| THIRD SUNDAY OF ADVENT (JOY) Sunday, December 15, 2013 Guest Writer for This Unit: Brian Bantum,  Lectionary Team Member The unit you are viewing, Third Sunday in Advent (Joy), is a compact  unit. This means that it is not a complete commentary of the Scripture(s)  selected for this day on the calendar, nor does it have a full, supporting  cultural resource unit and worship unit. Instead, to enliven the imagination of  preachers and teachers, we have provided a sermonic outline, songs, suggested  books, and suggested articles, links, and videos. For additional information,  see Advent in the archives of the Lectionary for 2008–2012. I. Description of the Liturgical Moment Week Three of Advent shifts from the expectation of  peace to the theme of joy. Joy encompasses the preceding weeks with hope and  peace as postures of expectancy, as we wait with Mary for what God will do and  what God has done. Moving into the third week of Advent, joy marks the  celebration of fulfillment, that what we are expecting has come and that cups  that were empty are now full. The heart of this joy is the arrival of the  child, Jesus, who has come to answer the yearning of Israel, but in his coming  has done even more than we could have imagined. This Sunday is a time of  remembering what is hoped for and a celebration that what is hoped for has  come, even as we wait for the Lord's return. With this material as our backdrop, we provide a sermonic outline for  Advent Week Three (Joy). II. Advent Week Three (Joy): Sermonic Outline A. Sermonic Focus Text(s): Isaiah 9:6-7 (New Revised Standard Version) (v. 6) For a child has been born for us, a son  given to us; authority rests upon his shoulders; and he is named Wonderful Counselor,  Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. His authority shall grow  continually, and there shall be endless peace for the throne of David and his  kingdom. He will establish and uphold it with justice and with righteousness  from this time onward and forevermore. The zeal of the Lord of hosts will do this. B. Possible Titles i. Joy Comes in the Morning
 ii.  Rejoice! Light Has Come
 
 iii.  Remembering What Was Behind and Looking Toward What Has Come
 C. Point of Exegetical Inquiry In any text, there can be several words or phrases that require  significant exegetical inquiry. One exegetical inquiry raised by this text is  the definition of the word joy. For purposes of today's text and the sermonic  theme (joy), joy is defined as the emotion reached when believers remember where  we were and the realization of what has happened to us and for us because of Christ.  In Christ, hope and peace has become flesh and so we rejoice! III. Introduction In  the context of Isaiah, this passage points to the significant yearning of  Israel and their hope for God's intervention into their midst. The earliest  followers of Jesus would come to see Jesus as the child who would bring endless  peace. Christ's coming is the coming of a peace that endures even in the face of  the most difficult and unjust circumstances. The coming of peace is the  beginning of joy and or the ability to express joy. The joy birthed in Christ  is the real presence of God in the world—God joined God's self to the very  real, confused, and often-painful conditions of our lives in order to make us all  whole. IV. Moves/Points Move/Point One – Joy arises from remembering the reality of our condition (past and  present).  Joy is the  fulfillment of hope and is made possible when we remember the instability,  fear, or guilt of our former life and see the unstable made stable, the fear  answered, and our guilt forgiven. We do not gloss over the difficulty. As did Israel,  we remember. a. Remembering  dislocation, Isaiah is speaking from a context where Israel has been taken from  their homeland. b. Israel is in this  dislocated space because they sought security and hope in gods that had no  power. In what ways do we seek security in the gods of this world? We must  remember the ways that we are unfaithful in order to find the peace of the  child born to us. c. Israel is yearning to  be made whole, and the desire for the Prince of Peace is a yearning for  protection and well-being in a dangerous land. Move/Point Two – What is this joy? Who is this one who brings  joy? a. Joy is the profound  recognition of what has been endured and what is now found. More than happiness  or enjoyment, joy is not a momentary or fleeting pleasurable experience. Joy is  the deep sense of being brought back home after enduring weeks, months, or  years of estrangement and isolation. But even more joy arises in the  realization that this rest is secure. b. While Israel's hope  lay in a Davidic king whose life would create a political and social peace,  Jesus' birth is the coming of a peace that has its roots in the very beginning  of time and the end of time. In Christ's birth we are invited to rest in the  home of our Creator's body and love. c. Joy comes in one who  has authority. His authority is not an authority that is given to him, but an  authority that is part of his identity. The one who creates all things comes to  us. Move/Point Three – What does it mean to live into joy when times  are not so joyful? a. Israel's cries were  to a God who had promised to be present to them and had fulfilled those  promises in Christ. Even when they believed themselves to be lost, God did not  cease to see them and their plight. b. Along  with Israel, we are still living into a realization of what contentment and joy  looks like. c. The joy that we yearn  for in Christ is grounded in a life of worship and a life of service and love  to one another. A son is born to us signals to us that we are reborn and that  God is working out God's promises through God's people. V. Celebration The  joy of knowing that the one who is responsible for our beginning and end has  come to us and allows us to be free to encourage, support, and be God's  presence to others. We celebrate what has come and exalt the One who is present  with us now and will be present to us even in our darkest moments. This  certainty of God's presence is the source of our joy, joy unspeakable. VI. Sounds, Sights, and Colors in This Passage 
                          
                            | Sounds: | The sounds of a child crying and a mother's  soothing/singing; 
 
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                            | Sights: | A gathering of family surrounding the newborn  child; family celebrating the arrival of a long-awaited child; 
 
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                            | Colors: | A beige straw crib; a light blue baby blanket;  and purple, the color of royalty. |  VII. Illustration(s) and Quotes – JOY A Disturbing Dance CNN featured a story about how a poor, black woman saved enough money to  purchase herself a home in Silicon Valley. She loved her new home. She kept the  inside clean and the lawn mowed. In an effort to get unwanted people out of the  neighborhood, the neighborhood association got together with the local bank and  established a law that allowed a home to be foreclosed if the owner did not pay  their association dues. For some reason or another, the black lady did not pay  her $200 dues. As a result, the bank foreclosed on her house and sold her house  which was worth over $100,000 for $10,000 to two white lawyers. The new owners  threw her stuff out the doors and windows into the yard. She became homeless  and had no place to go. Though she was homeless, CNN showed the woman in church that Sunday  praising God; she still had joy. She danced up a storm. She danced until Heaven  got disturbed and disturbed the minds of nine brilliant lawyers. The lawyers  took her cause to court and they got her property restored. Whatever the situation, when you can't do anything else, you praise the  Lord. Heaven can decipher what you need and take it from there. 
                                                    
                            |  | —Charles Adams, from the sermon "Why Praise the Lord”
 |  This is the true joy in life, the being used for  a purpose recognized by yourself as a mighty one: the being thoroughly worn out  before you are thrown on the scrap heap, and being a force of nature instead of  a feverish selfish little clod of ailments and grievances, complaining that the  world will not devote itself to making you happy. 
                                                    
                            |  | —George Bernard Shaw, (quoted in Jon Johnston, Courage: You Can Stand Strong in  the Face of Fear)
 |  A woman  sees a father shopping with a fussy two-year-old in his grocery cart. “Be  patient, Billy,” he whispers. “You can handle this, Billy. It’s okay, Billy.” The woman said to him, “I  don’t mean to interrupt your shopping, but I just had to tell you how  wonderfully loving and patient you are with little Billy.” The man replied, “Actually,  my son’s name is Patrick. My name is Billy.” The Spirit is available to  whisper to us thoughts of love and joy and peace and patience every moment of  our life. Right now. All we have to do is stop, ask, and listen. 
                                                    
                            |  | —J. Ortberg, The me i  want to be |  See the Sermon Illustrations section of The African American Lectionary for additional illustrations that you may wish to use in presenting a sermon for this moment on the liturgical calendar. VIII. Songs to Accompany This Commentary A. Hymn(s) Angels  We Have Heard on High. Text: Les anges dans nos campagnes. Tune, (GLORIA),  French Traditional
 
Joyful,  Joyful, We Adore Thee. By Henry van Dyke. Tune, (HYMN TO JOY), by Ludwig van  Beethoven and Edward Hodges
 B. Modern Song(s) Still  Have Joy. By Tye Tribbett
 
Joy  Will. By Charles Jenkins
 C. Congregational Song(s) I've  Got the Joy, Joy, Joy. Text and Tune, (I'VE GOT THE JOY), by George W. Cooke
 
This  Is the Day. Text: Psalm 118:24. Tune by Les Garrett
 
Joy  Unspeakable. Text and Tune by Barney E. Warren
 D. Gospel Song(s) for Choirs, Ensembles, or  Praise Teams My  Joy. By John P. Kee and Tye Tribbett
 
Joy.  By Kirk Franklin
 
Exceeding  Joy. By Miriam Webster
 E. Song(s) or Instrumental(s) for the Offertory  Period This  Joy. By Tracy Shy
 
Joy.  By Walter Hawkins
 
Joy  to the World. By Isaac Watts and Lowell Mason
 F. Song(s) or Instrumental(s) for the Period of  Prayer Blessed  Quietness. By Marie P. Ferguson. Tune, (BLESSED QUIETNESS), by W. S. Marshall
 
Center  of My Joy. Text and Tune by Richard Smallwood, William Gaither, and Gloria  Gaither
 
God  Is. Text and Tune by Robert J. Fryson
 G. Invitational Song(s) Come  to Jesus. Traditional. Tune, (COME TO JESUS).
 
Softly  and Tenderly Jesus Is Calling. Text and Tune, (THOMPSON), by Will L. Thompson
 
If  You Want Joy, Real Joy. Text and Tune by Joseph D. Carlson
 H. Song(s) of Benediction or Sending Forth Go,  Tell It on the Mountain. Negro Spiritual and John W. Work, Jr. Tune, (GO TELL  IT ON THE MOUNTAIN), Negro Spiritual
 
Always  Remember. Text and Tune by Andraé Crouch
 
Let  the Church Say Amen. By Andraé Crouch
 IX. Books to Assist in Preparing Sermons or Bible Studies Related to  Advent 
  
    |  | Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. God Is in the Manger:  Reflections on Advent and Christmas. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox  Press, 2012. |  
    |  | Kirk-Duggan, Cheryl A. Mary  Had a Baby: An Advent Study Based on African American Spirituals (Student and  Leader Guides). Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 2003. |  
    |  | Underhill, Evelyn, and Christopher Webber. Advent with Evelyn Underhill.  Harrisburg, PA: Morehouse Pub., 2006. |  
    |  | Various Authors. Watch  for the Light: Readings for Advent and Christmas. Maryknoll,  NY: Orbis Books, 2004. |  X. Notes  for Select Songs A. Hymn(s) Angels  We Have Heard on High. Text: Les anges dans nos campagnes. Tune, (GLORIA),  French TraditionalLocation:
 Church  of God in Christ. Yes, Lord! Church of God in Christ Hymnal. Memphis, TN:
 Church  of God in Christ Pub. Board in association with the Benson Co., 1982. #207
 
 
Joyful,  Joyful, We Adore Thee. By Henry van Dyke. Tune, (HYMN TO JOY), by Ludwig van  Beethoven and Edward HodgesLocation:
 The  United Methodist Hymnal. Nashville,  TN: The United Methodist Publishing House, 1989. #89
 B. Modern Song(s) Still  Have Joy. By Tye TribbettLocation:
 Tribbett,  Tye and Greater Anointing. Victory Live. New York, NY: Sony/BMG Records,  2006.
 
 
Joy  Will. By Charles JenkinsLocation:
 Jenkins,  Charles and Fellowship Chicago. The Best of Both Worlds. Chicago, IL:  Inspired People, 2012.
 C. Congregational Song(s) I've  Got the Joy, Joy, Joy. Text and Tune, (I'VE GOT THE JOY), by George W. CookeLocation:
 African  American Heritage Hymnal. Chicago,  IL: GIA Publications, 2001. #622
 
 
This  Is The Day. Text: Psalm 118:24. Tune by Les GarrettLocation:
 African  American Heritage Hymnal. #108
 
 
Joy  Unspeakable. Text and Tune by Barney E. WarrenLocation:
 Yes,  Lord! Church of God in Christ Hymnal. #475
 D. Gospel Song(s) for Choirs, Ensembles, or  Praise Teams My  Joy. By John P. Kee and Tye TribbettLocation:
 Tribbett,  Tye and Greater Anointing. Life. New York, NY: Sony/Columbia Records,  2004.
 
 
Joy.  By Kirk FranklinLocation:
 Georgia  Mass Choir. I Sing Because I'm Happy. Jackson, MS: Savoy/Malaco Records,  1992.
 
 
Exceeding  Joy. By Miriam WebsterLocation:
 Hillsong. Hope. Sydney, New South Wales, Australia: Hillsong Music, 2003.
 E. Song(s) or Instrumental(s) for the Offertory  Period This  Joy. By Tracy ShyLocation:
 Evans,  David G. Bishop David G. Evans Presents Automatic Praise: Live. Lindenwold,  NJ: Abundant Harvest, 2008.
 
 
Joy.  By Walter HawkinsLocation:
 Hawkins,  Walter and The Love Center Choir. Love Alive V: 25th Anniversary Reunion.  Inglewood, CA: Gospocentric Records, 1998.
 
 
Joy  to the World. By Isaac Watts and Lowell MasonLocation:
 Hutchins,  Norman and JDI Christmas. Emmanuel. Los Angeles, CA: JDI Records, 2001.
 F. Song(s) or Instrumental(s) for the Period of  Prayer Blessed  Quietness. By Marie P. Ferguson. Tune, (BLESSED QUIETNESS), by W. S. MarshallLocation:
 The  New National Baptist Hymnal 21st Century Edition. Nashville, TN: Triad  Publications, 2005. #122
 
 
Center  of My Joy. Text and Tune by Richard Smallwood, William Gaither, and Gloria  GaitherLocation:
 African  American Heritage Hymnal. #491
 
 
God  Is. Text and Tune by Robert J. FrysonLocation:
 African  American Heritage Hymnal. #134
 G. Invitational Song(s) Come  to Jesus. Traditional. Tune, (COME TO JESUS).Location:
 The  New National Baptist Hymnal 21st Century Edition. #182
 
 
Softly  and Tenderly Jesus Is Calling. Text and Tune, (THOMPSON), by Will L. ThompsonLocation:
 African  American Heritage Hymnal. #347
 
 
If  You Want Joy, Real Joy. Text and Tune by Joseph D. CarlsonLocation:
 Yes,  Lord! Church of God in Christ Hymnal. #301
 H. Song(s) of Benediction or Sending Forth Go,  Tell It on the Mountain. Negro Spiritual and John W. Work, Jr. Tune, (GO TELL  IT ON THE MOUNTAIN), Negro SpiritualLocation:
 The  United Methodist Hymnal. #251
 
 
Always  Remember. Text and tune by Andraé CrouchLocation:
 African  American Heritage Hymnal. #640
 
 
Let  The Church Say Amen. By Andraé CrouchLocation:
 The  Journey. Sherman Oaks, CA:  Riverphlo Entertainment, 2011.
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