Holy Cross Lutheran Church Our Mission

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Holy Cross Lutheran Church Our Mission We gather as an open community of Christians, responding to God s call. We welcome all people as members of our extended family. We gather to support and nourish one another in the faith, equipping people to live the Gospel in the world. Our purpose is to encounter the Gospel in worship play, study, music, work, prayer and activism. We provide worship that is diverse, flexible, thought provoking and relevant to our challenging times. We are a voice for compassion and actively seek justice and peace in the world. We identify and serve our neighbors in need. We offer programs that encourage spiritual growth by teaching the Gospel in the Lutheran tradition. We provide opportunities to work, play and pray together. Everyone Is Welcome! In response to the overwhelming love of God we stand in awe of the wideness of God s mercy. In faithfulness to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, mindful of our Lutheran emphasis on grace, and rejoicing in the celebration of our shared baptismal journey, we welcome as members of our extended family, all those who have ever felt excluded by the Church because of their race, gender, sexual orientation, age, physical or mental challenges, financial resources, or family status. As followers of Christ, all members of Holy Cross Lutheran Church are compelled by the Gospel to seek reconciliation and wholeness in a world that is all too often an unloving place. Therefore, rejoicing in God s abundant grace, we extend a special welcome to all. Whether you are gay, straight, lesbian or bisexual; whatever your country of origin or ancestry; whether you are a believer, a doubter or a seeker; in Christ s love, we welcome you, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit we can work together to usher in God s Reign of justice, peace, and mercy.

ASH WEDNESDAY LITURGY at! please stand if you are able Music Printed under LiscenSing #1975 GATHERING The worship begins in silence. Silence for reflection.. Hymn: When the Wind of Winter Blows WORDS: Ruth Duck; MUSIC: Lori True LiscenSing # 1975 Canticle #501 Come With Us, O Blessed Jesus Prayer SENDING Blessing Sending Hymn #639 When We Are Living Dismissal A: C: Go in peace. Embrace your mortality! Thanks be to God.

Praying as Jesus taught us: Loving Presence, luminous in all creation, hallowed be your name. Thy kin-dom come. May we reflect on earth the yielding perfection of the heavens. Help us to receive an illumed measure from the earth this day. Forgive us when we trespass against others, human and other than human, as we forgive others who trespass against us. Keep us on the path of wisdom when we are tempted to take the selfish path. May it be your rule we follow, your power we exercise, and your radiance that allures.! Greeting Prayer of the Day P: God is with you. C: And also with you. WORD First Reading Isaiah 58 Response Second Reading Gospel Acclamation #699 In Deepest Night The Star Within a creation story by Dr. Paula Lehman & Rev. Sarah Griffith Christ Above Me May this be the truth that guides our lives, the ground from which our future will grow, until we meet again. Amen. At the Breaking of the bread Communion Hymns #466 In the Singing Oh God We Call repeat, sing a cappella Gospel Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21 Homily Embracing Mortality Hymn of the Day #636 How Small Our Span of Life

INVITATION TO LENT P: Ash Wednesday invites us to come back to earth. To wonder at the gift of life, my life, your life, our life with the earth, the shared body of our existence. These ashes were once trees and shrubs, and places where life was lived to its fullest. Once they were full of life. Now they are black and grey. Dry. Lifeless. But mixed with the oil and water of our baptism they make good fertilizer: it will help the seeds of the gospel take deeper root in us and bring forth the fruits, the harvest of justice, peace, and generosity. These are ashes worth wearing. May we accept this gift. And know our blessedness. And be assured we will be different at the end of this season. For from the burnt ashes will spring the green shoot of life and the purple flower of attentiveness to God. LITANY P: Sisters and Brothers in Christ: The season of Lent awakes us to the wilderness that surrounds us and as we look closely at what we have done and what we have left undone, we see that it is time to repent, to turn around, to turn toward our Creator. And so, from deep within our souls we cry out for God... P: Because temptation is woven into the fabric of our lives, and we know the weariness of forty days in the desert, and the beckoning power of sweet fruit, and vain promises, After supper, Jesus took the cup of wine, gave thanks and gave it to his friends, saying, Drink this all of you. This cup is the new covenant poured out for you and for all people. Do this to remember me. Remembering Christ s death and celebrating Christ s resurrection, we await Christ coming again and again to bring peace and justice to all the earth and we declare the mystery of our faith: C: Christ has died, Christ is risen, Christ will come again and again. Spirit of God you are here, You have come to us again. Let the bread that we eat bind us across the world with those who have nothing to eat. Let the wine we drink fortify our resolve to share with those who thirst for justice. Let the power of love move us to work with those who long for love. Let the justice of Jesus become a reality that all people can taste, drink, savour and be sustained by. Let the reality of justice and peace come, and may we be a part of its coming. C: Through Christ, with Christ, in Christ, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, all honour and glory are yours, O God of love, now and forever. Amen. P: Because we see the broken before the whole, and the half empty cup, and the unfinished task,

And we give thanks for all that holds us together. And so, with the disciples, and with all the faithful, we proclaim God s great and glorious name, forever praising God and singing: and the thirst in freedom's quest, P: Because we trust in what we can see, and we are blinded by our prejudices, and we do not know what we do not know, we long for you, O God P: Because our need for correctness exceeds our need for truth, and our excuses preempt the cry of the wounded, and our celebration of blessing is mindless of those displaced, P: Because you have come among us, and breathed into our sinewy souls, and healed our pain and let us wound you, and loved us to the end, and triumphed over all our hatred, CONFESSION In the stories handed down to us by our ancestors we are told that: On the night before Jesus died, he had supper with his friends. At that supper Jesus took bread, gave thanks, broke it, and gave it to his friends saying: Take this and eat it, all of you. this is my body, given for you. Do this to remember me. P: Created in the image of thone who made us, mindful that we are capable of great goodness while also capable of doing immense harm, knowing our need to turn from all that separates us from God and from one another, let us confess that our choices have often wounded those we love, those we call enemies, our very selves and creation itself. Silence for reflection. P: O Life that surges through all things, Source of every living thing, we confess that we often lose touch with the unique worth of the life each of us has to live. We often fail to see the beauty in people and in the world. Let us awaken our hearts and minds, to the mystery and wonders of life so that God s refreshing Spirit may touch us again. Silence for reflection.

P: In the presence of the Power that fills the universe with purpose and love, we confess that we often do not hear God s song. How fragile is our spirit of adventure. How weak is our desire for change and freedom. Let us awaken ourselves with a vision of wholeness, so that we may be fruitful people, serving God and one another with faithful abandon. Silence for reflection. P: In the midst of God, we confess with sadness that we have not yet lived into the fullness of our humanity. We have not done what we ought to have done. We have remained deaf to the cries of those who hurt. We have remained silent in the face of evil. We have allowed the shadow of death to hover over the innocent. We have failed to proclaim with power or conviction God s liberating Word. C: We repent; we turn toward You, O Holy One, trusting that your grace is sufficient as we forgive ourselves, our enemies and one another so that love may abound. P: Hear the Good News! In Christ we are liberated from the pain of our pasts. Freed to live in to the fullness of our humanity. Remember that the power to forgive is yours. In the name of God our Creator,! Christ our Liberator, and the Holy Spirit our Comforter: be all that you were created to be! C: Amen. Thanks be to God! IMPOSITION OF ASHES Please come forward to receive the mark of your humanity. The Pastor will mark your forehead with a cross of ashes, saying: Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return. Return to your seats and remain standing. After all have received the sign of the cross: P: Let us journey into the wilderness, confident that the Spirit of God lives and breathes in, with, and through us. May that Spirit accomplish renewal in you as you ponder the mysteries of our God. Prayers of the Body Offering Offertory Offering Prayer #232 Let My Prayer Rise Up Those sitting on the piano side of the church sing Group One Those sitting on the other side sing Group Two P: God is with you. C: And also with you. HOLY COMMUNION P: Open your hearts. C: We open our hearts to our God. P: Let us give thanks to our God Most Holy. C: It is right to give God thanks and praise. P: Here today, through bread and wine, we renew our journey with Jesus and his followers. We renew our unity with one another, and with all those who have gone before us in faith. We renew our communion with the earth and our interwovenness with the broken ones of the world. We take bread, a symbol of labour and a symbol of life. We will break the bread because Christ, the source of life, was broken for the excluded, exploited, and the downtrodden. We take wine, a symbol of blood, spilt in war and conflict; a symbol too of new life. We will drink the wine because Christ, the peace of the world overcomes violence. Now bread and wine are before us, the memory of our meals, our working, our talking; the story that shapes us: the grieving and the pain, the seeking and the loving. Peace