교회력에 따른 찬송 추천1 - 주일예배, 성가대용
하나님과 이웃과 개혁신학을 사랑합니다.

하나님은 사랑이시라 사랑 안에 거하는 자는 하나님 안에 거하고 하나님도 그의 안에 거하시느니라(요일 4:16)

후원과 광고협찬을 부탁드려요! 자세히보기

연구소/오픈 자료실(연구소 & 교회)

교회력에 따른 찬송 추천1 - 주일예배, 성가대용

개혁신학어벤져스 2023. 12. 23. 12:20

-> 3년간 매주 교회력에 따라 다양하게 찬송할 수 있습니다.

 -> 시간의 흐름에 맞추어 신앙 시간표를 계획하는 것은 좋은 일입니다. 루터교회의 것이긴 하지만 모범적인 예가 있어서, 또한 개혁교회에서 얼마든지 사용할 수 있어서 자료를 올립니다.^^

 -> [year A(HTML 첨부) 외에도] 다운받으셔서 유용하게 사용하시길 바랍니다! 매주의 교회력에 대한 간단한 설명을 다루니 신앙생활에 매우 도움이 됩니다.

 

Planning Christian Worship - Year A - (All).pdf
2.87MB
Planning Christian Worship - Year B - festival.pdf
2.12MB
Planning Christian Worship - Year B - non - festival.pdf
1.00MB
Planning Christian Worship - Year C - festival.pdf
2.42MB
Planning Christian Worship - Year C - non-festival.pdf
2.90MB


Planning Christian - 교회력에 따른 주일 예배 찬양집

June 15, 2020 Last Updated

© 2023 Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod. All Rights Reserved.

 

Planning Christian  
Worship  
Year A  
REV. JONATHAN E. SCHROEDER  
AUTHOR, YEAR A  
REV. JONATHAN E. SCHROEDER  
EDITOR  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A Page | 2  
Hymn suggestions by the Rev. Michael D. Schultz. All hymns and psalms referenced are from Christian Worship:  
A Lutheran Hymnal (NPH, 1993) or from Christian Worship Supplement (NPH, 2008).  
Many thanks to Nathan Nass for his proofreading.  
All scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®,  
NIV®. Copyright ©1973, 1978, 1984 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved  
worldwide. www.zondervan.com  
Page | 2  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A Page | 3  
Contents  
Contents.................................................................................................................................................................... 3  
Advent....................................................................................................................................................................... 6  
First Sunday in Advent ................................................................................................................................. 8  
Second Sunday in Advent .......................................................................................................................... 10  
Third Sunday in Advent.............................................................................................................................. 12  
Fourth Sunday in Advent ........................................................................................................................... 14  
Christmas ................................................................................................................................................................ 17  
The Nativity of Our Lord: Christmas Eve.................................................................................................... 19  
The Nativity of Our Lord: Christmas Day ................................................................................................... 22  
First Sunday after Christmas...................................................................................................................... 24  
Second Sunday after Christmas ................................................................................................................. 26  
Epiphany ................................................................................................................................................................. 29  
The Epiphany of Our Lord .......................................................................................................................... 30  
First Sunday after the Epiphany—The Baptism of Our Lord...................................................................... 32  
Second Sunday after the Epiphany............................................................................................................ 34  
Third Sunday after the Epiphany ............................................................................................................... 37  
Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany............................................................................................................. 40  
Fifth Sunday after the Epiphany ................................................................................................................ 42  
Sixth Sunday after the Epiphany................................................................................................................ 45  
Seventh Sunday after the Epiphany........................................................................................................... 47  
Eighth Sunday after the Epiphany.............................................................................................................. 49  
Last Sunday after the Epiphany—The Transfiguration of Our Lord........................................................... 51  
Lent......................................................................................................................................................................... 53  
Ash Wednesday ......................................................................................................................................... 55  
First Sunday in Lent.................................................................................................................................... 57  
Second Sunday in Lent............................................................................................................................... 59  
Third Sunday in Lent .................................................................................................................................. 61  
Fourth Sunday in Lent................................................................................................................................ 63  
Fifth Sunday in Lent ................................................................................................................................... 65  
Sixth Sunday in Lent—Palm Sunday........................................................................................................... 67  
Page | 3  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A Page | 4  
Maundy Thursday ...................................................................................................................................... 69  
Good Friday................................................................................................................................................ 71  
Holy Saturday............................................................................................................................................. 74  
Eastertide................................................................................................................................................................ 75  
The Resurrection of Our Lord: Easter Dawn .............................................................................................. 76  
The Resurrection of Our Lord: Easter Day ................................................................................................. 78  
Second Sunday of Easter............................................................................................................................ 80  
Third Sunday of Easter............................................................................................................................... 83  
Fourth Sunday of Easter............................................................................................................................. 86  
Fifth Sunday of Easter................................................................................................................................ 89  
Sixth Sunday of Easter ............................................................................................................................... 92  
The Ascension of Our Lord......................................................................................................................... 95  
Seventh Sunday of Easter .......................................................................................................................... 98  
The Coming of the Holy Spirit—The Day of Pentecost ............................................................................ 101  
The Season of Pentecost....................................................................................................................................... 103  
First Sunday after Pentecost—Holy Trinity.............................................................................................. 105  
Second Sunday after Pentecost ............................................................................................................... 107  
Third Sunday after Pentecost .................................................................................................................. 110  
Fourth Sunday after Pentecost ................................................................................................................ 113  
Fifth Sunday after Pentecost ................................................................................................................... 116  
Sixth Sunday after Pentecost................................................................................................................... 119  
Seventh Sunday after Pentecost.............................................................................................................. 122  
Eighth Sunday after Pentecost................................................................................................................. 125  
Ninth Sunday after Pentecost.................................................................................................................. 128  
Tenth Sunday after Pentecost ................................................................................................................. 130  
Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost............................................................................................................. 133  
Twelfth Sunday after Pentecost............................................................................................................... 136  
Thirteenth Sunday after Pentecost.......................................................................................................... 139  
Fourteenth Sunday after Pentecost......................................................................................................... 142  
Fifteenth Sunday after Pentecost ............................................................................................................ 145  
Sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost............................................................................................................ 148  
Seventeenth Sunday after Pentecost ...................................................................................................... 151  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A Page | 5  
Eighteenth Sunday after Pentecost ......................................................................................................... 154  
Nineteenth Sunday after Pentecost......................................................................................................... 157  
Twentieth Sunday after Pentecost .......................................................................................................... 160  
End Time ............................................................................................................................................................... 164  
First Sunday of End Time—Reformation Sunday..................................................................................... 165  
Second Sunday of End Time—Last Judgment.......................................................................................... 168  
Third Sunday of End Time—Saints Triumphant....................................................................................... 171  
Last Sunday of End Time—Christ the King............................................................................................... 174  
Page | 5  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A Page | 6  
Advent  
Advent is a season of preparation and anticipation. The Church looks for the coming of her Savior in this  
threefold advent: his coming in the flesh; his return in judgment; his daily coming in Word and Sacrament. The  
Church encompasses all these facets of the season in the single word that defines Advent worship: “Come!”  
Throughout the prayers, verses, and lessons that single word is our invitation, our anticipation, our sure and  
certain hope. Come, Lord Jesus!  
The Prayers of the Day for each Sunday in Advent help set the tone for the day. The prayers are especially  
beautiful and worth repeating, perhaps, in the sermon introduction or highlighting in the worship folder. These  
ancient prayers were said by many of the faithful during the week when children would take turns reciting them  
as they lit the candles on the Advent Wreath.  
Traditionally, the Gloria in excelsis is not sung during Advent. The absence of this song of praise marks Advent  
worship with a sense of something missing. During the four weeks of preparation, the Church looks forward to  
the return of the song of the angels on Christmas Day in celebration of God fulfilling his promises in Christ.  
Christian Worship: Occasional Services offers two resources for the season: the rite for the “Lighting of the  
Advent Candles” (133), and an advent adaptation of King’s College Service of Lessons and Carols (135).  
Progression of Lessons  
Each Sunday of Advent serves the same purpose in yearly cycles (ABC).  
Advent 1: Keep Watch, for the Lord will come again  
Year A: Unexpectedly  
Year B: At an unknown time  
Year C: Forewarned by signs  
Advent 2: The Forerunner Prepares: Christ is coming  
Year A: He is near—repent!  
Year B: He is powerful—be baptized!  
Year C: He is coming—prepare!  
Advent 3: The Forerunner Explains: The Christ is here!  
Year A: To his disciples  
Year B: To the religious leaders  
Year C: To the people  
Advent 4: The Promised Virgin Birth of Christ  
Year A: To Joseph  
Year B: To Mary  
Year C: The Magnificat  
Page | 6  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A Page | 7  
First Lesson Series in Year A:  
The prophet Isaiah has been called the Fifth Evangelist because of the gospel content of his book. Beginning with  
Advent 1, the pericope includes an eleven-week series of readings from the book of Isaiah. The series leads the  
Church through the book from chapter 2 to chapter 60. The worship planner might consider a sermon series on  
Isaiah from Advent through Epiphany. The pastor might also consider using the lessons of Isaiah as the basis for  
a twelve-week Bible study that would correspond with the first lesson each week. The editor offers the following  
suggestion:  
Isaiah’s Gospel Promises  
Promises Made  
Advent 1:  
Advent 2:  
Advent 3:  
Advent 4:  
God’s kingdom is coming  
God’s kingdom is worth waiting for  
God’s coming kingdom gives us strength and courage  
God’s kingdom will come through the child Immanuel  
Isaiah 2:1-5  
Isaiah 11:1-10  
Isaiah 35:1-10  
Isaiah 7:10-14  
Promises Kept  
Christmas Day: Proclaim the good news: God has kept his promise!  
Isaiah 52:7-10  
Isaiah 63:7-9  
Isaiah 61:10-62:3  
Christmas 1:  
Christmas 2:  
Tell of the kindness of the LORD: he redeemed his people  
Rejoice in the LORD: he has clothed us with garments of salvation  
Promises in Action  
Epiphany:  
The Savior rises and shines  
The Savior is anointed  
The Savior calls a people to himself  
The Savior brings light to those in darkness  
Isaiah 60:1-6  
Isaiah 42:1-7  
Isaiah 49:1-6  
Isaiah 9:1-4  
Epiphany 1:  
Epiphany 2:  
Epiphany 3:  
Page | 7  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A Page | 8  
First Sunday in Advent  
Keep watch for the unexpected coming of Christ! Its unexpectedness, however, does not change its certainty (cf.  
Verse of the Day) or our prayer (cf. Prayer of the Day). Rather, the coming of Christ defines our present time  
because we know that he comes with unexpected judgment on the unbelieving world and unexpected grace for  
his people. We are filled with hope, with love, and with light. With anticipation in our hearts, we long for the  
fulfillment, “Come, Lord Jesus!”  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 24:36-44  
Isaiah 2:1-5  
Romans 13:11-14  
18  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Genesis 6:9-22, 7:11-23  
Color  
Blue or Purple  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Stir up your power, O Lord, and come. Protect us by your strength and save us from the threatening dangers  
of our sins; for you live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. He who testifies to these things says, “Yes, I am coming soon.” Amen. Come, Lord Jesus. Alleluia.  
(Revelation 22:20)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 24:36-44  
So unexpected is the coming of Christ, that neither the Church, nor the angels, nor even the Son knows the  
day or time. Warnings are spoken; promises are made; signs are given. But the great day will come as  
unexpectedly as the deluge upon the unsuspecting world. Noah had preached; Noah had built; but the  
world was lost in the darkness of spiritual blindness. The certainty of Christ’s coming is never in question—  
only the timing. So Christ tells us to keep watch and to be ready, actions that define our present time.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 2:1-5  
The first chapter of Isaiah does not paint a pretty picture of Judah and Jerusalem. “Ah, sinful nation, a  
people loaded with guilt, a brood of evildoers, children given to corruption” (Isaiah 1:4). But today’s lesson  
from chapter two shows a completely different picture. Here one sees the glorious destiny that awaits her.  
In the last days, in the midst of the unexpected judgment, God comes with unexpected grace for his people.  
The people of chapter one are changed forever. In the coming kingdom many will say, “Come, let us go up to  
the mountain of the LORD.” In the coming kingdom, God will teach the people his ways so that they walk in  
his paths. The coming of Christ defines our present time. We are at the doorstep of the impending age of the  
kingdom come. We join with Isaiah in living our lives in view of Christ’s unexpected coming: “Come, O house  
of Jacob, let us walk in the light of the LORD!”  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A Page | 9  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 13:11-14  
Understanding the present time means working and walking in love. We do this, Paul says, because the  
coming of our Lord is near. Notice the words he chooses: nearer, nearly, almost. The certainty of Christ’s  
coming is never in question, only his timing. Paul encourages us to let the nearness of the kingdom and the  
unexpected nature of its arrival define our present time. At the very end of the night, Venus rises above the  
horizon and reflects the brightness of the coming dawn, promising that the day is nearly here. Christ Jesus is  
our Morning Star, the harbinger of God’s coming kingdom. It’s almost here! We let that define our present  
time by living as citizens of the kingdom now. It is not easy to live as in daylight while it’s still dark. So Paul  
tells us to clothe ourselves with the only thing that will give us the power to do it: Jesus Christ our Lord.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: GENESIS 6:9-22; 7:11-23  
Jesus told the story of the Flood to explain the unexpected coming of God in judgment and grace. Noah was  
a man who worked and walked in the light. But he lived in a world darkened by sin. The lost around him  
were deaf to his preaching and blind to the signs. The coming of God’s judgment was as unexpected as it  
was terrifying for them. But in the middle of all that judgment, God came in unexpected grace to rescue  
Noah and his family. As Noah worked and walked in the light, he heeded God’s warnings and trusted God’s  
promises. He watched; he waited; he prepared. And God made good on his promise: the same Flood that  
judged the world also safely carried Noah and his family until they came to rest on a world washed clean.  
NOTES:  
For the next twelve weeks the First Lesson surveys the book of Isaiah from chapter 2 to chapter 60. The  
preacher may consider a series of sermons or Bible studies on Isaiah from Advent through Epiphany  
(see Year A, Introduction).  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
2 Savior of the Nations, Come  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
1 The Advent of Our King  
7 Rejoice, Rejoice, Believers  
208 Great God, What Do I See and Hear  
209 Day of Wrath, Oh, Day of Mourning  
220 O’er the Distant Mountains Breaking  
254 The Day Full of Grace  
305 From Depths of Woe I Cry to You  
472 Rise, My Soul, to Watch and Pray  
704 Lo, He Come With Clouds Descending  
705 The Night Will Soon Be Ending  
732 We Are Singing, for the Lord is Our Light  
771 I Want to Walk as a Child of the Light  
788 Thanks Be to God!  
9 Jesus, Your Church with Longing Eyes  
15 Hark! A Thrilling Voice Is Sounding  
21 Hosanna to the Coming Lord  
22 O Savior, Rend the Heavens Wide  
23 Oh, Come, Oh, Come, Emmanuel  
26 Jesus Came, the Heavens Adoring  
30 Rise, Arise  
206 Wake, Awake, for Night Is Flying  
207 The Day Is Surely Drawing Near  
Page | 9  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Second Sunday in Advent  
Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is near! The Forerunner prepares for the coming Christ by preaching  
repentance that brings renewal of life. The Root of Jesse will come in swift judgment on the unrepentant but in  
mercy and grace for God’s people. His coming will end the wickedness of the world and usher in a new age  
restored to the perfection with which God made it.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 3:1-12  
Isaiah 11:1-10  
Romans 15:4-13  
130  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Daniel 4:19-37  
Acts 3:19-26  
14  
Color  
Blue or Purple  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Stir up our hearts, O Lord, to prepare the way for your only Son. By his coming give us strength in our  
conflicts and shed light on our path through the darkness of this world; through your Son, Jesus Christ our  
Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Prepare the way for the Lord, make straight paths for him. All mankind will see God’s salvation.  
Alleluia. (Luke 3:4,6 cf. NIV)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 3:1-12  
A voice in the desert cried out, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is near!” A fulfillment of Isaiah’s  
prophecy, John dressed like the first Elijah (2 Kings 1:8) and fulfilled the role of the second Elijah (Malachi  
4:5-6) as foretold by Gabriel (Luke 1:17). Many people responded to John’s preaching with repentance,  
baptism, and spiritual renewal. Others neither repented nor produced the fruits of a life renewed by the  
Spirit. John warned them that God’s ax chops down unfruitful trees and leaves only stumps as witness to his  
judgment. John told both groups that the Messiah was near: near to the people to save them; near to the  
religious leaders to judge them. Harvest time had come, and God’s winnowing fork was in his hand to  
separate the wheat from the chaff.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 11:1-10  
David’s dynasty died in 586 B.C. The Babylonians served as the ax of God that cut off the line of Jesse and  
made David’s family tree nothing but a stump. The lifeless stump was a witness to God’s judgment. But  
behold, a branch is growing! A new shoot sprouts from Jesse’s stump. God would renew the stump of  
David’s kingdom, but it wouldn’t be the restoration of an earthly rule and reign over Israel. No, God had  
greater things in mind. Instead, David’s greater Son would rule over a renewed earth and heaven. “I am  
making everything new” (Revelation 21:5). In this renewed kingdom, sin and its effects are gone; peace and  
righteousness rule. The Root of Jesse is a banner for the peoples, and his place of rest will be glorious.  
Page | 10  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 15:4-13  
God renewed the hope of his people by raising up the root of Jesse. Hope in him reshapes our hearts and  
the resulting fruits of repentance show themselves in our renewed lives. Examples of those fruits can be  
seen in the unity of our walk and our witness and in our acceptance of our brothers and sisters. The Holy  
Spirit brings forth such faith and fruit to the glory and praise of God.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: DANIEL 4:19-37  
God had used Nebuchadnezzar as his ax to chop down the unrepentant tree of David. But the king of  
Babylon failed to heed Daniel’s warning that the ax now sat at the root of his own tree. The prophet told  
him to repent, for God’s coming judgment was near. Nebuchadnezzar failed to acknowledge God’s sovereign  
power; he failed to repent and live in newness of life. So God fulfilled the dream: the tree of  
Nebuchadnezzar’s reign was chopped down. God struck his glory and power and left him with neither civility  
nor sanity. How true it is: God is able to humble those who walk in pride. The world’s greatest sovereign  
became like an animal. Yet look at the mercy of God! When Nebuchadnezzar repented and acknowledged  
and glorified God, the Lord forgave him, renewed him, and restored him.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: ACTS 3:19-26  
God used the miracle of the beggar’s healing to capture the attention of the crowd so that Peter and John  
could preach a message of repentance to the people. They preached the harsh accusations of the law: “You  
killed the author of life, but God raised him from the dead,” to prepare the hearts of the people to repent.  
Then they offered the sweetest gospel message that repentance brings renewal by wiping away sins and  
bringing God’s refreshment through Christ.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
16 On Jordan’s Bank the Baptist’s Cry  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
11 Comfort, Comfort All My People  
13 There’s a Voice in the Wilderness Crying  
14 Arise, O Christian People  
437 I Trust, O Christ, in You Alone  
475 The Man Is Ever Blest  
552 By All Your Saints Still Striving  
567 Awake, O Spirit, Who Inspired  
577 Rise, O Light of Gentile Nations  
579 Lift High the Cross  
15 Hark! A Thrilling Voice Is Sounding  
20 When All the World Was Cursed  
23 Oh, Come, Oh, Come, Emmanuel  
27 O Jesus, Lamb of God, You Are  
28 Let the Earth Now Praise the Lord  
47 Behold, a Branch Is Growing  
205 O Lord, Look Down from Heaven  
275 Blest Be the God of Israel  
702 Prepare the Royal Highway  
703 My Soul in Stillness Waits  
709 Christ, Your Footprints through the Desert  
710 Jesus, Once with Sinners Numbered  
723 Holy Spirit, the Dove Sent from Heaven  
750 Christ, the Word of God Incarnate  
769 Lord of All Hopefulness  
276 Praise Be to the Lord  
305 From Depths of Woe I Cry to You  
Page | 11  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Third Sunday in Advent  
In the Messiah’s kingdom things are not always what they seem. Appearances can be deceiving and lead to  
doubt. In the Prayer of the Day the Church asks Christ to drive the darkness of doubt from our hearts and fill us  
with the light of the knowledge of Christ. Faith in Christ leads us to patiently hope in the Lord’s caring plan  
despite any appearances to the contrary.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 11:2-11  
Isaiah 35:1-10  
James 5:7-11  
146  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Job 1:6-22  
Color  
Blue or Purple  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Hear our prayers, Lord Jesus Christ, and come with the good news of your mighty deliverance. Drive the  
darkness from our hearts and fill us with your light; for you live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit,  
one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. I will send my messenger ahead of you, who will prepare your way before you. Alleluia. (Matthew  
11:10 cf. NIV)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 11:2-11  
Things were not what they seemed. John languished in prison for preaching righteousness. When he saw the  
works of Jesus (τὰ ἔργα τοῦ Χριστοῦ) questions rose in his mind and doubt filled the hearts of his followers.  
John knew that Jesus was the Christ, but where were the acts of judgment promised? Why did John look like  
a failure and the wicked look like they were winning? John sends his disciples to the right place, to Jesus.  
When we take our doubts and questions to Jesus, he drives the darkness from our hearts and fills us with  
light. Jesus pointed to his works as signs from God fulfilling the words of the prophet and marking him as the  
Coming One. Jesus was far more than he appeared to be: he was the Messiah who makes the blind see, the  
dead live and the poor evangelized. Jesus then points to John and shows greatness hiding behind the cross  
and persecution. Though John did not seem it, he was the second Elijah and a prophet without peer.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 35:1-10  
The coming of the Messiah would change everything. A world destroyed by sin is filled with sorrow and  
sighing. But things are not always what they seem: A desert is a latent pool; thirsty ground is a future  
streambed; the blind are future seers, and the lame future leapers. Our certain knowledge that the earth is  
the Lord’s and that he controls everything in it gives us patience and courage to wait for God to make what  
we see match what we know. Be strong, do not fear; your God will come. His promise to come strengthens  
feeble hands and fearful hearts. He will come with vengeance and retribution to redress the wrong and with  
Page | 12  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
redemption and rejoicing for God’s people. Jesus fulfilled these words of prophecy in his acts of ministry so  
that God’s people could see how near God’s kingdom had come!  
SECOND LESSON: JAMES 5:7-11  
Knowing what we do about Christ’s coming kingdom, we want it now. God’s encouragement, however, is for  
us to be patient. A farmer’s fields may look fallow or dead, but things are not always what they seem. The  
seed waits inside the earth for the rains and then bursts forth to life. When Christians face persecution or  
suffering, life can seem like a fallow field. While we wait for the rain, we struggle with questions and doubts.  
James reminds us that the fallow parts of our lives are simply waiting for God’s timing to bring forth fruit in  
our lives. The Christian patiently waits for the Lord’s coming, when what we see will finally match what we  
know.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: JOB 1:6-22  
In the second lesson, James points to Job as an example of perseverance in the face of suffering and God’s  
resulting blessing. To Satan it appeared that Job served God because he was blessed. That was not so. After  
great suffering and tremendous loss, it appeared to everyone else that Job had absolutely no reason to  
praise God. That was not so either. Job knew that for the children of God, things are not always what they  
seem. He had the patience to wait for the rain—to wait for God to make fruitful again the fallow parts of his  
life.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
14 Arise, O Christian People  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
7 Rejoice, Rejoice, Believers  
357 Jesus, Lover of My Soul  
12 Hark the Glad Sound! The Savior Comes  
13 There’s a Voice in the Wilderness Crying  
16 On Jordan’s Bank the Baptist’s Cry  
20 When All the World Was Cursed  
93 Hail to the Lord’s Anointed  
192 Triune God, Oh, Be Our Stay  
235 Praise the Almighty; My Soul, Adore Him  
252 Oh, Sing to the Lord  
405 Oh, for a Faith that Will Not Shrink  
414 I Leave All Things to God’s Direction  
415 Be Still, My Soul  
421 All Depends on Our Possessing  
449 Children of the Heavenly Father  
507 Lord of Our Growing Years  
520 Your Hand, O Lord, in Days of Old  
552 By All Your Saints Still Striving  
703 My Soul in Stillness Waits  
253 I Will Sing My Maker's Praises  
275 Blest Be the God of Israel  
751 Word of God, When All Was Silent  
276 Praise Be to the Lord  
353 Praise the One Who Breaks the Darkness  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Fourth Sunday in Advent  
God will come to save his people, just as he promised. He saves them through the virgin born Son of David who  
is also the Son of God, Immanuel. The Church prays for God to come in power to take away the burden of our  
sins. Since the Garden, there has been only one promised plan to do that: God would take on flesh and blood.  
Immanuel comes—God in the flesh—exactly as promised to save his people. The use of the Great O Antiphons  
on this Sunday highlights God’s promises kept by invoking an Old Testament title for Christ and anticipating the  
promise kept by the Christ-child.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 1:18-25  
Isaiah 7:10-14  
Romans 1:1-7  
24  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Isaiah 7:1-17  
Color  
Blue or Purple  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Stir up your power, O Lord, and come. Take away the burden of our sins and make us ready for the  
celebration of your birth, that we may receive you in joy and serve you always; for you live and reign with  
the Father and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel. Alleluia.  
(Matthew 1:23)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 1:18-25  
Joseph found himself in the middle of an unwelcome nightmare: his bride to be was pregnant, and he was  
not the father. As a righteous man, he could not go forward with the marriage; as a merciful man, he could  
not expose Mary to public disgrace. How long did it take for him to fall asleep with broken betrothal  
promises on his mind? During the night, Joseph sees an angel who calls him “the son of David.” Joseph’s  
father was Jacob, but the angel reminded Joseph that he was a descendant of kings. Starting this night, he  
would act as one of David’s line again: he would care for the promised Son who would reign on David’s  
throne. God had come to save his people, just as he promised. He would do it through the child in Mary’s  
womb. Joseph believed the promises of God kept in Christ and named the child, “The LORD saves,” knowing  
full well he was Immanuel.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 7:10-14  
Such grace that God would even speak to a wicked king like Ahaz! What God said is even more surprising. He  
didn’t just promise deliverance and ask that Ahaz blindly trust him. God offered a sign to an unbelieving king  
to prove that he would keep his promise and save his people. How foolish of Ahaz to refuse! How sinful to  
make a pretense of piety! God, however, would let no sinful king stand in the way of deliverance for his  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
people. So God chose the sign. Not merely a sign of Judah’s physical safety, God chose a sign that would  
prophesy the deliverance of the whole world from sin and death. A virgin would give birth to God in the  
flesh for the salvation of his people. In Christ Jesus, God kept every promise made.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 1:1-7  
After thousands of years of God’s promises, Paul looks back and sees every one of them kept in Christ. All of  
Scripture promised the gospel message summarized in the name: Jesus Christ our Lord. Jesus, the man born  
of Mary, is also our Lord, God himself. This God-man was anointed with the Holy Spirit and with power to be  
the Christ who would save God’s people from their sins. Any doubts about Jesus of Nazareth evaporated  
with the Easter morning dew: the resurrection declared to the world he was Immanuel, God with us. God  
kept every promise in Christ to give us what we so desperately needed: Grace and peace to you from God  
the Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 7:1-17  
This supplemental lesson expands the First Lesson to include both the geopolitical scene and the  
intermediate fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy. Both highlight the day’s theme that God will save his people  
just as he promised. When the people of Judah heard that Aram and Ephraim had allied against them, they  
were shaken. No wonder! Under King Ahaz, Judah had already lost in battle to Aram—with many prisoners  
carried away. They had also lost to the Northern Kingdom under Pekah. Consider the scope of their defeat in  
2 Chronicles 28: in a single day Pekah killed 120,000 soldiers—including the prince, the officer of the palace  
and the second-in-command of the kingdom. He also captured 200,000 wives, sons and daughters. The  
magnitude of this defeat must have weighed heavily on the national consciousness. And now, Aram and  
Ephraim had joined forces to attack Judah; Judah had no chance whatsoever! Until God spoke and said, “It  
will not take place, it will not happen.” God will save his people, just as he promised. The enemies stacked  
against the people of God have proven impossible for us to withstand. The devil, the world, and our sinful  
flesh have defeated us again and again. We stand no chance in the battle; we must be lost. Until God speaks  
and says, “It will not take place, it will not happen.” Immanuel has come, just as God promised—the Savior  
of his people.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
NOTES:  
For at least 1300 years the Church has sung the Great O Antiphons of Advent beginning on December 17 and  
culminating before Christmas Eve. Each antiphon sings of an Old Testament title of the Messiah and calls on  
Christ to come and fulfill his work. The familiar hymn by John Neale, O Come, O Come, Emmanuel, is an  
adaptation of the O Antiphons.  
The seven antiphons are:  
O Sapientia (Wisdom)  
O Adonai (Lord)  
O Radix Jesse (Root of Jesse)  
O Clavis David (Key of David)  
O Oriens (Dayspring)  
O Rex Gentium (King of the nations)  
O Emmanuel (God-with-us)  
The first letter of each antiphon, read backwards, spells ero cras, “Tomorrow I will be/come.”  
Christian Worship: Altar Book contains a prayer form of the antiphons (see CW:AB 174, noting that it does  
not maintain the ero cras order). Consider using these antiphons on the Fourth Sunday in Advent or during  
the last midweek service before Christmas Eve.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
23 Oh, Come, Oh, Come, Emmanuel  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
2 Savior of the Nations, Come  
86 The Only Son from Heaven  
271 We All Believe in One True God  
277 God, We Praise You  
344 At the Name of Jesus  
363 The King of Glory Comes  
372 I Lay My Sins on Jesus  
377 Dear Christians, One and All, Rejoice  
480 Almighty Father, Heaven and Earth  
485 We Give Thee But Thine Own  
552 By All Your Saints Still Striving  
701 Zion, at Your Shining Gates  
702 Prepare the Royal Highway  
707 Peace Came to Earth  
3 Lift Up Your Heads, You Mighty Gates  
4 Lift Up Your Heads, You Mighty Gates  
24 The Angel Gabriel from Heaven Came  
30 Rise, Arise  
31 O Lord of Light, Who Made the Stars  
35 Of the Father’s Love Begotten  
36 A Great and Mighty Wonder  
39 Now Praise We Christ, the Holy One  
41 Let All Together Praise Our God  
47 Behold, a Branch Is Growing  
54 Where Shepherds Lately Knelt  
76 Jesus! Name of Wondrous Love  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Christmas  
The Christmas season celebrates the Incarnation of the Son of God. The eternal Word became flesh that he  
might be the Christ, anointed to redeem God’s people. God had to become man to live under the law and die in  
our place. Christ’s birth, then, is inextricably connected to his death: Good Friday necessitated Christmas. So  
great is the love of God that even though our sin required such a sacrifice, the Light of the world still descended  
into our darkness.  
Capturing the magnitude of the mystery of Christmas is difficult. Secular Christmas celebrations are godless. Too  
often, even our own can be trite. Before the worship planner begins picking carols, perhaps he should be like  
Mary and ponder this divinum mysterium:  
Of the Father’s love begotten, ere the worlds began to be,  
He is Alpha and Omega, he the source, the ending he,  
Of the things that are, that have been, and the future years shall see  
Evermore and evermore.  
Oh, that birth forever blessed when the virgin full of grace,  
By the Holy Ghost conceiving, bore the Savior of our race,  
And the babe, the world’s Redeemer, first revealed his sacred face  
Evermore and evermore.  
This is he whom heav’n taught singers sang of old with one accord;  
Whom the Scriptures of the prophets promised in their faithful word.  
Now he shines, the long expected; let creation praise its Lord  
Evermore and evermore.  
Let the heights of heav’n adore him, angel hosts his praises sing,  
Pow’rs, dominions bow before him and extol our God and King.  
Let no tongue on earth be silent, ev’ry voice in concert ring  
Evermore and evermore.  
– Aurelius Clemens Prudentius (c. 400 AD) in CW 35.  
After omitting the Gloria for the weeks of Advent, the Church bursts forth in the song of the angels above the  
Judean countryside: Glory to God in the highest and peace to his people on earth!  
Christian Worship appoints lessons for both Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. Celebration of the Sacrament on  
the festival of the Incarnation is especially appropriate.  
By December 25, the secular world is done with Christmas, after gorging itself on it since November. The Church,  
however, spent four Advent weeks preparing and now spends the Twelve Days of Christmas praising God for the  
Incarnation. The Twelve Days of Christmas culminate on January 6, the festival of the Epiphany of our Lord.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Minor Festivals:  
December 26  
December 27  
December 28  
January 1  
St. Stephen  
St. John  
The Holy Innocents  
The Name of Jesus  
In the fourth and fifth century, the Western Church established a triduum of martyr festivals on December  
26, 27, and 28 to commemorate St. Stephen, St. John, and the Holy Innocents. Medieval commentators  
suggest that these three festivals reveal the triple kind of martyrdom endured by the faithful: St. Stephen,  
martyrdom in will and deed; St. John, martyrdom in will but not in deed; the Holy Innocents, martyrdom in  
deed but not in will. (see Luther Reed, The Lutheran Liturgy, 472ff.) The Gospel for Christmas 1 omits the  
verses that comprise the Gospel for the Festival of the Holy Innocents. Worship planners may consider  
occasionally celebrating these festivals when they fall on a Sunday. Finally, on January 1, the Church  
celebrates the circumcision and naming of Jesus, Son of Mary and Son of God.  
Propers for these minor festivals can be found in Christian Worship: Manual (NPH, 1993).  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
The Nativity of Our Lord:  
Christmas Eve  
A child is born who changes everything for his people. The ancient Prayer of the Day has been used on this night  
for 1500 years. The child of light entered this sin-darkened world and shone the brightness of God’s love upon  
all people: “Today in the town of David, a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord” (Verse of the Day).  
This child would change man’s life, his death, and his destiny.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
Luke 2:1-20  
Isaiah 9:2-7  
Titus 2:11-14  
96  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, you made this holy night shine with the brightness of the true light. Grant that as we have  
known on earth the wonder of that light, we may also behold him in all glory in the life to come; through  
your only Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and  
forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord. Alleluia. (Luke 2:11)  
THE GOSPEL: LUKE 2:1-20  
Two thousand years ago, a child was born who seemed to change everything. This child was declared by his  
father to be the heir of all his glory; his kingdom and his rule would be described with the word “Gospel.” He  
proclaimed himself the savior of his people. That child’s name was Octavian. By age 33 he was the  
undisputed emperor of the world, and he was given a new name, Augustus, the “exalted one.” Augustus  
raised the expectations of what a leader could accomplish and what a society could achieve. He ended wars  
and built roads. He found a republic built of brick and left it an empire built of marble. By the time he died,  
his empire was at peace and the Roman people worshipped him as a god. Yet far from imperial Rome, far  
from the purple of empire and the riches of power, a teenage girl—a virgin, yet pregnant—was on the move.  
She traveled to Bethlehem so the great Caesar could count her. While she was there, she gave birth to the  
one child who didn’t just seem to change everything, but actually did. This child changed man’s relationship  
with God, his life, his death, his destiny. He did not come to bring fear, but great joy for all of God’s people.  
The promise made long ago in the Garden was now kept, and the path back to Eden was being blazed,  
because God himself had come in the flesh: the Christ and the Lord in one person. Here was the child who  
changes everything. Glory to God in the highest!  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 9:2-7  
The people of Judah had a king, but they needed a change for the better. Their earthly king had failed them,  
and his reign brought them ever closer to loss and destruction. Their predicament pictures mankind’s  
dilemma under the reign of sin. The prophet Isaiah, however, points God’s people to a future where  
everything changes. They were captives, oppressed and afflicted, lost in the dark, when suddenly, the light  
of a new dawn breaks over them. In the light of this new day, they see that everything is changed. No longer  
will they be enslaved and hungry and fearful. No longer will they be defeated and broken. Instead, the  
nation will grow, and the people will rejoice with joy that comes from the kind of abundance found only in  
harvest or conquest. How will God do all of this? The prophet points to a most improbable place: a child—a  
child who would end wars and build an eternal kingdom on righteousness and justice. How could a child  
change everything? He is the Wonderful Counselor, the mighty God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince1 of  
Peace.  
SECOND LESSON: TITUS 2:11-14  
Paul tells us that the Christchild was the epiphany of God’s grace to all people, and his appearance changes  
our destiny in the coming age. Paul reminds us, however, that this child brings changes for this present age  
as well. The Christ’s coming changes the lives of his people because he came to purify for himself a people  
that are his very own. This purification cost the price of redemption: Jesus Christ gave himself for us. His  
death on the cross, however, changes us. God’s people are redeemed from wickedness and now are eager  
to do what is good. This grace of God teaches us to live changed lives in the present age—lives as Christ’s  
own people who are waiting with certain hope for the second coming of the Christchild.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
37 Once Again My Heart Rejoices  
38 From Heaven Above to Earth I Come  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
1 Interestingly, God does not call Jesus a king here. He certainly does in other places. Perhaps the reason for calling him a  
prince here is to differentiate him from the kind of kings that God’s people had been experiencing. This child was going to  
be different.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
2 Savior of the Nations, Come  
28 Let the Earth Now Praise the Lord  
34 Now Sing We, Now Rejoice  
40 O Jesus Christ, Your Manger Is  
42 Come, Your Hearts and Voices Raising  
43 To Thee My Heart I Offer  
44 Break Forth, O Beauteous Heavenly Light  
46 Your Little Ones, Dear Lord, Are We  
47 Behold, a Branch Is Growing  
50 Once in Royal David's City  
51 I Am So Glad When Christmas Comes  
52 On Christmas Night All Christians Sing  
53 To Shepherds as They Watched by Night  
54 Where Shepherds Lately Knelt  
56 Gentle Mary Laid Her Child  
63 Angels We Have Heard on High  
65 O Little Town of Bethlehem  
66 O Little Town of Bethlehem  
67 What Child Is This  
68 Away in a Manger  
90 The People that in Darkness Sat  
366 O Jesus So Sweet, O Jesus So Mild  
377 Dear Christians, One and All, Rejoice  
379 Amazing Grace—How Sweet the Sound  
434 Lord, You I Love with All My Heart  
702 Prepare the Royal Highway  
703 My Soul in Stillness Waits  
705 The Night Will Soon Be Ending  
706 A Stable Lamp is Lighted  
707 Peace Came to Earth  
60 Silent Night! Holy Night  
747 There Is a Redeemer  
61 Hark! The Herald Angels Sing  
62 Joy to the World  
753 Father, God of Grace, You Knew Us  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
The Nativity of Our Lord:  
Christmas Day  
The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. Christmas Day is the festival of the Incarnation: the  
eternal Son of God was born in time as the son of Mary (Verse of the Day) so that in his flesh he might free us  
from the bondage of sin (Prayer of the Day). From the beginning, the solution to sin was the flesh and blood of  
God.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
John 1:1-14  
Isaiah 52:7-10  
Hebrews 1:1-9  
98  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, grant that the birth of your one and only Son in the flesh may set us free from our old  
bondage under the yoke of sin; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy  
Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. When the time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under law, to redeem  
those under law. Alleluia. (Galatians 4:4,5a)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 1:1-14  
John’s Christmas story begins in eternity within the Godhead. That the Son is eternally God and that he  
shared in the creation of the universe only underscores the enormity of his condescension to become man.  
In a paucity of words Scripture describes the indescribable: Καὶ ὁ λόγος σὰρξ ἐγένετο καὶ ἐσκήνωσεν ἐν  
µῖν. “And the Word flesh became and tented among us.” How shocking that this had to be true! God had  
to become flesh and blood to be born under law, to suffer, and to die that he might redeem us. John’s  
expression, “He tented among us,” recalls the tabernacle of the Exodus that moved with the people of God  
in the desert. God was there beneath the skins. So with Christ, God’s glory could be seen as he came in grace  
and truth, in flesh and blood, to give us the right to be children of God.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 52:7-10  
The return of Israel from captivity prefigured the work of the Word made flesh who redeemed mankind  
from sin. The prophecy pictures the watchmen of Jerusalem standing sentinel on the city walls. Suddenly  
they see messengers descending the mountains that surround Zion. The watchmen shout for joy because  
the messengers bring news of peace, goodness and rescue: Your God reigns! God is in control and is ruling  
for his people. He laid bare his holy arm by hiding himself in flesh in order to buy back Jerusalem—not with  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
gold or silver but with his holy, precious blood and his innocent suffering and death. God kept his promise,  
and all the ends of earth will see his salvation.  
SECOND LESSON: HEBREWS 1:1-9  
The arrival of God in the flesh inaugurated the last age of this earth. In Jesus Christ all the promises God  
made were kept. In this age of promises kept, God’s interaction with mankind fundamentally changed. In  
the past God sent angels and prophets as messengers to his people. But in these latter days, God sent the  
One who made the universe and who sustains it by the breath of his mouth. God sent the Son who is the  
exact representation of God’s being and the radiance of his glory. This is the One who came to speak to the  
people of God. This is the One who took on flesh and blood and became a companion of man—for one  
purpose: purification of our sins.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
33 All Praise to You, Eternal God  
35 Of the Father’s Love Begotten  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
2 Savior of the Nations, Come  
21 Hosanna to the Coming Lord  
36 A Great and Mighty Wonder  
39 Now Praise We Christ, the Holy One  
40 O Jesus Christ, Your Manger Is  
41 Let All Together Praise Our God  
45 Oh, Rejoice, All Christians, Loudly  
48 When Christmas Morn Is Dawning  
49 Rejoice, Rejoice, This Happy Morn  
50 Once in Royal David’s City  
62 Joy to the World  
64 Let Us All with Gladsome Voice  
67 What Child Is This  
279 O Word of God Incarnate  
281 God Has Spoken by His Prophets  
366 O Jesus So Sweet, O Jesus So Mild  
369 Beautiful Savior  
370 All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name  
400 O God, O Lord of Heaven and Earth  
568 Good News of God Above  
570 O Christians, Haste  
54 Where Shepherds Lately Knelt  
55 Oh, Come, All Ye Faithful  
733 Rejoice In God  
57 Go, Tell It on the Mountain  
58 See in Yonder Manger Low  
59 Christ the Lord to Us Is Born  
61 Hark! The Herald Angels Sing  
750 Christ, the Word of God Incarnate  
751 Word of God, When All Was Silent  
752 In Christ Alone  
753 Father, God of Grace, You Knew Us  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
First Sunday after Christmas  
God cares for his sons. He cared for his son, the nation of Israel—though they were rebellious. He cared for his  
Son, Jesus—though Herod raged against him. He even cares for his newly adopted sons—though we do not  
deserve it. God cared for us by sending his Son to deliver us from the corruption of sin and transform us into  
sons just like Jesus (Prayer of the Day). That work of Christ gives us peace (Verse of the Day) that only sons can  
have.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
Matthew 2:13-15, 19-23  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Isaiah 63:7-9  
Galatians 4:4-7  
2
Hosea 11:1-7  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, in mercy you sent your one and only Son to take upon himself our human nature. By his  
gracious coming deliver us from the corruption of our sin and transform us into the likeness of his glory;  
through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts. Alleluia. (Colossians 3:15a)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 2:13-15, 19-23  
At the birth of Christ, the angels announced good news and great joy meant for all people, but not everyone  
saw it that way: Herod reacted to the birth of Jesus with fear, opposition, and violence. The malice of Herod,  
however, could not rob the world of the peace God intended to bring through his Son. God cared for his Son  
and all the sons of God by using Joseph to keep him safe in the land of Egypt. The words of Hosea found  
their fulfillment at his return from Egypt—Jesus was Israel reduced to one. God cared for his sons by having  
his Son serve as their substitute. The closing words, “He will be called a Nazarene,” are problematic since  
they are not found in the Old Testament prophets. Matthew might have intended a play on words between  
Nazareth and 
צר
 
נ
 , “branch, ” fulfilling Isaiah 11:1. Perhaps, though, he meant that Jesus’ new hometown of  
ֶ
Nazareth would contribute to the contempt that he would receive as a man (see John 1:45-46), thus fulfilling  
the word of the prophets that the Messiah would be a suffering servant.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 63:7-9  
Isaiah extols the kindness of the LORD by reminding God’s people of all that he has done for us. The LORD  
stood by his covenant even though his son, Israel, turned away from him. The LORD showed compassion and  
mercy to a people who did not deserve it. What but the kindness of God could look at Israel and us and still  
say, “Surely they are my people, sons who will not be false to me”? That can only be said because of the  
work of God’s only true and faithful Son, Jesus. God cared for his sons so much that in the fullness of time,  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
the LORD became our Savior to redeem us. See how much God cares for his sons: when they are distressed,  
he is distressed; when they are in danger, he lifts them up and carries them. So now the sons of God join  
Isaiah saying, “I will tell of the kindness of the LORD.”  
SECOND LESSON: GALATIANS 4:4-7  
God’s care for his sons meant preparing the world for the coming of Christ. The common language of Greek,  
the peace of the Roman Empire, the ability to travel, the dispersion of the Jews throughout the world—all  
these served to help the message of Jesus spread. But even more, the time was right for God to fulfill every  
prophetic promise to care for his children. He commissioned his own Son to become the God-man who  
subjected himself to law so that everyone under sin’s curse might be bought back. The Incarnation of God  
meant that children of wrath could become the sons of God, and Pentecost proves our adoption as sons.  
The Spirit that cries, “Abba, Father,” also testifies to our freedom from sin and our new status as heirs of  
God’s kingdom.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: HOSEA 11:1-7  
God had made a son for himself in the nation of Israel, but they turned away from God again and again. God  
had cared for his son by healing him and teaching him and feeding him, but Israel failed to recognize his  
care. The Father kept calling, but the son turned further and further away. To his rebellious son, Israel, God  
said, “I love you, but I will judge you.” That judgment on Israel certainly came. But God had not stopped  
caring for his sons. God sent his Son to be the son Israel should have been so that his repentant children  
might be his sons again.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
41 Let All Together Praise Our God  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
28 Let the Earth Now Praise the Lord  
30 Rise, Arise  
35 Of the Father’s Love Begotten  
37 Once Again My Heart Rejoices  
55 Oh, Come, All Ye Faithful  
61 Hark! The Herald Angels Sing  
86 The Only Son from Heaven  
122 Sing, My Tongue, the Glorious Battle  
176 Come, Holy Ghost, God and Lord  
203 Lord, Keep Us Steadfast in Your Word  
226 To Your Temple I Draw Near  
291 We Have a Sure Prophetic Word  
465 Jesus, I My Cross Have Taken  
552 By All Your Saints Still Striving  
747 There Is a Redeemer  
753 Father, God of Grace, You Knew Us  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Second Sunday after Christmas  
The Incarnation reveals the unseen God to the eyes of the faithful. The light of Christ illuminates hearts and eyes  
once darkened by sin (Prayer of the Day), and the whole world sees the salvation of our unseen God made  
visible in our flesh-and-blood Savior (Verse of the Day).  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
John 1:14-18  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Isaiah 61:10—62:3  
Ephesians 1:3-6, 15-18  
148  
Genesis 16:1-16  
Ephesians 1:3-14  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, you have filled us with the new light of the Word who became flesh and lived among us. Let  
the light of our faith shine in all that we do; through your Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord, who lives and reigns  
with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. All the ends of the earth have seen the salvation of our God. Alleluia. (Psalm 98:3b)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 1:14-18  
John 1:14 occurs in the Gospel for Christmas Day and for Christmas 2. The worship planner will note each  
Sunday’s distinctly different emphasis. The point of Christmas Day is that God became flesh. The emphasis  
on Christmas 2 is that the Incarnation reveals the unseen God to us. The sin-darkened eyes of mankind can  
not see God in his glory; he must remain hidden in unapproachable light. God, however, wanted us to know  
him—to see him—and so God chose to reveal himself by hiding himself in flesh and blood. This is the great  
mystery of the Incarnation: Christ is the exegesis of God (ἐκεῖνος ἐξηγήσατο). Jesus Christ—himself God the  
one and Only, µονογενὴς θεὸς came to make the unapproachable God known to us; he came to make the  
unseen God seen.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 61:10—62:3  
The Messiah promises that the righteousness and glory of the unseen God will be made known to all  
nations. Then God speaks (62:1ff.) and shows the surprising way he will reveal his glory and righteousness:  
they will be seen in his people. No longer will they be called Desolate and Deserted. God speaks and makes  
our righteousness shine like the dawn, our salvation like a blazing torch. As a king’s crown shows his power,  
so the righteousness of his people makes known the glory of the unseen God.  
SECOND LESSON: EPHESIANS 1:3-6, 15-18  
Paul prays that the Ephesians might know God better. There is only one way for us to better see and know  
the unseen God: the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, must tell us. The way to know God  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
better is to see exactly what he has done for us (vv. 3-6) and what he will yet do for us (vv. 13-14). The  
wisdom that comes from the revelation of the Gospel enlightens the eyes of believing hearts (cf. 2  
Corinthians 4:6) and lets them see and know the hope to which they have been called. This hope is certain  
because God’s people already have the deposit (v. 14), and the promise was made by their adoptive Father  
(v. 5).  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: GENESIS 16:1-16  
Abram and Sarai believed in the promise of God, but ten years of waiting caused doubts to surface in their  
minds. Though their intentions might have been good, they did not act according to God’s wisdom and  
revelation. Hagar conceived, but was mistreated by Sarai and fled into the desert—pregnant, alone,  
helpless. Then the angel of the LORD, the pre-incarnate Messiah, appears for the first time in the Old  
Testament and makes the unseen God known by loving the unloved, caring for the abandoned, and helping  
the helpless. The angel of the LORD spoke words of prophecy and revelation to Hagar that revealed what  
God is like. He is a God who hears (
יהוה
 
כּי־שׁמע
 
ישׁמעאל
 
 
מ
 
 
וקראת
) and a God who sees and cares for us  
(
י
רא
 
אל
). Like Hagar, in Christ we now have seen the One who sees us.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: EPHESIANS 1:3-14  
This supplemental lesson includes Paul’s entire doxology on the spiritual blessings in Christ (vv 3-14 are one  
sentence in the original). Including verses 7-14 ties the lesson more tightly to the Sunday’s theme of making  
known the unseen God. With the blood of Christ God bought us back, forgave our sins and lavished on us  
wisdom and understanding. True wisdom is understanding the mystery of God’s will. That could not be  
discovered or uncovered; God’s will had to be revealed. This is the Gospel message which God purposed in  
Christ: we would be redeemed by the Son of God made flesh and be presented blameless in his sight.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
34 Now Sing We, Now Rejoice  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
2 Savior of the Nations, Come  
21 Hosanna to the Coming Lord  
33 All Praise to You, Eternal God  
35 Of the Father’s Love Begotten  
36 A Great and Mighty Wonder  
39 Now Praise We Christ, the Holy One  
41 Let All Together Praise Our God  
62 Joy to the World  
344 At the Name of Jesus  
354 Lamb of God, We Fall before You  
357 Jesus, Lover of My Soul  
361 Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence  
368 O Savior, Precious Savior  
376 Jesus, Your Blood and Righteousness  
379 Amazing Grace—How Sweet the Sound  
392 Not unto Us  
67 What Child Is This  
707 Peace Came to Earth  
180 Holy Spirit, God of Love  
711 Jesus Has Come and Brings Pleasure Eternal  
723 Holy Spirit, the Dove Sent from Heaven  
736 All Christians Who Have Been Baptized  
751 Word of God, When All Was Silent  
752 In Christ Alone  
238 Oh, Bless the Lord, My Soul  
241 Alleluia! Let Praises Ring  
247 Earth and All Stars  
279 O Word of God Incarnate  
297 Baptized in Water  
311 Soul, Adorn Yourself with Gladness  
315 Here, O My Lord, I See You Face to Face  
334 Praise God, from Whom All Blessings Flow  
753 Father, God of Grace, You Knew Us  
764 There Is a Time for Everything  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Epiphany  
The twelve days of Christmas culminate at the celebration of the Epiphany of our Lord on January 6th. The  
season of Epiphany highlights the appearance (ἐπιφαίνω) of the Son of God as the Savior of the whole world—  
both Jew and Gentile. God revealed the mystery of his person and his mission through the words and works of  
the Father, though the anointing and empowering of the Spirit, and through the preaching and miracles of  
Christ.  
This season of the Savior’s appearance is bracketed by two white Sundays: The Baptism of our Lord and  
Transfiguration. Since he had come hidden in flesh, recognizing Jesus of Nazareth as the Son of God required  
revelation. From John’s Baptism to the Father’s booming voice, God revealed the truth about Jesus to the world:  
this son of Mary is the Son of God, come as the Christ. The Father’s testimony about Jesus bookends the season.  
From the glory of his baptism at the beginning of his ministry to the glory of his transfiguration at its  
culmination, the voice of the Father declares what flesh had hidden from the world: This is my Son!  
The rest of the Sundays in Epiphany are green. Like the green Sundays of Pentecost, Epiphany 2-8 focus on  
growth and new life in the Church. During Year A, the Gospels come from a continual reading of Matthew and  
encompass large sections of the Sermon on the Mount with its emphasis on the Christian life.  
Epiphany Themes  
Epiphany:  
Jesus appears as the Savior of the Nations  
Jesus appears as the Christ, the Anointed One  
Jesus appears as the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world  
Jesus appears as the light that shines in the darkness  
The Savior’s Sermon: Trust in God’s strength!  
The Savior’s Sermon: Let your light shine!  
The Savior’s Sermon: Live a holy life!  
The Savior’s Sermon: Love your enemies!  
The Savior’s Sermon: Don’t worry!  
Jesus appears as the Son of God in glory  
Epiphany 1:  
Epiphany 2:  
Epiphany 3:  
Epiphany 4:  
Epiphany 5:  
Epiphany 6:  
Epiphany 7:  
Epiphany 8:  
Transfiguration:  
Minor Festivals  
January 18  
January 24  
January 25  
January 26  
February 2  
February 24  
Confession of St. Peter  
St. Timothy  
Conversion of St. Paul  
St. Titus  
Presentation of our Lord  
St. Matthias  
The minor festivals during Epiphany place a special emphasis on the role of ministers of the Word in  
communicating the message of Christ as the Savior of all nations. From the confession on which the Church  
is built, to the conversion of the great apostle to the Gentiles, to the replacement God gave in the apostolic  
ministry, to the men who model pastors in training, the Church sees the grace of God in the ministry of the  
Word for the world.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
The Epiphany of Our Lord  
Jesus appears as Savior of the Nations. The Church remembers January 6th as the Twelfth Day which closes the  
Christmas season. The Festival of the Epiphany of our Lord is the second oldest festival celebrated by the  
Church, dating to the second century. The Eastern Church commemorates the birth of Christ on this day, but the  
Western Church remembers it as the “Gentile Christmas” and celebrates Jesus who appeared (ἐπεφάνη) as the  
Word for the world.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
Matthew 2:1-12  
Isaiah 60:1-6  
Ephesians 3:2-12  
72  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Lord God, by the leading of a star you once made known to the nations your one and only Son. Guide us,  
also, who know him now by faith, to come at last to the perfect joy of your heavenly glory; through Jesus  
Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. We saw his star in the east and have come to worship him. Alleluia. (Matthew 2:2b)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 2:1-12  
When the Son of God entered our race, the world barely seemed to notice. Though the Messiah lived within  
their midst, the powerful men at the temple and palace of Jerusalem took no notice. God, however, set out  
to display the glory of his Son born in the flesh. He placed his sign in the heavens, and Gentile magi came to  
acknowledge the birth of Israel’s king and thus fulfill the prophecy of Isaiah. Where had the magi heard the  
promises? What did they know? Were they recipients of the remnants of Daniel’s testimony? We don’t  
know what God had revealed to them. The priests and teachers, however, had the prophets, and they had  
the promises—they were so close. They knew this King of the Jews would be the Christ, born of David’s line  
in Bethlehem. Yet, they did nothing with what they knew. The magi, though, saw the star and believed. They  
came, and they worshipped. In that, they were a picture of all the Gentiles who would come to faith in  
Christ: Gentiles who were not of the patriarchs, the promised land, or the prophets—but Gentiles called by  
the Gospel, converted by the Spirit and worshipping the true King of the Jews and Savior of the Nations.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 60:1-6  
Isaiah speaks God’s promises of the future glory of Israel—glory not realized until the Son of Man came as  
the Savior of the nations. The union of Christ and the true Israel, the Church, brings undreamed of glory for  
us. The light of God’s love has appeared among us, and therefore God tells us to rise and shine the light of  
God’s glory into all the darkness around us. The Church is a beacon of God’s glory that pierces the darkness  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
of the world. In the glow of this light, Isaiah points Israel to what God is accomplishing through them:  
Gentiles are streaming to them and kings are coming to their brightness. Not all Gentiles will come (note the  
absence of the article with 
גוֹים
). Some, like Herod, scurry and hide from the light. Others, like the Magi,  
come to the brightness of Israel’s dawn, bringing with them new sons and daughters for Israel. As the  
Church shines her light into the world, Israel can see the promise to Abraham fulfilled: all nations are  
blessed.  
SECOND LESSON: EPHESIANS 3:2-12  
The people of Israel knew that the Gentiles had a place in the Old Covenant. The Law had made provisions  
for them. The prophets had made promises about them. The mystery, however, lay in exactly what kind of  
place they would have in the New Covenant. The Jews did not understand that God intended the Gentiles to  
have an equal place. The coming of the magi marked the beginning of wave after wave of Gentiles who  
would come to faith in Christ. God wanted them to be equal partners with the sons of the covenant. Paul  
shares the mystery that the Gentiles would be συγκληρονόμα καὶ σύσσωμα καὶ συμμέτοχα which  
the NIV renders well with its triple “together.” God intends that his joint Church of Jew and Gentile reveal  
his manifold wisdom and glory—to kings (First Lesson), to the learned (Gospel), and even to the rulers and  
authorities in heaven (v 10)!  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
79 How Lovely Shines the Morning Star  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
63 Angels We Have Heard on High  
67 What Child Is This  
250 From All that Dwell Below the Skies  
397 Just As I Am, without One Plea  
402 My Faith Looks Up to Thee  
427 We Are the Lord’s  
461 From Eternity, O God  
539 In Christ There Is No East or West  
556 Rise, Shine, You People  
569 O Christ, Our True and Only Light  
577 Rise, O Light of Gentile Nations  
702 Prepare the Royal Highway  
703 My Soul in Stillness Waits  
770 O Christ, Who Called the Twelve  
80 Angels from the Realms of Glory  
81 Arise and Shine in Splendor  
82 Songs of Thankfulness and Praise  
83 As with Gladness Men of Old  
84 Jesus Shall Reign Where’er the Sun  
87 Hail, O Source of Every Blessing  
91 The Star Proclaims the King Is Here  
92 Brightest and Best  
93 Hail to the Lord’s Anointed  
94 O Jesus, King of Glory  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
First Sunday after the EpiphanyThe  
Baptism of Our Lord  
Jesus appears as the Christ, the Anointed One. The titles “Christ” and “Messiah” both mean “The Anointed One,”  
and they describe how God prepared Jesus for his mission. Since the days of Othniel (Judges 3:10), the Spirit of  
the Lord empowered God’s heroes to do his saving work. At his baptism, God anointed Jesus with the Holy Spirit  
and with power and declared this son of Mary to be the Son of God—the one anointed to be the Savior of  
mankind.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
Matthew 3:13-17  
Isaiah 42:1-7  
Acts 10:34-38  
45  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Father in heaven, at the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan you proclaimed him your beloved Son and  
anointed him with the Holy Spirit. Keep us who are baptized into Christ faithful in our calling as your children  
and make us heirs with him of everlasting life; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns  
with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. You are my Son, whom I love; with you I am well pleased. Alleluia. (Mark 1:11b)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 3:13-17  
What kind of God gets baptized? The Baptist’s question confronts every Christian reading this account, and  
we join in John’s incredulity (cf. ἔχωσὺ) at Jesus’ intended condescension. Though John objected, Jesus  
encouraged him to allow this concession in order to fulfill their purpose there together (πρέπον ἐστὶν ἡµῖν).  
Their joint purpose was to fulfill all righteousness. Jesus would do that by being the Messiah and standing in  
the place of sinful man—first at the font and ultimately at the cross. John would play his part by fulfilling his  
role as forerunner: baptizing with water that the Messiah might be revealed (John 1:31). When John  
consented and baptized Jesus, the Spirit fulfilled the promises of Isaiah (First Lesson), and Jesus was  
anointed with the Holy Spirit and with power (Second Lesson). In this inauguration into his office as the  
Christ, God prepared the Messiah for his mission with an unlimited outpouring of the Spirit (John 3:34). In  
the very next verse, empowered and led by the Spirit, the hero of God immediately goes out to war against  
Satan on behalf of mankind (Matthew 4:1ff), fulfilling all righteousness and bringing us peace.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 42:1-7  
This Servant Song foretells the Messiah’s work: he will be God’s own servant sent to accomplish God’s  
mission. God will choose him, uphold him and delight in him. God will also put his Spirit on him that he  
might bring justice to the nations. His ministry is characterized by gentleness toward the weak, but also by  
an inexorable driving toward his goal. He will not falter in the work for which he was anointed until he brings  
forth the right verdict (
משׁפּט
 
עד־ישׂים
): the justice that comes from God and declares his people righteous in  
his sight because of Messiah’s work. He will be the Mediator of the new covenant (Jeremiah 31:31-34) based  
on his person that will bring the people and the Gentiles out of the darkness of sin’s prison. Matthew’s  
account of Jesus’ baptism shows how these prophesies were perfectly fulfilled in the person of Jesus of  
Nazareth.  
SECOND LESSON: ACTS 10:34-38  
The Gentile household of Cornelius had heard the message about the Savior, but then Peter came as an  
eyewitness of prophesy’s fulfillment. Jesus was the Christ because at his baptism God anointed him with the  
Holy Spirit and with power. Immediately, the empowerment of the Spirit made itself evident in the works of  
Jesus as he did the Messiah’s work of healing those under the power of the devil. This anointing as Savior  
resulted in Peter’s amazing statement in verse 36, “the message proclaiming the good news (τὸν λόγον  
εὐαγγελιζόµενος) of peace through Jesus Christ, who is Lord of all.” The message God sent Israel consisted in  
that one word: peace. That message was on the lips of the angels at Christmas and on the lips of Christ at his  
resurrection. Jesus restored peace between man and God because that’s exactly what he had been anointed  
to do.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
88 To Jordan Came the Christ, Our Lord  
89 To Jordan’s River Came Our Lord  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
16 On Jordan’s Bank the Baptist’s Cry  
78 O Light of Gentile Nations  
439 Lord, Take My Hand and Lead Me  
451 Precious Lord, Take My Hand  
577 Rise, O Light of Gentile Nations  
709 Christ, Your Footprints through the Desert  
710 Jesus, Once with Sinners Numbered  
765 Day by Day  
91 The Star Proclaims the King Is Here  
294 Baptized into Your Name Most Holy  
299 All Who Believe and Are Baptized  
366 O Jesus So Sweet, O Jesus So Mild  
390 Salvation unto Us Has Come  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Second Sunday after the Epiphany  
Jesus appears as the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. This Lamb would take away the sins of  
the world and bring both Israel and the Gentile nations into the kingdom of God. The hearts that see this Savior  
in faith cannot help but take news of this salvation to the ends of the earth.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
John 1:29-41  
Isaiah 49:1-6  
1 Corinthians 1:1-9  
89  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Isaiah 49:1-7  
Acts 13:38-49  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, you gave your one and only Son to be the light of the world. Grant that your people, illumined  
by your Word and sacraments, may shine with the radiance of Christ’s glory, that he may be known,  
worshiped, and believed to the ends of the earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who with you and the Holy  
Spirit lives and reigns, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. He said to me, “You are my servant in whom I will display my splendor.” Alleluia. (Isaiah 49:3 cf.  
NIV)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 1:29-41  
As the last and greatest of the prophets, John the Baptist rightly summarizes the totality of God’s plan of  
salvation by pointing to Jesus and calling him the Lamb of God. Though not an Old Testament title, John’s  
name for Christ is the perfect sum of the sacrificial system. Christ is the fulfillment of all the sacrificial victims  
of the Old Testament, from Yom Kippur’s goat to the Passover Lamb and every sin and guilt offering in  
between. They are all fulfilled in the Son of God made flesh that he might stand in our place, that he might  
take the burden of sins off the world and onto his shoulders, and that he might die in our stead. Seeing the  
Lamb of God leads believers like John and Andrew to bring his salvation to the ends of the earth.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 49:1-6  
Listen to the message meant for all nations: The Messiah is a weapon in the hand of God. God concealed  
him like an arrow in a quiver: the Messiah would come with his glory hidden in flesh. That meant the Servant  
would suffer, but in that suffering God would display his splendor. Jesus struggled with the cup he was to  
drink, but trusted in God’s promised reward (v 4). God would use the Servant to restore Israel and shine the  
light of his love on all the Gentiles, too. The salvation won by the Lamb would be brought to the ends of the  
earth. When Simeon laid eyes on the Christ-child, he remembered these words and could depart in peace,  
because he knew that God had now kept his promise.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
SECOND LESSON: 1 CORINTHIANS 1:1-9  
This lesson begins a seven-week set of continual readings through 1 Corinthians 1-4 that runs from Epiphany  
2-8. The preacher may consider a sermon series on the unity of the Church. In this section, Paul shows the  
great confidence he has in the Christian congregation in Corinth—even though they struggled with many  
congregational problems and sins. Paul’s confidence came from knowing that the burden of their sins had  
been picked up and carried by the Lamb of God, so that they will be blameless on the day of our Lord Jesus.  
Paul reminds us that our blameless state on the day of Christ will not rely on our faithfulness, but on the  
faithfulness of God.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 49:1-7  
The addition of one verse features the LORD himself speaking and ratifying the Servant’s words. He promises  
that though his Servant will suffer and be despised, the LORD will not forget him, but will ensure his glory and  
honor. To that promise he adds a pledge on his name as the Redeemer and the Holy One of Israel. Though  
Christ would be the Lamb of God who would suffer and die to bear our sins, though he would be rejected  
and despised, God promised to glorify him again. He promised that every eye will see him—even those who  
pierced him—and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: ACTS 13:38-49  
In Pisidian Antioch, Paul preached the message of the Lamb of God: the sacrifices in the Law of Moses could  
not justify; only the Lamb sacrificed for sin could. The Gospel resulted in faith in some Jewish hearts and  
rejection in others. In the face of opposition, Paul and Barnabas fulfilled the promises of God in Isaiah and  
made Christ a light to Gentiles and brought salvation to the ends of the earth.  
Note: The Church remembers the first disciple of Jesus with the Feast of St. Andrew on November 30th. His  
distinction as first of the disciples is commemorated each new Church Year as Advent 1 is celebrated on the  
Sunday nearest the Feast of St. Andrew, the first disciple.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
86 The Only Son from Heaven  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
15 Hark! A Thrilling Voice Is Sounding  
20 When All the World Was Cursed  
27 O Jesus, Lamb of God, You Are  
78 O Light of Gentile Nations  
85 O God from God, O Light from Light  
88 To Jordan Came the Christ, Our Lord  
89 To Jordan’s River Came Our Lord  
100 A Lamb Goes Uncomplaining Forth  
101 Behold the Lamb of God  
181 Come, Oh, Come, Life-Giving Spirit  
265 This Is the Feast of Victory  
269 In Peace and Joy I Now Depart  
288 The Gospel Shows the Father’s Grace  
352 Lord, Enthroned in Heavenly Splendor  
391 God Loved the World So that He Gave  
394 Blessed Are the Saints of God  
438 In God, My Faithful God  
552 By All Your Saints Still Striving  
567 Awake, O Spirit, Who Inspired  
571 From Greenland's Icy Mountains  
576 Spread, Oh, Spread the Mighty Word  
577 Rise, O Light of Gentile Nations  
709 Christ, Your Footprints through the Desert  
710 Jesus, Once with Sinners Numbered  
714 The Lamb  
743 O Gracious Lord, I Firmly Am Believing  
746 You, Lord, Are Both Lamb and Shepherd  
770 O Christ, Who Called the Twelve  
772 When Jesus Came from Nazareth  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Third Sunday after the Epiphany  
Jesus appears as the light that shines in the darkness. Dark places remain covered in the shadow of sin and  
unbelief. Now there are, however, bright places, too, and there you find God’s children. Jesus shines his light by  
preaching repentance and the good news of the nearing kingdom, and he invites us to follow him to a life  
illumined by him. Following him means living in the joy of freedom (First Lesson) and walking in the light of love  
for God and brother (Second Lesson).  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 4:12-23  
Isaiah 9:1-4  
1 Corinthians 1:10-17  
27  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Isaiah 8:19—9:2  
1 John 2:3-11  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, you sent your Son to proclaim your kingdom and to teach with authority. Anoint us with the  
power of your Spirit that we, too, may bring good news to the afflicted, bind up the brokenhearted, and  
proclaim liberty to the captive; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and  
the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Jesus went throughout Galilee, teaching, preaching, and healing every disease. Alleluia. (Matthew  
4:23 cf. NIV)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 4:12-23  
The light of the world appeared and began to cast its beams. Fulfilling Isaiah’s prophecy, the bulk of Christ’s  
ministry took place in Galilee of the Gentiles which had been so oppressed. Galileans were the first to see  
the light of God’s day breaking over the world. From that time on, Jesus began to preach, and we hear the  
first public words of Jesus Christ: Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is near. With those words the Holy  
Spirit describes Jesus shining his light into the shadowed nooks and crannies of the world. From fishing boats  
to synagogues, from workmen to lame men, Christ cast a beacon of light into the darkened world around  
him with his three-fold ministry of teaching, preaching, and healing. The kingdom of heaven drew near and  
called God’s children to follow the light and live in the light.  
Note: The Gospel includes the promise of Jesus to make his disciples “fishers of men.” While it is a compelling  
component of the Gospel, Epiphany 3, Year A, emphasizes Jesus as the light of the world. Worship planners  
may save the theme of discipleship for Epiphany 3, Year B.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 9:1-4  
The story of Zebulon and Naphtali was one of suffering. These northern tribes bore the brunt of foreign  
attacks, most notably by Assyria. Adding insult to injury, the land had become Galilee of the Gentiles, a  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
melting pot of resettled peoples and a hot bed of crass syncretism. It was a land covered by the darkness of  
gloom and unbelief. Though the people’s punishment was well deserved, it was not an end to itself, but a  
means to God’s end. God’s plan broke upon them as suddenly as light shining into the darkness when Jesus  
appeared and began to preach and teach. He fulfilled every one of Isaiah’s prophecies: he honored them  
with his presence; he gladdened them with his gifts; he freed them with his sacrifice for sin.  
SECOND LESSON: 1 CORINTHIANS 1:10-17  
In the second of a seven-week series of readings, Paul appeals to the church that there be no divisions  
among the body of Christ. There is only one Light—Jesus. All other ministers are merely servants of the  
Light. Following the light that shines in the darkness means fostering a unity of mind and thought among  
Christian brothers and sisters. No room remains for selfish pride or sinful divisions in the congregation. So  
strongly does Paul emphasize this that he is thankful he did not baptize many among them—lest anyone  
think that Paul was more important than the gospel he preached and thus empty the cross of its power to  
save.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 8:19—9:2  
The supplemental selection focuses more tightly on this Sunday’s theme. Man cannot find his way through  
the darkness of the world except by inquiring of God. No spirit, no man, no other message brings light to  
those living in darkness. To the law and to the testimony! There you find the Word, the great light for those  
living in darkness.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 1 JOHN 2:3-11  
How can we be certain that we know God? John says, “Obey his commands.” The gnostic heretics that John  
combatted had little regard for laws and sin and the commands of God. They felt they knew God well  
enough without worrying about acts of obedience. How similar to modern unbelievers and even to many  
Christians today! They think they know God, but they have little time for talk of sin, guilt, and obedience.  
John tells us that contrary to their opinion, they do not know God. Jesus, our Morning Star, has already  
come, and the light of his dawn is beginning to break over the world, and the time for deeds of darkness is  
fading fast. There are still places of deep darkness, but that is not the place to find God’s children. They will  
be found walking in the light and shedding their own light on the darkness around them by living in love for  
God and brother.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
85 O God from God, O Light from Light  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
81 Arise and Shine in Splendor  
84 Jesus Shall Reign Where’er the Sun  
86 The Only Son from Heaven  
90 The People that in Darkness Sat  
254 The Day Full of Grace  
525 The Son of God, Our Christ  
537 Onward, Christian Soldiers  
555 For All Your Saints, O Lord  
556 Rise, Shine, You People  
560 I Hear the Savior Calling  
279 O Word of God Incarnate  
280 Thy Strong Word  
566 We All Are One in Mission  
569 O Christ, Our True and Only Light  
577 Rise, O Light of Gentile Nations  
613 Come, You Thankful People, Come  
614 Sing to the Lord of Harvest  
703 My Soul in Stillness Waits  
732 We Are Singing, for the Lord is Our Light  
745 May the Peace of God  
338 I Heard the Voice of Jesus Say  
361 Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence  
363 The King of Glory Comes  
378 All Mankind Fell in Adam’s Fall  
419 If God Himself Be for Me  
423 Not in Anger, Mighty God  
424 O God, Forsake Me Not  
767 The Lord Is My Light  
452 Let Us Ever Walk With Jesus  
453 Come, Follow Me, the Savior Spoke  
460 How Can I Thank You, Lord  
463 Jesus Calls Us O’er the Tumult  
770 O Christ, Who Called the Twelve  
772 When Jesus Came from Nazareth  
773 In Unity and Peace  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany  
The Savior’s Sermon: Trust in God’s strength! The Beatitudes are hard for us to swallow. Jesus seems to be  
espousing a Christianity imbued with fatalism at best or defeatism at worst. Look closer, however, and see what  
he says. The weaker you are, the stronger God is in your life. The weaker you are now, the more ready you are  
to trust in a future reward. Look at the past acts of God’s grace and you will find many reasons to trust his  
strength in the face of adversity, persecution or sorrow.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
Matthew 5:1-12  
Micah 6:1-8  
1 Corinthians 1:26-31  
1
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Daniel 3:13-27  
37  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Lord God, you know that we are surrounded by many dangers and that we often stumble and fall.  
Strengthen us in body and mind, and bring us safely through all temptations; through Jesus Christ, your Son,  
our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. The Spirit of the Lord is on me; he has anointed me to preach good news. Alleluia. (Luke 4:18)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 5:1-12  
In the Beatitudes, our Savior turns the world upside down. He calls blessed the people this world never  
would. He calls blessed people that the world would use as doormats! The world praises the brash, the  
strong, and the self-sufficient. Jesus calls blessed what others see as weak or stupid. To live this kind of  
blessedness requires a deep trust in the Lord’s strength and a long-term view of life. Jesus calls us blessed  
even in circumstances like mourning and persecution, because he is looking beyond the troubles of this  
world to the reward that is waiting for the people of God. Like reading the last chapter of a book, Jesus takes  
the mystery out of a life filled with sorrow by showing us the end, the outcome of life lived trusting in God’s  
strength. All the weak children of God can rejoice and be glad—even now—because our reward will be  
great!  
FIRST LESSON: MICAH 6:1-8  
God builds a case against the people of Israel. He calls the mountains as witnesses and lodges a charge  
against the unfaithful people. Yet look at the grace when he still calls them, “My people!” This faithless and  
wayward group he still calls his own and reminds them of all his righteous acts from the Exodus until the  
crossing of the Jordan (from Shittim to Gilgal). Israel, though, does not respond in faith, but in sinful pride:  
What must I do to make this right (v 6)? No sacrifice from human hands could clear the guilt. The sacrifice  
God wanted was a broken and contrite heart (Psalm 51:17) that knows its weakness and trusts in the  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
strength of God’s saving grace. Then God will give the strength to act justly, to love mercy and walk humbly  
with our God.  
SECOND LESSON: 1 CORINTHIANS 1:26-31  
Paul points the Corinthians to themselves as an example of God’s strength made perfect in weakness. The  
majority of them did not come from the upper crust of society or the ranks of the learned. God, however,  
chose them. Paul’s list of God’s chosen ones fits well with Jesus’ description of the blessed ones in the  
Gospel. God chooses the losers of this world, not the winners; he chooses the weak, not the strong, so that  
there is no doubt as to the nature of his one-sided grace. The weaker we are, the more ready we are to trust  
in God’s strength and boast in the work he does in us.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: DANIEL 3:13-27  
Rejoice and be glad, Jesus said, because great is your reward in heaven. He does not promise to keep us  
from a martyr’s death or Christian persecution on earth. He promises to reward us in spite of them. That we  
might trust his promises of future reward, however, he shows us his righteous acts of the past. The God of  
the Three Men in the Fiery Furnace can be trusted! As they stood before great Nebuchadnezzar, these men  
looked weak. As they chose the path of righteousness rather than accommodation, they seemed stupid. As  
they spoke about a powerful God, their words and actions seemed powerless. At the weakest moment of  
their lives—despised, condemned, bound hand and foot and falling into an inferno—they trusted that God  
was their strength, and he did not fail them.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
395 Seek Where You May to Find a Way  
556 Rise, Shine, You People  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
125 When I Survey the Wondrous Cross  
223 As We Begin Another Week  
249 God of Mercy, God of Grace  
290 One Thing’s Needful  
325 How Blest Are They Who Hear  
347 Jesus! and Shall It Ever Be  
383 Blessed Are They, Forever Blest  
403 I Know My Faith Is Founded  
415 Be Still, My Soul  
430 Evening and Morning  
438 In God, My Faithful God  
446 I Am Trusting You, Lord Jesus  
491 O Master of the Loving Heart  
499 O God of Mercy, God of Might  
550 Behold a Host, Arrayed in White  
758 Blest Are They  
763 Jesus Sat With His Disciples  
781 I Lie, O Lord, within Your Care  
421 All Depends on Our Possessing  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Fifth Sunday after the Epiphany  
The Savior’s Sermon: Let your light shine! Jesus tells us: You are…so be. You are the light of the world, so be light  
for the earth. You are the salt of the earth, so be salt for it. Our calling as sons of God means our lives will reflect  
our new status, and the world around us will be blessed by us. The Church prays that God would help us believe  
and then do the things that are pleasing in his sight (Prayer of the Day).  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 5:13-20  
Isaiah 58:5-9a  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Joshua 24:14-24  
1 Peter 2:9-12  
1 Corinthians 2:1-5  
111  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, you sent your one and only Son as the Word of life for our eyes to see and our ears to hear.  
Help us to believe what the Scriptures proclaim about him and do the things that are pleasing in your sight;  
through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now  
and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Jesus said, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will  
have the light of life.” Alleluia. (John 8:12)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 5:13-20  
Jesus’ sermon moves from the promises of the Beatitudes to his commands for the Christian life. The  
Christians blessed by Christ are called to be blessings to the world around us. You are salt, Christ says, so be  
it: act as the preservative that keeps this world from rotting. You are light, so be it: shine into the darkness of  
the world that people might see and know how different you are. The message of grace is not a message of  
antinomianism. Jesus did not come to abolish the Law, but to fulfill it—first for us, and then in us. Our  
righteousness could never be enough—even if we could keep the 613 laws of the Pharisees—but Jesus’  
righteousness is. Now he commands our light to shine (λαµψάτω τὸ φῶς ὑµῶν) that our deeds might give  
evidence of our faith to the praise of God the Father who created us to do them.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 58:5-9A  
Going through the motions of fasting did not make an acceptable fast. Crass hypocrisy thinks a mere  
outward form of faith is enough. Here God tells his people that the proof of repentance doesn’t consist in  
the form of their fast but in the deeds of their faith. In the same way merely going through the motions of  
faith in Christ is not an acceptable substitute for a true change of heart. God wants us to fulfill the Law by  
loving him and our neighbor. Real repentance leads to fruits—living as salt and light. Look at the promises  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
God gives to accompany his call to obedience! Your light will break forth; your healing will quickly appear;  
your righteousness will be before you and the glory of the LORD will have your back.  
SECOND LESSON: 1 CORINTHIANS 2:1-5  
This is the fourth lesson of the seven-week reading from 1 Corinthians. Although Jesus commands us to be  
salt and light as a witness for the world, our deeds can never become a source of pride. Paul’s ministry  
among the Corinthians was not based on eloquent words or superior wisdom—but only on Christ and him  
crucified. Paul’s message and preaching didn’t display his own works or power, but the Spirit’s. Our lives as  
salt and light always point not to self but to Christ that faith might rest not on men, but on God.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: JOSHUA 24:14-24  
Faith responds to God’s grace by promising to live as salt and light. Joshua pointed the people of Israel back  
to the gracious acts of God who had delivered them from every enemy. Now in possession of the Promised  
Land, God’s people could reflect on God’s great acts of grace and power in their lives. Seeing all God had  
done, the people vowed to Joshua to live as salt and light: “We will serve the LORD our God and obey him.”  
As the children of God today, we see that God has defeated enemies far fiercer than the Amorites,  
Perizzites, and Canaanites. Sin, death, and the devil are vanquished. The gates to the heavenly promised  
land stand open. Looking at God’s great acts of grace and power, we cannot help but join in vowing our  
obedience to God. We will put away the gods of self and sin, and through the Spirit we will yield our hearts  
and join with Joshua in his life of salt and light: As for me and my house, we will serve the LORD.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 1 PETER 2:9-12  
The call of God made us part of a new people in order that we might declare his praises. Peter tells us to live  
lives that are different from the world around us—as different as light is to darkness. Called out of the  
darkness, we live in this world like foreigners who know that this is not our home. Strangers to the world, we  
abstain from sin and live such good lives that even the pagans will have to give God glory for his work in our  
lives. Called into the wonderful light, we let that shine on everyone around us.  
NOTE:  
For the next four weeks Jesus preaches the sanctified Christian life in the Sermon on the Mount. The preacher  
may prepare by reviewing the Formula of Concord’s articles on Good Works and the Third Use of the Law (SD  
IV and VI).  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
280 Thy Strong Word  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
79 How Lovely Shines the Morning Star  
200 A Mighty Fortress Is Our God  
201 A Mighty Fortress Is Our God  
236 All Praise to God Who Reigns Above  
241 Alleluia! Let Praises Ring  
390 Salvation unto Us Has Come  
394 Blessed Are the Saints of God  
458 May We Your Precepts, Lord, Fulfill  
491 O Master of the Loving Heart  
506 Oh, Blest the House, Whate’er Befall  
521 Lord of All Nations, Grant Me Grace  
523 God of Grace and God of Glory  
526 We Are Your People  
571 From Greenland's Icy Mountains  
579 Lift High the Cross  
596 Let Me Be Yours Forever  
735 Speak, O Lord  
774 Church of God, Elect and Glorious  
279 O Word of God Incarnate  
285 The Ten Commandments Are the Law  
291 We Have a Sure Prophetic Word  
325 How Blest Are They Who Hear  
359 Jesus, My Great High Priest  
366 O Jesus So Sweet, O Jesus So Mild  
383 Blessed Are They, Forever Blest  
387 Drawn to the Cross  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Sixth Sunday after the Epiphany  
The Savior’s Sermon: Live a holy life! Jesus came to free us from sin. He did not come to free us to sin. The  
commands in the lessons today remind us just how holy our God is, and their dire warnings remind us just how  
holy he wants us to be. After examining our lives, we must despair, but the Verse of the Day reminds us to flee  
to Christ who has the words of life. Then the Prayer of the Day asks that we might be given the grace to both  
know and do what pleases him.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 5:21-37  
Deuteronomy 30:15-20  
1 Corinthians 2:6-13  
119a  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
2 Samuel 11:1-17, 26-27  
1 Thessalonians 4:1-12  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Lord God, in mercy receive the prayers of your people. Grant them the wisdom to know the things that  
please you and the grace and power always to accomplish them; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord,  
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. Alleluia. (John 6:68)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 5:21-37  
Jesus commands us to be holy in our relationships with our brothers, our adversaries, our bodies, our  
spouse, and our God. Hearing his instructions for the Christian life, we see that God is far holier than we can  
imagine! How high Jesus sets the bar here: not just acts, but thoughts—not just words, but attitudes, are  
judged by our God! In the place of a pharisaical form of godliness, Jesus calls for true spiritual righteousness.  
God’s demands of holiness only highlight the depravity of our sinful nature. Let the preacher bring God’s  
Law in all its severity and preach his hearers down to hell, until the flesh despairs of itself and can only cry,  
“Lord, have mercy on me, a sinner!” Then let the preacher boldly proclaim that the Savior who preaches the  
holy life is the Savior who lived the holy life as our Substitute. Let him proclaim forgiveness that is greater  
than our depravity and mercy that far outweighs our wickedness.  
FIRST LESSON: DEUTERONOMY 30:15-20  
Moses made it clear that the choice between God and sin was also the choice between life and death. He  
reminded God’s people that Israel had received a two-sided covenant from God: If you are my people, I will  
be your God. If you are not my people, you will be destroyed. The choice was a no-brainer! Love the LORD  
your God and walk in his ways. If serving God was a no-brainer for Israel, how much more for us, who have  
received the one-sided covenant of God’s grace? We know the LORD is our life, and so we listen to his voice  
and hold fast to him.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
SECOND LESSON: 1 CORINTHIANS 2:6-13  
In the continuation of the seven-week series, Paul says that godly wisdom comes from the Holy Spirit who  
does two things: he reveals what God has prepared for us, and he makes us understand it. Knowing and  
understanding what God has done for us creates true, godly wisdom that will show itself as we live holy  
lives.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: 2 SAMUEL 11:1-17, 26-27  
Our Savior’s call to holy living leads us to have a healthy fear of sin. What a warning God provides us in  
David! When the king was at the height of his power and full of God’s blessing, his great fall began. Why?  
Because he toyed with sin. He let lust fester and morph into adultery. He spoke lies until deception ruled his  
heart. He let selfishness metastasize into a godless disregard for any life but his own. He thought he could  
toy with sin, but in the end it was sin and Satan that toyed with him. Jesus’ call to live a holy life is like a  
mother warning her child to beware a hot stove. It is a call motivated by love and meant for our safety.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 1 THESSALONIANS 4:1-12  
Paul’s encouragement to live a holy life serves as a great model for preaching sanctification to a  
congregation. He does not speak to them as heathens, but as people who are in fact living in order to please  
God. Paul’s words, then, instruct and admonish them to do this more and more. The authority behind his  
preaching of sanctification did not come from Paul’s life but from the authority of Christ himself. This is what  
Christ wants! The Thessalonians faced the same problem we do: we know what God wants; we understand  
it; we just don’t do it consistently. Paul applies the warning of God’s Law and the calling of God’s Gospel.  
Paul repeatedly emphasizes this: You know it, so now we urge you to do it more and more.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
283 Speak, O Savior; I Am Listening  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
121 Jesus, Grant that Balm and Healing  
186 O Spirit of Life, O Spirit of God  
221 Blessed Jesus, at Your Word  
285 The Ten Commandments Are the Law  
286 The Law Commands and Makes Us Know  
287 The Law of God Is Good and Wise  
292 The Lord Is God; There Is No Other  
348 Jesus, Jesus, Only Jesus  
464 Jesus Christ, My Pride and Glory  
471 Renew Me, O Eternal Light  
493 Forgive Our Sins as We Forgive  
503 Oh, Blessed Home, Where Man and Wife  
505 Love Is the Gracious Gift  
509 How Shall the Young Secure Their Hearts  
536 Lord Jesus Christ, the Church’s Head  
583 Now that the Daylight Fills the Sky  
586 O Splendor of God’s Glory Bright  
764 There Is a Time for Everything  
776 Sing with All the Saints in Glory  
390 Salvation unto Us Has Come  
452 Let Us Ever Walk with Jesus  
459 O God, My Faithful God  
462 Oh, that the Lord Would Guide My Ways  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Seventh Sunday after the Epiphany  
The Savior’s Sermon: Love your enemies! What could be more counterintuitive? Yet Christ calls his disciples to a  
love for our neighbor that models itself after Jesus’ love for the world. As Luther said: Christi sumus in  
nominativo et genitivo (We are Christs—with and without the apostrophe). A heart like Christ’s has no room for  
vengeance, but is filled with love for all.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 5:38-48  
Leviticus 19:1, 2, 17, 18  
1 Corinthians 3:10, 11, 16-23  
103  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
1 Samuel 26:(1-6) 7-25  
Romans 12:9-21  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Gracious Father, keep your family, the Church, always faithful to you, that we may lean on the hope of your  
promises and be strong in the power of your love; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and  
reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful. Alleluia. (Luke 6:36)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 5:38-48  
Our flesh finds Jesus’ commands revolting. The human animal snarls when attacked and bites back when  
bitten. Jesus, however, tells us not to resist evil, to turn the other cheek, to love our enemies. Who would  
live like this? Only the Son of our heavenly Father. God demonstrated his love for us in this: when we were  
still sinners, Christ died for us. Jesus himself prayed for his enemies who crucified him. He most certainly  
was his Father’s Son. Now God calls us, his sons, to live like Jesus and love people as perfectly as the Father  
does. As God makes the sun rise on the evil and the good, so he commands us to shine the light of our love  
on everyone around us.  
FIRST LESSON: LEVITICUS 19:1, 2, 17, 18  
This is the passage that Jesus references in the Gospel. However, some of the Pharisees had changed its  
interpretation by adding “but hate your enemy” to the phrase “love your neighbor.” While that makes sense  
to our flesh, it is completely out of character with God. The standard for our life is the holiness of God, not  
our feelings or wants. God’s holy standard is clear: love for our neighbor must be equal to the love we have  
for our very self. Make no room in your hearts for vengeance or grudges, but live with the holiness of God as  
your standard and your example. Live also with the last sentence as your comfort and motivation: I am the  
LORD, the God of the covenant, the God of free and faithful love for you.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
SECOND LESSON: 1 CORINTHIANS 3:10, 11, 16-23  
This is the sixth in a seven-week series of readings from 1 Corinthians. Paul could have borne a grudge  
against Apollos or Peter because of the divisions present in the church of Corinth. Instead, he models  
Christian love for our neighbor and Christian unity with his words and actions. Paul lives and speaks and  
loves like Christ, seeking only to serve. The world would call it foolishness, but God calls such selfless love  
the wisdom of God.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: 1 SAMUEL 26:(1-6) 7-25  
Would anyone have faulted David for killing Saul? Saul had unfairly abused him; Saul had unfairly exiled him;  
Saul had unfairly tried to kill him. David could have claimed his actions were in self-defense or in fighting a  
just war or in taking the office to which he had been anointed. Who would have found fault with him?  
Certainly not the sons of Zeruiah! Though unfailingly brave, they could never understand David’s lack of  
pragmatic action (see Abner, Absalom, Shimei, etc.). Yet David showed again that he was a man after God’s  
own heart. David trusted that his reward was with his God, and so he had no need for vengeance. That freed  
him to be able to love even his enemy Saul.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 12:9-21  
In the twelfth chapter of Romans Paul urges us to offer our bodies as living sacrifices to God. In this lesson  
we find practical examples of how spiritual acts of worship are offered to God through our love for our  
neighbor. Loving our brothers and sharing with those in need certainly makes sense. But like Jesus, Paul goes  
further: bless your persecutors and don’t take revenge because that is God’s domain. Our domain is the  
opposite of vengeance; our domain is the imitation of Christ. Sons of the Father love their enemies and pray  
for their persecutors.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
492 Son of God, Eternal Savior  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
202 If God Had Not Been on Our Side  
234 Praise to the Lord, the Almighty  
238 Oh, Bless the Lord, My Soul  
257 My Soul, Now Bless Your Maker  
285 The Ten Commandments Are the Law  
386 Now I Have Found the Firm Foundation  
403 I Know My Faith is Founded  
410 Our Father, Who from Heaven Above  
459 O God, My Faithful God  
479 Jesus, Your Boundless Love to Me  
486 Lord of Glory, You Have Bought Us  
493 Forgive Our Sins as We Forgive  
494 Blest Be the Tie that Binds  
498 Though I May Speak with Bravest Fire  
505 Love Is the Gracious Gift  
521 Lord of All Nations, Grant Me Grace  
529 Built on the Rock  
531 Christ Is Made the Sure Foundation  
536 Lord Jesus Christ, the Church's Head  
538 The Church's One Foundation  
563 Go Labor On  
580 Every Morning Mercies New  
586 O Splendor of God’s Glory Bright  
615 We Thank You for Your Blessings  
760 When Peace, like a River  
773 In Unity and Peace  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Eighth Sunday after the Epiphany  
The Savior’s Sermon: Don’t worry! Your heavenly Father’s steadfast love is constant (Verse of the Day), and he  
wants to give you peace based not on an abundance of possessions but on the contentment that comes from  
living out of his hand. The Church prays for God’s peace (Prayer of the Day) that teaches Christians that we don’t  
need to worry about anything, but can learn to trust and be content with our Father’s care.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 6:24-34  
Isaiah 49:13-18  
1 Corinthians 4:1-13  
119b  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Genesis 32:6-12  
Philippians 4:8-13 (14-20)  
37  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty and eternal God, you govern all things in heaven and on earth. In your mercy hear our prayers and  
grant us your peace all the days of our life; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns  
with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; his mercies never come to an end. Alleluia.  
(Lamentations 3:22, RSV)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 6:24-34  
Slaves can only have one master. You are either a slave to stuff or a slave to God. Material blessings are not  
evil—God knows that we need them. But a frantic pursuit of earthly blessings or a constant worry about our  
bodily lives suggests an obedience to the wrong master. When we acknowledge God as the source of our  
security, we can work hard, pray hard, and then accept what comes from the hand of our Father. Worrying  
is worthless: it is ineffective and unnecessary. In his sermon today, Jesus says, “Don’t worry!” It is not a  
harsh command, but the gentle reminder of a parent to a child concerned about things he needn’t be. Jesus  
tells us to look at his Father’s love, and then draw the logical and inevitable conclusion:  
Therefore…therefore, do not worry.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 49:13-18  
Isaiah foresaw a people who would have every reason to worry. Jerusalem would be conquered, its walls  
demolished, its leaders exiled, its glory taken away. Christians facing grief and loss today often share  
Jerusalem’s worry that the LORD has forgotten them. Note well the words that God gave his people! He  
doesn’t explain away the grief. He doesn’t rationalize the loss by trying to show them some greater good.  
No, he simply tells them that he could never forget his people. Their names are engraved on his hands. They  
are always in his heart, and their welfare is foremost in his mind. What wonderful words for sorrowful or  
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worrying Christians! The heavens and earth are singing, because they know that God will comfort his people  
and bring them his peace.  
SECOND LESSON: 1 CORINTHIANS 4:1-13  
This is the last lesson in the seven-week series of readings from 1 Corinthians. Paul did not let his hardships  
drag him into worry or despair. Though slandered and cursed, the apostles sought God’s kingdom. Though  
treated badly, they kept their hope in Christ. A Christian who puts his hope and peace in the hands of God  
will find trust and contentment in any situation.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: GENESIS 32:6-12  
Jacob had good reason to worry. He had robbed his brother of his birthright and then robbed him of his  
blessing. He had fled from Esau’s rage years earlier, but now had to bring his family back into the territory of  
a brother who certainly must hate him. Jacob sent a peace offering, but heard the news that his brother’s  
men of war were marching toward his camp. In great fear and distress Jacob made plans for the worst and  
then did the best thing a Christian faced with worry can do: he prayed. He remembered God’s promises and  
all his gracious acts, and then sought his peace in the hand of his God. Here is a model prayer for Christian  
peace: “I am afraid…but you have said…”  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: PHILIPPIANS 4:8-13 (14-20)  
God’s peace teaches us contentment whatever our lot in life. Yes, contentment must be learned. Paul  
learned to find his peace not in health or wealth, but in Christ. Whether well fed or hungry, in plenty or in  
want, we can live without worry because the peace of God guards our hearts and lives. Godly contentment  
frees us to use our material blessings like the Philippians did, as fragrant offerings to God.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
236 All Praise to God Who Reigns Above  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
69 Across the Sky the Shades of Night  
253 I Will Sing My Maker's Praises  
290 One Thing’s Needful  
438 In God, My Faithful God  
446 I Am Trusting You, Lord Jesus  
477 What Is the World to Me  
319 On My Heart Imprint Your Image  
320 On My Heart Imprint Your Image  
348 Jesus, Jesus, Only Jesus  
533 I Love Your Kingdom, Lord  
542 Dear Lord, to Your True Servants Give  
547 We Bid You Welcome in the Name  
548 O Lord, in Prayer You Spent the Night  
570 O Christians, Haste  
610 Now Thank We All Our God  
757 Where Your Treasure Is  
760 When Peace Like a River  
349 Jesus, Priceless Treasure  
355 Take the World, but Give Me Jesus  
395 Seek Where You May to Find a Way  
414 I Leave All Things to God's Direction  
421 All Depends on Our Possessing  
425 Oh, Sing, My Soul, Your Maker’s Praise  
430 Evening and Morning  
762 Consider How the Birds Above  
781 I Lie, O Lord, within Your Care  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Last Sunday after the EpiphanyThe  
Transfiguration of Our Lord  
Jesus appears in glory as the Son of God. The Epiphany season is bookended by the voice of God the Father  
proclaiming Jesus his Son. Before he suffered as man’s substitute, Jesus gave his Church a glimpse of the glory  
that he set aside to be our Savior. See how much he loves us! The God of Mt. Sinai, the Majestic Glory, became a  
man to suffer and die for us, just as Moses and the Prophets had foretold. It’s good that we are here.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 17:1-9  
Exodus 24:12, 15-18  
2 Peter 1:16-21  
148  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
110  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Lord God, before the suffering and death of your one and only Son, you revealed his glory on the holy  
mountain. Grant that we who bear his cross on earth may behold by faith the light of his heavenly glory and  
so be changed into his likeness; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy  
Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. A voice came from the cloud: “This is my Son, whom I love. Listen to him!” Alleluia. (Mark 9:7b)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 17:1-9  
Six days earlier, Peter had his moment of great triumph and great failure. After witnessing the ministry and  
miracles of Jesus, his mouth confessed what his heart believed: You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.  
But his great failure of faith came immediately thereafter when he wanted no part with a crucified Christ. Six  
days later, God gave him proof for what his faith confessed, and hope in the face of what his heart feared.  
God showed Peter, James, and John all the glory that belonged to the Son of God shining out in the person  
of Jesus. They heard God the Father testify that this was his own Son. They understood that Jesus’ death and  
departure were a fulfillment of the Old Testament promises of God. As Peter said, it is good for us to be on  
this mountain and see this Jesus, because it prepares us for Lent, and it prepares us for life. We have seen  
his glory, so we know he goes to his suffering and death willingly, lovingly, to be our Savior. We have seen  
his glory, so we know that no matter the sorrow or darkness we face in this life, we have been bought for  
another life in the kingdom of glory with our Lord.  
FIRST LESSON: EXODUS 24:12, 15-18  
How different Mt. Sinai was from the Mount of Glory! Moses entered into thick darkness (Exodus 20:21) to  
receive the Law of God and the two-sided covenant for Israel. When he came down from the mountain and  
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found Israel dancing before a golden calf, he could see how man would never be able to keep this Law. Yet  
on the Mount of Glory in the midst of a bright cloud, Moses saw God’s new covenant in the person of Jesus  
Christ. Here was the Man who would not just keep the covenant, but who would be the covenant for all  
mankind. On Mt. Sinai, the people cowered in fear at the glory of God which looked like a consuming fire.  
But on the Mount of Glory, that same glory looked like a man—a man who touched his disciples and gave  
them the message of the covenant fulfilled, “Don’t be afraid!”  
SECOND LESSON: 2 PETER 1:16-21  
“We were eyewitnesses of his majesty.” Only two remained, since Herod had killed James years earlier. But  
for Peter and John, that day on the sacred mountain continued to shape their lives. From John 1 to 2 Peter,  
these men who had seen Christ’s glory testified that the man Jesus of Nazareth was the Son of God. Peter  
promised that the Lord Jesus Christ would come again in power, and he offers us a three-fold assurance of  
his reliability: Peter was an eyewitness of the glory of Christ; Peter heard the Majestic Glory call Jesus the  
Son of God; Peter had the word of the prophets which were inspired by the Spirit and fulfilled in Christ.  
NOTE:  
Transfiguration is a distinctly Lutheran addition to the Christian calendar. In the 16th century, Johannes  
Bugenhagen and Veit Dietrich placed the celebration at the end of Epiphany before Lent, remembering that  
Jesus descended the Mount of Glory and set his face toward Jerusalem (Luke 9:51).  
On Transfiguration, the Church says “farewell” to alleluias. The Church refrains from using her most jubilant  
words of praise during the muted celebration of Lent. The alleluias will return with the risen Lord at the  
celebration of Easter.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
97 Down from the Mount of Glory  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
9 Jesus, Your Church with Longing Eyes  
25 The King Shall Come  
79 How Lovely Shines the Morning Star  
85 O God from God, O Light from Light  
86 The Only Son from Heaven  
280 Thy Strong Word  
291 We Have a Sure Prophetic Word  
332 Go, My Children, with My Blessing  
350 All Praise Be Yours  
369 Beautiful Savior  
95 How Good, Lord, to Be Here  
96 Oh, Wondrous Type! Oh, Vision Fair  
212 Jerusalem, Thou City Fair and High  
242 Oh, that I Had a Thousand Voices  
256 How Great Thou Art  
370 All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name  
705 The Night Will Soon Be Ending  
712 Jesus, Take Us to the Mountain  
741 Take and Eat  
746 You, Lord, Are Both Lamb and Shepherd  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Lent  
The Season  
The season of Lent leads the Church on a forty-day journey of repentance and prayer, of remembrance and  
renewal of our baptism. God calls to mankind: Return to the Lord! The journey begins with Ash Wednesday’s  
warning of mortality and culminates at the Service of Holy Baptism in the Easter Vigil on Holy Saturday.  
Many congregations that gather for midweek Lenten services meditate on the Passion of our Lord for the six  
weeks of Lent. The season of Lent, however, does not always need to be an extended treatment of Holy Week. If  
the whole season of Lent becomes a meditation on the suffering and death of Christ, the following warning  
should be heeded:  
[Meditation on the Passion] throughout the entire season of Lent restricts thought to contemplation of the  
sufferings and death of our Lord, to the exclusion of practically all other ideas. By the time Holy Week is  
reached, the mind of the church has been so saturated with morbidity that pastors and people find it  
wearisome and unrewarding to repeat the same lugubrious details. Lent should prepare us for Easter, not  
for Good Friday. (Luther Reed)  
For many years the six weeks of Lent served the Church as the culmination of the catechumenate’s instruction.  
Many congregations, therefore, have used the weeks of Lent as times to study the chief doctrines of the Church  
as a basis for repentance and renewal of faith.  
The focus of the season is not Good Friday, but Easter. As an alternative to a six week Passion emphasis,  
consider using the midweek services to prepare for Easter through the study of the chief parts of the catechism  
and keep the extended treatment of the Passion for Holy Week services.  
The Sundays  
The Church’s Lenten worship is muted and quiet. For centuries, the Church has omitted her most jubilant songs  
of praise during this season of repentance. Worship planners may omit the use of “Alleluia” until Easter. The  
Song of Praise may also be omitted to reflect the somber nature of the season. Note, however, that the Sundays  
are designated as Sunday in Lent, not Sundays of Lent. The Sundays themselves are not considered part of the  
forty days, but are islands of refreshment in our Lenten walk.  
The Lessons  
Consider each Sunday’s focus and progression. Notice the hope and refreshment they offer to Christians walking  
toward Good Friday and Easter Sunday:  
Lent 1: Jesus defeated the devil for us  
Lent 2: Jesus is the gift of God for all nations by faith  
Lent 3: Jesus is the light of the world who brings sight for the blind and judgment to the blinded  
Lent 4: Jesus calls us from sinful selfishness to selfless service  
Lent 5: Jesus will raise us from death to life  
Lent 6: Hail the King who humbly comes to save us!  
Here is refreshment for the Lenten journey: Your Savior has defeated the devil for you. The promise comes by  
faith and is meant for all people. Though you were born in the blindness of sin, the light of the world shines  
upon you and lets you see. New life in the light of Christ leads you to selfless service until the day he makes good  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
on his greatest promise—the resurrection. What can we say in response to love so great? Blessed is the one who  
comes in the name of the Lord. Hail him!  
Throughout the season of Lent, the Second Lesson features words from St. Paul that give commentary and  
exposition on the themes of the First Lesson. There are no lectio continua readings during Lent; rather, the  
lessons are tightly thematic. As such there are no supplemental second lessons offered. The supplemental First  
Lessons either expand the Sunday’s theme or use Old Testament narratives to convey the point of the  
traditional first lesson.  
Minor Festivals  
March 19  
March 25  
St. Joseph  
The Annunciation of our Lord  
The minor festivals in Lent celebrate the coming of Christ in the flesh for his saving work. The angel announced  
the arrival of the Hope of the ages. Scripture records the Virgin’s humble faith. God commends his Son’s safety  
into the hands of his earthly caregiver. Through his mother Mary and through Joseph, God cared for his Son  
during the first years of his sojourn among us. Their care and faithfulness found fulfillment when Christ began  
his walk to the sacrifice of Calvary and the victory of the tomb.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Ash Wednesday  
Return to the Lord! Ash Wednesday calls us to a forty-day journey of repentance and renewal. The ashes upon  
our heads testify: Man, you are mortal; prepare to meet your God! Recognition of our sin leads us to cry for  
mercy and trust in God’s promised forgiveness. Note the sweet Gospel phrases that dominate the thought of  
every part of the Propers. Return to the Lord, for he is gracious. Having obtained his pardon, we seek a renewal  
of our faith and life that we might live as baptized children of God.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Luke 18:9-14  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Isaiah 59:12-20  
2 Corinthians 5:20b—6:2  
51a  
Numbers 21:4-9  
2 Corinthians 7:8-13a  
32  
Color  
Black or Purple  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty and merciful God, you never despise what you have made and always forgive those who turn to  
you. Create in us such new and contrite hearts that we may truly repent of our sins and obtain your full and  
gracious pardon; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,  
one God, now and forever.  
Note: This 1549 prayer of the English reformers displays remarkable beauty and balance. The Church may  
use this prayer after the Prayer of the Day throughout the Lenten Season until Palm Sunday. Christians may  
use it daily in personal Lenten devotions.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Return to the Lord, your God, for he is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love.  
(Joel 2:13)  
THE GOSPEL: LUKE 18:9-14  
The Lenten call to repentance and renewal begins by addressing the sin in man. Sin drives a man to two  
extremes: pride and despair. The tax collector had to wear his sin in society like a scarlet letter. The Pharisee  
hid his guilt beneath a veneer of righteousness. Which man has more to teach us? We have a such high  
opinion of our own righteousness! We may fool our friends; we may even fool our family. But the ashes on  
our head remind us that we will meet God, and he is not fooled by our shined-up exterior. He can see the  
depravity and decay within. The man who understands this beats his breast and cries, Kyrie eleison! That  
man returns to the Lord and finds justification in Christ, pardon from his forgiving God, and real  
righteousness.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 59:12-20  
Returning to the Lord means understanding the depth of our sinfulness and the multitude of our offenses. It  
means despairing of our own worth or ability and recognizing that we have all together become corrupt. Our  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
offenses are ever with us, so God himself worked the salvation we could not; he provided the righteousness  
we failed to give. The call to repentance reminds us that the Lord is coming again, clothed in righteousness  
and salvation, but also in vengeance and zeal. He comes to repay his enemies according to what they have  
done (v 18), but for the repentant, he repays them according to what he has done (v 16). Return to the Lord,  
and your Redeemer will come!  
SECOND LESSON: 2 CORINTHIANS 5:20B—6:2  
In order to reconcile us to himself, God acted. I heard you. I helped you. God made the Sinless sinful that  
sinners might be made righteous. At the beginning of our Lenten walk, Paul reminds us the solution for sin is  
found in the Savior. Return to God because now is the time of God’s favor. He worked the Great Exchange  
that we might be reconciled to God by God. Return to the Lord, the God of grace and mercy and love!  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: NUMBERS 21:4-9  
Only sin can turn a gift as gracious as manna into something detestable. Only sin could lead a people to  
speak against the God who had worked such mighty miracles for them. So God worked another miracle—  
one meant to cause the people to return to him. The venomous bites of the snakes brought God’s people to  
their knees in repentance, and God quickly offered pardon and safety with a type of Christ. Notice that the  
people asked that God remove the snakes, but the snakes stayed. The Lord chastises those he loves. Notice,  
too, that this is the last complaint of God’s people until they entered the Promised Land!  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 2 CORINTHIANS 7:8-13A  
God wants us to have godly sorrow over sin that leads to salvation. Godly sorrow brings repentance, not  
regret. Worldly sorrow leads only to regret that binds and imprisons us in our past sins. Godly sorrow leads  
to repentance that opens the prison doors and sets us free from the past, free to return to God, free to sin  
no more.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
396 In Adam We Have All Been One  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
124 Savior, When in Dust to You  
125 When I Survey the Wondrous Cross  
138 Oh, Perfect Life of Love  
376 Jesus, Your Blood and Righteousness  
377 Dear Christians, One and All, Rejoice  
383 Blessed Are They, Forever Blest  
398 Lord, We Confess Our Numerous Faults  
401 Your Works, Not Mine, O Christ  
450 God, My Lord, My Strength  
534 In the Midst of Earthly Life  
565 There Still Is Room  
713 In Silent Pain the Eternal Son  
738 In Hopelessness and Near Despair  
739 Baptismal Waters Cover Me  
254 The Day Full of Grace  
266 Kyrie, God Father in Heaven Above  
268 Lamb of God, Pure and Holy  
302 Lord, to You I Make Confession  
303 With Broken Heart and Contrite Sigh  
304 Jesus Sinners Does Receive  
305 From Depths of Woe I Cry to You  
306 Before You, God, the Judge of All  
317 O Lord, We Praise You  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
First Sunday in Lent  
The Son of God goes forth to war and defeats the devil for us. The Prayer of the Day sets the tone for the  
Sunday: the ancient foe warred on mankind in the garden, but God promised to send a champion to battle on  
our behalf. The Second Adam came to do what the first could not, and in the desert the battle was joined. But  
for us fights the valiant one whom God himself elected…he holds the field forever (Hymn of the Day).  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 4:1-11  
Genesis 2:7-9, 15-17; 3:1-7  
Romans 5:12-19  
130  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Genesis 3:1-15  
3
Color  
Purple  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Lord our strength, the battle of good and evil rages within and around us, and our ancient foe tempts us  
with his deceits and empty promises. Keep us steadfast in your Word, and when we fall, raise us up again  
and restore us through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,  
one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
It is written: “Worship the Lord your God, and serve him only.” (Matthew 4:10b)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 4:1-11  
The Second Adam goes to war to regain all that the first Adam had lost. Empowered by his baptism and led  
by the Spirit, Jesus defeats the devil for us. Let the preacher note that this pericope is not a “how-to” guide  
for Christians to fight temptation. The point, rather, is that Jesus fought as the champion of mankind by  
walking to the cross in obedience to his Father’s plan. Satan tempted Christ to use the greatest weapons at  
his disposal—miracle, mystery and authority—to shortcut this mission (Dostoyevsky). He tempted the Son  
to have a distrustful Sonship, a presumptive Sonship, a disloyal Sonship (F. Lindemann). Satan would have  
had his way with us, but not with our champion! Jesus won this and every battle with the devil, and now one  
little word can fell him.  
FIRST LESSON: GENESIS 2:7-9, 15-17; 3:1-7  
God had placed Adam into a perfect world and called on him to worship the Lord his God and serve him  
only. But Adam did not. He worshipped himself and ate the forbidden fruit, and so plunged the world into an  
age of darkness and death. Before that day, man’s destiny had been life eternal with God in glory, but death  
came rushing in the vacuum left behind when holiness and peace vanished. Everything changed that day  
that Adam fell. But God looked down at these children that he created, and like the parent of a wayward  
child, he loved them in spite of themselves. God loved them and us and wanted us to live again—to live the  
way he had intended—with life and light and peace. So God made a promise: What you could not do, I will  
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do in your place. Because man could not live perfectly and serve God faithfully, God promised to one day  
become a man to do it in our place. Thousands of years later God made good on his promise in the womb of  
the Virgin. He became man with one mission: to right what was wrong, to do what we had left undone. God  
became man to do what man could not.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 5:12-19  
Paul provides a New Testament commentary on the First Lesson and shows the universal effects of the First  
Adam’s failure and the Second Adam’s victory. Adam was a son of God in human flesh (Luke 3:38), but Adam  
failed the tests of his sonship. Through his flesh he passed his failure on to all of his children, condemning us  
to sin and death. So God sent another Son in human flesh to be the Son that Adam had not been. He obeyed  
where Adam did not. The obedience of the second Adam had as wide an effect as the disobedience of the  
first: he gives his victory to us and declares us righteous and brings life for all.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: GENESIS 3:1-15  
The supplemental reading omits the context of Creation before the Fall, but provides an expanded  
treatment of the results of sin. Most importantly, for this Sunday, it includes the protoevangelium where  
God promises to send the Seed of Woman as the champion of mankind in the battle against Satan. Inherent  
in the promise was the cost: though the victory was certain, so was the sacrifice!  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
200 A Mighty Fortress Is Our God  
201 A Mighty Fortress Is Our God  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
106 Come to Calvary’s Holy Mountain  
121 Jesus, Grant that Balm and Healing  
192 Triune God, Oh, Be Our Stay  
202 If God Had Not Been on Our Side  
204 O God, Our Lord, Your Holy Word  
287 The Law of God Is Good and Wise  
305 From Depths of Woe I Cry to You  
349 Jesus, Priceless Treasure  
403 I Know My Faith Is Founded  
447 Who Trusts in God, a Strong Abode  
455 Rise! To Arms! With Prayer Employ You  
541 Lord Jesus Christ, with Us Abide  
556 Rise, Shine, You People  
585 While Yet the Morn Is Breaking  
587 Now Rest Beneath Night’s Shadow  
593 Now the Light Has Gone Away  
726 Christ, the Lord of Hosts, Unshaken  
754 The Tree of Life  
371 Oh, Love, How Deep  
378 All Mankind Fell in Adam’s Fall  
396 In Adam We Have All Been One  
781 I Lie, O Lord, within Your Care  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Second Sunday in Lent  
The gift of God comes by faith to all nations. Not a holy life, not acts of obedience, but simple trust in the  
promise of God brings the gift of living water for thirsty souls. Abraham believed God’s promise and so became  
not only the father of a nation, but the forefather of the Promised Seed who would bless all peoples. He had  
faith in God who justifies the wicked, and so God credited it to him as righteousness. By this same faith, Christ  
gives righteousness to all who believe and enfolds sinful Samaritans and modern Gentiles like us into the family  
of God.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
John 4:5-26  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Genesis 12:1-8  
Romans 4:1-5, 13-17  
121  
Color  
Purple  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, you see that we have no power to defend ourselves. Guard and keep us both outwardly and  
inwardly from all adversities that may happen to the body and from all evil thoughts that may assault and  
hurt the soul; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now  
and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Jesus humbled himself and became obedient to death, even death on a cross. (Philippians 2:8b)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 4:5-26  
He defied popular convention by traveling through Samaria. He defied religious convention by asking a  
Samaritan woman for a drink. Why would Jesus even bother with this woman? She was a Samaritan and a  
habitual adulterer. Yet he had to be here (John 4:4), not because of convention or expectations but because  
of his mission to save all people. He had come to save the world, and that meant he had come for this  
woman, too. Not because she had lived a holy life—far from it! Only because of his grace. He used the  
mirror of the Law to incite within her a thirst for mercy that could only be sated by the living water of grace.  
A Samaritan…a sinner…and yet Jesus opens the flood gates of the water of life and reveals his true identity  
as the Promised Seed, the Anointed One, her Savior. He calls her to faith, and she believes and finds living  
water for her thirsty soul.  
FIRST LESSON: GENESIS 12:1-8  
God’s plan of salvation called for one special nation which would carry the Promise of the Seed meant for all  
people. From the beginning, this nation would be built on faith in the promises of God. God told Abram to  
leave all he knew and go to a place yet unknown and wait for blessings as yet undefined. God revealed that  
the Seed of woman promised in the garden would now descend from the family of an old man and his  
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barren wife living as strangers in a land not yet their own. No logic or emotion could have led Abram to  
leave his home—only trust in his Savior God. Abram believed and set God’s plan in motion to build a nation  
on the promises of God to fulfill the promises of God. All people would be blessed by the nation descended  
from Abram, because this man of faith would bear the bloodline of the Promised Seed, the Messiah who  
would come as Savior of all nations.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 4:1-5, 13-17  
Paul taught the Romans about faith by using Abraham as an example. Faith is simply receiving the grace of  
God by trusting in his promises. This God credits to us as righteousness. Abraham’s righteousness did not  
come by doing but by believing. What did Abraham do? Nothing! God did it all: He made the promises; he  
gave the inheritance; he gave the child, the blessing for all nations. Abraham merely received the promises  
of God by believing that the One who made the promises was faithful. And then what happened? God acted  
again and credited this faith to Abraham as righteousness. This is the righteousness that every person needs  
to stand in God’s presence. This is the righteousness that the sinful woman at the well, and even faithful  
Abraham lacked. This is the righteousness God gives. We are people like Abraham, who believe that God  
justifies the wicked. And so God forgives our wickedness and calls us righteous—no, even more—he gives us  
righteousness in the place of our wickedness. This is the living water that slakes the thirst of every believing  
soul.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
391 God Loved the World So that He Gave  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
28 Let the Earth Now Praise the Lord  
106 Come to Calvary’s Holy Mountain  
283 Speak, O Savior; I Am Listening  
286 The Law Commands and Makes Us Know  
287 The Law of God Is Good and Wise  
289 Preserve Your Word, O Savior  
309 Draw Near and Take the Body of the Lord  
337 Delay Not! Delay Not  
353 Praise the One Who Breaks the Darkness  
357 Jesus, Lover of My Soul  
380 Lord, ’Tis Not that I Did Choose You  
395 Seek Where You May to Find a Way  
404 Faith Is a Living Power from Heaven  
529 Built on the Rock  
740 Draw Near  
750 Christ, the Word of God Incarnate  
338 I Heard the Voice of Jesus Say  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Third Sunday in Lent  
The light of the world brings sight to the blind and judgment to the blinded. Faith means seeing Jesus as Savior:  
like the bronze serpent, we look on him and live (Verse of the Day). We were born in the blindness of sin, and  
without the light of Christ we could not find a way to safety. Christ comes to shine his light into our darkened  
eyes that we might see him and live. Yet for those who refuse to see their Savior in Christ, the blindness of  
unbelief remains. He gives gracious sight to the blind who trust in him; he gives blinding judgment on those who  
reject him; finally, he displays the work of God in the lives of those who now walk in the light of Christ.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
John 9:1-7, 13-17, 34-39  
Isaiah 42:14-21  
Ephesians 5:8-14  
143  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Color  
Purple  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, look with favor on your humble servants and stretch out the right hand of your power to  
defend us against all our enemies; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns with you  
and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, that everyone who  
believes in him may have eternal life. (John 3:14,15)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 9:1-7, 13-17, 34-39  
In God’s plan there are no coincidences, and there is no karma. The man was born blind not because of his  
parents’ sin; nor was the man lying in Jesus’ path by accident. Both happened that the work of God might be  
displayed in the life of this man who was doubly blind: he could not see Jesus physically or spiritually. Christ  
opened the door to the latter by solving the former. It was no coincidence that this happened on the  
Sabbath. Christ had come not only to give sight to the helplessly blind—he also came to bring judgment on  
the Pharisees who should have seen him as the Messiah, but who refused to believe even what they saw  
with their own eyes. Yet for us, born in the blindness of sin, but looking to Christ as Savior, Jesus shines as  
the light of the world. We believe, and we worship him.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 42:14-21  
In the Gospel we saw two kinds of blindness. One cannot see a way to salvation; the other sees the Way, but  
rejects him. Here, the Lord makes promises to both groups. To his helplessly blind children who cannot find  
a way out, he promises certain deliverance and rescue. God himself will lead them to safety and will turn  
their darkness into light. But to those who reject the true God and look to idols, God promises judgment!  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Like the Pharisees in the Gospel, God promises that though they see, they remain spiritually blind—though  
they hear, they remain spiritually deaf.  
SECOND LESSON: EPHESIANS 5:8-14  
Notice what Paul says. He does not say that once we were in the dark and now we are in the light. No, once  
we were darkness and now we are light. Our conversion meant a total transformation of what we are, and  
therefore, it will lead to a total transformation of what we do. No longer producing fruits of darkness, we  
live in the light and shine the light into the sin-darkened corners of our world. With lines from an early  
Christian hymn, Paul shares Christ’s call to us and his promise for us. Once you were darkness, but now you  
are light. Live as children of the light. The difference between darkness and light is dramatic. The difference  
between believers and unbelievers should be equally so. They are as different as the nursery and the  
morgue!  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
343 Christ Is the World’s Light  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
33 All Praise to You, Eternal God  
221 Blessed Jesus, at Your Word  
254 The Day Full Of Grace  
397 Just As I Am, without One Plea  
420 God Moves in a Mysterious Way  
460 How Can I Thank You, Lord  
321 Savior, Again to Thy Dear Name  
338 I Heard the Voice of Jesus Say  
362 Lord Jesus Christ, My Savior Blest  
367 Christ Be My Leader  
373 O Jesus, King Most Wonderful  
379 Amazing Grace—How Sweet the Sound  
520 Your Hand, O Lord, in Days of Old  
560 I Hear the Savior Calling  
569 O Christ, Our True and Only Light  
577 Rise, O Light of Gentile Nations  
771 I Want to Walk as a Child of the Light  
774 Church of God, Elect and Glorious  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Fourth Sunday in Lent  
Jesus calls us from sinful selfishness to selfless service. We can view the world from the perspective of  
selfishness or selflessness. Selfishness puts self before all and leads to favoritism, pride and envy. Repentance,  
however, means despairing of self, trusting in Christ’s substitutionary sacrifice and leading lives of selfless  
service modeled after our Savior who came not to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for us.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 20:17-28  
Hosea 5:15—6:3  
Romans 8:1-10  
42-43  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Genesis 37:1-11  
Color  
Purple  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, we confess that we deserve to be punished for our evil deeds. But we ask you graciously to  
cleanse us from all sin and to comfort us with your salvation; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who  
lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish  
but have eternal life. (John 3:16)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 20:17-28  
Jesus revealed the plan of the Father to his disciples: the Son of God would leave his heavenly throne and  
selflessly give his freedom to his enemies, his body to the torturer, his life to the executioner in order that  
he might be our Savior. Rather than marveling at the depth of his love and self-sacrifice, the disciples argued  
about places of greatness in glory. The sons of Zebedee wanted to sit at the right and left of Jesus, but were  
only promised that they would join in drinking his cup. The other disciples were indignant, but not  
righteously so. Jesus corrected them, too. Followers of Jesus drink his cup and find greatness in selflessly  
serving others. For our motivation and our model, Christ points back to God’s plan for the Son of Man who  
came not to be served, but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many.  
FIRST LESSON: HOSEA 5:15—6:3  
Let the preacher consider the context of this lesson carefully. True repentance and selfless service are about  
more than saying the right words. On their face, this confession of Israel is beautiful, but at its heart it is  
empty. This is unrepentant Israel’s kind of “repentance.” The words sound nice, but there is no confession of  
guilt, God doesn’t receive it, and fruits don’t follow. This is a selfish “repentance” that is, in fact, merely  
made out of self-interest. True repentance leads to confession, trust, and fruits of selfless service that were  
absent in Israel (see 6:4-6).  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 8:1-10  
One of Scripture’s greatest chapters begins with one of its sweetest verses: Therefore, there is now no  
condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. Christ’s life ransomed mankind because it met God’s  
demands and set us free from the Law of sin. Now we are free to live according to the Spirit. The sinful  
nature wants us to live in selfishness; the Spirit sets us free to live lives of selfless service to God and  
neighbor. Sinners that we are, the requirements of the Law could never be fully met by us, but now they are  
fully met in us through the indwelling of the Spirit and Christ.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: GENESIS 37:1-11  
The life of Joseph illustrates Jesus’ message that whoever wants to be first must be your slave. Selfishness  
led to Jacob’s favoritism and his sons’ jealousy. Selfishness led Jacob and his sons to such pride that they  
could not imagine God’s prophecy about Joseph coming true. Their selfishness forced Joseph into the role of  
slave and servant, yet God in his grace would save many people in spite of their sin. Sold into slavery, and  
jailed unjustly, Joseph would trust in God and selflessly serve his fellow man. Ultimately, God brought the  
prideful low and raised up humble Joseph. In doing so, He both fulfilled his prophecy and also saved the  
family of God and countless others.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
437 I Trust, O Christ, in You Alone  
486 Lord of Glory, You Have Bought Us  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
8 Come, O Precious Ransom, Come  
41 Let All Together Praise Our God  
102 Enslaved by Sin and Bound in Chains  
104 Go to Dark Gethsemane  
377 Dear Christians, One and All, Rejoice  
386 Now I Have Found the Firm Foundation  
401 Your Works, Not Mine, O Christ  
484 Brothers, Sisters, Let Us Gladly  
492 Son of God, Eternal Savior  
113 Upon the Cross Extended  
115 He Stood before the Court  
518 Forth in the Peace of Christ We Go  
525 The Son of God, Our Christ  
711 Jesus Has Come and Brings Pleasure Eternal  
738 In Hopelessness and Near Despair  
739 Baptismal Waters Cover Me  
741 Take and Eat  
126 Lord Jesus, You Are Going Forth  
181 Come, Oh, Come, Life-Giving Spirit  
194 Oh, that I Had a Thousand Voices  
207 The Day Is Surely Drawing Near  
302 Lord, to You I Make Confession  
350 All Praise Be Yours  
754 The Tree of Life  
376 Jesus, Your Blood and Righteousness  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Fifth Sunday in Lent  
Jesus will raise us from death to life. The crown jewel of the coming kingdom is the resurrection of the dead.  
One day, Jesus will defeat the last enemy (1 Corinthians 15:27) and life will reign again in our new Eden with  
God. On our Lenten walk to Calvary, the Church sees the Savior come face to face with death and defeat it  
completely. During our Lenten walk, the Prayer of the Day asks God to help us remember that Jesus, who is  
resurrection and life, has made us heirs of eternal life.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
John 11:17-27, 38-45  
Ezekiel 37:1-14  
Romans 8:11-19  
116  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
2 Kings 4:18-37  
Color  
Purple  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Eternal God and Father, help us to remember Jesus, who obeyed your will and bore the cross for our  
salvation that through his anguish, pain, and death we may receive forgiveness of sins and inherit eternal  
life; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now  
and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
The Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many. (Mark  
10:45)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 11:17-27, 38-45  
Jesus performed the greatest miracle of his ministry to prove to us the certainty of his greatest promise.  
Death has hounded mankind since the garden and caused misery that God never intended for his children.  
When Christ saw the effects of death on his loved ones, he wept with them, but also promised them that  
one day even this last enemy would be defeated. Martha, too often remembered for her busyness, should  
be remembered for her confession of faith—so complete, so noble—that encompassed everything Jesus had  
preached. It even encompassed teachings the disciples struggled to comprehend! She believed in Jesus’  
promise of a future resurrection, and so Jesus gave proof to her and to us that his promise is true. By that  
same faith, he will give to us the crown jewel of the kingdom. The one who is resurrection and life will also  
give resurrection and life to all who believe. Jesus’ victory in this battle with death was a forgone conclusion:  
he thanked God for it in advance. But Lazarus’ response to the command of Christ stirs the heart of every  
Christian who has stared at the ugly face of death: the dead man came out.  
FIRST LESSON: EZEKIEL 37:1-14  
Israel in exile was as good as dead. Cut off and helpless, the Israelites were not like an army but like a valley  
full of bones. Yet God promises to bring this nation back to life. In raising Israel from the death of exile, God  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
foreshadowed the great work of Christ: the resurrection of God’s people from the dead. Here he speaks to a  
figuratively dead nation; one day he will speak it literally: I am going to open your graves and bring you up  
from them. The crown jewel of the kingdom will be given to all who believe—to all who have the Spirit.  
Reminiscent of the Spirit’s first life-giving act on Adam will be the Life-giver’s ultimate act on us. God says: I  
will put my Spirit in you, and you will live.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 8:11-19  
The indwelling of the Spirit proves our possession of the crown jewel of the kingdom, the resurrection from  
the dead. If the Spirit is in us, God will most certainly grant true and real life to our mortal bodies. The truth  
of the protasis in verse 11 is evidenced by our lives. When the Spirit works fruits in our life, he proves to us  
that he dwells within us. If the protasis is true, then the apodasis is equally true: God will give us life. The  
knowledge of our future glory lets us approach God without fear and bear suffering as children of God and  
coheirs with Christ.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: 2 KINGS 4:18-37  
The story is heartbreaking: a barren woman gives birth to a promised child. All her hopes and love wrapped  
themselves up in this little boy, until the day his head hurt. He died in his mother’s lap while she rocked him.  
Can you imagine the tears? Death is the bitter lot we inherited from Adam. But God wants us to know that  
even in the face of a death as heartrending as this, he promises that whoever believes in him will live, even  
though he dies. So he lets Elisha pay an advance on the inheritance waiting for the coheirs of Christ, that we  
might know and believe that Jesus one day will raise us from death to life.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
110 My Song Is Love Unknown  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
99 Oh, Come, My Soul  
392 Not unto Us  
104 Go to Dark Gethsemane  
116 In the Hour of Trial  
398 Lord, We Confess Our Numerous Faults  
400 O God, O Lord of Heaven and Earth  
425 Oh, Sing, My Soul, Your Maker’s Praise  
434 Lord, You I Love with All My Heart  
452 Let Us Ever Walk with Jesus  
454 I Gave My Life for Thee  
460 How Can I Thank You, Lord  
465 Jesus, I My Cross Have Taken  
607 How Blest Are They  
120 What Wondrous Love Is This  
121 Jesus, Grant that Balm and Healing  
158 I Am Content! My Jesus Lives Again  
167 Jesus Christ, My Sure Defense  
170 Draw Us to Thee  
181 Come, Oh, Come, Life-Giving Spirit  
189 Jehovah, Let Me Now Adore You  
211 I Know of a Sleep in Jesus’ Name  
214 Jerusalem the Golden  
608 I Fall Asleep in Jesus’ Wounds  
728 Jerusalem the Golden  
226 To Your Temple I Draw Near  
236 All Praise to God Who Reigns Above  
388 Redeemed, Restored, Forgiven  
737 God’s Own Child, I Gladly Say It  
750 Christ, the Word of God Incarnate  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Sixth Sunday in LentPalm Sunday  
Hail the King who humbly comes to save us! For 1700 years the Church has celebrated with Hosannas and palm  
branches this festival that opens Holy Week. The time for Christ’s glory had come (Verse of the Day). He would  
not, however, gain glory in the manner of other kings. Rather, he would humble himself in great acts of love for  
us, and then the Father would exalt him to the highest place, because he had fulfilled God’s mission to save  
mankind.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 21:1-11  
Zechariah 9:9, 10  
Philippians 2:5-11  
24  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Color  
Purple  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
We praise you, O God, for the great acts of love by which you redeemed us through your Son, Jesus Christ.  
As he was acclaimed by those who scattered their garments and branches of palm in his path, so may we  
always hail him as our King and follow him with perfect confidence; who lives and reigns with you and the  
Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified. (John 12:23)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 21:1-11  
The great King comes to his city and to his temple! He could have come with all the power and glory of the  
Son of God. He could have ridden a thunderstorm as his chariot with legions of angels striding beside him  
and creation itself singing forth the praise of its Maker. But look how he comes: Not on the storm, but on a  
donkey; not accompanied by heavenly warriors, but by fishermen with a spotty record of faith; not to the  
sound of creation singing, but to the shouts of fickle pilgrims who cheered him on Sunday but would desert  
him by Friday. Why did he come so humbly? Because he came not to rule us, but to save us. He came, not to  
command us, but to invite us. He came not to demand anything from us, but to give everything for us. He  
comes in the name of the Lord to save us. Hail him!  
FIRST LESSON: ZECHARIAH 9:9, 10  
Zechariah tells Jerusalem to rejoice when the messianic King comes to her, because he will have with him  
the righteousness she needs and the salvation she craves. This King would surpass the glory and power of all  
Israel’s kings before him. King David’s rule extended to the River Euphrates at its farthest—but this King’s  
rule would extend from the Euphrates to the very ends of the earth, from sea to sea. His worldwide kingdom  
would mean the end of war and the advent of peace. All this he would do not with an army, but with his  
person—not with violence, but with gentleness. Rejoice, daughter of Zion! Your King comes to you. Hail him!  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
SECOND LESSON: PHILIPPIANS 2:5-11  
Jesus is our King, but he came humbly to save us. Though true God, he became man. Though all powerful, he  
became a servant. Though immortal and eternal, he died. He not only laid aside his glory, but he took our  
shame upon him. He not only humbled himself, but he died as one who was cursed. Yet in this great  
humility, he won the peace of forgiveness for us. The King came humbly because he wasn’t on the way to a  
throne in Jerusalem, but to a hill called Golgotha where he would fulfill God’s mission and save his people.  
Therefore, God would give him glory greater than his humiliation—every creature will bow the knee and hail  
him: Jesus Christ is Lord!  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
132 Ride On, Ride On in Majesty  
133 Ride On, Ride On in Majesty  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
1 The Advent of Our King  
251 When Morning Gilds the Skies  
344 At the Name of Jesus  
350 All Praise Be Yours  
363 The King of Glory Comes  
370 All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name  
371 Oh, Love, How Deep  
540 Rejoice, O Pilgrim Throng  
550 Behold a Host, Arrayed in White  
701 Zion, at Your Shining Gates  
702 Prepare the Royal Highway  
704 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending  
706 A Stable Lamp is Lighted  
716 No Tramp of Soldiers’ Marching Feet  
747 There is a Redeemer  
3 Lift Up Your Heads, You Mighty Gates  
4 Lift Up Your Heads, You Mighty Gates  
8 Come, O Precious Ransom, Come  
18 O Lord, How Shall I Meet You  
19 O Lord, How Shall I Meet You  
21 Hosanna to the Coming Lord  
29 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending  
30 Rise, Arise  
110 My Song Is Love Unknown  
130 Hosanna, Loud Hosanna  
131 All Glory, Laud, and Honor  
134 O Bride of Christ, Rejoice  
230 Lord Jesus Christ, Be Present Now  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Maundy Thursday  
Christ shows us the full extent of God’s love for us. The Church calls this day Maundy because of Jesus’ new  
command in the Gospel that his followers love one another (it is the dies mandati). The Year B lessons focus on  
the fulfillment of the Passover, and the Year C lessons on the fulfillment of the New Covenant. The Year A  
lessons, however, focus on Christ’s command for humility and love. Christ shows the full extent of his love in  
both service and sacrifice. He loves us more than life and feeds us his flesh and blood to prove it. Reconciled to  
God through the flesh and blood of Christ, we follow his command to love each other.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
John 13:1-15, 34  
Exodus 12:1-14  
1 Corinthians 11:23-28  
116  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
115  
Color  
Purple  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Lord Jesus Christ, in the sacrament of Holy Communion you give us your true body and blood as a  
remembrance of your suffering and death on a cross. Grant us so firmly to believe your words and promise  
that we may always partake of this sacrament to our eternal good; for you live and reign with the Father and  
the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
As often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes. (1  
Corinthians 11:26)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 13:1-15, 34  
The washing should have been done before the meal, but the disciples had been arguing about greatness, so  
no one was willing to condescend to fill this servant’s role—except for Jesus. Jesus had come to love them to  
the end (εἰς τέλος). Thirty-one times during the course of the night, Jesus mentioned “love.” Nothing spoke  
more clearly, though, than his acts of service and sacrifice. Peter, for his part, didn’t want a Messiah who  
washed people’s feet. However, he hadn’t even begun to see the extent of Jesus’ love! Jesus had not come  
to merely wash dirt from feet, but sin from hearts! He had come to cleanse by carrying not only a servant’s  
bowl, but the curse of the cross! There, on Golgotha—there, on the altar of the Sacrament—we see the  
fullness of his service. There we see the fullness of his sacrifice. There we see the full extent of his love for  
us. Then we hear his new, his distinctly different command (ἐντολὴν καινὴν): Just as Christ loved us with  
service and sacrifice, so he commands us to love one another.  
FIRST LESSON: EXODUS 12:1-14  
During twilight on the 14th day of Nisan, 1500 years before Christ, lambs were slaughtered, doorposts were  
painted, and God’s people waited to see the full extent of God’s love. God had promised a plague of death  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
on the firstborn sons of unbelievers, but deliverance for all who were covered by the blood of the Passover  
lamb. The first Passover, however, was just the beginning. God’s people saw the full extent of his love 1500  
years later, in the twilight hours of the 14th day of Nisan, when God’s Son showed himself as the Lamb of  
God sacrificed for us. The firstborn sons of Israel were saved because God’s only begotten Son was  
sacrificed.  
SECOND LESSON: 1 CORINTHIANS 11:23-28  
Jesus instituted the Lord’s Supper on the night he was betrayed—not afterward. He gave his disciples a  
sacrament that proclaimed his death—before it even happened. See the extent of the love of Christ: He  
gave them his body and blood sacrificed for sin, before it had been done! He had come to be the atoning  
sacrifice for the sins of the world, and nothing would stop his mission. Indeed, he was the Lamb slain from  
the creation of the world (Revelation 13:8).  
In order to save mankind, God needed to provide a Savior who could live under the law for us and die in our  
place. That meant God had to become one of us—he had to become human. So God took on flesh and blood  
that he might be our Savior. From the Garden of Eden onward, the solution for sin was to be the flesh and  
blood of God. Now, in this sacrament, he shows us the full extent of his love for us. He gives us the flesh and  
blood of God, the solution for sin. He gives it to us to eat and drink, to be part and parcel of our being, to  
feed and nourish us until he takes us out of this house of bondage to the Promised Land.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
313 Jesus Christ, Our Blessed Savior  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
5 As Angels Joyed with One Accord  
101 Behold the Lamb of God  
316 O Jesus, Blessed Lord, to Thee  
317 O Lord, We Praise You  
135 The Death of Jesus Christ, Our Lord  
136 ’Twas on that Dark, that Doleful Night  
210 Who Knows When Death  
231 Now the Silence  
268 Lamb of God, Pure and Holy  
326 May the Grace of Christ Our Savior  
361 Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence  
406 This Is the Threefold Truth  
717 When You Woke that Thursday Morning  
740 Draw Near  
309 Draw Near and Take the Body of the Lord  
310 I Come, O Savior, to Your Table  
311 Soul, Adorn Yourself with Gladness  
312 Lord Jesus Christ, You Have Prepared  
315 Here, O My Lord, I See You Face to Face  
741 Take and Eat  
742 What Is This Bread  
743 O Gracious Lord, I Firmly Am Believing  
744 You Satisfy the Hungry Heart  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Good Friday  
Darkness descended on the world that day as God draped Creation in the darkness of mourning. For the Light of  
the world was flickering out; the great Prince of the heavenly kingdom was dying. Though guiltless, he was  
tortured and cursed; though innocent, he died among criminals. Who could ever call this day “good?” Only those  
who know the truth of the cross: Sing my tongue the glorious battle; sing the ending of the fray. Now above the  
cross, the trophy, sound the loud triumphant lay. Tell how Christ, the world’s Redeemer, as a victim won the day.  
– Venantius Fortunatus (609 AD), CW 122.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
John 19:17-30  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Isaiah 52:13—53:12  
Hebrews 4:14-16; 5:7-9  
22  
Color  
Black  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
God Most Holy, look with mercy on this your family for whom our Lord Jesus Christ was willing to be  
betrayed, be given over into the hands of the wicked, and suffer death upon the cross. Keep us always  
faithful to him, our only Savior, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Surely he took up our infirmities and carried our sorrows, yet we considered him stricken by God, smitten by  
him, and afflicted. (Isaiah 53:4)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 19:17-30  
Scripture records the greatest event in history with a shocking paucity of words: “Here they crucified him.”  
Here was the culmination of God’s plan since the Garden: the innocent for the guilty, the sinless for the  
sinful. The participants in this divine act are carried along fulfilling prophecy after prophecy. Pilate with his  
sign, soldiers with their lots, hyssop and vinegar. They are all just one drumbeat after another, sounding the  
cadence of Christ’s advance in the battle for mankind. He fulfilled every promise that Scripture made. He  
fulfilled every act of righteousness that we needed. He suffered every bit of judgment we deserved. And  
when it was all fulfilled, when there was nothing left for him to do, he cried, “It is finished!” It was God’s  
plan; it was Christ’s mission; it was our salvation, and now it was accomplished. As he died, he won. Every  
thorn in his crown was becoming a shining jewel in his diadem of glory. The nails in his hands were being  
forged into the scepter of a king, and his wounds were clothing him with the purple of empire. (Kretzmann)  
He won! And all things are now made new. Humanity is redeemed, and from that moment on, the eternal  
fate of all men of all ages would be determined by the cross.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 52:13—53:12  
The Messiah would come as an ordinary man—but would suffer extraordinary punishment. This Man of  
Sorrows had done nothing wrong. Yet when we look at what happened on Good Friday, we considered him  
stricken by God and afflicted. It offends our sense of justice. It makes no sense that the innocent should  
suffer like this. It makes no sense that the Son of God would cry that his Father had forsaken him. What  
punishment ever brings peace? What wounds ever bring healing? Yet, it was God’s will to crush him,  
because God made him to be a guilt offering (
ם
 
 
א
)—the offering God prescribed when sin needed to be  
atoned, and restitution was possible. On Good Friday we see the fulfillment of every guilt offering.  
Restitution was possible, but it would be very costly. Only one thing could restore the holiness Man had lost  
and pay the ransom price necessary: Christ’s holy precious blood and his innocent suffering and death. It is  
true that he deserved none of this. Yet—in a divine and holy paradox—he did. He deserved it all. Because  
Christ picked up our transgressions and carried our iniquities. God laid on him the sin of the world. And so,  
when the Messiah hung on the cross, he suffered there as the world’s biggest sinner—as the world’s only  
sinner. God made the Sinless One to be sin for us, and the punishment that brought us peace was upon him;  
by his wounds we are healed.  
SECOND LESSON: HEBREWS 4:14-16; 5:7-9  
Here is the high priest that we need: though tempted, he was sinless; though guiltless, he died as a guilt  
offering. Jesus, our high priest, offered himself as the sacrificial victim (Hebrews 7:27) to win our  
forgiveness. Gone is the throne of judgment. Christ founded a kingdom defined by grace where even sinners  
like us can approach God with confidence in his mercy. Our Savior showed himself perfect and so became  
the source of salvation for us. This Friday most certainly is Good.  
Adoramus Te, Christe,  
et benedicimus Tibi,  
We adore you, O Christ,  
And we bless you,  
Quia per sanctam crucem  
Tuam redemisti mundum.  
For by your holy cross  
You have redeemed the world.  
Francis of Assisi (1226 AD)  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
100 A Lamb Goes Uncomplaining Forth  
140 God Was There on Calvary  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
107 Deep Were His Wounds  
113 Upon the Cross Extended  
114 Christ, the Life of All the Living  
117 O Dearest Jesus  
351 Hail, O Once-Despised Jesus  
359 Jesus, My Great High Priest  
372 I Lay My Sins on Jesus  
377 Dear Christians, One and All, Rejoice  
387 Drawn to the Cross  
119 Were You There  
122 Sing, My Tongue, the Glorious Battle  
126 Lord Jesus, You Are Going Forth  
127 Stricken, Smitten, and Afflicted  
129 Alas! and Did My Savior Bleed  
137 Oh, Darkest Woe  
401 Your Works, Not Mine, O Christ  
413 When in the Hour of Utmost Need  
608 I Fall Asleep in Jesus' Wounds  
713 In Silent Pain the Eternal Son  
714 The Lamb  
138 Oh, Perfect Life of Love  
715 What Grace Is This!  
139 Jesus, in Your Dying Woes  
140 God Was There on Calvary  
268 Lamb of God, Pure and Holy  
302 Lord, to You I Make Confession  
304 Jesus Sinners Does Receive  
319 On My Heart Imprint Your Image  
320 On My Heart Imprint Your Image  
716 No Tramp of Soldiers’ Marching Feet  
718 Rest, O Christ, from All Your Labor  
746 You, Lord, Are Both Lamb and Shepherd  
747 There Is a Redeemer  
748 Lamb of God  
752 In Christ Alone  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Holy Saturday  
And sleeps my Lord in silence yet, within the darkness laid away;  
Where none remember nor forget, where breaks no more the sunlit day?  
And sleeps my Lord in silence yet, where cold His lifeless body lay?  
And does the sting of death remain to work unchanged its bitter will?  
Were cross and passion all in vain, no battle won on Calv’ry’s hill?  
And does the sting of death remain, and gapes the grave in triumph still?  
Have faith in Christ, the risen Son, who reigns eternal, glorified!  
Who death destroyed, who triumph won, who flung the gates of heaven wide!  
Have faith in Christ, the risen Son, the living Lord of Eastertide!  
Timothy Dudley-Smith, 1984.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Eastertide  
The Season  
After forty days of repentance and prayer, the Church bursts forth in jubilant praise at the Resurrection of our  
Lord. The alleluias and glorias which were muted for Lent ring out again as the Bride of Christ welcomes her  
Bridegroom back from the dead. Easter is as the pinnacle of the Church Year, the oldest festival and season  
celebrated by the worshipping Church. For a full week-of-weeks (49 days) the Church celebrates the resurrection  
of Christ on the Sundays of Easter which culminate on the 50th day, Pentecost.  
The Sundays  
The readings for the Sundays of Easter offer opportunities for the preacher to consider sermon series. In the  
First Lesson we see the advance of the Gospel as recorded in Acts. The disciples go to all nations as witnesses of  
the resurrection and the Spirit builds the Church. The Second Lesson features a series of five readings through  
the book of 1 Peter.  
The themes for the Sundays are keyed to the Gospel message of the season: The Redeemer Lives!  
Easter Dawn: He lives to dry my tears and take away my fears  
Easter Festival: He lives to take me from death to life  
Easter 2: He lives to give me proof and peace  
Easter 3: He lives to restore my Hope  
Easter 4: He lives to be my Good Shepherd  
Easter 5: He lives to be the only Way to heaven  
Easter 6: He lives to call me to live for him  
Ascension: He lives to rules all things for the Church  
Easter 7: He lives to give me eager expectation of glory  
Minor Festivals  
April 25  
May 1  
May 31  
St. Mark, Evangelist  
St. Philip and St. James, Apostles  
The Visitation  
Congregations using a paschal candle place it next to the altar for the seven weeks of Easter. The candle burns  
throughout the season until it is recessed at Ascension. Thereafter, the candle is placed near the font and lit for  
every baptism, and placed at the head of the casket and lit for every funeral.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
The Resurrection of Our Lord:  
Easter Dawn  
Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! The Church gathers at dawn and remembers the early hours of the first Easter  
Sunday. After three days in the tomb, Christ returned to dry our tears and remove our fears. Jesus wants no soul  
left in mourning over death. He laid down his life, and he took it up again. He removed the sting of death  
(Second Lesson) by becoming salvation for us (First Lesson), so that we can call God our Father (Gospel).  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
John 20:1-18  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Isaiah 12:1-6  
1 Corinthians 15:51-57  
30  
Color  
White or Gold  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O God, you made the dawn of this most holy day shine with the glory of our Lord’s resurrection. Grant that  
we who have been raised from the death of sin by your life-giving Spirit may worship you in sincerity and  
truth; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Alleluia. Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia. For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be  
made alive. Alleluia. (1 Corinthians 15:22)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 20:1-18  
After Good Friday, Jesus’ followers were quick to believe all he had said about his crucifixion, but slow to  
believe any of his promises of the resurrection. In the early morning hours, the women trudged toward the  
tomb, expecting only to find a dead man. The sight of the empty tomb made Mary Magdalene so  
despondent that she left before hearing the angels’ message. Peter and John raced to the tomb, but left  
with only the stirrings of faith. Mary stayed behind at the tomb, alone with her tears and fears. What love  
we see in our Savior’s appearance to Mary! Though risen and glorious, he does not forget a single soul, but  
comes to Mary to dry her tears and take away her fears. In that one word, “Mary,” every Christian hears his  
own name on the lips of the Savior, and in Mary’s cry, “Rabboni!” we feel our own joy at the Savior who  
loves us like this! We do not need to cling to Jesus’ feet to keep him from leaving. No, it was once for all that  
he died. Now he is the Living One who holds the keys of Death and Hades.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 12:1-6  
God was right to be angry with us. We deserved to be abandoned. We rightly cried and feared what our sins  
had done. Such righteous anger called for payment—for atonement. But here is the great reversal of Easter:  
God’s anger is turned away, and the one who should be our judge, has become our comforter. God himself  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
made atonement; God became our salvation. Jesus rose from the dead to prove that payment had been  
made in full. The time for crying is over—both seasonally and spiritually. Jesus returned to dry our tears and  
take away our fears. Now we can trust and be unafraid because the Holy One of Israel is great, and he is  
among us as our Savior. Our joy bursts forth, unrestrained and uninterrupted, because Christ is a well that  
provides salvation and joy without end. This is the day of the Lord, and the Church fulfills the word of the  
prophet: we give thanks; we call on his name; and we proclaim to the nations what he has done.  
SECOND LESSON: 1 CORINTHIANS 15:51-57  
In the realm of mortal existence, dead is dead. It is death’s finality—its irreversibility—that makes man fear  
it. At the grave, all the hopes and dreams of mortal man are dashed, and survivors are left with nothing but  
mourning and tears. But look at this…behold! Paul reveals a mystery: the dead will be raised! The body  
corrupted by the ground will be raised incorruptible, and the man brought low by his mortality will be raised  
immortal. Dead is not dead forever! Death, in fact, is not final at all! The mystery revealed is the truth that  
man has been longing to hear since the Garden: the dead will live. Jesus Christ is the resurrection-firstfruits  
from the harvest field of humanity, and that means many more will follow. Suddenly, the tomb is not a place  
of fear, but a place of hope. Jesus comes even to the graveside to dry our tears and remove our fears. The  
debt of sin is paid; the law is fulfilled. So where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
144 Christ Is Arisen  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
265 This Is the Feast of Victory  
341 Crown Him with Many Crowns  
446 I Am Trusting You, Lord Jesus  
552 By All Your Saints Still Striving  
719 Christ Has Arisen, Alleluia  
720 Christ Jesus Lay in Death’s Strong Bands  
722 Scatter the Darkness, Break the Gloom  
724 Voices Raised to You We Offer  
733 Rejoice in God  
145 Jesus Lives! The Victory's Won  
146 His Battle Ended There  
147 Like the Golden Sun Ascending  
148 The Strife Is O'er, the Battle Done  
149 Christ the Lord Is Risen Today  
152 I Know that My Redeemer Lives  
153 Alleluia! Jesus Lives  
159 Morning Breaks upon the Tomb  
160 This Joyful Eastertide  
749 The Love of Christ, Who Died for Me  
752 In Christ Alone  
788 Thanks Be to God!  
161 Christ Jesus Lay in Death’s Strong Bands  
168 With High Delight Let Us Unite  
211 I Know of a Sleep in Jesus’ Name  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
The Resurrection of Our Lord:  
Easter Day  
Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Sinners should fear God. Sinners ought to die for their wickedness. The grave  
should be the place of ultimate defeat for mankind. Yet on this day, the Second Adam did all that the first had  
left undone. Bearing our guilt and suffering our verdict, the Son of Man died, but three days later he rose in  
glory. As a result, fear is gone, mankind is redeemed, and Christ calls us his own brothers. Jesus came from  
death to life, and through baptism he brings us with him.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 28:1-10  
Jonah 2:2-9  
Colossians 3:1-4  
118  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Color  
White or Gold  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, by the glorious resurrection of your Son Jesus Christ you conquered death and opened the  
gate to eternal life. Grant that we, who have been raised with him through baptism, may walk in the  
newness of life and ever rejoice in the hope of sharing his glory; through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom,  
with you and the Holy Spirit, be dominion and praise now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Alleluia. Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia. This is the day the Lord has made; let us rejoice  
and be glad in it. Alleluia. (Psalm 118:24)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 28:1-10  
The women walked to the tomb, arms full of spices and hearts full of disappointment. They had come to a  
place of disappointment, broken promises, and fear. All they had hoped to do was anoint the body of a dead  
man. A dead Jesus does no good for anyone—not for the women, not for the disciples, not for us. But when  
the angel spoke, the tomb became a place of victory, a place of promises fulfilled, a place of joy. Do not be  
afraid! The angel spoke two amazing words, “was” and “is.” Yes, he was crucified, but no, he is not here in  
the grave. He is very much alive, just as he said. That fact fundamentally changes our relationship with God  
forever. You can see in it the words of Jesus to the women, “Go and tell my brothers.” Jesus had good  
reason to remind those men of their desertion. Jesus had good reason to remind them that they were  
nothing but servants. Instead, he took this moment to call them “my brothers” for the very first time. The  
living Son of God had made full payment for sin so that he could call us brothers. Mankind is redeemed;  
death is defeated; fear is conquered. And Christ looks upon us forgiven sinners and calls us his brothers. This  
is the day the Lord has made!  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: JONAH 2:2-9  
Jesus compared himself to only one Old Testament prophet: the reluctant, petulant, and chastised prophet  
Jonah. Why would he compare himself to Jonah? Because in his suffering and death, he took the place of  
sinful man who deserves nothing but judgment and death. Speaking to a wicked and rebellious generation,  
Jesus promised the sign of the prophet Jonah: as he was in the belly of a fish for three days and three nights,  
so the Son of Man would be in the belly of the earth. Jonah’s prayer from the belly of the fish finishes with  
the key point of his book and of Scripture: 
ליהוה
 
ישׁוּעתה
 “Salvation belongs to the LORD!” God would make  
salvation ours, but he would do it by making Jesus just like Jonah. God punished Jesus for our rebelliousness  
and sent Christ to our grave. In Jonah, we see a picture of both Jesus and us. Like Jonah, Jesus was judged  
and sent to his death by God the Father. Like Jonah, after three days, he emerged from death to life. Like  
Jonah, you and I deserve nothing but death. Yet it’s God’s will to kill us not physically, but baptismally  
(Romans 6), and that a new man should arise as from the dead to live before God. Raised from death to life,  
we join with a forgiven Jonah in proclaiming: 
ליהוה
 
ישׁוּעתה
.  
SECOND LESSON: COLOSSIANS 3:1-4  
Through baptism, God kills our sinful nature and raises a new man to life within us. The power of baptism  
comes from the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. So Christ’s Easter is really our Easter, too. Our  
spiritual resurrection creates a new reality for us who are bound for glory. Though eternal life is ours  
through baptism, its full glory remains hidden until the day of Christ. Until then, we live as resurrected heirs  
waiting for our inheritance. We set our hearts and minds on the glory that is waiting for us above.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
156 Awake, My Heart, with Gladness  
161 Christ Jesus Lay in Death’s Strong Bands  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
341 Crown Him with Many Crowns  
452 Let Us Ever Walk with Jesus  
471 Renew Me, O Eternal Light  
143 He's Risen, He's Risen  
147 Like the Golden Sun Ascending  
149 Christ the Lord Is Risen Today  
150 Christ the Lord Is Risen Today; Alleluia  
152 I Know that My Redeemer Lives  
155 Christ the Lord Is Risen Again  
156 Awake, My Heart, with Gladness  
157 Jesus Christ Is Risen Today  
159 Morning Breaks upon the Tomb  
161 Christ Jesus Lay In Death’s Strong Bands  
162 He Is Arisen! Glorious Word  
166 The Day of Resurrection  
528 Christ Is Our Cornerstone  
531 Christ Is Made the Sure Foundation  
552 By All Your Saints Still Striving  
719 Christ Has Arisen, Alleluia  
720 Christ Jesus Lay in Death’s Strong Bands  
722 Scatter the Darkness, Break the Gloom  
743 O Gracious Lord, I Firmly Am Believing  
746 You, Lord, Are Both Lamb and Shepherd  
749 The Love of Christ, Who Died for Me  
752 In Christ Alone  
225 This Is the Day the Lord Has Made  
265 This Is the Feast of Victory  
788 Thanks Be to God!  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Second Sunday of Easter  
In the face of doubt, Christ gives us proof and peace. To the doubting disciples, he gave certain proof that led to  
certain peace. Through his Word and sacraments, Jesus gives the same proof to all people of all time. “Peace be  
with you,” said our Lord. Then he sent his people forth with this message of peace based on the proof of his  
resurrection.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
John 20:19-31  
Acts 2:14a, 22-32  
1 Peter 1:3-9  
16  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Acts 10:34a, 36, 39-43  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O risen Lord, you came to your disciples and took away their fears with your word of peace. Come to us also  
by your Word and sacrament, and banish our fears with the comforting assurance of your abiding presence;  
for you live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Alleluia. Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia. Blessed are those who have not seen and yet  
have believed. Alleluia. (John 20:29b)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 20:19-31  
Peace was one thing the disciples did not have. They had questions, concerns, and doubts. But they had no  
peace that Easter evening as they huddled behind locked doors. Jesus was dead—killed on a Roman cross—  
and now fear held them in its icy grip. They lacked more than peace of mind; the disciples also lacked any  
peace of spirit. Shame hung heavy on their shoulders. Grief and guilt weighed down their hearts. They had  
great doubts about their Lord, their lives, their salvation. But then Jesus came! In the face of all their doubts  
he offered proof that he was alive and sin was dead. Jesus showed them his nail-marked hands and riven  
side. These holy wounds are the proof positive that God is at peace with us. Thomas could be the poster  
child for our existential culture. No matter how many times the others told him about the resurrection, he  
set himself against them all. Thomas required more evidence. He must see him with his own eyes; he must  
touch the wounds—more than that, he must thrust his hand into Jesus’ side (cf. the coarseness of the  
Greek). Unless he got the evidence that he demanded, he would in no way ever believe it. What grace we  
see in Jesus! He comes again and repeats Thomas’ objections nearly word for word. Again, he gives the  
ultimate proof that he was alive, and sin was dead. Jesus gave the proof that led to peace for Thomas, peace  
that could only be found in his Lord and his God.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: ACTS 2:14A, 22-32  
Jesus told Thomas, “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.” However, Jesus had good  
reason to let the disciples see him with their own eyes: they were to be his witnesses. When Peter stood  
before the crowds on Pentecost, we see the purpose for all the resurrection appearances of Jesus. He  
showed himself to them; he ate and drank with them; he let them touch his flesh and bones; he showed  
them his holy wounds. Jesus let them see and touch because they weren’t just looking for themselves. No,  
these eleven would be the witnesses of the bodily resurrection of Christ for all ages. Through the eyes of  
these eleven men, God gives his Church the gift of proof and the gift of peace.  
SECOND LESSON: 1 PETER 1:3-9  
What brings more doubt into our lives than grief or sorrow? “Why did this happen to me?” “How could God  
let my loved one die?” “When will this sickness stop?” Grief and sorrow raise doubts about God’s love and  
God’s plan for our lives. Peter points us to the resurrection as proof of the living hope we have regardless of  
our outward circumstances. We may doubt when we face trials, but the trials themselves prove the  
genuineness of our faith. Faith clings to a Savior we have not seen, but love. And this unseen Savior gives us  
the inexpressible joy of proof and peace even in the face of doubt.  
Note: The second lessons from Easter 2-6 contain a series of continual readings from 1 Peter. The preacher  
may consider an Easter Season sermon series.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: ACTS 10:34A, 36, 39-43  
The Gentile believers to whom Peter spoke had never seen the risen Lord. But Peter had; Peter had watched  
Jesus eat and drink; Peter had touched and felt his risen body. God had made his disciples both apostles and  
witnesses of the resurrection so that they could provide proof for the Gentiles. They were sent to give this  
proof and proclaim Christ’s peace to these new Christians who fulfilled Jesus’ promise to Thomas: they had  
not seen, but yet they believed.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
165 O Sons and Daughters of the King  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
29 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending  
32 When Sinners See Their Lost Condition  
118 O Dearest Lord, Thy Sacred Head  
142 Come, You Faithful, Raise the Strain  
145 Jesus Lives! The Victory’s Won  
149 Christ the Lord Is Risen Today  
151 Triumphant from the Grave  
161 Christ Jesus Lay in Death’s Strong Bands  
308 As Surely As I Live, God Said  
341 Crown Him with Many Crowns  
346 In You Is Gladness  
368 O Savior, Precious Savior  
406 This Is the Threefold Truth  
416 How Firm a Foundation  
154 Alleluia, Alleluia, Give Thanks  
158 I Am Content! My Jesus Lives Again  
159 Morning Breaks upon the Tomb  
160 This Joyful Eastertide  
428 Why Should Cross and Trial Grieve Me  
434 Lord, You I Love with All My Heart  
552 By All Your Saints Still Striving  
558 Christ High-Ascended  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
704 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending  
719 Christ Has Arisen, Alleluia  
720 Christ Jesus Lay in Death’s Strong Bands  
721 If Christ Had Not Been Raised from Death  
722 Scatter the Darkness, Break the Gloom  
739 Baptismal Waters Cover Me  
746 You, Lord, Are Both Lamb and Shepherd  
756 We Walk by Faith and Not by Sight  
768 How Firm a Foundation  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Third Sunday of Easter  
Hope Restored. The certain hope of eternal life with God is founded on the sacrificial death and victorious  
resurrection of Christ. God had promised this ancient hope in the Garden at the dawn of time. God had carried  
this ancient hope in his Word through the ages. How did the disciples fail to anticipate the resurrection? How  
did the teachers and people of Israel fail to see the Messiah God had promised and delivered? They let their  
wants and cultural expectations color their view of Scripture, and hope was lost. But God restored this ancient  
hope by raising Jesus from the dead and pointing his people back to his promises.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Luke 24:13-35  
Acts 2:14a, 36-47  
1 Peter 1:17-21  
67  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Acts 24:10-21  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O God, by the humiliation of your Son you lifted up this fallen world from the despair of death. By his  
resurrection to life, grant your faithful people gladness of heart and the hope of eternal joys; through your  
Son, Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Alleluia. Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia. Our hearts were burning within us while he  
talked with us on the road and opened the Scriptures to us. Alleluia. (Luke 24:32)  
THE GOSPEL: LUKE 24:13-35  
Note: The events of this lesson precede last Sunday’s lesson. Care will need to be taken to establish the  
timing and setting of these events on Easter Sunday afternoon.  
For these two disciples on the road, it was a day of great puzzlement, sadness, and disillusionment. They left  
the Holy City having heard the report of the women and Peter and John. But their understanding of God’s  
plan of salvation was deficient: they weren’t expecting a resurrection! John puts his finger on the disciples’  
problem. “They still did not understand from Scripture that Jesus had to rise from the dead.” (John 20:9).  
Their sight, logic, emotions, and expectations had led them to abandon what Scripture said. But our gracious  
Lord comes and identifies the problem: they are not believing all that the prophets have spoken. They chose  
only to believe those parts of Scripture that met their preconceived notions of what the Messiah should be.  
Our Lord addresses the problem by explaining all the Scriptures that showed the Christ had to die and rise.  
How well did they learn the lesson? They marveled at how he opened the Scriptures to them and restored  
that ancient hope!  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: ACTS 2:14A, 36-47  
This lesson continues Peter’s Pentecost sermon from last Sunday with the culmination of his message to the  
people of Israel. They had lost the ancient hope long promised, and instead they placed their hope in the  
punctilious performance of human ordinances. Peter’s sermon dashes their false hope to pieces. Could  
there be a better preachment of specific Law than Peter’s words here? Could there be a better preachment  
of specific Gospel as Peter restores their hope through the sweet message of Christ crucified and risen for  
sinners? Pastors, preach Law that kills and Gospel that raises to life. C.F.W. Walther’s Sixth Thesis on Law  
and Gospel says, “God’s Word is not properly divided when the Law is not preached in its full severity nor  
the Gospel in its full sweetness…” Rightly dividing Law and Gospel leads to hope restored in the Savior.  
SECOND LESSON: 1 PETER 1:17-21  
This is the second in a series of five continual readings from 1 Peter. Peter’s first epistle is a letter of hope in  
the midst of suffering. He wrote to believers elected by God but persecuted for their faith. Trials and grief  
try to choke out our hope. But how empty life would be if we followed the way of the world! We would have  
nothing but a short life in this world of pain with no hope for a better future. Our hope is restored when we  
remember that we were bought by the blood of Christ, and that one day we will join our glorious Savior in  
our heavenly home. Until that day, we live in this world as strangers who are focused on going home.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: ACTS 24:10-21  
After his arrest at the temple, Paul stood before the Sanhedrin. The session erupted into a brawl when Paul  
asserted his belief in the resurrection, a divisive issue for Pharisees and Sadducees, and the Roman officer  
had to remit Paul to the regional governor. In this lesson, Paul is on trial in Caesarea before Governor Felix.  
The Sanhedrin had hired the lawyer Tertullus to accuse Paul of leading the Nazarene sect. In Paul’s reply to  
Tertullus he asserts that Christianity is no sect, but agrees with all that is written in the Law and the  
Prophets. It is the Pharisees and the Sadducees that abandoned Scripture and became a sect without hope.  
We hold to the ancient hope of Scripture: the resurrection of the dead.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
160 This Joyful Eastertide  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
108 Jesus, Refuge of the Weary  
184 O Holy Spirit, Enter In  
226 To Your Temple I Draw Near  
249 God of Mercy, God of Grace  
281 God Has Spoken by His Prophets  
333 Abide, O Dearest Jesus  
346 In You Is Gladness  
372 I Lay My Sins on Jesus  
436 Jesus, Shepherd of the Sheep  
492 Son of God, Eternal Savior  
494 Blest Be the Tie that Binds  
541 Lord Jesus Christ, with Us Abide  
574 May God Bestow on Us His Grace  
588 Abide with Me  
714 The Lamb  
722 Scatter the Darkness, Break the Gloom  
736 All Christians Who Have Been Baptized  
737 God’s Own Child, I Gladly Say It  
739 Baptismal Waters Cover Me  
741 Take and Eat  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
743 O Gracious Lord, I Firmly Am Believing  
747 There Is a Redeemer  
748 Lamb of God  
750 Christ, the Word of God Incarnate  
751 Word of God, When All Was Silent  
752 In Christ Alone  
753 Father, God of Grace, You Knew Us  
764 There Is a Time for Everything  
780 Stay With Us, Till Night Has Come  
783 Stay With Us, Lord, the Sun Descends  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Fourth Sunday of Easter  
Good Shepherd Sunday. The image of shepherd and sheep are certainly familiar to modern Christians, but do  
those concepts resonate as deeply for us as they did for the people of God 2000 years ago? “In such a landscape  
as Judea, where a day’s pasture is thinly scattered over an unfenced tract of country, covered with delusive  
paths, frequented by wild beasts, and rolling off into the desert, the shepherd and his character are  
indispensable. On some high moor, across which at night the hyenas howl, when you meet him, sleepless, far-  
sighted, weather-beaten, armed, leaning on his staff, and looking out over his scattered sheep, every one of  
them on his heart, you understand why the shepherd of Judea sprang to the front in his people’s history; why  
they gave his name to their kings; why Christ took him as the type of self-sacrifice.” (George Smith) On Good  
Shepherd Sunday we see how sharp the contrast is between true shepherds and false shepherds. All is  
determined by their relationship to Christ, the only gate for the sheep.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
John 10:1-10  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Acts 6:1-9; 7:2a, 51-60  
1 Peter 2:19-25  
23  
1 Samuel 17:34-37  
Hebrews 13:20-21  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O Lord Jesus Christ, you are the Good Shepherd who laid down your life for the sheep. Lead us now to the  
still waters of your life-giving Word that we may abide in your Father’s house forevermore; for you live and  
reign with him and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Alleluia. Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia. I am the good shepherd; I know my sheep and  
my sheep know me. Alleluia. (John 10:14)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 10:1-10  
In the three-year cycle of readings, Good Shepherd Sunday draws its Gospel lessons from successive  
readings of John 10. In this lesson, Christ only infers that he is the Good Shepherd. Rather, the great “I am”  
statement that sets the direction for this Sunday is “I am the gate for the sheep.” The preceding context of  
this lesson is crucial. After Jesus healed the man born blind, the Pharisees interrogated the man and his  
family about the healing. The Pharisees had already rejected Jesus as the Christ and were expelling from the  
synagogue anyone who confessed Christ. After throwing the man out of the synagogue, they verbally accost  
Jesus. This lesson is his answer to them. Jesus’ “I am” statements highlight the exclusivity of the Christian  
message. Christ is Savior, and there is no other! Jesus is the only gate for the sheep, and there is no other!  
When a man approaches the sheep, one only needs to see how he enters the pen. Does he use the gate, i.e.,  
does he confess Christ as Savior? True shepherds use the gate, preach Christ, and love the sheep. False  
shepherds refuse the gate, reject Christ, and destroy the flock.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: ACTS 6:1-9; 7:2A, 51-60  
Note the sharp contrast between true shepherds and false shepherds. The apostles’ care for Christ and his  
Church leads them to raise up more leaders to serve. See how these new leaders enter by the gate! Stephen  
holds to Christ no matter what the consequences! But how true were Jesus’ words about false shepherds:  
they come only to kill and destroy. With their words and teeth and rocks they testified to whom they  
belonged. Stephen was a µάρτυς until the end, a witness of the Savior who waited to bring him to eternal  
pasture. Psalm 23 graces many funerals. How fitting that on this day when we hear of the Church’s first  
martyr, we sing Psalm 23 and remember Stephen, a true shepherd who now dwells in the house of the Lord  
forever.  
SECOND LESSON: 1 PETER 2:19-25  
Undoubtedly, the Church was rocked by the martyrdom of Stephen—Peter included. Yet Peter reminds us  
that not even suffering and tragedy can remove us from the care of our Good Shepherd. To be the gate for  
straying sheep meant that Jesus had to suffer for us. So Jesus did—willingly, silently—bearing the sins of  
straying sheep. Now Peter calls us to follow our Shepherd and Overseer, even if it means that we suffer for  
doing good.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: 1 SAMUEL 17:34-37  
Long before he was the royal shepherd of the kingdom of Israel, David shepherded his father’s flock in the  
wild country. He let no danger stop him from caring for his sheep. No law required a shepherd to fight lion  
and bear for the sake of the sheep. In fact, David’s words here and Christ’s in John 10 are all the more  
striking because Rabbinic law made it clear that a shepherd was not called upon to expose his own life for  
the safety of his flock. David, a good shepherd, knew what he spoke of when he extoled the comfort of the  
Shepherd’s rod and staff in Psalm 23. See his words fulfilled in great David’s greater Son!  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: HEBREWS 13:20-21  
Only one gate leads to life eternal, because only Christ provided the blood of the eternal covenant. As we  
sheep stand looking back at the Easter miracle, we are empowered and equipped to follow our Shepherd  
wherever he may lead.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
375 The King of Love My Shepherd Is  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
205 O Lord, Look Down from Heaven  
329 Lord, Dismiss Us with Your Blessing  
339 Today Your Mercy Calls Us  
399 To God Be the Glory  
432 I Am Jesus’ Little Lamb  
436 Jesus, Shepherd of the Sheep  
442 Have No Fear, Little Flock  
508 Gracious Savior, Gentle Shepherd  
515 Shepherd of Tender Youth  
536 Lord Jesus Christ, the Church’s Head  
348 Jesus, Jesus, Only Jesus  
360 The Lord’s My Shepherd; I’ll Not Want  
374 My Shepherd Will Supply My Need  
396 In Adam We Have All Been One  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
552 By All Your Saints Still Striving  
576 Spread, Oh, Spread the Mighty Word  
711 Jesus Has Come and Brings Pleasure Eternal  
741 Take and Eat  
746 You, Lord, Are Both Lamb and Shepherd  
750 Christ, the Word of God Incarnate  
766 The Lord’s My Shepherd; I’ll Not Want  
772 When Jesus Came from Nazareth  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Fifth Sunday of Easter  
I am the way, the truth, and the life. Christ’s message is so exclusive that it rejects all others. There is only one  
way to the Father, and that way is a person. He does not say, ‘I show you the way,’ like a second Moses, but I am  
the way. Nor ‘I have the truth,’ like another Elijah, but I am the truth. Not only ‘I lead unto life,’ as one of his  
apostles, but I am the life. (Kögel) The exclusivity of salvation resting in the person of Jesus Christ is a rock  
against which the unbelieving world crushes itself, but upon which God builds his Church.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
John 14:1-12  
Acts 17:1-12  
1 Peter 2:4-10  
33  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
1 Kings 18:16-45  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O God, you form the minds of your faithful people into a single will. Make us love what you command and  
desire what you promise, that among the many changes of this world, our hearts may ever yearn for the  
lasting joys of heaven; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy  
Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Alleluia. Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia. I am the way, the truth, and the life, says the  
Lord. Alleluia. (John 14:6)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 14:1-12  
He deserves to be called a theologian, however, who comprehends the visible and manifest things of God  
seen through suffering and the cross. Martin Luther’s Thesis 20, the Heidelberg Disputations, 1518 AD.  
Jesus bids farewell to his disciples on the night he was betrayed. He tries to set their hearts at rest and tells  
them to trust God and him regarding this departure. But the disciples’ faith is clouded by doubt and false  
hopes. Thomas cannot conceive of a Messianic kingdom that involves death or departure. They did not want  
to see God in sufferings, but in glory. Philip, like us all, wanted to see the Father. Show us the glory cloud!  
Show us the fiery mountain! Show us the sapphire pavement! Show us the throne ringed by cherubim and  
seraphim! Show us the Father! Sinful man wants to look right past this man from Galilee. Sinful man fails to  
see the truth expressed in Luther’s thesis, the truth so crucial to the theology of the cross: the hidden God  
reveals himself by hiding himself. There is only one way, and that way is a person. Jesus points Thomas and  
Philip to the one person who reveals the hidden God to us. Let the preacher note the definite articles in  
verse 6. We are tempted to think there must be more than this humble man from Galilee. Oh, there is! Look  
closer and see the hidden God. See grace in the flesh—the God of glory willing to hide himself unto death  
for me.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: ACTS 17:1-12  
Paul said it was necessary for God to hide himself in suffering: τὸν χριστὸν ἔδει παθεῖν. All the popular  
conceptions of Messiah as earthly king were wrong. Not only did Messiah suffer and die, Messiah had to  
suffer and die! All the prophesies found their fulfillment in the person of Jesus of Nazareth: οὗτός ἐστιν ὁ  
χριστὸς [] Ἰησοῦς ὃν ἐγὼ καταγγέλλω ὑµῖν. The exclusivity of the Christian message led to vociferous  
rejection by the people of Israel, both at home and abroad. But the stone the builders rejected has made a  
new people, a chosen people, a people filled with eagerness and hope in Christ.  
SECOND LESSON: 1 PETER 2:4-10  
The world looks at God hidden in Christ and sees either a loser or a joke (1 Corinthians 1). The Jews rejected  
him because of his humility. The world today rejects him because of his claims of being the one way, the one  
truth, the one life. In neither case do they see Christ as the stone that should set their angles or head their  
corners. They would rather fashion their lives by their own design. This rejected stone, however, will  
ultimately be their downfall. For believers, though, this rejected stone is what saves and builds. Jesus said,  
ἐγώ εἰµι ἡ ζωή.” That living stone is Life, gives life, and makes living stones out of people who were  
scattered in darkness.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: 1 KINGS 18:16-45  
Ahab and Jezebel had institutionalized idolatry and persecution on a national scale. To people worshiping a  
false god of the storm, God sent his prophet to announce his judgment: There would be no rain. After three  
years of drought, famine crippled the kingdom. Against that backdrop, God sent Elijah to a showdown with  
Ahab and his false prophets. In the context of this Sunday, the lesson shows the emptiness and impotence of  
all other ways besides the one way. No matter their outward show of power or prestige, 450 prophets and  
the might of royalty could not change the spiritual reality that there is one way, one truth, one life. Even  
today, a whole world of false teachers and TV bible scholars cannot change the spiritual reality that Christ is  
the way, the truth, and the life. The drama of this narrative engages: as the water runs down and fills the  
trench, we wait. As the fire descends and consumes, we marvel. As the people’s hearts are turned back to  
God, we shout Elijah’s (
הוּ
 
ָ
֨  
ל
ִ  
א
ֵ  
– note the translation) name: The LORD—he is God! The LORD—he is God!  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
141 At the Lamb’s High Feast We Sing  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
145 Jesus Lives! The Victory's Won  
152 I Know that My Redeemer Lives  
170 Draw Us to Thee  
172 Up through Endless Ranks of Angels  
175 Hail the Day that Sees Him Rise  
248 When in Our Music God Is Glorified  
254 The Day Full of Grace  
351 Hail, O Once-Despised Jesus  
356 You Are the Way; through You Alone  
359 Jesus, My Great High Priest  
367 Christ Be My Leader  
391 God Loved the World So that He Gave  
426 Yours Forever, God of Love  
528 Christ Is Our Cornerstone  
529 Built on the Rock  
343 Christ Is the World’s Light  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
531 Christ Is Made the Sure Foundation  
581 Father, We Praise You  
729 There Is a Blessed Home  
733 Rejoice in God  
734 When in Our Music God Is Glorified  
741 Take and Eat  
759 Do Not Let Your Hearts Be Troubled  
771 I Want to Walk as a Child of the Light  
774 Church of God, Elect and Glorious  
775 For Builders Bold, Whose Vision Pure  
776 Sing with All the Saints in Glory  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Sixth Sunday of Easter  
The love of God who lives in us leads to a life of obedience. Jesus’ promise of another Counselor is a loaded one:  
the Holy Spirit gives us the ability to do what Jesus asks. This Sunday’s lessons teach that love for our risen Lord  
means obedience to his commands. Only Jesus’ promises make that possible. The Prayer of the Day sets the  
tone: “Put your Spirit in us to think those things that are true and long for those things that are good…”  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
John 14:15-21  
Acts 17:22-31  
1 Peter 3:15-22  
66  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Genesis 4:1-16  
1 John 3:13-18  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Father of lights, every good and perfect gift comes from you. Inspire us to think those things that are true  
and long for those things that are good, that we may always make our petitions according to your gracious  
will; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God,  
now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Alleluia. Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia. If anyone loves me, he will obey my teaching. My  
Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him. Alleluia. (John 14:23)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 14:15-21  
Because I live, you, too, will live! Jesus promises more than just a resurrection from the dead for his  
disciples. Note the tenses in verse 19: in the very face of his own death, Jesus did not promise that he would  
come back to life, but that he is alive in the soteriological sense. Verse 6 said, “ἐγώ εἰµι ἡ ζωή.” Jesus is life,  
that state of blessed holiness and perfect righteousness and communion with God. Man had lost that life in  
Adam’s fall, and sin and death rushed into the vacuum left behind. The Son of God, the Life, came to bring it  
back. Because he is alive, we, too, will live in blessedness and holiness forever. We are children who will  
never be orphaned, but rather will be comforted, counseled, and kept forever. What is our response? Life  
lived as God intended—a life that treasures our Lord, his Word, and obedience to both!  
FIRST LESSON: ACTS 17:22-31  
Could this lesson be more timely? Paul preached to a people enamored with spirituality, but ignorant of the  
true God. To a people who thought they had all the answers, Paul offers real knowledge of the true God  
unknown to them. Imagine the scene on Mars Hill. Rising above them, the higher hill of the Acropolis  
loomed and upon its peak the Parthenon dominated the skyline. This timeless treasure of architecture  
marked the high point of Greek art and culture, and served as a temple for the city’s patron goddess,  
Athena. In front of this jaw-dropping beauty, Paul says, “God does not live in temples built by hands.” No,  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
this unknown God made himself known by living with us, and then living in us. Love for this risen Lord leads  
to a life filled with loving obedience, cf. the quote from the Greek poet Epimenides (v 28a).  
SECOND LESSON: 1 PETER 3:15-22  
This is the fifth reading from 1 Peter during the Easter season. Last week Peter declared what we are in  
Christ: a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a people belonging to God. In this lesson he details what that  
means for our lives: Set apart Christ as Lord. Love for our Lord means obedience to his commands—even if  
that obedience means suffering. The Christian can offer willing obedience in the face of suffering because  
Christ rules, and Holy Baptism guarantees our connection to him.  
Note: Verse 21 comments on this baptism that now saves us. The NIV says that baptism is “the pledge of a  
good conscience toward God.” The footnote suggests “response of a good conscience” as an alternate  
translation. “Response” is the worst choice because it is most likely to be understood as our response toward  
God, rather than his promise to us. “Pledge” could be understood correctly, but only if we understand God as  
the pledge maker, not us. The word ἐπερώτηµα can mean “answer” in a legal sense, so a better translation  
would be, “the legal claim of a good conscience toward God.” (Brug)  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: GENESIS 4:1-16  
When Adam and Eve ate the fruit, they opened a Pandora’s box on an unsuspecting world. Life as God  
intended had disappeared from this world. Expelled from the garden and guarded from the Tree of Life, man  
would know only the tolling death knell of 
ת
 
ֹ
מ
ֽ
ָ
ו
ַ . But to this dying world, God promised a Savior, born of  
woman, who would restore to man life as he had once lived. That promise had so quickened Adam’s heart  
that even when faced with the new reality of living death, he gave his wife the name Life, 
חוּה
, because  
through her womb the eternal Gospel would be fulfilled, and this life of death deferred would become a life  
of death destroyed. When this womb produced its first fruit, Eve exclaimed: 
את־יהוה
 
אישׁ
 
קניתי
. Luther offers a  
grammatically correct opinion that Eve thought she had given birth to the promised Seed (I have gotten a  
man, the LORD). How wrong that thought would have been! She did not bear God’s Son, but Adam’s son,  
Cain, who showed that mere obedience does not please God, but only the obedience that flows from faith  
and love. Abel lived in the blessedness of forgiveness, and not even his brother’s murderous actions could  
take away that true Life.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 1 JOHN 3:13-18  
Love means obedience to God. It was love that led Jesus to obey his Father, obedient to death, even death  
on a cross for us. Now that same love empowers us to love our brother. Hatred and vengeance have their  
home east of Eden. But here, among the people of God, there is no room for hatred—only love. Christians  
are to be the antithesis of Cain: we lay down our lives for our brothers, not just in word, but in every daily  
deed. We do it because we now have that life once lost, but now regained by our living Savior. We have  
passed from death to life.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
377 Dear Christians, One and All, Rejoice  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
5 As Angels Joyed with One Accord  
143 He's Risen, He's Risen  
155 Christ the Lord Is Risen Again  
169 Alleluia! Sing to Jesus  
476 Thee Will I Love, My Strength, My Tower  
479 Jesus, Your Boundless Love to Me  
480 Almighty Father, Heaven and Earth  
482 Forgive Us, Lord  
172 Up through Endless Ranks of Angels  
189 Jehovah, Let Me Now Adore You  
235 Praise the Almighty; My Soul, Adore Him  
297 Baptized in Water  
332 Go, My Children, with My Blessing  
343 Christ Is the World’s Light  
355 Take the World, but Give Me Jesus  
396 In Adam We Have All Been One  
496 Glorious in Majesty  
529 Built on the Rock  
562 I Love to Tell the Story  
723 Holy Spirit, the Dove Sent from Heaven  
736 All Christians Who Have Been Baptized  
737 God’s Own Child, I Gladly Say It  
739 Baptismal Waters Cover Me  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
The Ascension of Our Lord  
Christ rules all things for his Church. In the early 700s AD, there lived an English churchman known to history as  
the Venerable Bede. He was the great teacher of the middle ages, the man who divided history into AD and BC,  
the first great historian of the English language and a devout man of God. On May 25, 735 AD, on the great  
Ascension Vigil, Bede finished his translation of the Gospel of St. John into Old English. Then, on that day of  
Ascension, he died. From his deathbed, the Teacher of the Middle Ages spoke the words that have become the  
Prayer of the Day on Ascension. This beautiful prayer sets the tone for the day, beginning with a note of triumph  
and ending with a supplication for the Spirit and his work.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
Luke 24:44-53  
Acts 1:1-11  
Ephesians 1:16-23  
47  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Esther 6  
Colossians 3:1-4  
110  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Lord Jesus, King of glory, on this day you ascended far above the heavens and at God’s right hand you rule  
the nations. Leave us not alone, we pray, but grant us the Spirit of truth that at your command and by your  
power we may be your witnesses in all the world; for you live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit,  
one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Alleluia. Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia. Surely I will be with you always, to the very end  
of the age. Alleluia. (Matthew 28:20b)  
THE GOSPEL: LUKE 24:44-53  
Ascension marks the coronation of our Prophet-Priest as King. Today we see his enthronement in glory and  
power to rule all things for the Church. Even at this late date, the disciples failed to understand Jesus’  
mission. So Christ opened the Scriptures to them to show once more that this was the Christ as prophesied.  
He told them, “This was the way it had to be! And you, you are now well-informed witnesses of the fact that  
I am both Lord and Christ.” Finally, his disciples understood: Christus est Deus. There was no more doubting,  
no more fearing, no more worry. Christ is God. They worshipped the God-Man and watched him depart with  
his hands raised in unending blessing. No wonder they went home rejoicing! No longer would they hide  
behind locked doors; no longer would they cower; no longer would they fear the Sanhedrin. Instead they  
would fill the temple with public praise, because Christus est Deus! Their rabbi, their friend, their  
brother…he was God and ruled all things for his Church.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: ACTS 1:1-11  
The weeks of Easter had been filled with breathless joy in the presence of their living Savior. For forty days  
the disciples listened to Christ speak about the kingdom of God. All that kingdom talk whetted their appetite  
for power and authority. They had seen their Savior suffer; now they were ready to see him win. Jesus  
offered them the tantalizing promise of something greater than John’s baptism, whom he had called the  
greatest man even born. What could it be? What heights of power and authority were waiting now that  
Jesus reigned as God and Lord? And so, οὖν, because of that, they asked him a question that makes us  
marvel. Verse 6 displays the depth of their culturally ingrained misunderstanding of Messiah: they certainly  
had spiritual hopes for Jesus, but even at this late date they could not divorce them from their expectations  
of an earthly kingdom. Christ’s answer gives direction for the Church of all time. They would get power, but  
not for an earthly kingdom. Rather, they would receive Spirit-power to be heralds of the impending kingdom  
of heaven.  
SECOND LESSON: EPHESIANS 1:16-23  
The post-ascension disciples no longer had their teacher with them walking the roads of Israel as before. We  
endtime disciples do not have Jesus’ visible presence with us either. Yet there is no ascension sadness,  
because the Church knows exactly where Christ is. He has taken up his power and has begun to reign with  
might that knows no limit and glory that knows no bounds. With a head like that, what foe have we to fear?  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: ESTHER 6  
Esther is unique among Biblical books: it makes no mention of God at all. Yet the book clearly shows the  
sovereignty of God throughout. The account of Haman and Mordecai shows that our Lord rules all things for  
his Church—often in ways unseen. History does not happen by coincidence or accident, but the book of  
Esther shows the hand of God ruling over the nations with quiet acts of providence. No matter the evil plans  
and purposes of men, God’s providential care for his Church cannot be thwarted.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: COLOSSIANS 3:1-4  
On the mount of Ascension the angels asked, “Why do you stand here looking into the sky?” The Church  
must be about its appointed work in the post-ascension world; we cannot merely stare after our ascended  
Lord. Yet while our eyes turn back to this world and the work in front of us, our hearts never cease their  
upward gaze, longing to see him come again, just as he went. With hearts and minds set on things above,  
and with eyes and hands and mouths busy with the work he has given us, the Church journeys on in  
confidence and hope that cannot be shaken, no matter what befalls us here on earth. Our Gospel is not one  
of health and wealth, but of a life hidden from this world—hidden with Christ in God…for now, but not  
forever.  
Note: Congregations that use a paschal candle may consider the Recession of the Paschal candle on  
Ascension. Having been burned for the seven weeks of Easter, the lit paschal candle is carried out of the nave  
to signify Christ removing his visible presence from us.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
173 On Christ’s Ascension I Now Build  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
9 Jesus, Your Church with Longing Eyes  
29 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending  
169 Alleluia! Sing to Jesus  
352 Lord, Enthroned in Heavenly Splendor  
370 All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name  
371 Oh, Love, How Deep  
170 Draw Us to Thee  
377 Dear Christians, One and All, Rejoice  
518 Forth in the Peace of Christ We Go  
536 Lord Jesus Christ, the Church’s Head  
557 On Galilee’s High Mountain  
171 A Hymn of Glory Let Us Sing  
172 Up through Endless Ranks of Angels  
174 See, the Conqueror Mounts in Triumph  
175 Hail the Day that Sees Him Rise  
180 Holy Spirit, God of Love  
558 Christ High-Ascended  
561 Lord, Speak to Us that We May Speak  
704 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending  
731 The King Will Come at Age’s End  
746 You, Lord, Are Both Lamb and Shepherd  
184 O Holy Spirit, Enter In  
291 We Have a Sure Prophetic Word  
341 Crown Him with Many Crowns  
350 All Praise Be Yours  
Note: “A Hymn of Glory Let Us Sing,” (CW 171) was also written by the Venerable Bede.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Seventh Sunday of Easter  
Live in eager expectation of glory! That glory is not dimmed by earthly suffering; rather, such suffering reminds  
us of the glory that awaits us. First the cross; then the crown. Our light and momentary troubles cannot mute  
the joy of living in eager expectation of glory. The week that falls between Ascension and Pentecost is one of  
waiting and expectation for the promised Spirit and the promised glory. The Prayer and Verse of the Day mark  
the impending nature of our departure and Christ’s return.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
John 17:1-11a  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Acts 1:1-14  
1 Peter 4:12-17; 5:6-11  
8
1 Samuel 1:21-28  
2 Corinthians 4:13-18  
124  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, your Son our Savior was taken up in glory and intercedes for us at your right hand. Through  
your living and abiding Word, give us hearts to know him and faith to follow where he has gone; who lives  
and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Alleluia. Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia. I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to  
you. Alleluia. (John 14:23)  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 17:1-11A  
Can you hear the certainty in Christ’s voice? Can you feel the authority resonate from his words? Stop for a  
moment and marvel at the words Christ speaks even as his enemies prepare to arrest him, to torture him, to  
kill him. Christ enters his passion as victor. We know the end of the story; we know this is Christ’s path to  
glory. But what would the disciples think in the next few hours as the blows landed, the whip bit, the nails  
pierced, and the blood flowed? This is glory? Just wait…these sufferings would not last. Just wait…glory is  
coming. Look at Jesus’ promise: he has been granted all authority—but he uses it to give, not to take. He  
gives us life eternal won by the glory of his completed work. On this post-ascension Sunday, Christ’s promise  
to return to his Father has proven true. What comfort, then, is his promised prayer for us who remain  
behind! We are in the world, but not as orphans, and so we bear our sufferings in eager expectation of the  
glory that’s coming.  
FIRST LESSON: ACTS 1:1-14  
The disciples rightly expected glory; they just expected it too soon. The time would come for them to rule  
with Jesus in his kingdom. The time would come for glory that knows no limit. But that time had not yet  
arrived. The Christian life is not lived in glory here and now, but in eager expectation of the glory that’s  
coming soon.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
SECOND LESSON: 1 PETER 4:12-17; 5:6-11  
Peter wrote at a time when Nero and the empire had turned against the Way. As followers of a religio  
illicita, great suffering impended for the faithful Christians. The lion’s roar could be heard coming ever closer  
to the people of God. In this life, sufferings will come; but we live in eager expectation of glory. The God of  
all grace called us to future glory, and no suffering, no emperor or empire can make us lose sight of what  
awaits us. The cares we have, we cast on him, knowing that any suffering can be borne in joy with eyes fixed  
on the glory that’s coming.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: 1 SAMUEL 1:21-28  
Afflicted by her rival, Peninnah, Hannah’s troubles seemed neither light nor momentary. Her barrenness  
brought suffering and sadness that embittered her life, but it did not shake her faith. At the house of the  
LORD she cast her cares on him and prayed, expectant of God’s grace and blessing. She humbled herself  
under God’s mighty hand, and he lifted her up in due time: the son she longed for would become Samuel,  
the leader of God’s people. On this Sunday of expectation, Hannah’s example shines: she did not focus her  
eyes on what was seen, on the troubles of this life, but on the unseen eternal glory that God had stored up  
for her. For her eager expectation of glory, see 1 Samuel 2.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 2 CORINTHIANS 4:13-18  
Who thinks that their troubles are light or momentary? When we lose a loved one, when we face mortal  
illness or financial ruin—who could ever think those troubles insignificant or passing? Only people who have  
a perspective that stretches to the unbounded time of eternity and encompasses the unbounded joy that  
we eagerly expect there. We believe that one day Christ will present us to the Father for an eternity of glory.  
Therefore…therefore we fix our eyes not on all our problems that we know so well, but on the unseen glory,  
the eternal glory that we do not yet know, but eagerly expect.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
359 Jesus, My Great High Priest  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
76 Jesus! Name of Wondrous Love  
169 Alleluia! Sing to Jesus  
170 Draw Us to Thee  
270 We All Believe in One True God  
271 We All Believe in One True God  
341 Crown Him with Many Crowns  
344 At the Name of Jesus  
171 A Hymn of Glory Let Us Sing  
172 Up through Endless Ranks of Angels  
173 On Christ's Ascension I Now Build  
174 See, the Conqueror Mounts in Triumph  
175 Hail the Day that Sees Him Rise  
202 If God Had Not Been on Our Side  
205 O Lord, Look Down from Heaven  
218 Then the Glory  
350 All Praise Be Yours  
351 Hail, O Once-Despised Jesus  
352 Lord, Enthroned in Heavenly Splendor  
359 Jesus, My Great High Priest  
370 All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name  
371 Oh, Love, How Deep  
403 I Know My Faith Is Founded  
411 What a Friend We Have in Jesus  
256 How Great Thou Art  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
428 Why Should Cross and Trial Grieve Me  
431 I Walk in Danger All the Way  
558 Christ High-Ascended  
725 Christ, the Lord of Hosts, Unshaken  
757 Where Your Treasure Is  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
The Coming of the Holy SpiritThe Day  
of Pentecost  
I will pour out my Spirit. God’s Old Testament people celebrated the gathering of the harvest at the Festival of  
Weeks. On the fiftieth day, God sent the promised Counselor on the day we call “Pentecost” (Greek for “fifty”  
from the LXX in Lev 23:15: ἀριθµήσετε πεντήκοντα ἡµέρας). This day marked the birthday of the New Testament  
Church and celebrates the harvest of souls won by the Son and gathered by his servants empowered by his  
Spirit. Pentecost is the third great festival of the Church and has been commemorated since at least 217 A.D.  
The Church dresses in red to remind us of the tongues of fire that marked the Spirit’s gift and the blood of the  
martyrs which was the seed of the Church. This day culminates the Season of Easter when our risen Lord now  
empowers his people to be witnesses of the resurrection for the world.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
John 16:5-11  
Joel 2:28-29  
Acts 2:1-21  
51b  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Color  
Red  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Holy Spirit, God and Lord, come to us this joyful day with your sevenfold gift of grace. Rekindle in our hearts  
the holy fire of your love that in a true and living faith we may tell abroad the glory of our Savior, Jesus  
Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Father, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful people, and kindle in them the fire of your love.  
Alleluia.  
THE GOSPEL: JOHN 16:5-11  
How could Jesus’ departure be advantageous for the disciples? Only when Jesus had finished his redemptive  
work and returned to the Father would he send the Counselor. At Pentecost, the Holy Spirit fulfilled this  
promise of Jesus as the Counselor who would work on the world by dwelling in his disciples. His great work  
is to convict the world in regard to sin, righteousness and judgment. As the Holy Spirit prompted the  
disciples to preach the Gospel, both believers and unbelievers heard and were convicted in regard to sin—  
resulting in either repentance or obduracy. The Holy Spirit convicts the world in regard to righteousness,  
because the purchase price for righteousness had now been paid, (“I am going to the Father”), and the  
world would either receive it by faith or reject it in unbelief. The Holy Spirit convicts the world in regard to  
judgment, because although the world has not yet been judged, its ruler has (Revelation 20). The preaching  
of the Gospel never leaves hearts the same: by either quickening or hardening, the Spirit convicts mankind.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: JOEL 2:28-29  
In the Old Testament God poured out his Spirit on the prophets and so revealed his will though visions and  
dreams. In Numbers 11, God anointed the 70 elders with his Spirit so that they prophesied. When Moses’  
young aide loyally objected to some of the elders prophesying in the camp, Moses said, “I wish that all the  
LORD’s people were prophets and that the LORD would put his Spirit on them!” The prophet Joel said that  
one day, Moses’ wish would be fulfilled. But when? “Afterward,” in the Messianic age, in the last age of the  
earth that began on the day God kept the promise of Joel and the wish of Moses and put his Spirit on all his  
people.  
SECOND LESSON: ACTS 2:1-21  
The Church follows in the footsteps of Christ who was prepared for his ministry by a dramatic, visible  
outpouring of the Spirit at his baptism. Jesus kept his promise to baptize them with the Holy Spirit and with  
fire. The real miracle of Pentecost is the transformative gift of the Holy Spirit, taking timid followers of Jesus  
and making them bold witnesses who carried the Gospel to the world. The sound of the violent wind served  
as a sign, but was not the gift. The tongues of fire marked its arrival, but they were not the gift. Miraculously  
speaking in foreign languages was a result, but it was not the gift. “All of them were filled with the Holy  
Spirit.” Moses wished it; Joel foretold it; the disciples lived it. The sin that had scattered mankind at Babel  
had been atoned. The last age of the earth (vv 19-21) wouldn’t be marked by the dividing of the peoples, but  
by their uniting into the Church of Christ where there is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor  
female.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
176 Come, Holy Ghost, God and Lord  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
177 Come, Holy Ghost, Creator Blest  
179 Hail Thee, Festival Day  
180 Holy Spirit, God of Love  
272 Create in Me a Clean Heart, O God  
281 God Has Spoken by His Prophets  
377 Dear Christians, One and All, Rejoice  
400 O God, O Lord of Heaven and Earth  
455 Rise! To Arms! With Prayer Employ You  
471 Renew Me, O Eternal Light  
564 There Is a Balm in Gilead  
578 Saints of God, the Dawn Is Brightening  
598 My Maker, Be with Me  
186 O Spirit of Life, O Spirit of God  
187 When God the Spirit Came  
188 Creator Spirit, by Whose Aid  
190 We Now Implore God the Holy Ghost  
192 Triune God, Oh, Be Our Stay  
200 A Mighty Fortress Is Our God  
201 A Mighty Fortress Is Our God  
229 This Day at Your Creating Word  
723 Holy Spirit, the Dove Sent from Heaven  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
The Season of Pentecost  
The Church grows  
After reliving the great events of the life of Christ, the worshipping Church spends half a year focusing on the  
teachings of Christ. The Church wears green during the season of Pentecost as the Spirit uses those teachings of  
Jesus to grow the faith of believers. The appointed lessons teach us the characteristics of the Holy Ministry, the  
Christian, the Church, our God, and the Christian life. The editor offers this suggestion as a path for worship  
planning in the Pentecost Season. (JES)  
THE HOLY MINISTRY…  
Pentecost 1  
Pentecost 2  
Pentecost 3  
Pentecost 4  
Pentecost 5  
The Holy Ministry proclaims the Triune God  
The Holy Ministry stands on the rock-solid truth of God’s Word  
The Holy Ministry is filled with people who God called out of his boundless mercy  
The Holy Ministry is given by God out of compassion for his people  
The Holy Ministry preaches Christ in spite of persecution  
THE CHRISTIAN…  
Pentecost 6  
Pentecost 7  
Pentecost 8  
Pentecost 9  
The Christian loves God above all things  
The Christian finds rest in Jesus  
The Christian is planted by the Word  
The Christian lives as wheat among weeds  
Pentecost 10 The Christian seeks spiritual wealth  
Pentecost 11 The Christian trusts God to provide  
Pentecost 12 The Christian answers doubt with faith  
THE CHURCH…  
Pentecost 13 The Church is meant for all people  
Pentecost 14 The Church will stand forever  
Pentecost 15 The Church is militant: first the cross, then the crown  
Pentecost 16 The Church fulfills her role as her brother’s keeper  
Pentecost 17 The Church forgives as God forgives  
OUR GOD…  
Pentecost 18 Our God is incomprehensibly gracious  
Pentecost 19 Our God wants real repentance and true obedience  
Pentecost 20 Our God patiently seeks fruits of faith  
Pentecost 21 Our God invites unworthy sinners to participate in his blessing  
THE CHRISTIAN LIFE…  
Pentecost 22 The Christian life appreciates godly government  
Pentecost 23 The Christian life fulfills the Law by loving everyone around us  
Pentecost 24 The Christian life faithfully uses all God’s gifts  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
The Book of Romans: the Basics of the Christian Faith, One Word at a Time.  
The Second Lessons of Year A, Pentecost 2-17 feature series of sixteen readings through Paul’s Epistle to the  
Romans. The preacher may consider a sermon series to share this great discourse on the basics of the Christian  
faith. These lessons read like a curriculum for St. Paul’s adult instruction class and provide an excellent  
opportunity to walk the parish through the basic doctrines of the Church, one word at a time. The editor offers  
this suggestion for a sixteen-week series. (JES)  
THE CHRISTIAN FAITH, ONE WORD AT A TIME  
Pentecost 2  
Pentecost 3  
Pentecost 4  
Pentecost 5  
Pentecost 6  
Pentecost 7  
Pentecost 8  
Pentecost 9  
Atonement  
Righteousness  
Reconciliation  
Reversal  
Buried (Baptism)  
Battling (Sin)  
Longing (Eschatology)  
Praying (Prayer)  
Pentecost 10 Chosen (Predestination)  
Pentecost 11 Inseparable (Providence)  
Pentecost 12 Roots (Old Testament Church)  
Pentecost 13 Grafted (New Testament Church) [include verses 17-24]  
Pentecost 14 Awe (Worship)  
Pentecost 15 Sacrifice (Body ministry)  
Pentecost 16 Love (A citizen of two kingdoms)  
Pentecost 17 Freedom (Christian Freedom)  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
First Sunday after PentecostHoly  
Trinity  
We believe in the Triune God. “Whoever wishes to be saved must, above all else, hold to the true Christian faith.  
Whoever does not keep this faith pure in all points will certainly perish forever” (Athanasian Creed). The third  
and longest of the ecumenical creeds underscores the importance of this Sunday’s message. The doctrine of the  
Trinity is not a logical exercise or a dogmatic excursion. It’s central to our salvation. The Triune God is our  
Creator, Redeemer, and Sanctifier. Lose this doctrine, and as the Creed says, you lose it all. A Jesus who is less  
than God is also less than Savior.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 28:16-20  
Genesis 1:1—2:3  
2 Corinthians 13:11-14  
150  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God and Father, dwelling in majesty and mystery, filling and renewing all creation by your eternal  
Spirit, and manifesting your saving grace through our Lord Jesus Christ: in mercy cleanse our hearts and lips  
that, free from doubt and fear, we may ever worship you, one true immortal God, with your Son and the  
Holy Spirit.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Holy, holy, holy is the Lord Almighty; the whole earth is full of his glory. Alleluia. (Isaiah 6:3b)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 28:16-20  
On a mountain in Galilee they met a man who had died, but lived again. Some of his disciples doubted, but  
the ones that believed his word bent the knee and worshipped this man as God. If what this man said was  
true, then God had died for them; God had risen for them; and now, God himself was calling them to a  
ministry for all nations. God reveals himself as triune: Father, Son and Holy Spirit. The God who made us is  
the God who saved us and is still the God who sets us apart. Many ancient heresies wanted to make Jesus  
less than a man. Most modern heresies don’t bother making him anything more than a man. But the Church  
teaches all nations to obey everything Jesus commanded us.  
FIRST LESSON: GENESIS 1:1—2:3  
Although the Bible ascribes certain works to each person (the Father as Creator, the Son as Redeemer, the  
Holy Spirit as Sanctifier), Augustine’s rule still stands that opera ad extra sunt indivisa: the external acts of  
the Godhead are shared. The Father created, the Son created, the Spirit created. The Father sanctifies, the  
Son sanctifies, the Spirit sanctifies. The only acts not shared by the persons are the opera ad intra which are  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
paternity, filiation, and procession. So when we read the account of creation here, we see all three persons  
of the Godhead at work. We read verse 1 in the context of Psalm 104 and John 1. God—Father, Son and  
Holy Spirit—created a home for the crown of his creation. The Trinity was speaking to itself and of itself in  
the amazing words that displayed God’s intent for humankind: Let us make man in our image. The Triune  
God planned for creation’s crown to conform to His image. When Adam fell, it was the Triune God who  
resolved to restore man to the perfection in which he had been created. This plan to restore holiness to the  
world would involve all three persons to choose us, to redeem us, to call us to himself.  
SECOND LESSON: 2 CORINTHIANS 13:11-14  
The grace, the love, the fellowship. That is the story of the Trinity in the lives of believers. Grace is that  
which we don’t deserve; God’s love is what drove it; our fellowship with God and with each other is its  
result. We trust in God the Father, who fills us with hope. We trust in the Lord Jesus Christ: Lord—the one  
who bought us; Jesus—the name he carried here on earth when he came to save us; Christ—the office he  
filled for our salvation. We trust in the Holy Spirit, who called us by his power and by that same power  
causes us to overflow with hope and love for our fellowman.  
Note: The length of the Athanasian Creed often precludes its regular use in worship, but don’t miss the  
opportunity to use it on this Sunday. Emphasize the ecumenicity of the Creed: anyone who calls themselves  
Christian confesses these words. Articulate its history: doctrine worth dying over is doctrine worth discussing.  
Consider reading portions responsively.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
177 Come, Holy Ghost, Creator Blest  
178 Come, Holy Ghost, Creator Blest  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
72 O Lord, Our Father, Thanks and Praise  
191 Father Most Holy, Merciful, and Tender  
192 Triune God, Oh, Be Our Stay  
193 Come, Now, Almighty King  
194 Oh, that I Had a Thousand Voices  
195 Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty  
241 Alleluia! Let Praises Ring  
326 May the Grace of Christ Our Savior  
481 O God, Your Hand the Heavens Made  
557 On Galilee’s High Mountain  
558 Christ High-Ascended  
566 We All Are One in Mission  
576 Spread, Oh, Spread the Mighty Word  
590 God, Who Made the Earth and Heaven  
597 May God the Father of Our Lord  
598 My Maker, Be with Me  
724 Voices Raised to You We Offer  
734 When in Our Music God Is Glorified  
736 All Christians Who Have Been Baptized  
737 God’s Own Child, I Gladly Say It  
745 May the Peace of God  
247 Earth and All Stars  
248 When in Our Music God Is Glorified  
261 We Sing the Almighty Power of God  
266 Kyrie, God Father in Heaven Above  
270 We All Believe in One True God  
273 Glory Be to the Father  
280 Thy Strong Word  
294 Baptized into Your Name Most Holy  
297 Baptized in Water  
753 Father, God of Grace, You Knew Us  
761 Christ Is With Me  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Second Sunday after Pentecost  
The Holy Ministry stands on the rock-solid truth of God’s Word. Not all who call themselves ministers do that, so  
watch out for false teachers! Many will come with wise sounding words and pious promises, but they are not  
what they seem. The Church’s only defense is to stand firmly on the rock-solid truth of God’s Word. The Season  
of Pentecost explicates the teachings of Christ and the application of faith in the life of the Christian. How fitting  
that this initial Sunday lays the foundation for that teaching and life: the inspired Word of God.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 7:15-29  
Deuteronomy 11:18-21, 26-28  
Romans 3:21-25a, 27, 28  
78  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
1 Kings 22:10-28  
2 Peter 1:20—2:3  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O God, you rule over all things in wisdom and kindness. Take away everything that may be harmful and give  
us whatever is good; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy  
Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path. Alleluia. (Psalm 119:105)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 7:15-29  
The Sermon on the Mount closes with this admonition of our Lord: “Small is the gate and narrow the road  
that leads to life, and only a few will find it.” The Gospel for today gives a reason so few will find that road:  
the deceptions of false teachers. Jesus warns the Church that no false prophet ever comes claiming to be  
one. We cannot judge them only by their actions—even Judas performed miracles. Outward power or piety  
merely masks the beast within false teachers. We must rather judge them by their fruit: not merely their  
moral lives, but the fruit of a prophet is his message. What does he say? He may speak it in the name of  
Jesus, but look at the prophet’s fruit, his message. The mark of a man on the narrow road, the mark of a true  
teacher is one who hears the words of Christ puts them into practice. That foundation of rock-solid truth can  
withstand any storm. True ministers of the Word proclaim the truth and put Christ’s words into practice.  
FIRST LESSON: DEUTERONOMY 11:18-21, 26-28  
The words of this lesson inscribed on parchment have filled the phylacteries of Jews for thousands of years.  
Though they tied them to their hands and bound them to their foreheads, they failed to fix the Word of God  
in their hearts and minds. And so when the Word made flesh stood before them, they could not see the  
Messiah long promised. The teachers of Israel became false prophets, phylacteries and all. When God spoke  
these words through the ministry of Moses, he meant for them to have a home in our hearts, rather than  
just tied to our heads. Moses proclaimed the Word that gives both promise and warning. When the  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Israelites retold the blessing and the curse, they did it next to Mt. Gerizim and Mt. Ebal. The mountains  
stood as a timeless testimony that there are only two choices: the rock-solid truth of God’s Word that brings  
fruitful life or the barren words of the false teachers that lead to nothing but death. How do we prepare  
ourselves to watch out for false teachers? We fix this rock-solid truth in our hearts and minds.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 3:21-25A, 27, 28  
What a great text this Sunday’s lesson provides for a Lutheran preacher! The opportunities are endless.  
However, in the context of this Sunday and its lessons, the point here is the content of the rock-solid truth  
proclaimed by the Holy Ministry. Namely, that only through Christ’s cross could both the Law and the Gospel  
be upheld. Only through Christ’s cross could all God’s words be kept. Only through Christ’s cross could God  
be both just and justifier. Only through Christ’s cross could man be justified by faith. That is rock-solid truth.  
Note: This lesson begins a series of readings through the Epistle to the Romans. For sixteen weeks, the  
Second Lesson will follow Paul’s dissertation on righteousness through faith. The preacher may consider a  
summer series that utilizes these lessons each Sunday. See Pentecost introduction.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: 1 KINGS 22:10-28  
Never before was there a man like Ahab who sold himself to do evil in the eyes of the LORD. As he and  
Jehoshaphat listened, prophet after prophet promised victory in the coming battle. Those prophets looked  
the part with their props and talked the talk by speaking in the name of the LORD. But as Jesus said, not  
everyone who prophesies in the name of the Lord is a true prophet. Judge them by their fruit—the message  
they speak. This lesson starkly reveals false prophets as the liars they are. But Micaiah stands on the rock-  
solid truth of God’s Word that will not be shaken by royal power, personal violence, or professional disdain.  
Mark Micaiah’s words carefully, and judge him by his fruit. No disguise, or ruse, or armor could hide Ahab  
from the arrow of God’s judgment, just as Micaiah prophesied. As the dogs licked Ahab’s blood from the  
chariot and Naboth’s murder was finally avenged, the false teachers were exposed as frauds, but God’s  
ministers who faithfully proclaimed his Word stood on a foundation that could withstand any storm.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 2 PETER 1:20—2:3  
False teachers like Zedekiah (Supplemental First Lesson) give their own interpretation, suited for themselves  
or their audience. Not so true prophesy! Verse 21 is one of the sedes doctrinae for the inspiration of  
Scripture. Using the false teachers as a foil, verse 21 says ἀλλὰ, and draws a direct contradiction between  
false prophesy and Scripture. Consider the Greek of 21b. Note the emphasis of position: The Holy Spirit is  
the important one hereἄνθρωποι comes last! “By the Holy Spirit carried, men spoke from God.” The word  
is ἐλάλησαν, not a form of λἐγω. Man did not contribute the message, but the mouth. Peter encourages us  
to be ready for false teachers: we know their coming, and we know their ending. The Holy Ministry watches  
out for false teachers and stands instead on the rock-solid truth of the inspired Word of God.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
190 We Now Implore God the Holy Ghost  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
205 O Lord, Look Down from Heaven  
284 How Precious Is the Book Divine  
291 We Have a Sure Prophetic Word  
293 God's Word Is Our Great Heritage  
318 Sent Forth by God’s Blessing  
346 In You Is Gladness  
377 Dear Christians, One and All, Rejoice  
382 My Hope Is Built on Nothing Less  
386 Now I Have Found the Firm Foundation  
390 Salvation unto Us Has Come  
393 If Your Beloved Son, O God  
398 Lord, We Confess Our Numerous Faults  
416 How Firm a Foundation  
434 Lord, You I Love with All My Heart  
438 In God, My Faithful God  
475 The Man Is Ever Blest  
512 Let Children Hear the Mighty Deeds  
536 Lord Jesus Christ, the Church’s Head  
541 Lord Jesus Christ, with Us Abide  
623 God the Father, Son, and Spirit  
714 The Lamb  
735 Speak, O Lord  
752 In Christ Alone  
756 We Walk by Faith and Not by Sight  
768 How Firm a Foundation  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Third Sunday after Pentecost  
The Holy Ministry is filled with people who God called out of his boundless mercy. Nothing else could explain the  
choices for ministers that God made! He calls such sinful and weak men to fill this office. Only mercy can explain  
the men he chose in this Sunday’s lessons: a despised tax collector, an exiled killer, a persecutor of Christians.  
How poignant these lessons are, when we remember that each lesson was penned by the unworthy minister  
called into service by God’s boundless mercy!  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 9:9-13  
Hosea 5:15—6:6  
Romans 4:18-25  
119c  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Exodus 3:1-15  
1 Timothy 1:12-17  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O God, the strength of all who trust in you, mercifully hear our prayers. Be gracious to us in our weakness  
and give us strength to keep your commandments in all we say and do; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our  
Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, and entrusting to us the message of  
reconciliation. Alleluia. (2 Corinthians 5:19)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 9:9-13  
The call of Matthew manifests the mercy of God. The Pharisees knew the Scriptures and walked the walk.  
They left no sacrifice undone. Their outward righteousness and place of respect among the people were the  
mirror opposite of the man sitting in the tax collector’s booth. Despised as a quisling and swindler, the  
publican’s only companions were the other “sinners” who lived beyond the pale of Jewish Law. Yet the call  
of Christ to faith and apostleship did not come to these outwardly righteous Pharisees, but to the tax  
collector. So powerful was the call that Matthew left his station and his old life behind and followed. Jesus  
bypassed the Pharisees because they knew sacrifice but were blind to mercy. When they questioned Christ’s  
acts of mercy, Jesus tells the teachers of Israel to go and learn Scripture, to see the difference between  
mercy and sacrifice…to see that their claims of righteousness were nothing but more whitewash on tombs.  
Can they really be healthy when they are blind to mercy for their brothers, blind to the prophets, and blind  
to the Messiah? Christ wanted different ministers than these. He wanted ministers who knew the mercy of  
God and would share the mercy of God. So he turned to the sinner, Matthew, and called him from his life of  
sin to a life of ministry with those merciful words, “Follow me.”  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: HOSEA 5:15—6:6  
Jesus’ words of condemnation for the Pharisees came from the mouth of Hosea, a prophet long familiar with  
unfaithful Israel. Like wanton Gomer, Israel had whored herself to false gods. In his mercy, God called to the  
people, the priests, and the nobility—and their response seemed so good! At first glance, the words that  
Israel spoke (6:1-3) seem a beautiful model of repentance. But this is unrepentant Israel’s idea of  
“repentance” that had as little to do with godly repentance as the Pharisees’ “righteousness” had to do with  
godly service. There is no confession of guilt; no fruits follow; God does not receive it. Their 
חסד
 burned off  
with the morning sun. Merely going through the motions of repentance did not cut it. Merely performing  
the outward functions of the Law did not suffice. God wanted an admission of guilt, an earnest seeking, but  
he did not find it. Only the 
חסד
 of God could solve their problem. “I will heal their waywardness and love  
them freely, for my anger has turned away from them.” (Hosea 14:4)  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 4:18-25  
This is the second of sixteen lessons from book of Romans (Pentecost 2-17). How could God choose the  
ministers he did? How could God choose the people he did? How can God continue to love us after all the  
times we turn our back on him? Because of an alien righteousness, long promised and now credited to us  
and to all who believe in him who raised Jesus from the dead.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: EXODUS 3:1-15  
We see the pre-incarnate Christ calling Moses into service by his mercy. What else could explain the choice?  
Moses had already proven himself a failure at delivering God’s people from bondage. He was an exiled killer,  
living in the wilds of Midian after fleeing the court of Pharaoh. No wonder Moses asked, “Who am I, that I  
should go to Pharaoh?” Everyone called into God’s service asks this question of themselves again and again.  
It comes from knowing that only mercy can explain God choosing us to serve him. But when the minister  
stops marveling at God’s mercy and instead starts questioning God’s choice, then God’s answer rings out  
loud and true: I. Not you. I. Thirteen times in the NIV God uses the first person pronoun. Can the point be  
clearer? Your call is by my mercy, and the ability to perform the service I give you comes only from me, the  
great I AM. What comfort for both preacher and parishioner!  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 1 TIMOTHY 1:12-17  
Paul tells the end result of a bright light on the Damascus road—Christ had come to call Saul to service by his  
mercy. But what an astounding choice! Such a man, to such an office! Only mercy could explain why Christ  
picked Paul, the worst of sinners. Could there have been a more unlikely man to call as Apostle to the  
Gentiles? The reason had nothing to do with Paul. It had to do with Christ and his μακροθυμία. It had to do  
with us: Jesus wanted us to know that the call to ministry is not based on merit, but on mercy. Here is the  
example par excellance of ministry based on Christ’s mercy and not human merit: Saul, the persecutor, is  
called into ministry as Paul, the Apostle. When he reflects on God calling him to ministry, Paul cannot help  
but sing the praises of the King of mercy.  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
596 Let Me Be Yours Forever  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
32 When Sinners See Their Lost Condition  
205 O Lord, Look Down from Heaven  
240 Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise  
283 Speak, O Savior; I Am Listening  
304 Jesus Sinners Does Receive  
305 From Depths of Woe I Cry to You  
313 Jesus Christ, Our Blessed Savior  
377 Dear Christians, One and All, Rejoice  
380 Lord, ’Tis Not that I Did Choose You  
384 By Grace I’m Saved  
399 To God Be the Glory  
401 Your Works, Not Mine, O Christ  
404 Faith Is a Living Power from Heaven  
458 May We Your Precepts, Lord, Fulfill  
460 How Can I Thank You, Lord  
462 Oh, that the Lord Would Guide My Ways  
463 Jesus Calls Us O'er the Tumult  
521 Lord of All Nations, Grant Me Grace  
552 By All Your Saints Still Striving  
588 Abide with Me  
385 Chief of Sinners Though I Be  
390 Salvation unto Us Has Come  
770 O Christ, Who Called the Twelve  
772 When Jesus Came from Nazareth  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Fourth Sunday after Pentecost  
The Holy Ministry is given by God out of compassion for his people. Over the next three Sundays we hear Jesus’  
Missionary Discourse (Matthew 10:5-42). Last Sunday we saw the unworthiness of the servants God calls by  
mercy. Today the emphasis is still on the Ministry of the Word, but the focus shifts from the servants to the  
people they serve. We see the compassion and love of God for this world, love so great that he called ministers  
of the Word to share his grace and mercy and foretell of the coming kingdom of heaven. The Prayer of the Day is  
Gregorian and fits the Sunday beautifully as it emphasizes how God protects us, empowers us, and sanctifies us  
through the ministry of the Word that shows us mercy and forgiveness and leads us to the glory of heaven. The  
Verse of the Day is an excellent match: ministers clothed by God make the saints rejoice!  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 9:35—10:8  
Exodus 19:2-8a  
Romans 5:6-11  
100  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Numbers 27:15-23  
2 Thessalonians 2:16—3:5  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O God, protector of all the faithful, you alone make strong; you alone make holy. Show us your mercy and  
forgive our sins day by day. Guide us through our earthly lives that we do not lose the things you have  
prepared for us in heaven; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,  
one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. May your priests be clothed with righteousness; may your saints sing for joy. Alleluia. (Psalm 132:9)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 9:35—10:8  
The compassion of God for the lost and helpless sinner is the reason for Christ’s work and the ministry of the  
Word. The people of Israel had been harassed by their spiritual leaders and left leaderless and helpless.  
Christ looked upon them and loved them, and then he called the twelve apostles to the ministry of the Word  
that they might shepherd these lost sheep. The disciples prayed for workers and found God’s answer in the  
twelve men Christ sent out to be leaders of the true Israel and heralds of the coming kingdom. They would  
go with Jesus’ message and Jesus’ miracles. They would go by grace to share grace.  
FIRST LESSON: EXODUS 19:2-8A  
Only the compassion of God can explain his loving patience and message of grace. To a people who  
grumbled and doubted and feared and would soon rebel, God sent his servant, Moses. Last week we saw  
Moses, unworthy though he was, called by God’s mercy into ministry. This week we see him practice the  
words of Jesus: Freely you have received, freely give. God sends Moses back down from the mountain to  
share the Word of God with the people. Moses’ ministry was a blessing from God for the people. He  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
reminded them of their Savior God who brought them through plagues and the sea, through the desert’s  
drought and famine. Then he called them to follow their God with full devotion. In his compassion God gave  
them a minister to renew the hearts of his covenant people both for their good and the good of the whole  
world. This would be the people God used to carry out his greatest act of compassion: the incarnation,  
death, and resurrection of his Son.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 5:6-11  
This is the third of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. Pause and contemplate the great love and  
compassion of God. We cannot fully perceive deus absconditus, but we can see his actions. Consider the  
compassion of God as seen in the sacrifice of Christ for the ungodly world. Christ did not die for good  
Christian folk. He died for the ungodly, the immoral, the enemies of God who wanted nothing to do with this  
sacrifice. In short, he died for us, because that is what we were before the grace and mercy of God sought us  
and found us. Martin Franzmann noted, “Since God has come all the way to us in our rebellious impotence,  
since the incredible has happened, since we stand acquitted by the atoning blood of Christ, the peace we  
have with God is peace without end. The wrath of God that looms up at the end of all men’s ways to judge  
them and destroy them, does not loom up at the end of our new way; the Christ looms up, and He will save  
us from the wrath to come.”  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: NUMBERS 27:15-23  
The context of this lesson is of utmost importance. After forty years of faithfully leading God’s people  
through their wanderings, after much pleading with God in prayer, Moses’ hopes of leading the people into  
the Promised Land were dashed. Moses would see the land from afar, but then like his brother before him,  
he would die because of his actions at Meribah Kadesh. But look at Moses’ response! There is no complaint  
or murmur or cry. See how this minister of the Word emulates the compassion of God and his Son: Moses’  
first thought is of the people of God. He saw them as Christ would 1400 years later, as sheep without a  
shepherd. Leave them not leaderless, O Lord! And God answers with a man full of the Spirit to be the new  
leader of God’s people. Lord, give your Church more ministers who model your compassion!  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 2 THESSALONIANS 2:16—3:5  
Paul’s words to the Thessalonians center on the ministry of the Word born of God’s compassion. The God  
who loved us also gave us the encouragement of his Word and Sacraments that strengthen us in word and  
deed. Therefore, Paul beseeches the prayers of the Church for its ministers. Pray that their message be  
spread and the ministers be spared, for there are those who will work against this ministry and its message.  
Yet see the compassion of Christ modeled in his ministers: Paul’s words are ones of concern and comfort for  
people of God. Note the juxtaposition of πίστις and Πιστὸς. The solution to the wicked faithlessness of the  
Church’s enemies is the faithfulness of the Lord.  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
346 In You Is Gladness  
576 Spread, Oh, Spread the Mighty Word  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
120 What Wondrous Love Is This  
179 Hail Thee, Festival Day  
187 When God the Spirit Came  
218 Then the Glory  
525 The Son of God, Our Christ  
542 Dear Lord, to Your True Servants Give  
548 O Lord, in Prayer You Spent the Night  
559 Lord of the Living Harvest  
228 Come, Rejoice before Your Maker  
233 All People that on Earth Do Dwell  
234 Praise to the Lord, the Almighty  
252 Oh, Sing to the Lord  
313 Jesus Christ, Our Blessed Savior  
366 O Jesus So Sweet, O Jesus So Mild  
431 I Walk in Danger All the Way  
438 In God, My Faithful God  
440 On Eagles’ Wings  
561 Lord, Speak to Us that We May Speak  
563 Go Labor On  
573 Hark! The Voice of Jesus Crying  
576 Spread, Oh, Spread the Mighty Word  
578 Saints of God, the Dawn Is Brightening  
613 Come, You Thankful People, Come  
614 Sing to the Lord of Harvest  
733 Rejoice in God  
770 O Christ, Who Called the Twelve  
492 Son of God, Eternal Savior  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Fifth Sunday after Pentecost  
The Holy Ministry preaches Christ in spite of persecution. Christ promises courage for his witnesses to testify  
even in the face of pain or persecution. The Prayer of the Day is one of the most ancient in the Church’s use. It  
seems to have been suggested by the disasters of the dying Western Empire. As Rome crumbled, the Church  
prayed for God’s governance that she might worship in peace and joy. Today Christ reminds us that even when  
that peace and joy are absent, he will give us the courage to continue to testify in his name.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 10:24-33  
Jeremiah 20:7-13  
Romans 5:12-15  
31  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Jeremiah 19:14—20:6  
Acts 23:1-11  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O Lord, our God, govern the nations on earth and direct the affairs of this world so that your Church may  
worship you in peace and joy; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the  
Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Because we are his children, God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, “Abba!  
Father!” Alleluia. (Galatians 4:6)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 10:24-33  
Jesus’ axiomatic statements are so obvious that they require no proof. Yet how surprised we are when we  
face persecution because of the Word! Perhaps we face physical persecution, or perhaps it is merely the  
way modern Christians are called intolerant, credulous, backward. But why should Christians be surprised or  
disappointed or angered about the persecutions they face? Look at the axiom! We slaves are not above our  
master who was persecuted first. So this should not lead to surprise and cannot lead to the cessation of our  
work as Gospel heralds. We know our master and the reality of who he actually is, not just the falsities his  
enemies promulgate. And οὖν, therefore, Μὴ φοβηθῆτε αὐτούς—do not be afraid of them! Instead, shout  
and proclaim! Our enemies can only succeed in killing the body. Such a small thing compared to the fate that  
awaits them! The enemies of Christ have always been fearsome, whether in the days of the crumbling of the  
Roman Empire or during these latter days of American hegemony. That’s why Christ says it three times, Μὴ  
φοβηθῆτε. In place of fear, find the courage of Christ to witness in the face of any persecution.  
FIRST LESSON: JEREMIAH 20:7-13  
Persecution can come from any quarter. For Jeremiah, it came from within the visible church. Passhur, the  
chief officer of the temple, heard the message Jeremiah proclaimed and had him beaten and put into stocks.  
How telling that the first time the Bible calls Jeremiah by the title “prophet” is also the first time he faces  
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bodily persecution! Proclaimers of the pure Word of God will always face persecution from without and  
within the visible church. But what could Jeremiah do? He could not hold in the Word because it was like a  
fire in his heart. He did his job and found his courage in the mighty warrior of the Lord and the knowledge  
that God will prevail. In the face of persecution, Jeremiah found courage, praise and joy.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 5:12-15  
This is the fourth in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. When the first Adam listened  
to the Serpent’s lies, life and holiness disappeared from God’s perfect creation, and into the vacuum left  
behind rushed sin and death. By one act the first Adam ushered in an age where sin ruled and death  
reigned. Even the life of mortal man could only be called a life of death deferred. But the second Adam  
came! By his one epoch-changing act, the life of death deferred became a life of death destroyed. No  
wonder Satan tries to silence the proclaimers of this message with persecution!  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: JEREMIAH 19:14—20:6  
This lesson gives the preceding context of the First Lesson. Note the courage of Jeremiah, first in speaking  
the Word of the Lord that landed him in the stocks, and then speaking the subsequent Word of the Lord as  
soon as he is released from the stocks. To the man who had beaten him, Jeremiah proclaimed a message of  
doom and death by God’s hand. Pashhur could merely kill the body. So Jeremiah did not fear him, but placed  
his life in the hands of the God who numbered every hair on his head. In those hands, Jeremiah found the  
courage to testify in the face of persecution, and even in the midst of it.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: ACTS 23:1-11  
St. Paul knew persecution well: he knew how to give it, and he knew how to take it. The man who once had  
been the Church’s worst nightmare had become by God’s amazing grace the Church’s great Apostle to the  
Gentiles. But the self-proclaimed chief of sinners, who once persecuted the Church, then endured a ministry  
filled with persecutions. The list of dangers and violence that Paul faced is lengthy. By the time we find Paul  
in this lesson he had faced persecutions many times. Yet, his Savior never forgot him, and his Savior never  
forgot to remind him of the courage he could have in Christ. He was going to Rome, and he would testify.  
Not even a martyr’s death would be able to stop the testimony Paul would make for Christ. What the Lord  
whispered in the dark, Paul shouted from the rooftop. And when he met his martyr’s death, it was only the  
door to eternity where his Savior acknowledged him before God the Father. Grant us that courage to testify,  
O Lord!  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
188 Creator Spirit, by Whose Aid  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
184 O Holy Spirit, Enter In  
435 The Will of God Is Always Best  
444 If You But Trust in God to Guide You  
445 Through Jesus’ Blood and Merit  
447 Who Trusts in God, a Strong Abode  
448 In You, O Lord, I Put My Trust  
472 Rise, My Soul, to Watch and Pray  
559 Lord of the Living Harvest  
570 O Christians, Haste  
754 The Tree of Life  
762 Consider How the Birds Above  
187 When God the Spirit Came  
202 If God Had Not Been on Our Side  
346 In You Is Gladness  
347 Jesus! and Shall It Ever Be  
349 Jesus, Priceless Treasure  
378 All Mankind Fell in Adam’s Fall  
396 In Adam We Have All Been One  
403 I Know My Faith Is Founded  
419 If God Himself Be for Me  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Sixth Sunday after Pentecost  
The Christian loves God above all things. The beautiful Prayer of the Day sets the tone for the Sunday. The  
Church prays for the love of God that we might always love him above all things. The Verse of the Day describes  
this total commitment to Christ as denying ourselves and carrying our crosses. The lessons warn of the earthly  
ramifications of such love, but also point to the promised heavenly rewards.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 10:34-42  
Jeremiah 28:5-9  
Romans 6:1b-11  
89  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Exodus 32:15-29  
1 John 2:15-17  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O God, you have prepared joys beyond understanding for those who love you. Pour into our hearts such  
love for you that, loving you above all things, we may obtain your promises, which exceed all that we can  
desire; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God,  
now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. Alleluia.  
(Mark 8:34b)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 10:34-42  
Persecution reprioritizes life and sharpens faith. However, the further Christians get from the lions’ roar or  
the martyr’s stake, the easier it is for us to make our faith in Christ merely moderately important in our lives.  
Family, friends, work, health—these all vie for our time and attention, and our faith gets pushed further and  
further down the list. When life is not so bad, who needs the promises of a better life to come? How true  
Luther’s words of warning: nulla persecutio est tota persecutio! How false our thoughts that faith can be  
only moderately important! C.S. Lewis said, “Christianity, if false, is of no importance, and if true, of infinite  
importance. The only thing it cannot be is moderately important.” In the Gospel, Christ asserts the all-  
important nature of faith, and the all-consuming nature of discipleship. Jesus calls us to love him above all—  
more than family or friends, more than personal safety or even life itself. Such total commitment to Christ  
will not bring peace to your life, but constant conflict with the sinful world around you. Since he did not  
come to bring peace, but a sword, he points the Christian to rewards in heaven, kept safe by the One who  
sent him.  
FIRST LESSON: JEREMIAH 28:5-9  
The false prophet Hananiah proclaimed a message that pleased everyone: within two years the captives and  
sacred articles would return from Babylon. Even Jeremiah liked the sound of Hananiah’s words. He was  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
quick to add his “Amen” to the concept. However, Jeremiah knew that Hananiah was dead wrong. False  
preachers have long promised health and wealth to God’s followers. Christianity, however, is not built on a  
prosperity Gospel, but on the cross for both Christ and Christians. How difficult it must have been for  
Jeremiah to contradict this false prophet who was saying everything the people wanted to hear! Yet God has  
called the Christian to love him above all things. Loving God above all means loving God’s Word, even when  
it’s not what people want to hear. Jeremiah spoke the truth, and God had his back. Jeremiah prophesied  
that God would stop Hananiah from speaking lies in his name, and within two months the man was dead.  
Loving God above all brings conflict, but God promises to be with us through it all.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 6:1B-11  
This is the fifth in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. In this Sunday’s context, this  
lesson provides an excellent opportunity to preach on the Fourth Part of Baptism from the Small Catechism:  
The meaning of baptism for our daily life. The Christian is able to love God above all things because he was  
buried with Christ through baptism into death. The resurrection to faith created a new man freed from sin  
and free to live wholly and completely for Christ. Our baptism enables us to love God above all, and it  
empowers us to do so daily.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: EXODUS 32:15-29  
Aaron had seen God standing on the sapphire pavement. The seventy elders had partaken of a divine  
banquet on the mountain (Exodus 24). And only forty days later, they lost it all. Unwilling to face conflict for  
God, they gave in to the people who wanted to love pleasure, flesh, and idols rather than the God who  
brought them up out of Egypt. Aaron’s feeble excuses remind us of our own shallow rationalizations for  
failing to love God above all things. The Levites, however, rallied to Moses’ call and showed that they loved  
the LORD even more than they loved their brothers. Total commitment to God did not bring peace, but a  
sword. Yet their devotion was rewarded by God who gave them the high privilege of being his special  
servants.  
Note: If the supplemental First Lesson is used on Pentecost 6, consider using CW’s First Lesson of Exodus  
33:12-23 on Pentecost 7. The juxtaposition of these two stories is a striking comparison of the faithlessness  
of Israel and the faithfulness of Moses and the LORD.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 1 JOHN 2:15-17  
Do not love the world or anything in the world. How easy that is to say; how difficult to do! St. John repeats  
Christ’s call for total commitment. Love for the world and the love of the Father are mutually exclusive.  
Loving God above all things means recognizing that our cravings, our lust, and our pride come from this  
world which will not last. So why do we put our love in things that are so transitory? Empires fall, desire  
wanes, relationships fail, accomplishments crumble. Sic transit gloria mundi! God calls the Christian to love  
him above all these things and receive a life that will last forever.  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
453 Come, Follow Me, the Savior Spoke  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
32 When Sinners See Their Lost Condition  
185 O Holy Spirit, Grant Us Grace  
294 Baptized into Your Name Most Holy  
297 Baptized in Water  
299 All Who Believe and Are Baptized  
301 We Praise You, Lord  
525 The Son of God, Our Christ  
530 Hark! The Church Proclaims Her Honor  
547 We Bid You Welcome in the Name  
548 O Lord, in Prayer You Spent the Night  
549 Around the Throne, a Glorious Band  
550 Behold a Host, Arrayed in White  
555 For All Your Saints, O Lord  
713 In Silent Pain the Eternal Son  
736 All Christians Who Have Been Baptized  
737 God’s Own Child, I Gladly Say It  
746 You, Lord, Are Both Lamb and Shepherd  
755 Your Kingdom, O God, Is My Glorious  
Treasure  
355 Take the World, but Give Me Jesus  
422 Jesus, Lead Us On  
434 Lord, You I Love with All My Heart  
452 Let Us Ever Walk with Jesus  
463 Jesus Calls Us O'er the Tumult  
465 Jesus, I My Cross Have Taken  
466 Though Thoughtless Thousands Choose  
477 What Is the World to Me  
761 Christ Is with Me  
500 For Christian Homes, O Lord, We Pray  
784 O Gracious Lord, with Love Draw Near  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Seventh Sunday after Pentecost  
The Christian finds rest in Jesus. From the beginning of time, God provided rest for his creation. He blessed the  
seventh day and set it apart, that man might learn to find his rest in God alone. In Jesus, the Christian finds rest  
from his burdens, rest from his battles, and rest forever in heaven.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 11:25-30  
Exodus 33:12-23  
Romans 7:15-25a  
145  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Joshua 23:1-11  
Hebrews 4:1-11  
122  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
God of all power and might, you are the giver of all that is good. Help us love you with all our heart,  
strengthen us in true faith, provide us with all we need, and keep us safe in your care; through Jesus Christ,  
your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Happy are they who hear the Word, hold it fast in an honest and good heart, and bring forth fruit  
with patience. Alleluia. (Luke 8:15)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 11:25-30  
Though they had seen many signs of Christ’s deity, Korazin, Bethsaida, and Capernaum failed to repent.  
Jesus warned them of the coming wrath. Then he turned to his followers and praised God that the Lord of  
heaven and earth had revealed the truth of Jesus’ identity to the little children who believe in him. He has  
no words of judgment for his followers. He has only words of invitation, of comfort, of rest. Yes, the rest  
comes with a yoke—but look at whose yoke it is! Our Savior’s humble and gentle heart leads him to give us  
an easy yoke, a light burden, and rest for our souls. Christianity is not a religion of rules meant to impinge on  
our freedom; it does not call us to endlessly labor for God’s favor; it does not leave us to work things out on  
our own. No, it frees us from the burden of carrying our sin and puts Christ in its place. It connect us to Jesus  
that we might learn from him. It gives us the rest our weary souls so desperately need.  
FIRST LESSON: EXODUS 33:12-23  
Can you hear the frustration in Moses’ voice? Can you sense the worry? Since their great fall with the golden  
calf, God had refused to go with the people of Israel. He would send an angel, but he himself would not  
accompany them. Moses pleaded with God to go up to the Promised Land with them. Though the Israelites  
had sinned greatly, Moses reminded the LORD that they were God’s people. God responded in grace and  
mercy and promised Moses that his very Presence would go with them, and he himself would give Moses  
rest. Can you hear the confidence in Moses’ voice after God’s promise? Can you sense the devotion? “Show  
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me your glory!” Then God took this man yoked to him in faith and in service, and he showed Moses all the  
glory he could mortally bear.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 7:15-25A  
This is the sixth in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. The Christian life is a battle  
between the sinful flesh and the new man born in us through baptism. The Old Adam wages constant war.  
Where can we find any rest from this kind of fight? Paul’s words ring true in our lives: all the good I want to  
do, but I fail to accomplish; all the evil I have promised never to do again, but repeat within a day. I want to  
do good, but I just can’t make it happen! What a wretched person I am! I just want rest from this battle—  
rest from my failure. Who can save me from this body of death? Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our  
Lord, who came to give rest to weary and burdened souls.  
John Donne (1572-1631) wrote “A Hymn to God the Father” and expressed the battle, the weariness, and  
the rest we find in Christ.  
1. Wilt Thou forgive that sin where I begun,  
Which was my sin, though it were done before?  
Wilt Thou forgive that sin, through which I run,  
And do run still, though still I do deplore?  
When Thou hast done, Thou hast not done,  
For I have more.  
2. Wilt Thou forgive that sin which I have won  
Others to sin, and made my sin their door?  
Wilt Thou forgive that sin which I did shun  
A year or two, but wallowed in a score?  
When Thou hast done, Thou hast not done,  
For I have more.  
3. I have a sin of fear, that when I have spun  
My last thread, I shall perish on the shore;  
But swear by Thyself, that at my death Thy Son  
Shall shine as he shines now, and heretofore;  
And having done that, Thou hast done;  
I fear no more.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: JOSHUA 23:1-11  
God kept the promise he made in the First Lesson: he had gone with his people to the Promised Land. Many  
years after finishing the conquest of Canaan, Joshua looked back and reminded the people that God had  
fought for them and had given them rest from all their enemies. Since God had done this, Joshua called on  
the people to give the Lord their allegiance, their obedience, and their love. Let the preacher make that  
same call to God’s people today. We can look back and see that God fought for us and gave us rest from our  
three great enemies. Now, with sin atoned, the devil defeated, and death vanquished, let all God’s people  
thank him for this rest by giving him allegiance, obedience, and love.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: HEBREWS 4:1-11  
The rest that God gave his people in Canaan foreshadowed the true rest of God in heaven. The rest in the  
Promised Land was received by some through faith and rejected by others through unbelief. The writer to  
the Hebrews urges every Christian to heed the warning of the generation that died in the desert. Instead, by  
faith in Christ, we find the true Sabbath rest of God in heaven.  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
419 If God Himself Be for Me  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
214 Jerusalem the Golden  
215 Jerusalem, My Happy Home  
218 Then the Glory  
409 Come, My Soul, with Every Care  
411 What a Friend We Have in Jesus  
417 I'm But a Stranger Here  
256 How Great Thou Art  
422 Jesus, Lead Us On  
258 Now Let All Loudly  
471 Renew Me, O Eternal Light  
519 O God of Love, O King of Peace  
522 Grant Peace, We Pray, in Mercy, Lord  
551 For All the Saints  
616 Feed Your Children, God Most Holy  
728 Jerusalem the Golden  
745 May the Peace of God  
765 Day by Day  
783 Stay With Us, Lord, the Sun Descends  
288 The Gospel Shows the Father’s Grace  
292 The Lord Is God; There Is No Other  
313 Jesus Christ, Our Blessed Savior  
336 Come unto Me, Ye Weary  
338 I Heard the Voice of Jesus Say  
349 Jesus, Priceless Treasure  
358 How Sweet the Name of Jesus Sounds  
372 I Lay My Sins on Jesus  
389 Rock of Ages, Cleft for Me  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Eighth Sunday after Pentecost  
The Christian is planted by the Word and produces fruit. The Sunday is summarized in the Prayer of the Day  
which thanks God for the implanting of the Word and asks for the Spirit’s help in producing fruits of faith.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 13:1-9, 18-23  
Isaiah 55:10, 11  
Romans 8:18-25  
65  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Isaiah 55:10-13  
Acts 18:1-11  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, we thank you for planting in us the seed of your Word. By your Holy Spirit help us to receive it  
with joy and to bring forth fruits in faith and hope and love; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who  
lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. The Word is very near you; it is in your mouth and in your heart so you may obey it. Alleluia.  
(Deuteronomy 30:14)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 13:1-9, 18-23  
What a description of Jesus’ ministry! What a description of ours! The Sower scatters the seed of the Gospel  
to all with no regard for where it might land. Yet most of his seed bears no fruit. This parable brings warning  
and such comfort. Christ warns us that the seed of the Word faces great opposition from sin, Satan, and the  
world. Newborn faith can be choked or scorched. The Gospel promise can be snatched from apathetic or  
misunderstanding soil. Though we sow the seed faithfully and generously, Jesus warns us that most of it will  
never bear fruit that lasts. Yet for every faithful Gospel preacher, Christ comforts us by showing that the  
preacher’s job is to sow the seed and leave the growing up to God. He comforts us by pointing to what his  
Word does in the good soil: it plants great faith that does great things. In the man who hears and  
understands it, the simple sowing of the Word will produce a crop—a hundred, sixty, or thirty-fold.  
Note: For three Sundays the Gospel features three parables about the kingdom of heaven. Worship planners  
should note the different aspects of each parable to keep from duplicating themes. In today’s parable we see  
how the kingdom is bestowed; next Sunday we see how it operates; and finally, we see how it is acquired.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 55:10, 11  
Though many seeds fall among soil that does not produce fruit, Isaiah gives us God’s promise that his Word  
will never return to him fruitless (
ריקם
). The Word is like the rain and snow sent from God in heaven that fall  
to bring blessing upon the earth and make it fruitful. Just as precipitation makes the earth bud and flourish,  
so God’s Word will always do its work of planting faith in the heart of man and making it fruitful. While this  
sedes doctrinae is often used to illustrate that God’s Word always works, either to convert or to harden, the  
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flavor of this passage and its context is decidedly positive. Faithful preachers are the mouth of God  
(Jeremiah 15:19) from which the Word goes forth to do its work of planting faith and making it bear much  
fruit in the heart of man.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 8:18-25  
This is the seventh in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. Paul teaches a lesson on  
longing for God’s plans to come to fruition. Even creation groans for release from the bondage of sin and  
longs for the freedom of the children of God. One day, God will make all things new and return creation to  
the perfection with which he made it. Until then, we preach the Word that plants faith that looks for a  
better world to come and produces the fruit of hope that lets us wait for it patiently.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 55:10-13  
The supplemental lesson adds two verses to the First Lesson to let the worshipper see the purpose God had  
in sending forth his Word (v 11). God sends his Word out for our joy and for the LORD’s renown.  
Intermediately fulfilled in the return from Babylon, God’s promise is ultimately fulfilled in the Holy Christian  
Church. The Word goes forth to plant faith for the glory of God and the salvation of man.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: ACTS 18:1-11  
The field of Corinth was filled with birds and stones and thorns. Though Paul reasoned and preached, one  
seed after another fell on soil that did not produce a crop. Yet God’s Word would accomplish his good  
purpose. Paul did not have to go far to find a fertile field. He walked out of the synagogue and went right  
next door. In the home of Titius Justus he found good soil that produced a crop one hundred times that  
which was sown.  
Preach you the Word and plant it home  
To those who like or like it not,  
The Word that shall endure and stand  
When flow’rs and mortals are forgot.  
Though some be snatched and some be scorched  
And some be choked and matted flat,  
The sower sows; his heart cries out,  
“Oh what of that, and what of that?”  
Preach you the Word and plant it home  
And never faint; the Harvest-Lord  
Who gave the sower seed to sow  
Will watch and tend his planted Word.  
Martin Franzmann (CW 544)  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
324 Almighty God, Your Word Is Cast  
574 May God Bestow on Us His Grace  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
36 A Great and Mighty Wonder  
62 Joy to the World  
323 Almighty Father, Bless the Word  
364 My Heart Is Longing  
255 Open Now Thy Gates of Beauty  
283 Speak, O Savior; I Am Listening  
318 Sent Forth by God’s Blessing  
319 On My Heart Imprint Your Image  
320 On My Heart Imprint Your Image  
322 On What Has Now Been Sown  
544 Preach You the Word  
568 Good News of God Above  
735 Speak, O Lord  
737 God’s Own Child, I Gladly Say It  
765 Day by Day  
775 For Builders Bold, Whose Vision Pure  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Ninth Sunday after Pentecost  
The Christian lives as wheat among weeds as he waits for the harvest. In the Prayer of the Day we ask for the  
spirit to live like wheat—to think and to do what is right—even while we live in this sinful world. Living with an  
eye on the coming harvest gives us encouragement, comfort, and hope.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43  
Joel 3:12-16  
Romans 8:26, 27  
18  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
1 Peter 4:1-8  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Grant us, Lord, the spirit to think and do what is right that we, who cannot do anything that is good without  
you, may by your help be enabled to live according to your will; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord,  
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. My Word will not return to me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose  
for which I sent it. Alleluia. (Isaiah 55:11b)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 13:24-30, 36-43  
God intended to have a weed-free field of wheat. From the beginning, however, the enemy thwarted his  
intentions with temptation and sin. How many Christians have seen the evil all around them and pondered  
the servants’ question, “Didn’t you sow good seed?” How many churchmen have tried to separate the  
wheat and weeds in the kingdom with rules or monasteries, with inquisitions or Pharisaical laws? Anyone  
who tries only succeeds in ruining wheat along with the weeds. They uproot the faith of the weak who fall  
into sin; they trample the faith of the strong by feeding their pride. The Lord most certainly has a plan to  
separate the wheat and weeds—just not yet. He has servants standing by to do the work—they’re just not  
us. Instead, God urges his people to live with their eye on the coming harvest. God does not want us to try  
and separate wheat from weeds before then. Christ tells us to live as wheat among the weeds of this world  
and wait expectantly for the harvest when the angels will sort it all out: weeds to fire, and wheat to shine as  
the righteous sons of God in the kingdom of their Father.  
FIRST LESSON: JOEL 3:12-16  
The book of Joel foretells the coming of the Day of the Lord. Here in chapter 3, Joel pictures the judgment of  
the nations as a day of harvest. The day is coming when the sickle will swing and the harvest will begin. Can  
you imagine the terror that will strike the unbelieving heart when the sun is darkened and the moon and  
stars fail to shine? Can you imagine the fear when he hears the roaring and thundering of the LORD? Yes, we  
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live as wheat among weeds, but the harvest is coming. When it does, there will be no need for God’s people  
to fear. He is their refuge and stronghold.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 8:26, 27  
This is the eighth in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. Prayer is a gift from God for all  
believers who are living as wheat among weeds. Surrounded by wickedness, the power and comfort of  
prayer is a great privilege indeed. Yet it’s a privilege that we so often leave unused or underutilized. Thank  
God for the gift of the Spirit! The One who called, enlightened, and sanctified us is still at work to overcome  
our weaknesses. When we don’t know what to pray for, we can know that the Spirit is praying for us.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 1 PETER 4:1-8  
Living as wheat among weeds means leaving our lives of sin behind and living for the will of God with an eye  
on the coming harvest. Although righteousness and wickedness must coexist until the judgment, Peter  
reminded his readers that they had spent enough of their lives living in sin. The time had come for a clean  
break with the world. Just because we have to live in the world, doesn’t mean we have to be of it. Yes, this  
break with the world will lead to our persecution. When it happens, fix your eyes on the coming harvest. As  
you bear up under suffering, take heart and know that all mankind will be judged. The end of all things is  
near, so live like wheat among the weeds of this world by loving each other deeply with that forgiving love  
found only in Christ.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
541 Lord Jesus Christ, with Us Abide  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
181 Come, Oh, Come, Life-Giving Spirit  
189 Jehovah, Let Me Now Adore You  
196 Lord God, to You We All Give Praise  
205 O Lord, Look Down from Heaven  
207 The Day Is Surely Drawing Near  
208 Great God, What Do I See and Hear  
221 Blessed Jesus, at Your Word  
226 To Your Temple I Draw Near  
291 We Have a Sure Prophetic Word  
337 Delay Not! Delay Not  
468 My God, My Father, Make Me Strong  
472 Rise, My Soul, to Watch and Pray  
476 Thee Will I Love, My Strength, My Tower  
481 O God, Your Hand the Heavens Made  
523 God of Grace and God of Glory  
613 Come, You Thankful People, Come  
723 Holy Spirit, the Dove Sent From Heaven  
755 Your Kingdom, O God, Is My Glorious  
Treasure  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Tenth Sunday after Pentecost  
The Christian seeks spiritual wealth. This Sunday’s readings are centered around the very ancient Prayer of the  
Day. For nearly 1600 years God’s people on this day have prayed that God might give them true spiritual wealth.  
“Teach us always to ask according to your will that we may never fail to obtain the blessings you have  
promised.” What a magnificent prayer for the materialist world in which we live! Our lessons today show people  
who have come into great wealth, but yet this earthly wealth only serves to illustrate where true treasure lies.  
Today we see that true, spiritual wealth can only be found in God and his eternal blessings for us in Christ.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 13:44-52  
1 Kings 3:5-12  
Romans 8:28-30  
119b  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
1 Timothy 6:17-21  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O Lord, your ears are always open to the prayers of your humble servants, who come to you in Jesus’ name.  
Teach us always to ask according to your will that we may never fail to obtain the blessings you have  
promised; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one  
God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. Alleluia. (John 6:68)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 13:44-52  
Jesus’ parables teach us to seek spiritual wealth. Both of the men in the parables found great treasure. For  
one it was a complete surprise, as unexpected as it was valuable. For the other it came from an expert  
search by a discerning man. Before they found these new treasures, both men no doubt valued what they  
previously owned. But once they saw this new treasure, see how little they valued all else they had! The  
spiritual wealth of Christ and his Gospel puts everything else into perspective; in fact it marginalizes all else.  
The importance of this truth comes to light in the parable of the net. All people, rich and poor, will be caught  
up. Only those who found true spiritual wealth are spared the furnace. Jesus concludes with an  
encouragement for the preacher of the Gospel: you have found true wealth in Christ; you have been given a  
storeroom full of treasures new and old. Bring them out to God’s people with joy and delight.  
FIRST LESSON: 1 KINGS 3:5-12  
What would you have asked for? If anything in the world could be yours, what would be your request? God  
only gave one man the choice between unlimited riches and spiritual wealth. Can you imagine facing his  
dilemma? What should I pick, temporal blessings or eternal ones? What should I value, the things of this  
world or the things of God? How well Solomon expressed the words of our Prayer for today, to ask  
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according to God’s will. We marvel at his faith in choosing great wisdom over great riches—especially since  
we so often fail in the pitifully small choices we make! It’s not for all the riches in the world that we turn  
down spiritual wealth, but for paltry over-time hours, or a little extra in the check book that we shaved off  
our offering. For such small things we are willing to trade away opportunities for true spiritual wealth. Look  
at Solomon and see an example of what God means by spiritual wealth. He doesn’t mean we need to live as  
mendicant monks; he doesn’t ask us to forgo all earthly treasure. He just doesn’t want us to value them  
more than the pearl of great price. After choosing spiritual treasure, God blessed Solomon in unbelievable  
ways. (Do the math on the twenty-five tons worth of gold that was part of Solomon’s annual income.) Seek  
first his kingdom and his righteousness and all these things will be given you as well.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 8:28-30  
This is the ninth in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. Paul explains the spiritual  
wealth that belongs to every Christian. Like the man who found treasure buried in the field, we brought no  
merit or worth to our calling. Rather, we were chosen. The surprising grace of God found us and gave us the  
ultimate treasure: predestined, called, justified, and glorified.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 1 TIMOTHY 6:17-21  
Could Paul’s words be more timely or appropriate for this generation? He instructs preachers everywhere to  
warn the rich about the two pet sins of the wealthy: arrogance and false hope. Mankind so easily falls in the  
error of thinking that earthly treasures can provide security or a sense of worth. In our affluent society both  
of those sins run rampant in many a Christian heart. God commands us not to trust in earthly treasure  
because he wants us to have a firm foundation on which to stand, a certainty on which to place our hope.  
That can only be found in spiritual wealth. God richly provides for us, and then we give thanks by being rich  
in good deeds. Spiritual wealth is certain and secure, for it is treasure laid up in heaven. How can we possibly  
carry out this command? Teach us to ask according to your will that we may never fail to obtain the  
blessings you have promised.  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
418 My God Will Never Leave Me  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
199 In Trembling Hands, Lord God, We Hold  
204 O God, Our Lord, Your Holy Word  
207 The Day Is Surely Drawing Near  
208 Great God, What Do I See and Hear  
290 One Thing’s Needful  
311 Soul, Adorn Yourself with Gladness  
325 How Blest Are They Who Hear  
349 Jesus, Priceless Treasure  
386 Now I Have Found the Firm Foundation  
409 Come, My Soul, with Every Care  
414 I Leave All Things to God’s Direction  
421 All Depends on Our Possessing  
429 What God Ordains Is Always Good  
469 Take My Life and Let It Be  
477 What Is the World to Me  
479 Jesus, Your Boundless Love to Me  
511 O Lord, Our God, Your Gracious Hand  
523 God of Grace and God of Glory  
620 To You, Our God, We Fly  
737 God’s Own Child, I Gladly Say It  
755 Your Kingdom, O God, Is My Glorious  
Treasure  
757 Where Your Treasure Is  
764 There Is a Time for Everything  
784 O Gracious Lord, with Love Draw Near  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost  
The Christian trusts God to provide. The Prayer of the Day summarizes the Sunday: God reveals his mighty  
power chiefly in showing mercy and kindness. God feeds hungry mouths and hungry souls with his gifts of grace.  
When we bring our problems to Jesus, he will richly supply all we need.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 14:13-21  
Isaiah 55:1-5  
Romans 8:35-39  
42-43  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Genesis 41:41-49  
1 Timothy 4:4-5  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O God, you reveal your mighty power chiefly in showing mercy and kindness. Grant us the full measure of  
your grace that we may obtain your promises and become partakers of your heavenly glory; through Jesus  
Christ, your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Jesus replied, “If anyone loves me, he will obey my teaching. My Father will love him, and we will  
come to him and make our home with him.” Alleluia. (John 14:23)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 14:13-21  
Though saddened by the Baptist’s death and seeking solitude, Jesus had compassion on the crowds that  
followed him and healed their sick. Then he turned to the training of his disciples. “Give them something to  
eat,” he told them (Mark 6:37). The disciples, however, saw all of the problems and none of the possibilities.  
They could estimate how many months’ wages it would cost; they could tally the measly resources on hand.  
Their math didn’t fail them, but their faith did. They did not begin to understand what kind of Lord they had  
in Jesus. Jesus taught them that a Christian trusts in God to provide when he said, “Bring them here to me!”  
They should have done immediately; it should be our first response to want or crisis. Bring it to Jesus. And  
look how he answered! So much food that thousands were fed and there were bushels left over. Here, the  
Son of God showed that he even cares for the physical needs of his people. Trust in God to provide!  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 55:1-5  
God’s care for our physical needs is coupled with his care for our spiritual needs. He wants to fill not only  
empty bellies but also hungry hearts and thirsty souls. “Come” is his invitation; “all” is the guest list; “free” is  
the cost. What hungry or thirsty soul would turn down his call? Those who come he fills with spiritual food.  
As richly as he fed the 5000, so richly he feeds his people with the Gospel, pure and free.  
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SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 8:35-39  
This is the tenth in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. Though we suffer much in this  
world, the Christian trusts that nothing can separate him from the love of God. In his providence, God  
provides for us; in his love, God protects us. Though we are considered sheep for the slaughter by the world,  
we know that in the hand of our God we are more than conquerors, inseparable from the love of God in  
Christ Jesus our Lord. No earthly powers, no spiritual forces, nothing in our past or in our future has the  
power to remove us from the care of our God.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: GENESIS 41:41-49  
A Christian trusts that God will provide—even when the plan makes no sense to us. Sold as a slave by his  
brothers, Joseph could have despaired of God’s care and love. In faith, however, Joseph trusted in God to  
provide for his needs and his future. Year after year, God did just that and raised Joseph from the depths of  
prison to dizzying heights of power. By the age of 30 he controlled one of the greatest empires the world has  
known. And it was all so God could provide for his people. He used Joseph as his tool to fill the granaries  
during the seven fat years that he might give bread to the people during the seven lean. So great was God’s  
blessing that they stopped counting the grain! The grace in God’s provision can be seen not only in the  
thousands of Egyptians saved from starvation, but most especially in the grain he provided to Jacob and his  
sons during the famine. Though he was sold as a slave, God made Joseph vizier that he might be God’s hand  
providing food to preserve the bloodline of the Savior. How often we look at our lives and see only problems  
and none of the possibilities that God would work in us and through us! Look at Joseph and learn again to  
trust God to provide.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 1 TIMOTHY 4:4-5  
The Gnostic heretics believed the physical world was evil. They demanded an ascetic life that was at odds  
with God’s intentions for our existence. Paul asserts that God not only cares about our physical existence,  
but everything we need for it is, in fact, a creation of God and essentially good—not evil. Rather than a life  
of denial, the Christian life is one of gratefully receiving all that we need as gracious gifts from God.  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
349 Jesus, Priceless Treasure  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
214 Jerusalem the Golden  
258 Now Let All Loudly  
410 Our Father, Who from Heaven Above  
432 I Am Jesus’ Little Lamb  
304 Jesus Sinners Does Receive  
332 Go, My Children, with My Blessing  
337 Delay Not! Delay Not  
338 I Heard the Voice of Jesus Say  
339 Today Your Mercy Calls Us  
353 Praise the One Who Breaks the Darkness  
364 My Heart Is Longing  
445 Through Jesus’ Blood and Merit  
465 Jesus, I My Cross Have Taken  
480 Almighty Father, Heaven and Earth  
482 Forgive Us, Lord  
511 O Lord, Our God, Your Gracious Hand  
565 There Still Is Room  
728 Jerusalem the Golden  
395 Seek Where You May to Find a Way  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Twelfth Sunday after Pentecost  
The Christian answers doubt with faith. Doubt is the unfortunate companion of faith. Wherever faith clings to  
the promises of God, doubt is always right there lingering in the back of our mind, constantly asking the  
serpent’s Garden question, “Did God really say?” How striking to think that we must have faith in God before we  
can doubt him! Today’s lessons show us believers who had faith in God and his abilities to save them, but yet  
doubted when his plans or purpose failed to match theirs. In each case, it is adversity that fights against faith  
and allows its unfortunate companion to rear its ugly head. And in each case, the true answer to doubt is not  
found in the great miracle that removes adversity, but in the still small voice of our Savior God whispering in his  
Word. Today we hear our Savior God ask us, “Why did you doubt?”, and we see that the Christian answers  
doubt with faith.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 14:22-33  
1 Kings 19:9-18  
Romans 9:1-5  
73  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Exodus 14:10-31  
James 1:2-8, 12  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty and everlasting God, you are always more ready to hear than we to pray, and to give more than we  
either desire or deserve. Pour upon us the abundance of your mercy, forgiving us those things of which our  
conscience is afraid, and giving us those good things for which we are not worthy to ask, except through the  
merits and mediation of your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,  
one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see. Alleluia. (Hebrews  
11:1)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 14:22-33  
Doubt and faith rose and fell like the waves of the sea that dark night. The evangelist paints a picture of  
frantic effort against a storm with little progress. Then Jesus came—and note the way he came! He did not  
simply appear among them, as he could have. He did not fly or float. He walked on the water. The very thing  
they had been fighting, the water that threatened to take their life, Jesus walked on it like it was dry ground.  
What a Savior we have that walks on the waters of all our greatest fears! See the faith in the disciples grow!  
See Peter show it in his own miraculous walk. But, all too often, doubt is the unfortunate companion of  
faith. Though Jesus was standing on the water, Peter feared it. What pulls our eyes of faith away from Jesus?  
What are the waves and wind in our lives that make us doubt him? To Peter, Jesus asked, “Why did you  
doubt?” He gave no answer. What could he say? With Jesus there is never any need to doubt. How sad that  
we so often do! Rather, let us focus on the Savior and watch our faith swell as the disciples’ did when their  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
doubts vanished, and they gave the greatest evidence of faith: they worshipped that man from Nazareth for  
what he truly was, the Son of God.  
FIRST LESSON: 1 KINGS 19:9-18  
Elijah’s great victory of faith was followed closely by great adversity. From the heights of Mt. Carmel, Elijah  
fell into the depths of frustration. Even after such a great display of God’s glory, this evil queen issued her  
death threats. Even after such a powerful display of God’s might, a general spiritual renewal did not occur.  
Elijah had faith in God’s power, but he doubted when God’s plans and purpose did not match his own.  
Hadn’t the people broken the covenant? Why didn’t God come and make things right with earthquake,  
wind, and the fire of judgment? Elijah went to the site where the covenant had been made, to the mountain  
of God where God had come once before in fire and wind and earthquake. There Elijah brought his case  
against the people of Israel. God answered his prophet not with great acts of power, but rather with quiet  
words of promise. God displayed all of his power, so that his display of grace might be all the more  
astounding. He would not come in judgment, but in grace for his elect. The still small voice of his message  
would accomplish all that he desired. It would tear down kingdoms and establish dynasties. It would bring  
judgment on his enemies and reserve a people for himself. Elijah heard the Word of God and had to wonder,  
“Why did I doubt?”  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 9:1-5  
This is the eleventh in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. Paul explains the roots of  
the Christian Church. He speaks of his brothers, the children of Israel, and asks them, “Why did you doubt?  
Why did you doubt that salvation is by grace, not by works? Why did you doubt the Messiah long promised  
was fulfilled in Jesus of Nazareth?” The unbroken line of God’s acts of grace left Israel no reason to doubt.  
Yet they did. And God’s answer to that doubt? He chose a remnant by grace and spoke to them in the gentle  
whisper of God made man.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: EXODUS 14:10-31  
The children of Israel during their great exodus aptly displayed that doubt is the unfortunate companion of  
faith. As they made their way from Egypt to Canaan, they scurried back and forth between the poles of faith  
and doubt with alarming regularity. Faith had led them to follow Moses and the Pillar into the desert. Now,  
however, with the sea in front of them and a great army behind them, faith fled and doubt reigned.  
Adversity made them forget the God of the Passover. Moses came with words so fitting for doubting hearts  
in the face of adversity, “You need only be still.” As the psalmist said, “Be still and know that I am God.”  
God’s plan will prevail. The very water they thought was preventing their escape would in fact be the cause  
of their deliverance. The very army they thought would destroy them would in fact be destroyed. The  
troubles that seem to afflict us or hem us in, are, in fact, part of the plan for the glory of God and the  
salvation of man. It is only after the parted sea finds its former home that we recognize the grace of God’s  
hand in our lives. And we hear the gentle whisper of our Savior God, “Why did you doubt?”  
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SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: JAMES 1:2-8, 12  
The trials we face in this sinful world can make us terrified like the disciples, or frustrated like Elijah, or  
despondent like the children of Israel before the sea. James calls us out as living like double-minded men  
when we doubt our God. He preaches a law to hearts that need to hear it: “Do not doubt!” But God  
promises that in the midst of the storms of life, we can listen and also hear his gentle whisper. “It is I. Don’t  
be afraid!” When we hear his voice, the waves of doubt recede and faith finds its place again, making us  
once more sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see.  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
379 Amazing Grace—How Sweet the Sound  
384 By Grace I’m Saved  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
431 I Walk in Danger All the Way  
433 Jesus, Savior, Pilot Me  
205 O Lord, Look Down from Heaven  
251 When Morning Gilds the Skies  
315 Here, O My Lord, I See You Face to Face  
346 In You Is Gladness  
434 Lord, You I Love with All My Heart  
439 Lord, Take My Hand and Lead Me  
447 Who Trusts in God, a Strong Abode  
451 Precious Lord, Take My Hand  
517 Almighty Father, Strong to Save  
522 Grant Peace, We Pray, in Mercy, Lord  
552 By All Your Saints Still Striving  
617 Christ, by Heavenly Hosts Adored  
711 Jesus Has Come and Brings Pleasure Eternal  
768 How Firm a Foundation  
349 Jesus, Priceless Treasure  
353 Praise the One Who Breaks the Darkness  
354 Lamb of God, We Fall before You  
357 Jesus, Lover of My Soul  
364 My Heart Is Longing  
405 Oh, for a Faith that Will Not Shrink  
415 Be Still, My Soul  
416 How Firm a Foundation  
779 I Sing as I Arise Today  
786 The Song of Moses  
418 My God Will Never Leave Me  
422 Jesus, Lead Us On  
428 Why Should Cross and Trial Grieve Me  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Thirteenth Sunday after Pentecost  
The Church is meant for all people. The Prayer of the Day reminds us that it is only by God’s gift of grace that we  
come into his presence to offer true and faithful service. Today’s lessons teach that the gift of grace given to  
Israel, God also intended to give through Israel to the world. The Church is meant for all people: a display of  
God’s mercy and a result of the living and active Word of God.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 15:21-28  
Isaiah 56:1, 6-8  
Romans 11:13-15, 28-32  
133-134  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Joshua 2:8-21  
142  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty and merciful God, it is only by your gift of grace that we come into your presence and offer true  
and faithful service. Grant that our worship on earth may always be pleasing to you, and in the life to come  
give us the fulfillment of what you have promised; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord, who lives and  
reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. The Word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, discerning the thoughts  
and intentions of the heart. Alleluia. (Hebrews 4:12)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 15:21-28  
Note the context of chapter 15. The children of Israel—and especially their religious leaders—found nothing  
but fault in Jesus of Nazareth. The chosen people of God to whom belonged the patriarchs, the promises,  
the covenant and the temple, could see nothing in Christ but a breaker of man-made traditions. Jesus’ words  
to them could not be harsher. They were the fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophesy: their outward rites and rituals  
belied an inward spiritual emptiness. The very people who should have been closest to Christ were most  
distant. So Jesus distances himself from them and goes to the Gentile land of ancient paganism, Tyre and  
Sidon. There he finds a most inexplicable thing: the Greek text notes it as both surprising and extraordinary:  
ἰδοὺ γυνὴ Χαναναία. After leaving the land of God’s chosen people, Jesus finds a woman—a Canaanite  
woman—who received the Word of God and trusted in God’s promises in a way that shamed every one of  
the religious teachers. The male leaders of God’s people failed to recognize him, but behold! Look carefully!  
A woman, a Canaanite woman, cries out, “Kyrie eleison!” And to whom does she cry? She called him “Lord,  
Son of David,” with all of its messianic implications. How amazing is the grace of God that chooses the weak  
and lowly things of the world to shame the wise and proud. Only twice are we told that Jesus called  
someone’s faith great. Both were Gentiles, and both exhibited a God-given trust in the Word and promises  
of God made man.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 56:1, 6-8  
The words of this lesson came to the mind and mouth of our Savior when he confronted the gross  
perversion of temple worship in Mark 11. Through Isaiah God told the world that God-fearing Gentiles  
would always have a place within his temple. Yet in his temple on earth, the religious leadership turned the  
court of Gentiles into a marketplace that robbed both man and God. Jesus cleansed it of both the commerce  
and corruption and quoted this lesson. The godly Gentiles described are the exact opposite of the Jews in  
Matthew 15. God in his grace calls the Gentiles into his presence and makes his Church a house of prayer for  
all nations.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 11:13-15, 28-32  
This is the twelfth in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. On this day celebrating faith  
for the Gentiles, St. Paul warns his Gentile readers against any pride on their part or prejudice against the  
Jews. Note the point of this Apostle to the Gentiles: he reaches out to the Gentile with the hopes of also  
winning the Jew. Verse 15 makes the point of our Gospel lesson. Rejection by the people of Israel meant  
Christ would be preached to the Gentiles. How personal this statement is for Paul! How many synagogues  
had he preached in, only to be cast out and make his way to the Gentiles? But yet Israel retains its dual  
status: enemies that are beloved. When the nation of Israel turned from its Savior God and his Messiah, God  
set his face against them as enemies of the Gospel. But yet God’s call and his Word of promise remain. Such  
is grace, that God does not love the lovable, but makes the unlovable his dear possession. Just look at what  
he did with the disobedient Gentiles! Both Jew and Gentile apart from Christ languish in the fearful prison  
called “Disobedience.” God shut them up together that locked thus, all hope and all self-help were gone.  
Disobedience was all they had and all they could bring forth. Only one door permits one to leave this prison,  
and it is inscribed: “God’s Mercy.” (R.C.H. Lenski)  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: JOSHUA 2:8-21  
It is reasonable that spies would hide themselves in a house of prostitution. It is reasonable, too, that this  
prostitute Rahab tried to cut a deal to preserve her life in the face of the Israelite onslaught that the whole  
city knew was coming. But what reason is there that she did it out of faith in the LORD? What reason did she  
find to have faith in the God of free and faithful love? There is no reason for that but the unreasonable gift  
of God worked in her heart by the living and active Word of God. Clearly, God meant his Church to be for all  
people. But he didn’t stop there! What reason could there be that this foreign woman, this prostitute from a  
godless country, that hers would be the womb through which line of the Blessed Seed would descend?  
There is no reason for that at all. That can only be grace. Grace meant for all people.  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
413 When in the Hour of Utmost Need  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
448 In You, O Lord, I Put My Trust  
494 Blest Be the Tie that Binds  
521 Lord of All Nations, Grant Me Grace  
534 In the Midst of Earthly Life  
539 In Christ There Is No East or West  
570 O Christians, Haste  
251 When Morning Gilds the Skies  
266 Kyrie, God Father in Heaven Above  
305 From Depths of Woe I Cry to You  
357 Jesus, Lover of My Soul  
395 Seek Where You May to Find a Way  
402 My Faith Looks Up to Thee  
571 From Greenland’s Icy Mountains  
577 Rise, O Light of Gentile Nations  
756 We Walk by Faith and Not by Sight  
773 In Unity and Peace  
403 I Know My Faith Is Founded  
404 Faith Is a Living Power from Heaven  
405 Oh, for a Faith that Will Not Shrink  
425 Oh, Sing, My Soul, Your Maker’s Praise  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Fourteenth Sunday after Pentecost  
The Church will stand forever. Nothing can keep our Redeemer from upholding his promised salvation. Neither  
false expectations nor the gates of hell, neither an Egyptian army nor a flowing river, not even the great  
tribulation of the end times will keep our God from preserving his Church.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 16:13-20  
Exodus 6:2-8  
Romans 11:33-36  
34  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Joshua 4:1-9  
Revelation 7:1-8  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty and everlasting God, give us an increase of faith, hope, and love; and, that we may obtain what you  
promise, make us love what you command; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns  
with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Jesus Christ has destroyed death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel.  
Alleluia. (1 Timothy 1:10b)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 16:13-20  
Who do people say the Son of Man is? That question is as applicable today as it was in Matthew’s Gospel.  
The question remains, “Who is Jesus?” As the disciples rattled off the popular misconceptions, one is struck  
by how illustrious that list actually was. There were no slouches in that group. But they didn’t even begin to  
compare with the truth. Many people today give similar answers: they call Jesus a teacher, a philosopher,  
the founder of a religion, an agent of change. Their answers miss the mark as widely as the answers of the  
people in the Gospel. Only disciples of Jesus, through the work of the Spirit of God, can confess him as he  
truly is. Could Peter’s answer be any better? You are the Anointed One, the one set apart by God and  
prophesied by Scripture, the Promised Seed who would save us from sin. But even more than that, Peter  
showed that the disciples confessed him to be the Son of the living God. You, Jesus of Nazareth, are the Son  
of the God who is life and who gives life. This living God is the hope of every sinful man ever since Adam in  
the face of death named his wife “Life,” because through her womb would come the Seed who is the Way,  
the Truth, and the Life. Now here, in the flesh, stood the Son of the living God whose mission was to restore  
life to this world of death. This truth is the rock on which the Church stands. Because it stands on the rock  
and not on the pebbles of men who serve it, the Church will stand forever: its message is changeless; the  
ramifications of its work are eternal.  
Note: The preacher will note that this passage has been used by the Roman Catholic Church to extend its  
tyranny over souls. A study of Πέτρος and πέτρᾳ is in place to dispel the Roman error that both refer to  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Simon. The singular pronouns in verse 19 are resolved in Matthew 18:18. The Reformers studied and wrote  
much regarding these verses and the Keys.  
FIRST LESSON: EXODUS 6:2-8  
To a people who wanted to know who God was, he responded, “I AM who I AM.” In this lesson he explains  
exactly what it means to be the LORD, the God of free and faithful love. It means that he is the living God  
who will preserve his Church forever. Why and how does he preserve it? God gives a striking answer by  
referring to himself 21 times in seven verses. The God of free and faithful love will redeem his people. And  
because our redemption is not based on our obedience, but on him and his faithfulness, his power and his  
grace, it is a covenant that cannot be shaken or removed. God will preserve his Church forever. How can we  
be certain? Look at the simple promise that brackets our lesson. “I am the LORD.”  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 11:33-36  
This is the thirteenth in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. Note the preceding  
context that falls outside of this lesson. Romans 11:25-27 remembers the covenant with Israel. Isaiah  
prophesied it. God fulfilled it. “This is my covenant with them when I take away their sins.” The living God  
preserves his Church forever by remembering his covenant. How can man respond to the illogical nature of  
grace? Only with awe; only with praise. Here Paul records a great doxology fit for our Redeemer God. The  
depth of his wisdom, his unsearchable judgments, his limitless grace in Christ—that truth is the rock on  
which the Church will stand forever. Worship him with awe! Praise him with joy!  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: JOSHUA 4:1-9  
Twelve rocks told the story God’s grace and preservation to generations of his people. Through the Word,  
they still speak to us today. As he once used his might to halt a river in its place to preserve his people, so  
today God still preserves and protects the new Israel, his Holy Church. Today, rocks still speak. Not stones in  
a river, but people like Peter, little rocks who proclaim the Rock on which we stand forever.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: REVELATION 7:1-8  
God doesn’t just hold back rivers, but he even holds back the winds of destruction until every one of his  
elect is safely sealed. Ezekiel 9 gives an interesting prophesy of such a seal. The believers are marked with  
the Hebrew letter Taw. It’s intriguing to think of the image that would have formed in the mind of the  
people of Israel. The Hebrew script at the time would have marked each forehead with † or + or X. Thus  
sealed with the seal of the living God, the whole Church is preserved forever (12 2 x 10 3 = 144,000. The  
number of the Church is 12; the number of completeness is 10; multiplication intensifies the symbolism).  
Note: This lesson provides the opportunity to address the popular misinterpretations of this text. Besides the  
symbolic numbers, the list itself is symbolic. Nowhere else does the Bible list the tribes in this way. Levi is  
never counted among the tribes, but is here. Joseph is listed, but so is Manasseh, while the more important  
Ephraim is not. Dan is omitted altogether. Judah is raised to its soteriological position of primacy. This is not  
a listing of the children of Israel, but a picture of the true Israel of God, the Holy Christian Church.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
536 Lord Jesus Christ, the Church’s Head  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
17 God’s Own Son Most Holy  
184 O Holy Spirit, Enter In  
445 Through Jesus’ Blood and Merit  
529 Built on the Rock  
226 To Your Temple I Draw Near  
239 Glory Be to God the Father  
308 As Surely As I Live, God Said  
335 O Kingly Love, that Faithfully  
368 O Savior, Precious Savior  
382 My Hope Is Built on Nothing Less  
399 To God Be the Glory  
403 I Know My Faith Is Founded  
420 God Moves in a Mysterious Way  
438 In God, My Faithful God  
537 Onward, Christian Soldiers  
538 The Church’s One Foundation  
552 By All Your Saints Still Striving  
560 I Hear the Savior Calling  
596 Let Me Be Yours Forever  
621 For Years on Years of Matchless Grace  
709 Christ, Your Footprints through the Desert  
739 Baptismal Waters Cover Me  
742 What Is This Bread  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Fifteenth Sunday after Pentecost  
The Church is militant: first the cross, then the crown. The Prayer and Verse of the Day center the lessons. Today  
Christ tells us that for him and for us, going God’s way means death must come before life. He calls on us to  
deny ourselves and follow him on the way of the cross. Those words offend our sinful flesh and make our Old  
Adam cry with Peter, “Never!” They make us accuse God with Jeremiah. So today the Church prays for the  
never-failing mercy of Christ that we might avoid such wicked and harmful thoughts and instead be guided on  
the cross-laden path to salvation. Then, and only then, do these words of Christ cease offending our flesh and  
become a joy and delight for our heart (Verse of the Day).  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 16:21-26  
Jeremiah 15:15-21  
Romans 12:1-8  
121  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Judges 16:22-31  
Galatians 6:12-16  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
O Lord Jesus Christ, preserve the congregation of believers with your never-failing mercy. Help us avoid  
whatever is wicked and harmful, and guide us in the way that leads to our salvation; for you live and reign  
with the Father and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Your words became a joy to me, and the delight of my heart. Alleluia. (Jeremiah 15:16 cf. RSV)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 16:21-26  
Peter’s great confession from last Sunday’s Gospel showed the disciples understood who Jesus was. But  
though they understood his person, they still failed to understand his work. He had come to fulfill the  
redemptive mission for which he was anointed; he had not come to fulfill Israel’s earthbound views of  
Messiah. He couldn’t be the Messiah they wanted, and still be the Savior they needed. “He must go…” Cross  
and death were necessary first. When Jesus spoke most clearly about his cross, Peter spoke Satan’s words of  
compromise. Thanks be to God that our Savior saw the necessity of the cross before the crown! Now for  
Christian followers, cross comes before the crown as well. We die to self, but gain Christ, the Life.  
FIRST LESSON: JEREMIAH 15:15-21  
The church is militant, and that means dying to self and the things of man. After a hard ministry, Jeremiah  
began to forget the things of God and concentrate too much on the things of man. The prophet Jeremiah  
struggled to carry the cross given him by his God. God’s Word was a joy and delight to his heart, but  
Jeremiah’s life had been anything but joy and delight. After bearing much persecution, God’s prophet finally  
tired of self-denial. He wondered whether God’s promises amounted to nothing, but were as failed and  
fruitless as a dried-up brook in times of drought. How does God respond? Does he remove the cross and  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
persecution? No, he commands his prophet to repent and turn to God for mercy. Then, God will permit him  
again the privilege of carrying a cross in his name. God renews a promise that he had made at the beginning  
of Jeremiah’s ministry. He didn’t promise to remove the persecution, but to make Jeremiah strong enough  
to take it. May God make each of us bronze walls, certain of the fact that even as we follow the way of the  
cross—no, especially as we follow the way of the cross—our God is with us to rescue and save us, and  
redeem us from the grasp of the cruel. That knowledge renewed and restored Jeremiah to a ministry  
centered on the things of God as he served in the Church militant.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 12:1-8  
This is the fourteenth in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. Jesus did not heed Satan’s  
temptation or Peter’s command. He denied himself and carried his cross to the hill of his death and our  
eternal life. Through that one act of righteousness, God gave justification that brings life to all mankind. St.  
Paul spends eleven chapters outlining the amazing nature of God’s plan for our salvation centered on our  
crucified Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Then in chapter 12, Paul begins, “Therefore…” He points back to the  
past eleven chapters and says, In view of all that—in view of everything God did to save you eternally…let  
death come before life for you. First the cross, then the crown. Offer your bodies as living sacrifices. This  
oxymoron only makes sense in the Christian response of life lived by dying to self and living for Christ.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: JUDGES 16:22-31  
What good will it be for a man if he gains the whole world, yet forfeits his soul? Jesus’ words of warning form  
a perfect picture of Samson. He had the world: strength, fame, power, leadership, love. Yet he was losing his  
soul. But the God of grace humbled him. Samson repented and took up his cross and followed. He lost his  
life, but died in faith. His words comprise the most fervent plea that a sinner can make at the end of life. Like  
the thief, he cried, “Remember me!” Once again a man of faith, he had in mind the things of God rather than  
men and died in service to his Savior God.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: GALATIANS 6:12-16  
Christians will be tempted to give in to license or legalism in order to escape persecution. But Christ told us  
to expect persecution and burdens that come from carrying his cross. For the Christian, bearing the cross is a  
point of pride and the basis for our boasting. How can this be? We are the Church militant, and so death  
comes before life, the cross before the crown. By the cross the world dies to us, and we die by that same  
cross to the world. But after that death comes life—new life—an entirely new creation.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
465 Jesus, I My Cross Have Taken  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
70 Help Us, O Lord, for Now We Enter  
125 When I Survey the Wondrous Cross  
186 O Spirit of Life, O Spirit of God  
259 When All Your Mercies, O My God  
345 In the Cross of Christ I Glory  
355 Take the World, but Give Me Jesus  
396 In Adam We Have All Been One  
422 Jesus, Lead Us On  
481 O God, Your Hand the Heavens Made  
483 Lord of All Good  
484 Brothers, Sisters, Let Us Gladly  
488 Savior, Thy Dying Love  
526 We Are Your People  
527 Weary of All Trumpeting  
529 Built on the Rock  
536 Lord Jesus Christ, the Church’s Head  
537 Onward, Christian Soldiers  
549 Around the Throne, a Glorious Band  
566 We All Are One in Mission  
579 Lift High the Cross  
701 Zion, at Your Shining Gates  
735 Speak, O Lord  
761 Christ Is With Me  
428 Why Should Cross and Trial Grieve Me  
430 Evening and Morning  
431 I Walk in Danger All the Way  
434 Lord, You I Love with All My Heart  
452 Let Us Ever Walk with Jesus  
453 Come, Follow Me, the Savior Spoke  
463 Jesus Calls Us O’er the Tumult  
466 Though Thoughtless Thousands Choose  
469 Take My Life and Let It Be  
772 When Jesus Came from Nazareth  
784 O Gracious Lord, with Love Draw Near  
477 What Is the World to Me  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost  
The Church fulfills her role as her brother’s keeper. The privilege, responsibility and importance of this task all  
rest in the words from our Gospel lesson that follow Jesus’ divine directive, “I tell you the truth…” The keys of  
the kingdom have been placed in our hands. It is our privilege and responsibility to bind and to loose—to be our  
brother’s keeper—because Christ has appointed the Church to carry out that task on his behalf. Note carefully  
today’s emphasis as opposed to next Sunday’s to keep from duplicating themes. Next Sunday deals with  
forgiving our neighbor as God forgave us. While forgiveness is inherent in Christian discipline, today we note the  
work of the Christian and the Church to reach out with Law and Gospel for the sake of the fallen brother.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 18:15-20  
Ezekiel 33:7-11  
Romans 13:1-10  
51a  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Galatians 2:11-21  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Let your continual mercy, O Lord, cleanse and defend your Church; and because it cannot continue in safety  
without your help, protect and govern it always by your goodness; for you live and reign with the Father and  
the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice. Alleluia. (Philippians 4:4)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 18:15-20  
“Matthew 18” has become shorthand for Christian discipline. This Sunday provides an excellent opportunity  
to ensure that shorthand has not become short shrift. The importance of Christian discipline lies in the fact  
that the keys have been placed into the hands of the Church and in no other. The Christian and the Church  
are a fallen sinner’s only life line. Satan tries to make Christian discipline seem like the height of hypocrisy or  
meddling. But his is a self-interested motive: he wants the fallen brother’s sins bound like his for an eternity  
in hell. Only love could lead the Christian and the Church to go to a fallen brother. Only love led our Savior to  
command it. Even the manner Jesus prescribes shows great love for the fallen. First, privately, so that  
offense and embarrassment might be contained, and pardon and forgiveness might all the more readily  
flow. Then with two or three, that the matter might be underscored without making tongues wag  
throughout the congregation. Finally, also in love, the Church calls and, if necessary, shuns. Such a great  
privilege and power has Christ bestowed on us! It leads us to even greater reliance on prayer for guidance  
and the presence of our Savior among us.  
Page | 148  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: EZEKIEL 33:7-11  
Since the time of Cain, man has hated being his brother’s keeper. Are we any different today? Who but little  
Pharisees enjoy pointing out others’ sins? But God tells us the task is not optional. No one wants to wake up  
their next door neighbor at 6:00am on a Saturday. But if his house were burning, and you let him sleep, you  
are not just loveless and careless. You are a killer. In the same way God drops on us the heavy message of  
being a watchman for our brother. God’s judgment on fallen man is as clear as it is severe. If we fail to do  
the job God has assigned us, God promises to hold us accountable. With the Law driven deeply into our  
hearts, God then reminds us why he has given us this job: because of his grace and his desire for the  
salvation of all mankind. The responsibility of waking our neighbor asleep in a burning house becomes a  
joyful privilege when he emerges safely from the smoke. May our task of being our brother’s keeper always  
be one done with such responsibility and joy.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 13:1-10  
This is the fifteenth in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. Paul takes up the issue of  
government and the Christian’s relationship to it. A Christian is a citizen of two kingdoms. The first part of  
this text is the definitive section of Scripture on our role as citizens of an earthly kingdom. Yet the latter part  
of this lesson best fits with the theme for the day. We owe our neighbor a debt of love. Keeping the  
commandments fulfills the law of love. “Love does no harm to its neighbor.” Today’s lessons point out that  
doing harm to our neighbor also means failing to do what God tells us in his regard: being his keeper.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: GALATIANS 2:11-21  
Being your brother’s keeper will lead at times to uncomfortable situations or even confrontations. Here Paul  
tells how he had to oppose Peter to his face. Paul did not do this out of jealously of this reputed pillar; this  
was no power play pitting the Apostle to the Jews against the Apostle the Gentiles. This had to do with the  
eternal salvation of everyone involved. Trusting in anything other than Christ is like sleeping in a burning  
house. Paul took his job of being a watchman seriously: if righteousness could be gained through the  
Judaizers’ demands, then Christ died for nothing! So Paul woke his sleeping neighbor with the harsh reality  
of Peter’s hypocrisy. But the Word did its work; Paul didn’t merely keep his brother, he won his brother  
over.  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
304 Jesus Sinners Does Receive  
521 Lord of All Nations, Grant Me Grace  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
226 To Your Temple I Draw Near  
493 Forgive Our Sins as We Forgive  
494 Blest Be the Tie that Binds  
521 Lord of All Nations, Grant Me Grace  
526 We Are Your People  
230 Lord Jesus Christ, Be Present Now  
286 The Law Commands and Makes Us Know  
308 As Surely As I Live, God Said  
386 Now I Have Found the Firm Foundation  
391 God Loved the World So that He Gave  
393 If Your Beloved Son, O God  
398 Lord, We Confess Our Numerous Faults  
410 Our Father, Who from Heaven Above  
446 I Am Trusting You, Lord Jesus  
454 I Gave My Life for Thee  
529 Built on the Rock  
532 God Is Here! As We His People  
617 Christ, by Heavenly Hosts Adored  
620 To You, Our God, We Fly  
738 In Hopelessness and Near Despair  
752 In Christ Alone  
761 Christ Is With Me  
490 Love in Christ Is Strong and Living  
Page | 150  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Seventeenth Sunday after Pentecost  
The Church forgives as God forgives. Anytime we try to imitate God, we quickly realize our inadequacy. Yet  
today God tells us to model our forgiveness on his: a boundless, free, and loving forgiveness based on the  
sacrifice of Christ. How could our sinful hearts ever forgive like that? The Prayer of the Day asks that the mercy  
and grace of God precede us and follow after us, that we might love God with undivided hearts—hearts always  
ready to forgive as God does: sins are forgiven, forgotten, forever.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 18:21-35  
Genesis 50:15-21  
Romans 14:5-9  
103  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Ephesians 4:29—5:2  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Lord, we pray that your mercy and grace may always go before and follow after us that, loving you with  
undivided hearts, we may be ready for every good and useful work; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord,  
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Everything that was written in the past was written to teach us, so that through endurance and the  
encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope. Alleluia. (Romans 15:4)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 18:21-35  
"The human animal is not…good at forgiveness. Forgiveness is not some innate, natural human emotion. It is  
natural for the human animal to defend itself, to snarl and crouch into a defensive position when attacked,  
to howl when wronged, to bite back when bitten. Forgiveness is not natural." (Willimon) Forgiveness must  
be learned, and Peter thought he had figured it out. From the elders of the Jews Peter had heard: “If a man  
transgresses one time, forgive him. If a man transgresses two times, forgive him. If a man transgresses three  
times, forgive him. If a man transgresses four times, do not forgive him.” Three times, the elders said, was  
the limit of forgiveness for a good Jew. Peter, however, was willing to go much further; not three times, but  
seven times, Peter thought with a smile. Until Jesus said, “Not seven times, Peter, seventy times seven—  
what the elders say doesn’t matter. I say to you that your forgiveness should have no limit, but be like  
God’s.” Jesus’ parable contrasts the forgiveness of God and our own unforgiving nature. The servant’s  
debt— by any measure of calculation—was impossibly high (perhaps 150,000 years’ wages). Who could  
have accrued debt such as this? Who could ever hope to repay? What an arresting picture of our debt of sin  
before God! The greatness of the debt magnifies the compassion of the king who wipes the debt away. Who  
can comprehend the forgiveness of God? Certainly not unmerciful servants like us, who refuse to forgive the  
small debts owed to us, and instead, inflict on our fellow servants the punishments that God should rightly  
have given us. Have mercy on us, Lord, and teach us to forgive like you!  
Page | 151  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: GENESIS 50:15-21  
How hard it is to forgive like God! We may forgive someone who hurts us, but we never forget. We harbor  
that hurt deep inside of us for years—never understanding that we are locking ourselves in the prison of the  
past. Joseph’s brothers feared that they would finally have to pay for what they did to Joseph. His father was  
gone; he was still in charge in Egypt; and the brothers thought that they were going to face Joseph’s  
vengeance. As repentant sinners, we often act like the brothers and wait for God to get even with us for our  
past sins. Shame on us! We are making God as shallow as we are! In God’s eyes our sins are forgiven,  
forgotten, forever. Joseph wept at their words as he remembered the sordid history and all the emotions  
that came with it. He wept, but he was free from the prison of the past; he had forgiven his brothers their  
terrible deeds. Through his tears, Joseph never wavered, but he calmed his brothers’ fears, forgave them  
like God forgives, and set them free from their prison of the past.  
SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 14:5-9  
This is the last in a series of sixteen lessons that run through Pentecost 17. Christ set us free from the  
burdens of the Law; in the Gospel we have the freedom of sons. With freedom, though, comes  
responsibility. Our Christian freedom must be normed by love for our neighbor. I am certainly free to eat or  
drink, but my eating and drinking doesn’t happen in a vacuum. My Christian freedom is not freedom to  
enslave a weaker brother’s conscience. We are bound to our brothers because we both belong to Christ.  
Therefore let us make every effort to do what leads to peace and to mutual edification (v.19). Restricting my  
freedom out of love for my brother is service to Christ that pleases God and brings righteousness, peace,  
and joy in the Holy Spirit (v. 17).  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: EPHESIANS 4:29—5:2  
Paul commands us not to act like the unmerciful servant, but rather: “Get rid of all bitterness, rage and  
anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice.” The Church is comprised of people who have  
been sealed for redemption, so let’s act like it! Not only kindness and compassion, but forgiveness is the  
primary mark of the Christian. We forgive because God forgave us in Christ. That makes us µιµηταὶ τοῦ θεοῦ,  
imitators of God. Every Old Testament sacrificial victim pointed ahead to the death of Christ, the fragrant  
offering and the atoning sacrifice that won our forgiveness and inspires our forgiveness for others.  
Page | 152  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
493 Forgive Our Sins as We Forgive  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
82 Songs of Thankfulness and Praise  
109 When O’er My Sins I Sorrow  
117 O Dearest Jesus  
385 Chief of Sinners Though I Be  
389 Rock of Ages, Cleft for Me  
392 Not unto Us  
234 Praise to the Lord, the Almighty  
238 Oh, Bless the Lord, My Soul  
257 My Soul, Now Bless Your Maker  
297 Baptized in Water  
303 With Broken Heart and Contrite Sigh  
305 From Depths of Woe I Cry to You  
306 Before You, God, the Judge of All  
317 O Lord, We Praise You  
393 If Your Beloved Son, O God  
420 God Moves in a Mysterious Way  
490 Love in Christ Is Strong and Living  
491 O Master of the Loving Heart  
521 Lord of All Nations, Grant Me Grace  
534 In the Midst of Earthly Life  
592 All Praise to Thee, My God, This Night  
593 Now the Light Has Gone Away  
615 We Thank You for Your Blessings  
760 When Peace, like a River  
359 Jesus, My Great High Priest  
383 Blessed Are They, Forever Blest  
384 By Grace I’m Saved  
764 There Is a Time for Everything  
Page | 153  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Eighteenth Sunday after Pentecost  
What is our God like? Over the next four Sundays, the Church hears Jesus tell four parables which reveal  
characteristics of our God. Today’s lessons cause the worshiper to ask: Is God fair? No, he’s not. He doesn’t give  
us what we deserve, and that’s called mercy. In fact, he gives us what we don’t deserve, and that’s called grace.  
Our God is inconceivably gracious.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 20:1-16  
Isaiah 55:6-9  
Philippians 1:18b-27  
27  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Jonah 4:5-11  
Romans 9:6b-16  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Lord God, you call us to work in your kingdom and leave no one standing idle. Help us to order our lives by  
your wisdom and to serve you in willing obedience; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord, who lives and  
reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness. Alleluia. (2 Corinthians  
12:9a)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 20:1-16  
What is our God like? Jesus teaches us with a story, but we struggle with the lesson. The parable offends our  
finely honed sense of what’s fair and what’s not. Note the context: the disciples had just asked what they  
would receive in the kingdom, and Jesus promised them twelve thrones. Then he immediately quashes any  
prideful thoughts by saying that in the kingdom of heaven, God makes no distinction by merit or work (For  
the kingdom of heaven is like…). In reality, God is not fair; rather, he is inconceivably gracious. One-hour-  
workers receive the same as those who bore the heat of the day. This parable carries both warning and  
promise for us—a warning that all comparisons based on merit or work do not belong in God’s kingdom; a  
promise that our relationship with God is based solely on grace which he lavishes in abundance. The story  
only offends our sense of fairness when we compare ourselves to other workers. Even though they were  
promised twelve thrones, Jesus wouldn’t allow his disciples to make comparisons. How much less would he  
let us whose labor is so late and light? When we keep our eyes where they belong—fixed on God—then  
have a correct view of our worth and labor. Then, when God places a denarius in our hands, we can marvel  
that the Lord isn’t fair—thanks be to God! He doesn’t give us what we deserve; no, he gives us what we  
don’t.  
Note: For a striking illustration of this parable, consider “The Vineyard of the Lord,” a painting by Lucas  
Cranach the Younger that hangs in Luther’s parish church, St. Mary’s in Wittenberg. For the history and  
explanations of imagery in the painting, see Albrecht Steinwachs’ book, “The Vineyard of the Lord.”  
Page | 154  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 55:6-9  
How gracious is God? His call to repentance doesn’t extend only backsliding Christians. His call to return to  
him isn’t restricted to upright citizens. His invitation to call on him is not reserved for sensible, suburban folk  
with 2.1 children and a white picket fence. The LORD calls the 
שׁע
 
ר
, the ungodly and wicked men who  
worship lust and self. The LORD calls the 
און
 
אישׁ
, the hardened sinner whose conscience has long stopped  
balking at his deeds. Look at what he promises to these people when they repent: mercy and pardon—the  
care of God and the forgiveness of God. They won’t get what they deserve—that is mercy. They get what  
they don’t deserve—that is the free pardon of grace. God’s plan to save sinners by grace soars above all that  
we could conceive or imagine.  
SECOND LESSON: PHILIPPIANS 1:18B-27  
This is the first in a series of four lessons in the book of Philippians. If Pentecost season runs through  
Pentecost 21, the preacher may consider a four-week sermon series on this epistle of joy. Paul’s confident  
words remind us that because of God’s inconceivable grace, to live is Christ and to die is gain. Life lived  
under such grace is life filled with joy and ordered by God’s wisdom (Prayer of the Day).  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: JONAH 4:5-11  
Jonah wanted Nineveh destroyed; in his mind it would only be fair. Nineveh was wicked, bloodthirsty, and  
feared. Jonah had not wanted to prophesy to them because he was afraid that they might listen and repent.  
Jonah knew what that would mean: God would have compassion on them and forgive them (Jonah 4:4). But  
God is far more gracious than Jonah could have even imagined. The LORD taught his prophet with a vine and  
made a striking point. Jonah, though you had no part in the creation, growth, or life of this vine, yet you  
were so emotionally attached to it. But think of me, Jonah! Those people, those children—even those  
cows!—I made them; I sustain them; I want them to be mine forever. So great is my grace!  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 9:6B-16  
Is God fair? Is God just? Neither—he is inconceivably gracious, as our eternal election proves. Paul answers  
the question by pointing us back to God’s speech to Moses in Exodus 33. The Israelites had worshiped the  
golden calf, and Moses made intercession for them. Moses asked the LORD to show him his ways (v 13) and  
his glory (v14). God’s responded by declaring his inconceivable grace: he would show mercy and grace to  
those he chose, regardless of any merit or worth. Though these people had abandoned him, he would be  
merciful and gracious to them. So also with us, the children of the faith of Abraham: God’s eternal election  
of us to salvation had nothing to do with merit or worth or works, but only stems from his inconceivable  
grace and mercy. Preachers, take the opportunity to read the exceptional treatise on election found in the  
Formula of Concord’s eleventh article on predestination (FC SD XI).  
Page | 155  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
390 Salvation unto Us Has Come  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
212 Jerusalem, Thou City Fair and High  
305 From Depths of Woe I Cry to You  
318 Sent Forth by God’s Blessing  
335 O Kingly Love, that Faithfully  
379 Amazing Grace—How Sweet the Sound  
381 Grace Has a Thrilling Sound  
384 By Grace I'm Saved  
438 In God, My Faithful God  
456 Forth in Your Name, O Lord, I Go  
466 Though Thoughtless Thousands Choose  
468 My God, My Father, Make Me Strong  
555 For All Your Saints, O Lord  
559 Lord of the Living Harvest  
606 For Me to Live Is Jesus  
389 Rock of Ages, Cleft for Me  
390 Salvation unto Us Has Come  
401 Your Works, Not Mine, O Christ  
405 Oh, for a Faith that Will Not Shrink  
419 If God Himself Be for Me  
611 For the Fruit of His Creation  
623 God the Father, Son, and Spirit  
732 We Are Singing, for the Lord is Our Light  
756 We Walk by Faith and Not by Sight  
767 The Lord Is My Light  
420 God Moves in a Mysterious Way  
Page | 156  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Nineteenth Sunday after Pentecost  
Our God wants real repentance that leads to true obedience. The Verse of the Day reminds us that one day,  
everyone will bow before Jesus of Nazareth and confess him as Lord. Some will do so in grief and others in joy.  
God wants real repentance from every sinner that they might bend the knee to Christ in true obedience and  
confess with gladness that Jesus is Lord. The Church prays that God would rule our hearts through Word and  
Sacrament that our repentance might be real and our obedience truly pleasing (Prayer of the Day).  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 21:28-32  
Ezekiel 18:1-4, 25-32  
Philippians 2:1-11  
25  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
2 Corinthians 13:5-8  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Mercifully grant, O God, that your Holy Spirit may in all things direct and rule our hearts, for without your  
help we are unable to please you; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns with you  
and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. At the name of Jesus every knee should bow, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to  
the glory of God the Father. Alleluia. (Philippians 2:10,11)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 21:28-32  
They seemed so righteous as they stood in the temple courts. The great men of Israel had gathered against  
Jesus. These men knew all the words to say and ways to act, but the only “righteousness” they had was a  
self-righteousness that offended God. They claimed to be doing God’s work and fulfilling his will, but there  
was no repentance and no true obedience. The parable Jesus spoke against them convicts every self-  
righteous person. The father commands two sons to work in his vineyard and receives two surprising  
answers. The first son flatly refuses; he fails to even offer an excuse, but simply says, “I will not. (οὐ θέλω)”  
The second son says all the right things and tacks on an appropriately respectful title. He seems almost  
breathless in his readiness to do the father’s will (ἐγώ, κύριε). True obedience, however, in not merely  
saying what God wants to hear, but doing what God wants done. The first son repented of his wickedness  
and gave his father true obedience; the second merely mouthed the words and contented himself with  
doing his own thing. Which did what the father wanted? Jesus’ question had only one answer, and the  
religious leaders gave it and indicted themselves. Yes, even the vilest sinner that repents gives an obedience  
far more true that the upright man wallowing in his self-righteousness. What a powerful preachment against  
the Pharisee inside each of us that wants to be content with saying the right words when it comes to faith!  
What a stinging rebuke of our lukewarm Christianity that confesses Christ with our mouth but denies him  
with our deeds! Repent, Christ says, and believe—true obedience will surely follow.  
Page | 157  
PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: EZEKIEL 18:1-4, 25-32  
On this Sunday when the Church is called to continual repentance, Ezekiel brings a strong warning for  
Christians who grow lax in their faith or dismissive of their sin. God wants real repentance that leads to true  
obedience. Israel had not given either. Instead of seeing their suffering as a result of their sin and as a call to  
repentance, they saw only injustice. With their favorite proverb, “The fathers eat sour grapes and the  
children’s teeth are set on edge,” they were saying that God should certainly punish sin, but they felt he was  
punishing the wrong people. They felt they were being punished for the sins of their parents, and they  
implied that God was not just in treating them this way. God denies it all: the soul that sins is the one that  
will die. This is not injustice—no, the injustice is that Man who was made for perfection sinned again and  
again against his God. God shows just how just he is: he will judge each man according to his way. Repent,  
God says, turn from your wickedness and live. God promises not to judge us by our past, but by our present,  
and so he calls us to live anew. Repent and receive a new heart and new spirit that leads to true obedience.  
Why will you die, O Israel? God wants exactly the opposite—repent and live!  
SECOND LESSON: PHILIPPIANS 2:1-11  
This is the second in a series of four lessons in the book of Philippians. Paul quotes a Hymn of Humiliation  
and Exultation as a model to shape our attitudes. Real repentance leads us to the true obedience of  
imitating Christ. Jesus is the third son—the one never mentioned in the parable—the son who said “Yes,”  
and also worked in the vineyard. Jesus is the true son of his Father who both said the words, “Not my will,  
but yours,” and did the work, “obedient to death—even death on a cross.” When his work in the vineyard  
was complete, God exalted his Son to the highest place and now calls every man to real repentance and the  
true obedience of bending the knee and confessing with joy that Jesus Christ is Lord (Verse of the Day).  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 2 CORINTHIANS 13:5-8  
The Corinthian congregation had heard much from Paul on the topics of repentance and obedience. As they  
readied to receive Paul on his third visit, he encouraged them to prepare by testing themselves. Which son  
were they acting like, the son who worked in the vineyard or the one who just talked about it? Five times in  
this lesson, Paul uses a form of the word δοκιµάζω, telling them to examine themselves to see whether they  
were in the faith. True obedience gives evidence of real repentance. It is not the cause of repentance, but a  
visible fruit that shows our faith is genuine. That brings us the great joy of knowing that Christ Jesus is in us,  
and we are walking on the way of righteousness.  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
306 Before You, God, the Judge of All  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
27 O Jesus, Lamb of God, You Are  
205 O Lord, Look Down from Heaven  
217 The Head that Once Was Crowned  
302 Lord, to You I Make Confession  
304 Jesus Sinners Does Receive  
308 As Surely As I Live, God Said  
335 O Kingly Love, that Faithfully  
337 Delay Not! Delay Not  
344 At the Name of Jesus  
350 All Praise Be Yours  
368 O Savior, Precious Savior  
370 All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name  
385 Chief of Sinners Though I Be  
403 I Know My Faith Is Founded  
438 In God, My Faithful God  
461 From Eternity, O God  
494 Blest Be the Tie that Binds  
536 Lord Jesus Christ, the Church’s Head  
708 Now Greet the Swiftly Changing Year  
716 No Tramp of Soldiers’ Marching Feet  
746 You, Lord, Are Both Lamb and Shepherd  
749 The Love of Christ, Who Died for Me  
773 In Unity and Peace  
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Twentieth Sunday after Pentecost  
Our God patiently seeks fruits.  
The Lord came to his city and his temple to teach his people, but the leaders of Israel rose up against him.  
During Holy Week, Sadducee and Pharisee put aside their differences to join in opposing this man who  
threatened their worldview and their worldly positions. When they questioned his authority, Jesus responded  
with three parables meant to drive the leaders to self-evaluation and self-condemnation. The parable of the two  
sons, the tenants in the vineyard and the wedding banquet were addressed to these men who had been given  
the trust of spiritual leadership in Israel, but had failed. The stories speak of family ties, contractual obligation,  
and the favor of a royal invitation. Each should have led to a proper response, yet each parable showed that  
Israel’s leaders were refusing to give God the fruits of faith he patiently sought.  
His enemies could answer Jesus’ questions correctly (Matthew 21:31, 41). They knew the parables were talking  
about them (21:45). They could even prophesy about his work (John 11:47-53). They would not, however,  
repent of their wickedness. In their unbelief they ratified every sin of their forefathers.  
The three parables portend the day when the father, the owner, the king finally says, “Enough.” “Jerusalem is  
the home of the sons of God who will not render a son’s obedience, of workers in God’s vineyard who will not  
give God what is God’s, of the guests of God who will not come to God’s feast. The gulf between Jerusalem and  
the obedient Son of God who does the will of Him who sent Him is unbridgeable. Jerusalem is ripe for judgment”  
(Franzmann, Martin. Follow Me. 164).  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 21:33-43  
Isaiah 5:1-7  
Philippians 3:12-21  
118  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
2 Kings 21:1-15  
2 Corinthians 6:1-13  
Color  
Green  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God, in your bountiful goodness keep us safe from every evil of body and soul. Make us ready, with  
cheerful hearts, to do whatever pleases you; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns  
with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. I will proclaim your name to my people; in the midst of the congregation I will praise you. Alleluia.  
(Hebrews 2:12)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 21:33-43  
Jesus’ words in the Gospel highlight the patience of our God as he seeks fruits of faith. Could God have done  
anything more for Israel? The point here is the amazing patience the owner displays. What owner would  
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continue to send servants when they were treated this way? Note the ascensive nature of verse 35: μὲν  
ἔδειραν, ὃν δὲ ἀπέκτειναν, ὃν δὲ ἐλιθοβόλησαν (They beat. They murdered. They stoned.) Who would ever  
answer such barbarity by sending his only Son? The patience of God with Israel is without comparison. Even  
Jesus’ enemies had to agree that the only just end for such tenants was judgment.  
The owner’s Son looked his enemies in the eye and proclaimed that opposing him was impossible. Killing the  
Son means defeat for his enemies and victory for God as prophesied in Psalm 118. God will lift his Son from  
death and use the stone rejected by men as his capstone.  
Let Jesus’ enemies be warned. You can oppose the Son actively and you will find yourself on your face. You  
can ignore the Son at your peril and you will find yourself ground to powder (λικμήσει αὐτόν).  
Israel’s leaders refused to produce the fruits of repentance and faith. As a result, the kingdom of God will be  
ripped away and given to a different nation. Jesus says, ἔθνει, not τὰ ἔθνη. The point is not that he will give  
the kingdom to Gentiles, but that God’s kingdom doesn’t belong to an ethnic group, but an ethical group:  
those who produce its fruit. The nation to whom is it given is the body of believers. Whether they are  
prostitutes (Matthew 21:32) or members of the Sanhedrin (John 19:39) or Gentiles who are of the faith of  
Abraham (Romans 4:16), the kingdom belongs to them by faith.  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 5:1-7  
The details of viticulture were common knowledge in Israel. They understood the backbreaking work that  
went into establishing a vineyard. They knew the joy of harvesting its fruit. Did Isaiah share this message at  
the time of the grape harvest when every detail was fresh?  
The song of the vineyard starts out as a beautiful love ballad. Read aloud the Hebrew of verses 1-2b and  
notice the assonance of verse 1 and the vocalizations of verse 2. It’s a story with a lovely and lyrical  
beginning. Israel is God’s own vineyard, and he gave her everything she needed.  
After planting vines, a farmer normally had to wait two years for the first harvest. Isaiah tells us that God  
was not idle after planting. He built a tower, a press—this vineyard had everything needed. No expense was  
spared. What a surprise then, when God came to look for fruit and found only 
בּאשׁים
 “stinking things.”  
When God speaks in verse 3, who could disagree with him?  
Like the vineyard, Israel lacked nothing. God took her from Egypt and planted her in the Promised Land. He  
drove out her enemies and made her secure. She had the Law, the Temple, the priesthood, the sacrifices,  
the prophets. What more could God have done? Yet when he came to harvest, there was no fruit. In fact,  
God found the opposite of his intention! Note the paronomasia of verse 7: God looked for 
משׁפּט
 “justice”  
but found 
משׂפּח
 “bloodshed.” He looked for 
קה
 
ָ
ד
ָ  
צ
ְ  
“righteousness” but found 
קה
 
ֽ
ָ
ע
ָ  
צ
ְ  
“cries of distress.” It  
had a beautiful beginning, but the song of the vineyard has a harrowing end: God himself will tear it down.  
When God looks for fruits of faith in our life and finds them lacking, couldn’t he ask the same question of us,  
“What more could I have done for you? I planted you in baptism; I bought you with blood; I guarded you  
with angels.” This song leads God’s people of every generation to self-evaluation and self-condemnation.  
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Such a song leads us to repent and cry, “Lord, have mercy!” Let us never receive God’s grace in vain, but  
pray that we might produce the fruits that our beloved seeks.  
SECOND LESSON: PHILIPPIANS 3:12-21  
This is the third of four consecutive readings from Philippians. Today’s pericope fits nicely with the theme of  
the Gospel: Paul encourages us to live up to what we have already attained. God has given us the kingdom  
of heaven by faith. We are the people he promised would produce its fruits. So let us do exactly that. Let us  
live drastically different lives than the people of this world who worship their stomach and their shame. Let  
us with free hearts do everything that pleases our Lord and Savior.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: 2 KINGS 21:1-15  
Manasseh’s story shocks us. Though he was king of God’s people, he committed every evil imaginable. His  
wickedness knew no bounds. He worshiped idols and put false altars in the temple of God’s holy name—  
even an Asherah pole. He practiced witchcraft. He put his son to death as a sacrifice. He filled Jerusalem  
with blood, and tradition says he had the prophet Isaiah sawn in half. He led God’s people into such  
apostasy that their sin was worse than the nations that God had driven out of the land at the exodus. God  
had been patient with Israel for 750 years, but the fruitlessness of Manasseh proved too much, even for our  
patient God. God vowed to destroy his vineyard, Israel.  
More shocking than Manasseh’s sin, however, is the story of God’s grace. In 2 Chronicles 33, we learn that  
Manasseh finally heard God’s call to repentance once the shackles were clamped on and a hook put through  
his nose. He humbled himself and cried out to God—and God forgave him. Consider the list of sins above  
again—and God forgave him! “The LORD was moved by his entreaty and listened to his plea; so he brought  
him back to Jerusalem and to his kingdom. Then Manasseh knew that the LORD is God.”  
That God could forgive Manasseh boggles the mind. So, too, does the change in Manasseh’s life. He  
produced the fruits that his God had patiently sought: he removed the altars, got rid of the false gods,  
worshiped the true God and encouraged all of Judah to do the same. Recognizing the greatness of God’s  
mercy and love leads us to diligently produce the fruits he desires.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 2 CORINTHIANS 6:1-13  
Jesus kept his promise and gave the kingdom of God to a new nation, to a people founded by faith and  
motivated by love. Paul writes as a servant of God to us, the new workers in the vineyard. He warns us not  
to squander the opportunity before us by receiving the grace of God in vain. Now is the day of salvation. The  
grace of God leads us to live as tenants who produce the fruits our God seeks. Paul points to his own  
ministry as an example. The grace of God led Paul to make every effort to bear the cross and suffer for the  
sake of the kingdom. He pointed to his fruits of faith and encouraged the Church, “Open wide your hearts  
also.”  
Make us ready, with free hearts, to do whatever pleases you; through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord, who  
lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
203 Lord, Keep Us Steadfast in Your Word  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
417 I'm But a Stranger Here  
110 My Song Is Love Unknown  
431 I Walk in Danger All the Way  
457 Fight the Good Fight  
466 Though Thoughtless Thousands Choose  
480 Almighty Father, Heaven and Earth  
528 Christ Is Our Cornerstone  
127 Stricken, Smitten, and Afflicted  
209 Day of Wrath, Oh, Day of Mourning  
211 I Know of a Sleep in Jesus' Name  
225 This Is the Day the Lord Has Made  
254 The Day Full of Grace  
531 Christ Is Made the Sure Foundation  
536 Lord Jesus Christ, the Church’s Head  
550 Behold a Host, Arrayed in White  
565 There Still Is Room  
281 God Has Spoken by His Prophets  
319 On My Heart Imprint Your Image  
320 On My Heart Imprint Your Image  
342 Amid the World’s Bleak Wilderness  
346 In You Is Gladness  
765 Day by Day  
771 I Want to Walk as a Child of the Light  
774 Church of God, Elect and Glorious  
786 The Song of Moses  
366 O Jesus So Sweet, O Jesus So Mild  
382 My Hope Is Built on Nothing Less  
386 Now I Have Found the Firm Foundation  
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End Time  
The Season  
The last four Sundays of the Church Year are designated as the season of End Time, a season unique to  
Christian Worship: A Lutheran Hymnal. The focus of the season is fulfillment of Christ’s promises and  
encouragement for the Church of the End Times. We live in the last age of this earth, and in this season, Jesus  
wants us to remember his promise, “Behold, I am coming soon!” This season prepares the Church for these  
latter days by encouraging faithfulness to the Word, mindfulness of the judgment, watchfulness for Christ’s  
coming, and joyfulness in Christ’s reign.  
The Sundays  
The Prayer of the Day for each Sunday in End Times sets the theme for the day. On each Sunday, the Church  
prays that God would bestow on her a characteristic necessary for the End Times Church:  
Reformation:  
Lord, keep us faithful to the Word!  
Lord, keep us mindful of the Judgment!  
Lord, keep us watchful for our triumph!  
Lord, keep us joyful in our King!  
Last Judgment:  
Saints Triumphant:  
Christ the King:  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
First Sunday of End TimeReformation  
Sunday  
Lord, keep us faithful to your Word! The Festival of the Lutheran Reformation of the Church emphasizes the true  
Church’s unfailing reliance on the Word of God and unflinching testimony to it in the face of persecution. Jesus  
promised to pour out his Spirit on the Church that we might be God’s mouthpiece even before kings. Today the  
Church prays that the Lord give us the strength to be faithful and the peace of knowing our lives are safe in his  
hands.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
Matthew 10:16-23  
Daniel 6:10-12, 16-23  
Galatians 5:1-6  
46  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
2 Timothy 4:9-18  
Color  
Red  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Gracious Lord, our refuge and strength, pour out your Holy Spirit on your faithful people. Keep them  
steadfast in your Word, protect and comfort them in all temptations, defend them against all their enemies,  
and bestow on the Church your saving peace; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns  
with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. If you continue in my Word, you are truly my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth  
will make you free. Alleluia. (John 8:31,32)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 10:16-23  
Throughout the history of the Church, the story of faithfulness to the Word of God has always been the  
story of persecution. And rightly so, because Jesus promised it! Who would send defenseless sheep into a  
world of ravenous wolves? It makes no sense, yet that is precisely the plan that Jesus describes for his  
Church. It makes no sense—unless you are the Good Shepherd who wants his sheep to utterly depend on  
him. Our trust in Jesus doesn’t guarantee an absence of persecution, but faithfulness in spite of it. We will  
witness to the Word of God before brothers, fathers, children, governors and princes. Jesus promised, “All  
men will hate you because of me, but he who stands firm to the end will be saved.” What comfort that must  
have been for Martin Luther, whose faithful witness caused him to be expelled from his order,  
excommunicated from his church, and outlawed from his empire. Before the kings and princes of Europe,  
Luther gave faithful witness at Worms: “Here I stand. I can do no other. God help me. Amen.”  
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FIRST LESSON: DANIEL 6:10-12, 16-23  
They didn’t persecute Daniel because of theses nailed to a church door; they didn’t accuse him because of  
stirring words spoken over a pile of condemned books. They persecuted Daniel because he prayed in his  
home. Daniel made a bold confession and faithful witness with his knees. No godless king or immutable law  
would change the homage due to God. No threats, no pain, not even death would change Daniel’s loyalty to  
the Word of God that called on him to worship the LORD his God only. So Daniel went home and prayed,  
just as he had done before. He was faithful, even in the face of certain persecution. For the Christian, most  
persecution doesn’t come from public writings like Luther, but from private acts like Daniel. We live our faith  
and are persecuted because of it. We don’t face a den of lions, but persecution abounds when we’re faithful  
to the Word. We lose relationships because of moral purity; we lose promotions because of worship  
priorities; we lose friendships because we won’t join in sinful talking or walking. Faithfulness to God’s Word  
in the face of persecution requires trust. God shut the lions’ mouths to answer the king’s question: Is your  
God able to rescue you? Yes, he is. God shut the lions’ mouths to show his Church of all the ages that God is  
able to guard and keep his own. You can trust him and be faithful to his Word in the face of any persecution.  
SECOND LESSON: GALATIANS 5:1-6  
Martin Luther called the book of Galatians, “My Katie von Bora—I am wedded to it.” Paul’s letter speaks  
clearly against work righteousness and plainly about grace. That meant much to Luther who had staked his  
life on both topics. Why would anyone risk so much over words? Because the very freedom of the Gospel  
was at stake. Either we are free by grace or slaves under the law; there is no middle ground. Attempts to  
justify ourselves by outward acts do not result in justification at all—whether you are first-century Judaizers,  
sixteen-century clerics or twenty-first century moralists. The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself  
through love. So, Paul says, stand firm and be faithful to the Word of God that sets us free.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: 2 TIMOTHY 4:9-18  
Paul learned firsthand that faithfulness to the Word of God brought persecution. His former brothers had  
abandoned him; his enemies had not stopped hounding him. Though he was by himself, Paul was never  
alone. Jesus stayed by his side and in Paul fulfilled the promises of both the First Lesson and the Gospel.  
Consider Paul’s confidence that God will rescue him from every evil attack—the point is not a rescue from  
danger, but rather a rescue through danger to the heavenly kingdom. Paul knew that even if he died for  
Christ, God would rescue him from that evil attack and bring him to heaven. Eventually the headsman’s  
sword took Paul’s life; but it did not stop Jesus from rescuing him and taking him to his heavenly kingdom.  
Lord, keep us faithful to your word in the face of any persecution! To you be glory forever and ever. Amen.  
Note: The effect of the Lutheran Reformation of the Church on the history of the world can hardly be  
overstated. In fact, when US News and World Report ranked the most important events of the last 1000  
years, the Lutheran Reformation placed second, right behind Gutenberg’s moveable type printing press.  
Historians consider the Lutheran Reformation to be of greater significance than the discovery of the New  
World (number 3).Luther was a monk, a priest, a professor at a little university in Wittenberg, Germany, but  
he is considered the third most influential person of the last 1000 years (1000 Years and 1000 People,  
Gottlieb and Bowers). God used his witness and simple faithfulness to the Word to change the world. As heirs  
of the Reformation, may our witness be as faithful and the effects of our witness be as profound!  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
200 A Mighty Fortress Is Our God  
201 A Mighty Fortress Is Our God  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
179 Hail Thee, Festival Day  
187 When God the Spirit Came  
408 Christians, While on Earth Abiding  
415 Be Still, My Soul  
199 In Trembling Hands, Lord God, We Hold  
202 If God Had Not Been on Our Side  
203 Lord, Keep Us Steadfast in Your Word  
204 O God, Our Lord, Your Holy Word  
205 O Lord, Look Down from Heaven  
236 All Praise to God Who Reigns Above  
239 Glory Be to God the Father  
514 Lord, Help Us Ever to Retain  
541 Lord Jesus Christ, with Us Abide  
546 Lord Jesus, You Have Come  
548 O Lord, in Prayer You Spent the Night  
549 Around the Throne, A Glorious Band  
550 Behold a Host, Arrayed in White  
553 Give Thanks to God on High  
290 One Thing's Needful  
291 We Have a Sure Prophetic Word  
349 Jesus, Priceless Treasure  
567 Awake, O Spirit, Who Inspired  
621 For Years on Years of Matchless Grace  
711 Jesus Has Come and Brings Pleasure Eternal  
770 O Christ, Who Called the Twelve  
399 To God Be the Glory  
400 O God, O Lord of Heaven and Earth  
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Second Sunday of End TimeLast  
Judgment  
Lord, keep us mindful of the Judgment! He will come to judge the living and the dead. We confess it every  
Sunday, but often live like those are empty words. Moses’ psalm on the mortality of man shakes us from our  
spiritual slumber. Number your days aright and gain a heart of wisdom! Today the Church prays that God keep  
us ever mindful of the Last Judgment that we might be found in faith, fruitful in both word and deed. Then  
there’s no need to fear Judgment Day; rather, we can look forward to the day of our redemption.  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
Matthew 25:31-46  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Daniel 7:9,10  
1 Thessalonians 5:1-11  
90  
Romans 2:2-11  
Color  
Red  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Lord God Almighty, so rule and govern our hearts and minds by your Holy Spirit that we may always look  
forward to the end of this present evil age and to the day of your righteous judgment. Keep us steadfast in  
true and living faith and present us at last holy and blameless before you; through your Son, Jesus Christ our  
Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. Watch, therefore, for you do not know on what day your Lord is coming. Alleluia. (Matthew 24:42)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 25:31-46  
The Son of Man came once as a humble baby, but will return as a glorious king with angel armies at his side.  
He will sit on his throne, and all the nations will be brought before him to be judged. In this judgment, there  
are no shades of gray: you are either a sheep or a goat—there is no third option. You will either be judged  
righteous and brought to heaven or condemned and sent into eternal fire. In our present world we see so  
many shades of gray, but at the judgment the contrast between believer and unbeliever will be stark. Jesus’  
judgment on unbelievers will be a just one, yet completely opposite of what he had wanted. Hell was never  
meant for humans; it had been prepared for the devil and his angels. When children of Adam are sent to hell  
on Judgment Day, they will enter a realm never meant for them. From the creation of the world, God had  
prepared an inheritance for the sons of Adam, a kingdom that becomes ours not by merit, but by grace.  
Both sheep and goats fail to see how their earthly lives could possibly merit their eternal fate. In fact, they  
speak the same words. The contrast, however, is stark: the sheep had faith in Christ that gave evidence of  
itself in the world; the goats had neither faith nor true fruits. Both receive an eternal judgment—life for the  
sheep and punishment for the goats. Lord, keep us mindful of your coming judgment that we might be  
found in faith, judged by your grace, and gifted with eternal life!  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: DANIEL 7:9, 10  
Daniel sees a vision of the Last Judgment that is filled with fire and thrones and books. God the Father is  
seated on his throne with fire beneath him and flowing out from him—fire that metes out punishment for  
the unrighteous but refines believers like gold with the dross removed. Who doesn’t shudder when he sees  
Daniel’s vision of God and then hears the somber statement, “The books were opened”? Being mindful of  
the coming judgment means knowing that one day the books will be opened, and God will judge us  
according to what is in them. But look carefully: there is not just one throne here! Daniel said “thrones”  
were set in place. See who else is at the judgment. The Son of God has a throne there (Psalm 110). So do the  
apostles (Mt 19:28). Yes, the same Jesus who died for us will be there to advocate for us; the same apostles  
who preached Jesus Christ risen for the forgiveness of sins will be there to call us part of their Church. Look  
at Revelation 20:11-15 and see the rest of the story. There are two kinds of books: books of deeds that  
record what each person has done, and a book that holds only names. Unbelievers are judged on the basis  
of their deeds, but believers are judged on the simple fact that their names are written in the book of life.  
When we are mindful of that, we can rejoice and look forward to the end of this age when we will reign with  
Christ in glory.  
SECOND LESSON: 1 THESSALONIANS 5:1-11  
Being mindful of the judgment means living according to God’s Word, not according to what the world says.  
The world tells itself again and again not to worry about God and his judgment. Peace and safety are its  
watchwords. Regardless of what the world says, the judgment is most certainly coming. When it comes on  
the world, it will be like a woman in labor—sudden, unstoppable, irreversible. Paul reminds us to be mindful  
of the coming judgment by living alert and self-controlled lives. We are believers and are as different from  
unbelievers as sheep are from goats, as day is from night. So let’s live like it! We have been appointed to  
receive salvation, so let’s live as sons of the light and sons of the day. Leave the deeds of darkness for this  
dark world whose cries of “Peace!” and “Safety!” will not stop the judgment from overtaking them.  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: ROMANS 2:2-11  
Being mindful of the judgment means never falling into a self-righteous condemnation of the world around  
us. You judge them, but you do the same things that they do—do you really think that you will escape God’s  
wrath? Those are serious words. Paul aims leave no soul unindicted, but to make the whole world  
accountable to God (Romans 3:19). As long as man still has the righteousness and pride and strength to  
judge his fellowman, he is not ready for the beggary of faith; he is not ready to receive the radical rescue of  
the righteousness of God (Franzmann). God will give according to what each person has done—but the point  
here is the motive, not the actions themselves. Those who live in faith seek God’s kingdom and his  
righteousness—their actions give evidence of the faith that moves them, and they receive eternal life.  
Those who live without faith seek only themselves—their actions give evidence that faith is lacking, and they  
receive wrath and anger. Lord, keep us mindful of the judgment that we might be found in fruitful faith!  
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HYMN OF THE DAY  
209 Day of Wrath, Oh, Day of Mourning  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
25 The King Shall Come  
419 If God Himself Be for Me  
29 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending  
74 Now Let Us Come before Him  
207 The Day Is Surely Drawing Near  
208 Great God, What Do I See and Hear  
213 Forever with the Lord  
441 O God, Our Help in Ages Past  
453 Come, Follow Me, the Savior Spoke  
475 The Man Is Ever Blest  
481 O God, Your Hand the Heavens Made  
482 Forgive Us, Lord  
214 Jerusalem the Golden  
240 Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise  
243 Oh, Worship the King  
486 Lord of Glory, You Have Bought Us  
524 O Fount of Good, for All Your Love  
525 The Son of God, Our Christ  
254 The Day Full of Grace  
535 Our Fathers' God in Years Long Gone  
704 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending  
728 Jerusalem the Golden  
286 The Law Commands and Makes Us Know  
306 Before You, God, the Judge of All  
337 Delay Not! Delay Not  
729 There Is a Blessed Home  
376 Jesus, Your Blood and Righteousness  
390 Salvation unto Us Has Come  
398 Lord, We Confess Our Numerous Faults  
401 Your Works, Not Mine, O Christ  
731 The King Will Come at Age’s End  
771 I Want to Walk As a Child of the Light  
776 Sing with All the Saints in Glory  
779 I Sing as I Arise Today  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Third Sunday of End TimeSaints  
Triumphant  
Lord, keep us watchful for our triumph! Today the Church hears strains of the distant triumph song and affirms,  
“Blessed are they who are called to the marriage feast of the Lamb.” Jesus wants us to be the waiting Church—  
the Church that watches for her Savior and cries, “Come, Lord Jesus!” As we journey through these latter days,  
however, our vigilance slips, and our hearts grow drowsy because the bridegroom seems to be taking so long. So  
while we wait, the Church prays, “Keep us ever watchful for the coming of your Son that we may sit with him  
and all your holy ones at the marriage feast in heaven.” (Prayer of the Day)  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 25:1-13  
Isaiah 52:1-6  
1 Thessalonians 4:13-18  
84  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Ezekiel 37:15-28  
Revelation 19:1-19  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Almighty God and Savior, you have set the final day and hour when we shall be delivered from this world of  
sin and death. Keep us ever watchful for the coming of your Son that we may sit with him and all your holy  
ones at the marriage feast in heaven; through your Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord, who lives and reigns with you  
and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. They are before the throne of God and serve him day and night in his temple. Alleluia. (Revelation  
7:15a)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 25:1-13  
Jesus pictures the time before his return as virgins waiting for a bridegroom and the start of a wedding feast.  
The parable divides all people (ten virgins) into two groups: foolish and wise. They weren’t described that  
way because of what they did in the parable, but their actions showed what they were. The foolish virgins  
acted utterly foolish, bearing empty lamps. The other virgins’ actions showed that they indeed were wise.  
The wise went into the joys of wedding banquet, but the foolish lost both invitation and even recognition.  
Jesus’ central instruction in this parable calls for the waiting Church to be the watchful Church. Keep watch  
for you do not know the day or the hour!  
FIRST LESSON: ISAIAH 52:1-6  
Isaiah prophesies to captive Israel who is sleepwalking through life, because they are lost in the stupor of  
grief over their afflictions. “Awake!” the prophet cries, and hear God’s promise of coming triumph that will  
give you strength to face your present problems. God would reveal his glory by redeeming his people and  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
leading them safely home. Captive Israel here is a picture of the waiting Church, and one day God will fulfill  
this promise also in us. The Church of the End Times labors in a world held captive by sin, and is tempted to  
sleepwalk through these last days. So the prophet cries to us, “Awake!” for the day of triumph is coming  
when God will lay bare his arm and redeem us from sin, death, and the devil forever. He will lead us to the  
New Jerusalem where we will sit enthroned at the marriage feast of the Lamb. The day is coming—watch for  
it!  
SECOND LESSON: 1 THESSALONIANS 4:13-18  
To the new Christians in Thessalonica, Paul explains the certain hope we have to be saints triumphant. His  
words are so simple, yet so profound! We believe that Jesus died and rose again, and so we believe that all  
who die in Christ will go with him to heavenly triumph. And we will be with the Lord forever. This is the  
crown jewel of the Christian faith: blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on. Paul’s main point:  
encouragement. Encourage each other with the hope of saints triumphant so that there is neither ignorance  
nor hopeless grief, but rather faithful, expectant watching for the triumph we know is coming.  
SUPPLEMENTAL FIRST LESSON: EZEKIEL 37:15-28  
This lesson immediately follows Ezekiel’s prophecy about the dry bones. God had promised Israel that he  
would raise them up from their graves and settle them in the land. He promised to restore captive Israel to  
the land of Abraham. The rescue and return of the remnant provides a picture of what the Church waits and  
watches for. In this lesson God extends that prophecy beyond physical Israel to the Church and to the  
Messianic kingdom of his Son. Earthly troubles like the captivity or our struggle with sin are temporary. The  
triumph that’s coming won’t be. Notice that in the last four verse God uses 
עוֹלם
 five times to talk about the  
ָ
unending nature of the kingdom waiting for us. It will be a kingdom without divisions caused by sin, but  
exemplified by oneness (one stick, one nation, one king, one shepherd—forever). How will this be? Look at  
how many times God says that he will act for us! We are purely passive in acquiring the triumph in store for  
us. God will act to save and to cleanse and to renew his covenant: I will be their God, and they will be my  
people. As Ezekiel held his bound sticks before the eyes of his countrymen, so the Church holds God’s  
promises of pending triumph before us and continually cries, “Wait for it! Watch for it!”  
SUPPLEMENTAL SECOND LESSON: REVELATION 19:1-9  
What kind of triumph are we watching and waiting for? For the persecuted Church, Jesus gave the  
Apocalypse of St. John, to let his people know: Jesus will win. Revelation 18 foretold the Fall of Babylon and  
the destruction of every enemy of the Church. “After this...” John heard the reaction of the saints and angels  
and all creation—they cried, “Hallelujah!” The word used so prevalently in the Old Testament was not heard  
in the New Testament until its final vision of the saints triumphant. George Handel tried to capture the glory  
of what John witnessed with his Hallelujah Chorus, but his work will certainly pale by comparison to that  
distant triumph song. John lets us see behind the shut door of the parable in our Gospel for the Sunday—he  
lets us see what we watch for: the consummation of the marriage of Christ and the Church. Blessed are they  
who are called to the marriage feast of the Lamb! Keep us watchful for our coming triumph!  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
206 Wake, Awake, for Night Is Flying  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
405 Oh, for a Faith that Will Not Shrink  
533 I Love Your Kingdom, Lord  
549 Around the Throne, A Glorious Band  
550 Behold a Host, Arrayed in White  
551 For All the Saints  
7 Rejoice, Rejoice, Believers  
10 The Bridegroom Soon Will Call Us  
29 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending  
79 How Lovely Shines the Morning Star  
169 Alleluia! Sing to Jesus  
565 There Still Is Room  
208 Great God, What Do I See and Hear  
211 I Know of a Sleep in Jesus' Name  
212 Jerusalem, Thou City Fair and High  
213 Forever with the Lord  
596 Let Me Be Yours Forever  
605 Asleep in Jesus! Blessed Sleep  
607 How Blest Are They  
704 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending  
727 There Is a Higher Throne  
728 Jerusalem the Golden  
729 There Is a Blessed Home  
730 Blessed Are They  
214 Jerusalem the Golden  
215 Jerusalem, My Happy Home  
219 Lord, When Your Glory I Shall See  
220 O'er the Distant Mountains Breaking  
231 Now the Silence  
731 The King Will Come at Age’s End  
743 O Gracious Lord, I Firmly Am Believing  
745 May the Peace of God  
760 When Peace, like a River  
776 Sing with All the Saints in Glory  
788 Thanks Be to God!  
234 Praise to the Lord, the Almighty  
244 Arise, My Soul, Arise  
284 How Precious Is the Book Divine  
325 How Blest Are They Who Hear  
341 Crown Him with Many Crowns  
370 All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name  
376 Jesus, Your Blood and Righteousness  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
Last Sunday of End TimeChrist the  
King  
Lord, keep us joyful in Christ our King! On this last Sunday of the Church Year, we rejoice in the fulfillment of  
God’s plan for our salvation through Christ our King. And we rejoice because Christ our King reigns—the king  
who once came as a sacrifice; the king who still shepherds us day by day; the king who one day will conquer all  
our enemies. Rejoice in his reign and look forward to the day when every knee will bow with us before the King  
of kings and Lord of Lords!  
CHRISTIAN WORSHIP LECTIONARY  
Matthew 27:27-31  
Ezekiel 34:11-16, 23, 24  
1 Corinthians 15:20-28  
47  
SUPPLEMENTAL LECTIONARY  
Gospel  
First Lesson  
Second Lesson  
Psalm  
Color  
White  
PRAYER OF THE DAY  
Lord Jesus Christ, by your victory you have broken the power of the evil one. Fill our hearts with joy and  
peace as we look with hope to that day when every creature in heaven and earth will acclaim you King of  
kings and Lord of lords to your unending praise and glory; for you live and reign with the Father and the Holy  
Spirit, one God, now and forever.  
VERSE OF THE DAY  
Alleluia. I am the Alpha and Omega, the First and the Last, the Beginning and the End. Alleluia. (Revelation  
22:13)  
THE GOSPEL: MATTHEW 27:27-31  
Joyful? How can this make us rejoice? The scene would seem like bad satire if not for its sad reality. Petty  
little men in a tiny little fortress bully the One who created light from darkness and divided land from sea.  
He deserved the finest crown, but look what Man gave! He deserved the noblest scepter, but look what Man  
handed him! He deserved the sincerest devotion, but look what man offered! He came to that which was his  
own, but his own did not receive him. The King of heaven came to earth, and look at what Man gave him! He  
could have swept them all away; he could have condemned us like he had the fallen angels. Man deserved  
nothing more—but look at what He gave! He gave his holiness for our sin and his death for our life. This  
scene is joyful because we know how it ends. The picture of our King wearing a crown of thorns is not tragic,  
but rather it is full of grace. We have a King in Christ who left his heavenly throne and regnavit a ligno crucis  
(“reigned from the wood of the cross”, Justin Martyr; Augustine). Rejoice in Christ the King who came as our  
sacrifice!  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
FIRST LESSON: EZEKIEL 34:11-16, 23, 24  
Since the time of David, Israel had called her kings “shepherds.” The men who followed in David’s line,  
however, did not shepherd Israel in the paths of God. So God made a promise: the Sovereign LORD would  
shepherd his people. Notice the first person pronouns in this lesson—we rejoice because we have a King  
who acts on behalf of his people, like a shepherd for sheep. God says, “I will guide them; I will guard them; I  
will seek them; I will find them.” Most importantly, God promised to raise up King David’s greater Son to be  
the prince of his people and their Good Shepherd. Rejoice in the Christ the King who shepherds his flock day  
by day!  
SECOND LESSON: 1 CORINTHIANS 15:20-28  
If the story of Christ ended on Good Friday, there could be no joy at all. Had Christ not been raised, we  
should be pitied more than all men, as Paul says in the verse immediately preceding this lesson. But the  
story didn’t end on Friday—a whole new chapter started on Easter Sunday morning! Christ has indeed been  
raised, and that means he is the firstfruits of the dead. When the Israelites brought the firstfruit offering to  
the Lord, they confessed that the whole harvest belonged to God, and they rejoiced at the greater harvest  
that was coming. Through the resurrection of Jesus, God promised that a field full of souls will follow the  
Firstfruits from death to life. Until then, Christ will reign as king until the Great Day comes when he reverses  
everything Adam ruined and destroys every enemy that stands against the Church. Then our joy will be  
complete, and God will be all in all. Rejoice in Christ the King who will conquer all our enemies!  
HYMN OF THE DAY  
217 The Head that Once Was Crowned  
ADDITIONAL HYMNS  
25 The King Shall Come  
277 God, We Praise You  
29 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending  
31 O Lord of Light, Who Made the Stars  
85 O God from God, O Light from Light  
153 Alleluia! Jesus Lives  
278 Holy God, We Praise Your Name  
341 Crown Him with Many Crowns  
344 At the Name of Jesus  
350 All Praise Be Yours  
160 This Joyful Eastertide  
351 Hail, O Once-Despised Jesus  
361 Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence  
370 All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name  
373 O Jesus, King Most Wonderful  
426 Yours Forever, God of Love  
540 Rejoice, O Pilgrim Throng  
704 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending  
716 No Tramp of Soldiers' Marching Feet  
721 If Christ Had Not Been Raised from Death  
728 Jerusalem the Golden  
164 Today in Triumph Christ Arose  
167 Jesus Christ, My Sure Defense  
206 Wake, Awake, for Night Is Flying  
214 Jerusalem the Golden  
216 Saints, Behold! The Sight Is Glorious  
218 Then the Glory  
219 Lord, When Your Glory I Shall See  
227 Come, Let Us Join Our Cheerful Songs  
239 Glory Be to God the Father  
265 This Is the Feast of Victory  
267 Isaiah, Mighty Seer in Days of Old  
731 The King Will Come at Age’s End  
749 The Love of Christ, Who Died for Me  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year A  
754 The Tree of Life  
787 A Canticle to the Lamb  
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PLANNING CHRISTIAN WORSHIP – Year C  
Soli Deo Gloria!  
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