Minute for Mission: Peace & Global Witness Offering/World Communion Sunday

 

October 3, 2021

Study Seminar participants help prepare sandwiches for an open table lunch after worship with The Border Church. (Kristi Van Nostran)

“May the God of Peace … grant you peace at all times in all ways.”

It was a daring prayer, all things considered, to ask the Thessalonians to pray — and it is also a daring one for us, I imagine. The second letter to the Thessalonians arrived at a time of turmoil, strife and confusion. The Christian community was experiencing persecutions so severe that some believed the time of judgment had come, while others took advantage of their doubt, spreading misinformation and sowing dissent. The letter ends with a benedictory prayer: for God’s peace to be granted at all times in all ways. It might have been daring enough to consider asking them to imagine peace at “any time,” much less at “all times,” or to imagine peace in some sort of way at all, much less in all of them. Have you ever felt so far from God’s peace that you couldn’t even imagine it?

Peace is so often a daring prayer and so often provoked in the imagination first. Artistic expression and movements for justice and peace often dance together. In turmoil, strife and confusion, visual artists and theatrical performances can point us to God’s peace-creating presence in our midst. We can listen for God’s voice in lamenting or angry poems, and in songs of freedom from those most vulnerable to violence and oppression. And the Church can dance with all whom God loves.

Artistic expression can light up our imaginations and lift our spirits. A church choir is a shining example of this, as I am sure you will agree. Art may help imagine peace, as it has in Lebanon where effects of war have been a daily reality for far too long; or at the southern U.S. border, where Presbyterians are imagining a season of peace with those who flee from violence; or it might join in songs of hope and inner peace with those considering taking their own lives. The Church joins with those imagining a new world, so we can create it, together.

The Peace & Global Witness Offering helps us imagine and create in each of our individual expressions, and together as a whole Church, a witness to the God of Peace. The Offering helps us work with our denominational partners so that our witness to peace is extended, and we help fulfill the daring prayer in 2nd Thessalonians: that the God of Peace is known “at all times in all ways.”

There is so much peace we are only beginning to imagine, and so we pray hard, with our minds, our gifts, with our Church and all those who inspire a sense of God’s peace.

On this World Communion Sunday, let’s celebrate our oneness in Christ with our siblings.

For when we all do a little, it adds up to a lot.

Bryce Wiebe, Director of Special Offerings and Presbyterian Giving Catalog

Revised Common Lectionary Readings for Sunday, October 3, 2021, the Twenty-Seventh Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year B)

First Reading Job 1:1, 2:1-10
Psalm 26:1-12
Second Reading Hebrews 1:1-4, 2:5-12
Gospel Mark 10:2-16

Today’s Focus: Peace & Global Witness Offering/World Communion Sunday

Let us join in prayer for:

PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Thomas Abraham, Finance & Accounting Technical Project Manager, Administrative Services Group (A Corp) 
Bob Abrams, Volunteer, Presbyterian Men

Let us pray

O God of Peace at all times in all ways, grant us your peace and help us to imagine a world where your justice and peace are ever known. Amen.


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