A site dedicated to publishing audio sermons and articles by Rev. Omar R Gonzalez and other related content
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Wednesday, December 10, 2014
Sunday, December 7, 2014
Advent Devotional Sunday 2
Year B: John the Forerunner
This Advent Devotional invites us to reflect on several pieces of Art during the Advent Season as we prepare our hearts for Christ's coming.
Monday, December 1, 2014
Accordance Bible Study Program from Oak Tree Software
Accordance Bible Software
I have to give my recommendation to "Accordance Bible Software" as one of the best Bible software product on the market. If anyone is looking to purchase and begin using Bible study tools in an electronic format on a computer, laptop, app, or tablet, you should look at Accordance.
Why Accordance? The easy to use workspaces allow you to bring up multiple window panes and interface with multiple texts, it has very clear and beautiful text font, (which can be easily resized) a user can bring up Bible texts, commentaries, dictionaries, or study notes simultaneously. An Instant details window at the bottom allows a user to view ancient languages such as Hebrew and Greek parsing, reference notes, syntax or grammatical information. A very easy to use tool bar allows user to sort and organize their libraries, and it can be personalized. Timelines, Atlases, and Analytics are all available and easy to use allowing users to graph frequency of words, use pie charts and tables to analyze and study data. Text comparisons are available as well allowing multiple Bibles for side by side comparison. It is very easy to do cross text searches instantly between let say, a word in the text of the Bible, to a dictionary, or commentary.
Besides the powerful search tools, speed, and sleek interface, Accordance boasts a truly broad library ranging from pastoral and devotional, to top of the line commentaries and dictionaries, and very rare ancient texts. Popular scholarly study commentaries such as the Anchor Bible Commentaries, New Interpreter's, Word Biblical and Hermenia are all available, along with Bibles in numerous languages and translations, Greek and Hebrew tools and texts, several versions of the LXX, Targums, the Mishna, Qumran texts, Critical version of Q, dictionaries, lexicons, Josephus and other historical sources such as the Didache. Many other tools such as Bible photo guides, and numerous other volumes, including devotional and pastoral are featured in the various collection for sale. Take some time to go to the Accordance home page and look at their product line and software tutorials. This is not only ideal for seminary and Bible college students, but pastors, scholars, missionaries, and any one interested in exploring Biblical scholarship. This truly is the future of bible software study.
click to access Accordance Home Page
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Advent Devotional Sunday 1 Devotional
Year B: The Light of the World
This Advent Devotional invites us to reflect on several pieces of Art during the Advent Season as we prepare our hearts for Christ's coming.
Thursday, November 20, 2014
Service of Thanksgiving Matt 25:1-13
click on this link to listen to Thanksgiving Sermon
click on this link to listen to Thanksgiving Sermon part 2
Thanksgiving is a civil holiday and not part of the liturgical year, nevertheless, it is an opportunity to reflect as a nation and to give thanks. This special service of thanksgiving at First Presbyterian Church of Umatilla reflects on Matt 25:1-13 and the healing of the ten lepers. Only one leper, appreciating the grace and mercy that he had received, returned to give thanks as an act of Worship to God. In the same way, for us, gratitude for God's grace and love should be the heartbeat for our living.
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
Reformation Hymns Remembered
The Reformation saw changes to worship, including the versification of Psalms among the Reformed churches, and new hymns that were introduced such as Martin Luther's "A Might Fortress is our God" and a lesser known hymn attributed to John Calvin which first appeared in the Strasbourg Psalter in 1545 "I Greet Thee Who My Sure Redeemer Art." This hymn illustrates the Reformed theological emphasis of God's grace and mercy, the sovereignty of God, a prayer for unity in the church, and our need to trust in Jesus Christ. This arrangement comes from singer, songwriter, and pianist Zachary Harris.
Some churches observe "Reformation Sunday" as a time to reflect on the Reformers, their message and the origins of numerous Christian denominations. While this usually reflects on the positive aspects of the reformation, we cannot ignore the many divisions, religious wars, political and social upheaval that resulted during this period. There is no question that for better of for worse the Reformation had a profound impact on the social fabric of Europe and the world. Even within the Roman Catholic church, the catholic reformation which in many ways preceded the Reformation gained steam after the outbreak of the Protestant Reformation. The Catholic church saw changes during this period with the Council of Trent and under St. Ignatius and the Jesuits who brought about a new emphasis on mission and education around the world. The hymn lyrics are provided below for "I Greet Thee" given as a prayer and hope for the peace and unity of the catholic church that we may one day heal the divisions that separate us. It is also presented in memory of those reformers that following their consciousness called the church to a renewal of faith and practice.
I Greet Thee, Who My Sure Redeemer
Art
I greet Thee, who my sure Redeemer art,
My only trust and Savior of my heart,
Who pain didst undergo for my poor sake;
I pray Thee from our hearts all cares to take.
Thou art the King of mercy and of grace,
Reigning omnipotent in every place;
So come, O King, and our whole being sway;
Shine on us with the light of Thy pure day.
Thou art the life, by which alone we live,
And all our substance and our strength receive;
Sustain us by Thy faith and by Thy power,
And give us strength in every trying hour.
Thou hast the true and perfect gentleness,
No harshness hast Thou and no bitterness;
O grant to us the grace we find in Thee,
That we may dwell in perfect unity.
Our hope is in no other save in Thee;
Our faith is built upon Thy promise free;
Lord, give us peace, and make us calm and sure,
That in Thy strength we evermore endure
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
What is Worship? by Rev. Dr. Michael Van Horn
What is Worship?
By: ~ The Rev. Michael Van Horn, Ph.D.
Human beings were created for worship. The triune God has invited us to
share in His life, and Jesus, our High Priest, leads us into the presence of
God by the power of the Holy Spirit. Our celebration of worship is the central
way we make ourselves present to what God has done and is doing through Jesus
Christ.
Worship should never be a spectator sport. We are invited to engage as
whole people in the public service of remembering God's covenants with His
people. The liturgy is not our words, but the Church's words, given to us by a
gracious, self-revealing God. We need worship, as one writer says, because we
need the "weekly practice at not being God" and discovering just who
the one true God is. It is only with this vision clarified that we can ever
discover who we are, and flourish as human creatures. A service of worship
church contains four basic elements: The Gathering, the Word, the Table, and
the Sending. Each of these elements intentionally forms us into the people of
God, mindful of God's gift of Himself:
1. Gathering as the People of God –
We come together, out of our various and distinct places of service in
the world, to be joined together as one people with one purpose; to be
re-oriented to God's life and God's world.
Silence
- We pause briefly to hush the "noise" of our lives, recalling that,
left to ourselves, we have nothing to say to God.
Call to Worship and Invocation - Here we recite our purpose for gathering and are
reminded that we come only at God's gracious invitation. For this gift, we can
only respond by saying "thank You."
Confession of Sin and Words of Pardon - We do not come before a holy God on
our own terms. We have sinned. We have hurt others and ourselves. Confession is
honesty about who we are in the light of who God is. We confess our sins
together, with the whole Church, because we do not stand alone in our
brokenness. Yet, we come to confession not to grovel in anxiety, but to empty
our hands of our own "solutions" so that we can receive God's gift of
promised forgiveness in Christ.
Peace
- As forgiven and reconciled people, we have been called to a ministry of
reconciliation in the world. Since God has forgiven us, we can forgive others
and live at peace with them. We start with the family of God, speaking words of
peace in Christ, and continue by extending that peace in all our relationships
and choices.
Praise
- Learning again that God has met us in our need, and has abundantly forgiven
us, we celebrate in songs of gratitude and joy. Once again, these are not
merely our words, but words given to us by God in His Church.
2. Listening to God's Word
The center of our worship is the revealed speech of God. God has spoken
to His people "words of eternal life," and we take time to simply,
reverently, and humbly listen to what God is saying. The Scriptural story is
our story, as the people of God. This is a story of people caught up in God's
grace, human faithfulness and failure, and God's constant loving kindness
toward us.
Scripture – There can be as many as four passages from Scripture read, (Old Testament, a Psalm response, New
Testament Epistle, and a Gospel reading). These texts, often taken from a
three-year lectionary cycle, are shared in common by Christians from many
denominations around the world. Here we remember that God is speaking to all of
us, the whole people of God, and our response at this Word is one of gratitude:
"Thanks be to God!"
Sermon
- The sermon is a prayerful attempt to proclaim the Word of God within our
lives together as followers of Jesus Christ. God's Spirit continues to speak to
us, and we are compelled to hear the daily call to faithful discipleship.
Creed
- Biblical worship always includes response. In our affirmation of faith, we
are invited to corporately affirm what the Church proclaims. With this
confession, we join our voices to the Church around the world and throughout
time, saying, "Yes Lord, we believe, and will obey."
3. Gathering at the Lord's Table
Here we begin to act as obedient disciples, through giving of our lives,
interceding in prayer for others, and sharing in the meal that identifies us as
people of the kingdom - the body of Christ for the world.
Offering - Like the rest of the worship service, the offering is a meaningful
symbol. By giving to the ministries of the Church as an act of worship, we are
acknowledging a deeper, larger reality: All of life is a gift from God. What we
joyfully give in worship should keep us mindful that everything we have is a
gift of God and should be used for His glory.
Prayers of the People - God has ordained us to be priests. Part of that
priesthood is the work of intercession. In the prayers of the people we begin
the lifelong task of bringing before God - through the ministry of Jesus, in
the power of the Spirit - the needs of the world, the church, our communities
and families, and ourselves.
The Eucharist - Communion is the reality of participating in the life of God through
the gift of Jesus Christ to us. Here we give thanks to the Father for His work
of creation and redemption; we remember the Son, Jesus, for His life-giving
life, death, and resurrection even as we await His coming; and we ask for the
presence of the Spirit to join us to the life of Christ and to transform us
into kingdom people, who seek to live lives of justice and peace in the world,
until the day the Kingdom of God fully arrives.
4. Going out into God's World
Worship makes "sense" of the world, inviting us to see and do
the world God's way. The end of the service is really a beginning: the
beginning of a life of worship in which we love God and neighbor, seeking to
"do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with our God."
Sending
- Having heard God speak, having learned the Good News, having been nourished
at the Lord's Table, we have been commissioned for the work of Jesus in our
homes, places of work and play, in the whole creation. The "sending"
offers words of direction - marching orders - for the people of God: "Go
in peace to love and serve God and neighbor." We have work to do.
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