AS this is the first Sunday of a new month we will be celebrating Communion this week. It is also a day when we encourage people to consider making a dedicated donation to our Local Outreach Fund.
For the first 3 Sundays of September this year we will be marking Creation Time, a season where we reflect on the world around us and our place in it.
The Scripture Readings this week are:
- Jeremiah 18:1-6
- Psalm 139:13-16
- Genesis 2:7-9
The Sermon title is Made of Clay, Shaped by God
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Early Thoughts: Lumps of mud, is that what we are? According to Genesis yes, that is what we are. We are formed from the dust of the ground. Now many people will point out that the only reason life is possible on Earth is because of particles, elements, 'stuff' that fell to the surface from the outer reaches of a forming universe that dust from which we were formed is in fact stardust but the fact remains we are, according to our faith story, bits of mud and dust with the breath of life blown into us.
At the same time the story tells us that we are shaped by God. Psalm 139 echoes this claim, this statement of faith. We are formed from the earth but formed with intention. We are linked to the rest of creation and linked to the one who forms us
ANd also the one who continually re-forms and re-shapes us.
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The Jeremiah passage is about the nation. There is no doubt about that. In its literary setting, in its words it is talking about the nation being re-shaped and re-formed because it is not what the maker wanted it to be. However I think it works for individuals as well.
I think that we are (possibly) malleable lumps of clay, ready to be re-worked. The God who first formed and shaped us is constantly working on us (I remember t-shirts that used to read "Be Patient with Me---God Ain't Finished With Me Yet") to bring us more into harmony with God's vision for who we and the world in which we live could be.
In this Season of Creation I think there is great value in reminding ourselves that we are formed from the same stuff as the rest of Creation. It helps keep us humble and it reminds us that we are inextricably linked to the world around us. We forget that link at our own peril.
In this Season of Creation, and the rest of the year too, there is great value in remembering that we are formed by the Potter (in God's image as the other Creation story tells us). This brings a sacred aspect to our very existence. It calls us to live into that sacredness.
Living in a world the humanity has not always served well, a creation where humanity has often been a poor steward of what was placed in our care it is good to remember that the Potter continues to reshape the vessel. This can be a great source of hope.
What does it mean to you to be told that you are made of clay? What does it mean to be told you are shaped by God? How do those things change who you see yourself as a part of God's Creation?
--Gord