Resources by Andrew De Gelder

Child Praying

This confession and assurance originally appeared in the worship service "Good News!—Lent 4: A Fresh Start."Call to ConfessionThis is the [insert week] Sunday in Lent, a time Christians historically have reflected upon their lives, identified sin, and repented of it. Of course these are things we should always be doing! But there’s something about the weeks leading up to Good Friday and Easter that makes one consider the cross and the price that was paid for our sin. Hear these words from 1 John 1:8–9: “If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.” Let us pray.Prayer of ConfessionHoly God,as we worship you this daywe do not want to be people who deceive ourselves.Instead we want to clearly see who you areand clearly see who we are.We cannot claim to be without sin.So we confess our sin before you,trusting that you are indeed faithful and justand that you will forgive us our sinsand purify us from all unrighteousness.Hear our prayer,for we pray these things in Jesus’ name.Amen.Assurance of PardonHear these words of assurance from Scripture: Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here! All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation. —2 Corinthians 5:17–18 NIV As the church today, we share the good news about new life in Christ, about sins forgiven and the restoration of our relationship with the God who made us, who created us in God’s image, and who loves us more than we can even imagine.Revised Common LectionaryYear C: Lent—Fourth Sunday in Lent

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Hands held in prayer

This prayer originally appeared in the worship service "Good News!—Lent 3: The Temple is Rebuilt!"Prayer of Thanksgiving for the Work of ChristHoly God and heavenly Father, we give you thanks that you sent Jesus into the world to be the gate that links heaven and earth. We thank you that, through the temple of his body that was broken and the blood that was poured out for many, he reconciled us to you. We thank you that we don’t have to go to a particular place or building to have our sins forgiven, but that we have the opportunity as Christians to gather and together be the body of Christ in this world. We pray that you will fill our hearts with gratitude for all that is ours in Christ Jesus and that we would bear fruit by your Holy Spirit. Give us courage and opportunities to share with excitement the good news of the gospel to those who need to hear it so they would experience with us the joy of salvation. We pray these things in Jesus’ name. Amen.

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Person kneeling in prayer

This call to confession and assurance of pardon originally appeared in the worship service "Good News!—Lent 3: The Temple is Rebuilt!"Call to ConfessionThis is the [insert week] Sunday in Lent, the season leading up to Good Friday and Easter. It’s a time when Christians have traditionally reflected upon the cross and the price that Jesus paid for our sin. It’s also a time of repentance and renewal, a time of turning away from sin and toward Jesus Christ. In a moment I’m going to invite you to join me in a time of silent prayer in which we’ll confess our sins before God. Before that, though, hear these words from Hebrews 4:16: “Let us then approach God’s throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.”Silent Prayer of ConfessionAssurance of PardonJesus said: “I am the light of the world.Whoever follows me will never walk in darknessbut will have the light of life.”—John 8:12 NIVRevised Common LectionaryYears A, B, C: Holy Week—Good Friday

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Empty Tomb

This prayer originally appeared in the worship service "Good News!—Lent 2: Worth Dying For."Prayer of the PeopleLoving God, as strange as it may sound, we are grateful this Lenten season that Jesus, the Christ, our Messiah, walked the path of suffering, death, and sacrifice. We are grateful because it was through this that our souls—in fact our very lives—were saved! We pray that by your Spirit you will help us to gratefully put Christ and not ourselves at the center of our lives so that as we follow Christ’s lead, as we experience suffering and rejection and make sacrifices in this life, those around us would see in us people who have been shaped by the gospel. We pray that our Christian witness, as individuals and collectively as a church, would be so compelling that people would be prompted to ask us how we can continue to worship you no matter the circumstances. We pray that we would have openings to tell good news to those around us. All this we pray in Jesus’ name. Amen.

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Person kneeling in prayer

This call to confession and assurance of pardon originally appeared in the worship service "Good News!—Lent 2: Worth Dying For."Call to ConfessionThis is the [insert week] Sunday in the season of Lent, a time when Christians traditionally have focused on repentance. Of course, any time is a good time to repent of sin, but for centuries the followers of Jesus have used this time leading up to Good Friday and Easter to carefully consider their lives and what is in their hearts. With this in mind, hear these words from Psalm 139: “Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting” (Psalm 139:23–24, NIV).Prayer of ConfessionAssurance of PardonIsrael, put your hope in the Lord, for with the Lord is unfailing love and with him is full redemption. He himself will redeem Israel from all their sins.—Psalm 130:7–8 NIVRevised Common LectionaryYear A: Lent—Fifth Sunday in Lent

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People praying together

This prayer originally appeared in the worship service "Good News!—Lent 1."Prayer of the PeopleGracious God, we thank you that you have drawn us to yourself. We thank you for the one who was lifted up and crucified. And while the ways in which you have worked in our lives are mysterious, and while each of us has a unique story about how you have drawn us to you, we pray that together in this congregation we would show the world how we are united in Christ. God, we thank you for the good news of the gospel that tells us that you were lifted up for us all and that all of us belong together in the body of Christ. Help us to love one another as Christ has loved us. We pray that you would use us to draw others into this family, where there is life and hope and salvation. These things we pray in Jesus’ name. Amen.

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Canopy of trees

This assurance of pardon originally appeared in the worship service "Good News!—Lent 1."Words of AssuranceListen to these words from 1 Peter 2:9–10 NIV For you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light. Once you were not a people, but now you are the people of God; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.As we hear these words from God, we can’t help but find ourselves both assured and challenged: assured that we are indeed God’s people who are forgiven, loved, and cherished, but also challenged to live as people of light who have been called out of darkness. For it is God’s will that we who believe and who have been shown mercy would live lives that glorify him and give praise and honor to Jesus Christ.Revised Common LectionaryYear A: Easter—Fifth Sunday of Easter

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Good News

This is part of the worship series, "Good News!”Introduction Lent 1 | Lent 2 | Lent 3  | Lent 4   Lent 5 | Palm Sunday | Good Friday | Easter SundayEASTER SUNDAYCall to WorshipThis is the good news—the grave is empty;Christ is risen.Hallelujah!This is the good news—the light shines in the darkness,and the darkness can never put it out.Hallelujah!This is the good news—once we were no people;now we are God’s people.Hallelujah!Christ is our peace,the indestructible peacewe now share with each other.Hallelujah!—Stages on the Way: Worship Resources for Lent, Holy Week, and Easter. Wild Goose Worship Group, 1998. © WGRG c/o Iona Community, GIA Publications, Inc., exclusive North American agent. Reprints permitted with a license from ONE LICENSE, onelicense.net.God’s GreetingWorship Song“Christ the Lord Is Risen Today” Wesley, LUYH 182, GtG 245, SSS 181Testimony VideosThree people from the congregation shared testimonies about what the resurrection meant for them in a series of lightly edited prerecorded clips.Songs“In Christ Alone” Getty and Townend“Living Hope” Johnson and Wickham“Lord, I Lift Your Name on High” FoundsScripture ReadingMark 16:1–8Sermon“Good News—He Is Risen!”Sermon NotesThe empty tomb is a historical fact upon which the message of Christianity rises or falls. The women in Mark 16 were trembling and bewildered when they encountered it, and we have a hard time believing it ourselves. Yet the eyewitness accounts and the life transformation of the disciples are evidence that it is true. We need to believe this good news and share it.Prayer of ApplicationAwesome God, on this Easter morning we are amazed again at the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. We give you thanks that all these years later the tomb is still empty and lives are still being changed because of the good news of the gospel. I pray, Father, that by your Holy Spirit you would move those today who are listening to this message and need to make a decision for you. Give them courage and grace to do so, and begin to do your transforming work in their lives. And for those of us who do believe already and who are following you, we pray that you will lead us into opportunities to reach out with good news to the people whom you have put in our paths. All these things we pray in the name of the risen Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen.Song of Response“Crown Him with Many Crowns” Bridge, ThringBlessingClosing Song“King of Kings” HillsongRevised Common LectionaryYear B: Easter—Easter VigilYear B: Easter—Resurrection of the Lord

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Good News

This is part of the worship series, "Good News!”Introduction Lent 1 | Lent 2 | Lent 3  | Lent 4   Lent 5 | Palm Sunday | Good Friday | Easter SundayGOOD FRIDAYThe readings for this service are excerpts from Psalm 22 amid “thoughts” from people based on the different ways people were suffering though the COVID-19 pandemic. These thoughts could be interchanged with other ways people suffer. Overall the message is that Christ is at one with us in our suffering because he suffered for us, and in our suffering there is hope for a new heaven and earth. This liturgy was designed for a Good Friday service of lament, so the song choices reflect that, but other songs that suit your congregation and the theme of the service could be chosen.Litany of LamentReader 1:My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?   Why are you so far from helping me, from the words of my groaning?O my God, I cry by day, but you do not answer;   and by night but find no rest.—Psalm 22:1–2 NRSVUE Reader 2: I’m so lonely. I’m not sure I can take another day alone, staring at the same four walls. I miss seeing my friends and my family. Life is so mundane, and I’m not sure how long I can try to keep up a good attitude. Why won’t God fix it? Why won’t God make it end? I’m not sure how much longer I can be isolated and alone. Reader 1:Yet you are holy,   enthroned on the praises of Israel.In you our ancestors trusted;   they trusted, and you delivered them.To you they cried and were saved;   in you they trusted and were not put to shame. —Psalm 22:3–5 NRSVUESong“My God, My God, Why (Psalm 22)” Vermeulen-Roberts (The Psalm Project)Reader 1:But I am a worm and not human,   scorned by others and despised by the people.All who see me mock me;   they sneer at me; they shake their heads;“Commit your cause to the Lord; let him deliver—   let him rescue the one in whom he delights!” —Psalm 22:6–8 NRSVUE Reader 3: They keep saying that we’re all in this together, but does anyone really know how I feel? I’m worried and scared. I also don’t feel like I can talk with anyone about my worries and anxieties because they’ll shrug it off. I tried to tell them why I have such a hard time leaving the house or getting together, but they just laughed and told me I shouldn’t be so paranoid. Then there was the time when I told them I was scared of getting sick and dying, and they said I should just trust in God to save me. I mean, God, yes, I trust in you! . . . Or at least I want to. . . . But so much is uncertain, and so much doesn’t make sense anymore. After all this is over I’m not even sure who my friends will be. Reader 1: Yet it was you who took me from the womb;   you kept me safe on my mother’s breast.On you I was cast from my birth,   and since my mother bore me you have been my God.Do not be far from me,   for trouble is near,   and there is no one to help.—Psalm 22:9–11 NRSVUE Reader 4:Things were going so well. I went to college, I set aside some savings, I made a plan, and had everything lined up to run my own business. I was very optimistic. Now I’ve had to let my employees go, and I’m about to lose my business. All my hard work, my savings, my dreams—they’re gone. I have nothing. I can’t sleep because all I do is worry about how I’m going to make it through this. I think I’m going to lose everything.Song“O Sacred Head, Now Wounded” LatinReader 1:I am poured out like water,   and all my bones are out of joint;my heart is like wax;   it is melted within my breast;my mouth is dried up like a potsherd,   and my tongue sticks to my jaws;   you lay me in the dust of death.—Psalm 22:14–15 NRSVUE Reader 2: I lost a loved one this past year, and I was not able to say goodbye in person. We didn’t even get to hold a proper funeral. Friends and family couldn’t comfort me. I know what loneliness and grief feels like now, and my heart is aching. I’m not even sure how I’m feeling now. Some days I just press on, and some days all the small things build up until it’s too much, and I break down. Reader 1:For dogs are all around me;   a company of evildoers encircles me;they bound my hands and feet.I can count all my bones.They stare and gloat over me;they divide my clothes among themselves,   and for my clothing they cast lots.—Psalm 22:16–18 NRSVUE Reader 3:Things have already been bad for years. The hurt and pain I’ve experienced these last few years have already isolated me from everyone else. My world was in upheaval far before the world was. Everyone seems so concerned with themselves now, and no one was ever concerned for me. I already knew what loneliness and brokenness felt like, and this last year just added to the pain I have desperately been trying to numb. Song“What Wondrous Love Is This” AnonymousReader 1:But you, O Lord, do not be far away!   O my help, come quickly to my aid!Deliver my soul from the sword,   my life from the power of the dog!   Save me from the mouth of the lion!—Psalm 22:19–21 NRSVUE Reader 5:I can’t help but think about all the things I’ve missed out on: No prom, no in-person first year of university, no hanging out with friends, no mission trips, no summer trips, no sports, no extracurriculars, no youth group, no church. If someone adds something else to the list of things I can’t do I think I’m going to lose it. I know there’s a bigger picture, and I know I’m not the only one suffering, but all these things that I found joy in, so much of what was fun, is gone now, and some things I can’t get back. Reader 1:For he did not despise or abhor   the affliction of the afflicted;he did not hide his face from me   but heard when I cried to him.—Psalm 22:24 NRSVUE Reader 4: Are you listening? Do you hear me? Do you notice or see me? Reader 3:Have you noticed how this world seems to be falling apart? Do you see how much hurt and anguish there is? Reader 5:The killing, the lying, the hatred, the deception, disappointment, those hurting, and those dying—do you see it, God? Reader 2:We’re so tired and weary, and we’re crying out for you to heal us, save us, restore us, and redeem us.Song“He Will Hold Me Fast” Habershon, MerkerSermon“Good News—Good Friday”Sermon NotesIn Psalm 22, David models pouring out his feelings to God while contrasting his intense emotion with what he knows to be true about God. What’s so amazing for contemporary readers of this psalm is that we know that these words were fulfilled a thousand years later at the cross. While we suffer too as believers in a broken world, we can know that we are not forsaken in our suffering. We know that this life and its suffering is not all there is! There is salvation and new life for those whose trust is in the Lord Jesus Christ.Prayer of ApplicationHoly God and heavenly Father, we are so grateful for the good news that Jesus Christ completed his work on the cross on our behalf and that through his extreme suffering we can find salvation. Help us to be reminded of this as we go through our present difficulties and look forward to the glorious day of Christ’s return, when all things will be made new! Give us strength and courage to persevere in our faith, to reach out to you when we are troubled, and to hold onto your gospel promises. All these things we pray in Jesus’ name. Amen.Celebration of CommunionSong During Communion“Man of Sorrows—What a Name” BlissBlessingClosing Song“Were You There” SpiritualRevised Common LectionaryYears A, B, C: Holy Week—Good Friday

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Good News

This is part of the worship series, "Good News!”Introduction Lent 1 | Lent 2 | Lent 3  | Lent 4   Lent 5 | Palm Sunday | Good Friday | Easter SundayPALM SUNDAYCall to WorshipBlessed is the one who comes in the name of the LORD.Hosanna in the highest!—Based on Psalm 118:26, NRSV, The Worship Sourcebook, 2nd ed., K.1.2.1Worship Song“Hosanna (Praise Is Rising)” BrownGod’s GreetingWorship Song“May the Peoples Praise You / Holy, Holy, Holy” Getty, Zimmer, Townend, and CashCall to ConfessionLike the people who greeted Jesusas he entered Jerusalemand then later pronounced “Crucify him,”we are fickle people who often deny Christin our thoughts, words, and deeds.Remembering the events of Jesus’ last weekhelps us see ourselves for what we are:sinners in need of a savior,a savior—praise God—we have in Christ.In honesty and hope, we confess now our sins to God.—The Worship Sourcebook, 2nd ed., K.2.1.1. Used by permission. Silent Prayer of ConfessionAssurance of PardonHear the Word of the Lord from Psalm 118:Let those who fear the Lord say,“His steadfast love endures forever.”Out of my distress I called on the Lord;the Lord answered me and set me free.The Lord is my strength and my song;he has become my salvation.I shall not die, but I shall live,and recount the deeds of the Lord.In Christ, God answers us and sets us free!In Christ, we are forgiven! Thanks be to God.—Based on Psalm 118:4–5, 14–15 NRSV, The Worship Sourcebook, 2nd ed., K.2.4.1Children’s MessageChildren’s Song“Shout Hosanna” EvansCongregational PrayerGood News CaféA staff member told of how she learned to see the blessings of God following a season of life in which she struggled with postpartum depression and the disruption caused by moving.Scripture ReadingMark 11:1–11Sermon“Good News—Even Better than Expected”Sermon NotesAs Jesus approached Jerusalem, the crowds shouted excerpts from Psalm 118 as they had for generations and called out for salvation from the realities of the Roman occupation. We are struggling in many ways too. The crowd expected the Messiah to be an earthly king who would restore the Davidic dynasty. While they were wrong about the kind of king Jesus would turn out to be, they were absolutely right to connect Psalm 118 to Jesus (see vs. 22 and 27, for example). The good news of the gospel for us today is that Jesus saves us from our sins even as he is with us in our struggles. We can cry out “Hosanna!” to him (“Save us!”) and know that he will.Prayer of ApplicationHoly God, we give you thanks for the awesome picture of the kingship of Christ that we see here in Mark 11. We thank you that he is who he said he is. He is who the Scriptures foretold and the one that the crowds were right about even though they didn’t fully understand how. We thank you that we can cry out to you to save us—and that you can save us and will save us because of the king that Jesus is. We pray that we would be moved to repent of our sin and to believe and to follow the Lord Jesus into a life of service for the sake of his kingdom and his glory. God, speed the day when King Jesus will return and make all things new. We pray these things in Jesus’ name. Amen.BlessingClosing Song“The Lord Is My Salvation” Getty, Myrin, and NockelsRevised Common LectionaryYear B: Lent—Liturgy of the Palms

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