The Lord is Risen! The Lord is Risen Indeed! Now What?

One of the cherished memories of my youth is playing trumpet in the Easter dawn service
held on God’s Acre in Winston-Salem, NC. I recall years of glorious sunrises as well as cold
and rainy years, the sound of a five hundred piece Moravian band, and the spectacle of
thousands of Christians gathering to celebrate their Lord’s Resurrection.

One of the repressed memories of my youth is the utter fatigue which overcame me each
year when, with the arrival of dawn and the conclusion of worship, the sustaining power of
Krispy Kreme doughnuts, coffee, and Moravian Sugar Cake no longer sufficed to keep me
awake.

Sometimes we complete Easter feeling a bit like that – fatigued – even if we didn’t get up at
midnight to begin early morning rounds with the band. If we embrace the discipline of Lent,
with its weekly services, the nightly services of Holy Week, and attend the Easter Sunrise
Service, we do so in addition to our other responsibilities to family and career. Then too, we
may have lost loved ones in the past year, faced illness, or loss of a job. Sometimes what we
need most after Easter is rest.

It was that way for the disciples. They had faced the persecution of the state and religious
leaders of their day. They had seen their friend, Lord, and Savior crucified. They had
experienced the depths of despair and a rebirth of hope beyond their wildest imagination.
Now what they needed was time to process all that they had done, experienced, and seen.
Previously Jesus had urged his followers to action on behalf of God towards those who were
most vulnerable in the society of that day. Now Christ tells them to be still – to wait for the
Lord to act.

After his suffering he presented himself alive to them by many convincing proofs,
appearing to them during forty days and speaking about the kingdom of God. While
staying with them, he ordered them not to leave Jerusalem, but to wait there for the
promise of the Father. “This,” he said, “is what you have heard from me; or John baptized
with water, but you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days from now.” (Acts
1: 3-5)

The human soul has seasons just like the year. There are times for vigorous action and times
for contemplation and rest. Without both we cannot fully become what God desires us to
be. Are you getting adequate spiritual, emotional, and physical rest and rejuvenation in your
life? If not, what adjustments do you need to make to return to health and draw closer to your God?

See you in church,

Pastor Derek

Easter and Holy Week Services At East Hills Moravian Church

We’d like to invite you to worship with us for Easter and Holy Week services, 2013. If you’ve never attended the Good Friday Tenebrae service, we recommend it highly.

(And don’t forget that Breakfast with the Easter Bunny is this Saturday!)

easter services bethlehem

Good Friday at East Hills Moravian

Palm Sunday March 24th

8:30 am & 11:00 am Services

Holy Week Readings March 24th – March 27th

Readings held in Fellowship Hall at 7:00 pm Sunday through Wednesday

Maundy Thursday March 28th

7:00 pm Communion

Good Friday March 29th

7:00 pm Tenebrae Service

Easter Sunday March 31st

6:30 am Easter Dawn service

8:30 am Communion

11:00 am Resurrection service

Easter Sunday and the significance of The Day Of Resurrection

bethlehem easter service moravianOn Easter morning we gather to hear and respond to familiar affirmations of faith:

“The Lord is risen! The Lord is risen indeed!”

Moravian Easter liturgies speak of a God who so loves humanity so much that he chose to enter a suffering world in the person of Jesus Christ in order to mend our relationship with God, free us from the power of sin, and open the way to eternal life. At the Easter dawn service the congregation responds to such statements of faith with the words: “This we truly believe.”

On Resurrection Sunday, when the band is playing, the choirs are singing, and the church is decked out with daffodils and Easter lilies, it is not hard to affirm Christian faith and attach ourselves to its message of hope. Yet how many of those who gather on Easter Sunday are also willing to walk with Christ through the Garden of Gethsemane, stand with him on the Pavement of Judgment before Pilate, accompany him as he carries the cross on the Via Dolorosa, or stand at the foot of the cross on Good Friday?

In terms of worship, every member of the congregation has the opportunity to experience the last week of Christ’s life prior to his execution by crucifixion during our Holy Week Reading Services. Each night we will take turns reading from the Gospels’ accounts of what Jesus was doing on a particular day or evening. The week comes to a liturgical climax with Maundy Thursday Holy Communion and our Good Friday Tenebrae services.

All evening worship services will be held at 7:00 pm.

In terms of life, every day presents us with many choices to serve God or to serve the world which crucified our Lord. What you decide to do with each day of your life will reveal whether Easter’s affirmation of faith “This we truly believe,” is an accurate expression of personal faith or empty words. Fortunately for all of us, God allows U-turns. No matter how insincere we have been in the past; no matter how unfaithful we may have been in attending worship, in loving our neighbor as ourselves, in keeping God first in our lives, we always have the option of turning towards God.

Must Jesus bear the cross alone,
and all the world go free?
(There’s a cross for everyone
And I know that there’s a cross for me).

No Cross. No Crown.

See you in church,

Pastor Derek

Order Easter Flowers

Easter Flowers

These are not what your daffodils will look like, but they’re beautiful nonetheless

It’s time to order flowers to beautify the church sanctuary for Easter services 2013.

This year’s choices are lillies for $10.00, tulips for $8.00 and Daffodils for $8.00.

Deadline to order is Sunday, March 10th.

When you fill out the form, don’t forget to fill in the “Presented By” line and the “honor”, “blessings” or “memory” lines.

Click here to download the order form. It’s in Microsoft Word, so you can fill it out very easily. When you click the link, a window will open – save it to your desktop so you can easily find it after it downloads.

Hint: These flowers are perennials and can be planted in your garden after Easter. When they’re done blooming in their pots, cut the stems off just above the bulb and plant them in a sunny spot. Next spring you’ll enjoy the blooms! The cool thing is, they “naturalize”, which means they’ll keep creating more flowers every year. So if you have a spot to fill in, this is your perfect opportunity (daffodils are the most prolific).

Hint 2: Lillies have a wonderful aroma, and daffodils have none. But squirrels and rabbits won’t eat daffodil bulbs.

Happy Easter.

The Paradox of Lent

“… you are dust and to the dust you shall return.”

(Genesis 3:19b)

Meditating on the reality of human mortality is something most of us prefer to avoid. While we know our days are numbered, we usually manage to distract ourselves from this ever present fact with work, family responsibilities and recreation. Yet the Church has a whole liturgical season dedicated to contemplation of death and to the transience of all human endeavors? Why?

monkey trapThere’s an old story about an ingenious monkey trap. Reportedly, the monkey hunters tie a coconut to a tree, drill a hole in the coconut just large enough for a monkey’s hand to reach in, and place a piece of fruit or a nut inside. The monkey comes and is easily able to reach his hand into the hole to grasp the food. Yet when the monkey closes his fist around his prize he can no longer withdraw his hand from the coconut. The delay provided allows a hunter to aim, shoot, and bag a monkey for dinner.

Nothing in the material world lasts forever, but that doesn’t keep us from clinging to families, achievements, possessions, and institutions like a monkey grasping fruit in a coconut. Familiar surroundings provide the illusion of security and permanence while the hunter creeps closer each passing day. Some live to a happy old age. Others fall to illness, accidents, natural disasters, or senseless acts of violence. In the end, we all die. Can we escape this “monkey trap”? Christian faith answers, “Yes!”

The spiritual disciplines of Lent – prayer, worship, fasting, and the imposition of ashes – exist to help us let go of our old selves, our old securities and old identities. It is only with open, empty hands that we can hold the hand of God. When we take God’s hand and follow Christ we discover that acceptance of our mortality has paradoxically led us to a new life on earth, followed by eternal life with God in heaven.

“When this perishable body puts on imperishability and this mortal body puts on immortality, then the saying that is written will be fulfilled: Death has been swallowed up in
victory.”

(I Corinthians 15:54)

Lent and death gives way to Easter and life.

See you in church,
Pastor Derek

Easter and holy week services

easter sunday east hills moravian church

Easter Sunday Morning at East Hills

 

We invite you to celebrate Holy Week and Easter services at East Hills Moravian Church. Please join us as we celebrate the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

 

Palm Sunday April 1st

8:30 am & 11:00 am Worship Services

 

Sunday through Wednesday April 1-4

7:00 pm

Holy Week Readings

 

Maundy Thursday April 5th

7:00 pm Holy Communion

 

Good Friday April 6th

7:00 pm Tenebrae Service

(what’s a Tenebrae Service?)

 

Easter Sunday April 8th

6:00 am Easter Dawn Service

8:30 am Holy Communion

11:00 am Easter Celebration