Episodes

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Preparing for Worship - May 10, 2026
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May 10th is the 6th Sunday of Easter in the One Year Series and is also known as Rogate Sunday. The Latin word means “to ask” or “asking,” and we will see different kinds of “asking” in our readings. Since the Risen Lord Jesus would soon return to His Father in heaven (Ascension Day on Thursday, May 14, this year), there is an emphasis on continuing to talk with Him in prayer as well. (Historically, those in some farming communities would also have “Rogation days,” when they would pray for the Lord’s blessings upon the Spring crops they were planting and for good, seasonable weather and rain.)
The Psalm is Psalm 107:1-9. The whole psalm speaks of people in various situations and circumstances “crying out to the Lord in their trouble, and the Lord delivering them from their distress.” (See v. 6, 13, 19, and 28.) The psalmist calls upon us all to pray and give thanks to the Lord for His steadfast love. He “redeemed” His people from slavery in Egypt and brought them to the Promised Land and later rescued them when they were scattered in various places, with the Babylonian captivity and other troubles. Out of that group of people, He sent our Redeemer and Savior, the Lord Jesus, and His “wondrous works to the children of man.” As some of those people redeemed by Christ, we are called to “say so,” too, and thank and praise our Lord for all the “good things” He has given to our own “longing and hungry souls.”
In our Old Testament lesson, Numbers 21:4-9, we hear that God’s people became impatient with the Lord and His ways, spoke against Him, and “asked why” He was treating them so badly. Their complaints were not true, for the Lord had provided them with manna, quail, water, and other necessities for 40 years. A judgment of fiery serpents came upon them, and many people died. Finally, the people repented, confessed their sin, and asked Moses to pray to the Lord for help. The Lord commanded Moses to make an image of a fiery serpent and place it on a pole. If people were bitten by a snake, they could “look at the bronze serpent and live,” and eventually some would enter the Promised Land. This story was also prophetic of Jesus, our Redeemer, as we hear in John 3:14-16. “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up” (on a cross), “that whoever believes in Him may have eternal life. For God so loved the world…” Jesus also refers to being “lifted up” in this way in John 8:28-29 and John 12:31-36. As we are brought to see Him on the cross and trust in Him in His sacrifice for us and resurrection, we too are assured of eternal life through Him. (So, there are both bad and good ways of approaching God and “asking” things from Him. Sadly, the bronze serpent was used in bad ways in later times, too. See 2 Kings 18:4, where we learn that some people preserved the serpent and made offerings to it, as if it were a kind of god. Hezekiah, a faithful king, had to break the bronze serpent into pieces, so that it would not be worshiped.)
The Gospel lesson is from John 16:23-33. These are likely the last Words of Jesus with His disciples, before they went to the Garden of Gethsemane on Maundy Thursday, Holy Thursday, evening. Jesus was preparing His disciples for His “leaving the world and going to the Father” at His ascension. We heard last week that the disciples were not asking Jesus much because they often did not understand what He was saying. He says in this passage that he had been using “figures of speech” that were hard, but He had encouraged them to pray to the Father and to Him in John 14:13-14 and in 15:16, and that He would respond to them. They were also to pray in His Name. He repeats that encouragement here. “Ask, and you will receive, that your joy may be full.” He also assures the disciples that “the Father loves them because they have loved Jesus and believed that He came from God.” The disciples say that people do not need to ask any more questions, for Jesus “knows all things.” What Jesus does know is that the disciples' faith and knowledge were still very weak. In fact, He predicts that they will soon scatter and leave Him alone, that very evening. Jesus believes in His Father and the power of talking with Him in prayer, though, and in John 17, He confidently prays one long prayer, called His “High Priestly Prayer,” for His disciples and for all believers in the future, including you and me, that we all would know the truth in Him as Savior and be kept in faith in Him. Jesus knew and still knows the value of prayer and talking with our Lord. In fact, when Jesus went to the Garden of Gethsemane, he prayed again and again to His Father, asking for strength and that His Father’s will be done, even with the agony of His suffering and death, in payment for all our sins, ahead for Him. The disciples failed miserably, unable to stay awake to watch and pray, but Jesus carried out His mission faithfully for them and for us. And at the end of our Gospel reading, Jesus gave His weak disciples and us Words of great encouragement. Jesus said, “I am not alone, for the Father is with Me” - even as He went to the cross and His death. “Father, into Your hands I commit My spirit,” He said in faith. And then came His Resurrection and Ascension and the fulfillment of His Word for His disciples for the future. “I have said these things to you, that in Me you may have peace. In the world, you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world.” These are still such encouraging Words for us today, in Christ.
There are two possibilities for the Epistle lesson, written by early Christian leaders, empowered by the saving Words and work of Jesus. Paul writes to a younger pastor, Timothy, in 1 Timothy 2:1-6, urging him to keep praying for and thanking God for all people. Some want “no kings” today, but Paul encourages prayer for all those in high positions, that they do their duty, keeping order and authority, enabling a “peaceful and quiet life” for many, with dignity and godliness. God, above all, “desires all people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth,” and that early Christians needed to be able to travel and take the Good News of Christ as far as possible in the known world. The emperors did not act kindly toward Christians, but many credit “the Roman peace” of that time for allowing these Christians to go as many places as they did, with the message that “there is only “one true God, and one Mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave Himself as a ransom for all, which is the testimony given at the proper time.” That testimony is the hope for all the world and for us. We ask and pray and do what we can, that it may be shared with others.
The other possible Epistle reading is from James 1:22-27. As the leader of the Christian church in Jerusalem, James, the brother of Jesus, encourages early Christians to hear the Word of God and to put it into practice. Otherwise, it would be as if Christians looked at themselves in a mirror and saw uncombed hair, messy clothes, and dirty spots all over them and then went away and forgot what they really were like and did nothing to improve their looks. Spiritually, Christians need to look into the perfect Word of God, both Law and Gospel, and act on what is good and not so good. By the grace of God, there can be blessings and spiritual growth for these people, but for those who cannot control their own tongues and language, their witness is worthless. In contrast, those who truly seek to help those in affliction, including widows and orphans, can bring blessings to them and avoid the evil world’s view of who is valuable and who is not. Essential is seeking God’s direction through His Word, and asking Christ to help us follow through on what he wishes, by His power. We are to try to “ask and seek and knock,” as He would wish for us.


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