for that awareness.
  2. The time of confession reminds us of what Peter says about our condition apart from Christ's transforming power: we find ourselves "nearsighted, blind, ineffective, unproductive, and acting as if we are not cleansed." (Check out Peter's words in 2 Peter 1:8-9. You may want to include these expressions in the prayer of confession.) The gospel calls us to live differently, to set our minds on things above.
  3. It may be appropriate to use more than one song as a response to the sermon because there are so many great hymns which speak of being transformed through Christ and acting as "Christ's people" once again.
  4. We suggest using the children's moment to further help the kids understand the sermon. Using the Isaiah text, help them to understand what "transformation" means. For example, begin with how Christ turns things upside down. Christ makes the weak, ______ (strong). He makes the poor, _______ (rich), or the broken, _______ (fixed!). This is especially meaningful since the passage in Isaiah says "a child shall lead them" (v. 6). Our world is hurting, and children can help the congregation see the radical transformation of Christ.

This weekly worship service has been provided for your use and encouragement by Howard Vanderwell and Norma de Waal Malefyt, Resource Development Specialists at the Calvin Institute of Christian Worship. You can reach them with your suggestions and comments at howard.vanderwell@calvin.edu or norma.malefyt@calvin.edu.

Any materials included here from The Worship Sourcebook are used by permission from The Worship Sourcebook, © 2004, CRC Publications. This permission is granted for one time worship use in an order of service for a congregation, or in a special program or lesson resource, provided that no part of such reproduction is sold, directly or indirectly. For all other uses, please contact the copyright holder.