Tuesday, February 19, 2013



 
Wednesday Church for the First Week in Lent
Lenten Wednesdays: 2/13; 2/20
 
 
WEDNESDAY CHURCH 
ON THE COMPUTER 
 
with Pastor Mike Fonfara
 
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
 
Welcome to Wednesday Church on the Computer!  Your visits to this blog are always appreciated.
Please enjoy the worship service and various sacred thoughts that follow.  Thanks again for your visit.
 
TODAY'S OPENING PRAYER
 
Great God, Mighty Creator, and Giver of Life,  
 
Awaken our hearts to new life brought by our holy Lenten Leader, Jesus Christ.  His deeds on earth, words recorded in the Bible, and amazing love for people stir our passions for Your Kingdom.  We respond to the Lenten challenge of our faith by learning the attitudes of Christ as found in the Bible and by following the Holy Spirit to use them in our daily lives.  Amen. 
 
WORSHIP FOR WEDNESDAY IN THE FIRST WEEK OF LENT
 
Gathering
 
"My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strentgh of my heart and my portion forever."
(Psalm 73:26)
 
Come, Wednesday worshippers, let God strenthen our hearts by this worship service!
 
Invocation/Confession
 
Gracious God,
 
Thank You for this Lenten Season, a time for strenthening my relationship with Jesus before Easter.  Receive my appreciation for blessings given today.
 
As much as I love You, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit, I still sin.  Please forgive my disobedience, judgmental attitudes, my chasing after worldly treasures while ignoring heavenly responsibilities, and yielding to temptations of all sorts.  I repent in my Savior's name.  Thank you for divine kindness, mercy, and forgiveness.  Amen.
 
Assurance of Forgiveness and New Life
 
God's love for repentant people never fails.  The Almighty forgives sin and renews the soul.  Your sin is forgiven in the name of Jesus.  Praise God!
 
Scripture    
 
 "For the kingdom of God is not a matter of talk but of power."
(1 Corinthians 4:20 NIV)
 
 
Message                                               "Seeing is Believing!"
 
Most Christians have heard this old expression, "Seeing is believing!"  Everybody I know wants some basis of reality to back-up how they think, what they say, and what they do.  This goes for me, too.  Most people believe that they can trust what they see.
 
There is a Christian dimension to this old adage quoted above.  People believe what they see and read about Christians.  Good or bad, public opinion about Christians, the Church, and even Jesus is formed by our noticed lives.  People are watching you and me.  
 
What type of faith seeds are we sowing this Lent?  We must live the right way and let the Holy Spirit's authority as well as power lead us to think, say, and do things that honor God and the Savior.
 
General Statement of Belief
 
I believe that the Almighty created me to reflect, enjoy, and share the love of Jesus.  I do this by the ways I praise God, treat other people, take care of Mother Nature, and live according to the Bible's teachings.  As good as my Christian intentions may be, I fall short and pray for God's forgiveness.  I know that God forgives and redeems me.  So, I will always continue to strive for authentic and victorious Christian living to glorify the Creator, the Son, and the Holy Spirit all the days of my life here on earth and in the hereafter.  Amen.
 
Closing Prayer (with a Native American contribution) 
 
Holy God and Great Spirit,
 
Please hear my prayer.  With thanksgiving in my heart, I pray for vibrant faith live in mysel and in all my loved ones.  Walk with us, O God, and lead us into Your kingdom now and forever.  Aho - Amen.
 
 


(A Native American Prayer Pipe)


Your Lenten Challenge for the Week
If you know of someone who might enjoy Wednesday Church on the Computer, 
 
Miscellaneous Sacred Thoughts 
 
1. Short History of Lent by Tim Kimberley
 
Millions of Christians around the world will spend the next 40 days celebrating a Christian tradition which predates every denomination. The season of Lent refers to a 40 day period leading up to the celebration of Easter. The English word “Lent” is a funny one. If you lived at a time and in a place where Latin was spoken you wouldn’t call this time “Lent,” you would use the more precise word Quadragesima which is a direct translation from the Greek term for “fortieth.” When sermons in the Middle Ages started to be spoken in the language of the people, instead of the elitist Latin (thanks be to Martin Luther and others), the word “Lent” was chosen to speak of this period of 40 days. Technically the word comes from the Germanic root word Lenz which simply means long. The days get longer during the Spring, so it’s no surprise this word in German and Dutch is used for the word “Spring.” Since springtime is the time we celebrate Easter, the word “Lent” was adopted to speak of this time of new life during Spring. Who knew?

Did you know, additionally, the 40 day period of Lent may be a translation mistake? Before you call me a heretic, let me explain.

We can trace Lent almost all the way back to the disciples. This is quite extraordinary. The heroic theologian Irenaeus (who died in 203AD and was discipled by Polycarp who himself was believed to be discipled by the Apostle John) wrote a letter to Victor I. This letter was thankfully recorded by the early church historian Eusebius. Irenaeus is telling Victor about their Easter celebrations. In this letter he writes:

“The dispute is not only about the day, but also about the actual character of the fast. Some think that they ought to fast for one day, some for two, others for still more; some make their ‘day’ last 40 hours on end. Such variation in the observance did not originate in our own day, but very much earlier, in the time of our forefathers” (Eusebius, History of the Church, V, 24).

Interestingly, the earliest of Christians believed Jesus was dead in the grave for 40 hours. The number 40 has held significant importance throughout biblical history. The rains fell on Noah in the ark for 40 days and 40 nights. Moses was on top of Mount Sinai receiving the Ten Commandments for 40 days and 40 nights. Elijah walked 40 days and 40 nights to the mountain of the Lord. Jesus, most importantly, fasted and prayed for 40 days and 40 nights before starting his public ministry.

The earliest of Christians put the 40 day fasting of Jesus in the desert together with his 40 hours in the grave. It appears Irenaeus is telling us the earliest of Christians spent 40 hours, not days but hours, fasting and praying in preparation for Easter celebrations. This is where a translation mistake changed the way we have and continue to celebrate Easter. A man named Rufinus translated Eusebius’ History of the Church from Greek into Latin. For some reason he put a punctuation mark between “40″ and “hours.” It gave people reading the letter of Irenaeus the idea that Irenaeus meant “40 – 24 hour days.”

By the 300′s AD a 40 day celebration period leading up to Easter appears to be widespread. The Council of Nicea (325AD) mentions two synods should be held each year, “one before the 40 days of Lent.” 4th century theological powerhouse Athanasius in his “Festal Letters” pleads with his congregation to fast for 40 days leading up to a more intense fast during Holy Week. 4th and 5th century church leaders Cyril of Jerusalem, Cyril of Alexandria and Leo I all speak of a 40-day period of Lent leading up to Easter.

The exact day Lent should officially begin has been debated for many centuries. Most Western Christians start the 40 day period on Ash Wednesday. Eastern Christians start Lent on a day referred to as Clean Monday. It is usually the Monday before the Wednesday celebrated by the West. For centuries a time of feast and festival precedes the time of prayer and fasting. The most famous pre-Lent festivals are celebrated in Rio de Janeiro, Trinidad & Tobago, Venice and in modern times New Orleans. The festival on the Tuesday before Lent is known by the names: Mardis Gras, Shrove Tuesday, or Fat Tuesday. Many of the people who celebrate these festivals, however, neglect entering into the reason for the season.

Lent has historically been seen as a time of serious self-denial. In denying ourselves we are able to catch a glimpse of the cosmic self-denial made by the second person of the Trinity for the salvation of mankind. Although the 40 day period may have come about through translation problems, the 40 day period has been influential in the lives of countless saints to redirect our affections toward our Savior. Lent predates every denomination. In whatever way your local church celebrates Lent; let this season break you, wound you, destroy you, and humble you so Jesus can be the center of your life and not you.

Thank you Tom Kimberley!


The next Wednesday Church on the Computer posting
is Wednesday, February 27, 2013.

Please stop by and visit again! 

Walk in peace!  Aho.

Pastor Mike Fonfara, D.Min.

 




 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
        
 
 

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