2020-12-13 Worship 11

Welcome to 11 a.m. Online Worship Service of Hillside Princeton!

The worship will start Sunday morning at 11 a.m. Thank you!

[Printable Worship Bulletin | “Comment” Below Worship Video]

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2020-12-13 Worship 9

Welcome to 9 a.m. Online Worship Service of Hillside Princeton!

The worship will start Sunday morning at 9 a.m. Thank you!

[Printable Worship Bulletin | “Comment” Below Worship Video]

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Promoting and engaging in holy living

“Therefore prepare your minds for action; discipline yourselves; set all your hope on the grace that Jesus Christ will bring you when he is revealed. Like obedient children, do not be conformed to the desires that you formerly had in ignorance. Instead, as he who called you is holy, be holy yourselves in all your conduct; for it is written, ‘You shall be holy, for I am holy.’”

(1 Peter 1:13-16, NRSV). (Also refer to 1 Peter 3:15)

What kind of hope holds you up in uncertain future? The pandemic makes things harder and more uncertain. The scripture rekindles the “hope” in us, which has its origin with Jesus and finds its destiny on “the grace” that he will bring on the day when he reveals himself to all. It reminds us of the significance of a privileged relationship with Jesus our Lord. The privilege is granted to those who choose to hear him, to learn his word, and to believe in his name, the name above all the names in the world and the name that gives power to live as God’s children.

Ask yourself this simple yet fundamental question: “What makes me different from others who do not know Jesus?” Many years ago, Peter answered the question on behalf of us when he truly came to realize who he was and what he was: Peter was chosen by Jesus but denied his relationship with his “Teacher and Lord” (John 13:13); yet, Peter’s unfulfilled love was rekindled by the grace of Jesus rooted on his love and care for his disciples. Having learned the significance of his love-relationship with Jesus, Peter appealed to his fellow believers who lived in Asia Minor where Christian movement was very active. He reminded them of the hope that sprouted when they accepted Jesus as their Lord as they were to endure to the end all sufferings and hardships that would come their way keeping their faith in Jesus. Peter knew that their hope was to be set and guarded on the promise that Jesus would bring on his second coming. He knew what made them different from those who belonged to the world: they were chosen and offered as “spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God” (1 Peter 2:5).

While he encouraged fellow believers reminding them of their relational identity, Peter also gave them a lifelong directive to keep them holy and sought to protect from evil ones. He did not want them to be caught off guard: they were to prepare their minds for action just as you are to prepare your mind for action that is needed at any moment for a glorious victory in Jesus. Engaging in this spiritual battle, you set your hope in the hope that will come true and find its ultimate fulfillment in the coming of Jesus. Peter clearly distinguishes those who belong to Jesus from those who belong to the world: the former is to promote a holy living because they belong to Jesus, holy, chosen, and precious in God’s sight (1 Peter 1:16; 2:4).

Advent Season is another opportunity to renew and promote our relationship with Jesus in a spiritual journey of taking actions in repentance and reflections on some practical implications of his coming. Today is another time to prepare your mind for action that will keep you on guard for a final glorious victory in Jesus. Even though there are more stress, more troubles, and more uncertainties, you have Jesus who sustains your life for a holy living, and life continues in Jesus. Therefore, remind yourself of what to do. Stay safe! Stay healthy! Stay connected with Jesus and with one another in writing of prayer and care. God is good!

In God’s Grace,
Pastor Paul Lee


God taking notice of His people

23 After a long time the king of Egypt died. The Israelites groaned under their slavery, and cried out. Out of the slavery their cry for help rose up to God. 24 God heard their groaning, and God remembered his covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. 25 God looked upon the Israelites, and God took notice of them.”

(Exodus 2:23-24; 3:7-12, NRSV)

This narrative describes a dramatic yet intimate response of God to His people, the Israelites, who were in misery and hardships in a life of slavery especially long after the death of the king of Egypt. Their life in Egypt finds its relevancy to your life where you are in various aspects. They had not chosen Egypt as their residence but were given a life that was inherited from their parents there. Their parents were descendants of Joseph and his brothers who had moved from Canaan to Egypt to survive; they were the children of the immigrants. The life of the Israelites at that time did not have many resources and free options. Many years had passed after their ancestors had immigrated to Egypt; even though many, many generations had passed, they were neither Egyptianized nor mingled with Egyptians; rather, they were still identified as “Israelites” whom the Egyptians treated them as foreigners and even as slaves. Some of them might have engaged in some types of business but could not own it as their possession. Others might have been highly proficient in certain areas of life with great job skills; yet, they were restricted in their promotion at work and limited to what they could do. Many of them must have felt that they were capable of doing many great things and yet chained to shackles with neither flexibility nor freedom. Their life, confused, hopeless, and uncertain as God’s people, is portrayed as “slavery” to the unchallengeable worldly power. Something common to your life?

At some point in their slavery, the Israelites reached a breaking point where they began to “groan under their slavery” and to cry for help desperately (Exodus 2:23). Their cry did not pass without being noticed by God. Two undeniable points are emphatic and perpetual beyond limit to space and time: (1) God remembered His covenant with His people; (2) God looked upon them and noticed their hardships and pain. First, God had made a covenant with Noah (Genesis 6:18; 9:9) and with Abraham (Genesis 15:18 17:2) about God’s care for His people. The act of God’s remembering marks the intimate, caring relationship with them (Genesis 8:1; 19:29; 30:22; Exodus 2:24; 6:5; Psalm 98:3; 105:42; 106:45; 136:23). Second, God never left them alone while they were suffering because of their taskmasters. He paid close attention to their situation where they did not know what to do with their sufferings and their life in slavery to Egypt. Remembering the covenant with their ancestors, God responded to their cry and promised that He would bring them to “a good and broad land, a land flowing with milk and honey” (Exodus 3:8). Are you holding onto the words of promise as you hear Jesus and follow his lead?

Do you find something here in common with your life? At good times, it may be easy to feel or say that God seems good to you even though that saying may not carry and reflect in your life as much meaning as it should be. In the midst of hardships or life crisis, we may find something different from the good times and yet similar to the situation that the Israelites had experienced in Egypt. If God were the God of eternity, the same God, who remembered His covenant with faith ancestors and paid close attention to the Israelites, would respond to the cry of His people today and in the future. If that were the case, the same God would respond to your cry for help in prayer while you feel desperate and much pain in your life. The COVID-19 outbreak would be one of those situations where people may find God as the God of care, those who hear His voice, following His lead and enduring to the end in their love for Jesus, rather than an unwarranted voice that is rooted on earthly things and temporary measures. Every now and then, we hear some say, “God is in control” referring to the COVID-19 outbreak. What does that mean to you? To some people, it may sound superficial not carrying any tangible connections with the living God. To other people, it may sound serious because they think they have an intimate relationship with God who remembered His covenant with faith ancestors and cared watching over their sufferings.

You may find similarity between the life situation of the Israelites and yours where you are today. Egypt was their residence whereas where you are is your residence; their heavy labor was a daily reality with no warranted assurance whereas your reality is fragile and uncertain as you are stuck in this pandemic right now. Their hope was to depart from their hopeless reality in Egypt and to enter into their destination, the Promised Land flowing with milk and honey, whereas you are a stranger in this world and yet long for a better place, your ultimate destination in heaven (Hebrews 11:13). In the meantime and in this in-between residence, God does not leave you alone just as He paid close attention to the Israelites in Egypt, a symbol of slavery. As you truly believe and live in the living God who said to Moses, “[God] will be with you” (Exodus 3:12), you may experience in due time His mighty hands working through this difficult time and having you carried into where you are to be with Jesus as you unswervingly endure to the end (1 Corinthians 10:13; Colossians 1:11). At the end of the conversation with Moses, God said to him, “you shall worship God on this mountain” (Exodus 3:12). Even in their uncertain situation, God commanded and expected the Israelites to worship Him emphasizing the act of worship as their first duty in the wilderness departing from the slavery to a new life marked by freedom and abundance of fresh food like milk and honey in a promised, blessed place (Exodus 3:8).

Where is your reality now? Where is your ultimate destination? What is your course of life aligned with? Who is the ultimate leader whose voice you are to hear and follow in the midst of confusion and uncertainty? The voice, which Moses heard, is also offered to you; it is your choice to hear and follow for a better, greater life that is abundant and eternal in Jesus, the risen Lord. Now is a difficult time to everyone; yet, their outcomes can be different depending on their choices and their responses to it for God’s glory. God was, is, and will be with His people. Stay safe! Stay healthy! Stay connected with Jesus and with one another in prayer and care. Hold onto the words of promise: “Come to me, … I will give you rest!” (Matthew 11:28). God is good!

In God’s Grace,
Rev. Paul Lee