Thriteenth Sunday After Pentecost
>> YOUR LINK HERE: ___ http://youtube.com/watch?v=Wh2FYUujxyk
“From this time many of his disciples turned back and no longer followed him” (John 6:66). What happened?! Jesus had recently fed many thousands of people. Everywhere he went, he was mobbed by a multitude looking for the hope and healing Jesus provided. In the first part of Jesus’ ministry, he was extremely popular. That changed so quickly. At this time many followers walked away from Christ. What had Jesus done that was so bad? He said, “I am the bread of life.” That statement seems, at worst, to be cryptic. It doesn’t seem offensive. But as the crowd grasped what Jesus was claiming, they decided they no longer wanted anything to do with him. • Bread is a staple food, something people eat every day (especially in Jesus’ day). Scripture will sometimes refer to bread and water as all one needs to sustain physical life. In this worship series, we will examine what Jesus is teaching when he calls himself “the bread of life.” We will discuss why people would abandon Jesus for making that claim. And we will wrestle with whether we would ever do the same. Our worship follows this path. • • Click below for the service folder: • http://www.zionmobridge.org/home/2182... • Sign our Online Friendship register: • https://forms.gle/avGs87cmF3HRbBbq8 • Zion Lutheran Church is a member of the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS) • Acknowledgments • Divine Service 1 gathering rite of Baptism Christian Worship Supplement. • Software distributed in partnership with Northwestern Publishing House. • Created by Christian Worship: Service Builder © 2022 Concordia Publishing House. • 647 Word and Water, Filled with Promise • Text: Michael D. Schultz, b. 1963 • Tune: Welsh Text: © 2021 Michael D. Schultz, admin. Northwestern Publishing House. Used by permission: One License no. 728956 • Tune: Public domain • Psalm 111 LORD, I Must Praise You • Text: Jaroslav Vajda Tune: G. A. Hennig Text: © 1987 Concordia Publishing House. Used by permission: One License no. 728956 • Tune: © 2021 G. A. Hennig, admin. Northwestern Publishing House. Used by permission: One License no. 728956 • 633 Speak, O Lord • Text: Stuart Townend, b. 1963; Keith Getty, b. 1974 Tune: Stuart Townend, b. 1963; Keith Getty, b. 1974 • Text and tune: © 2006 Thankyou Music, admin. CapitolCMGPublishing,com. Used by permission: One License no. 728956 • 581 Lord, ’Tis Not That I Did Choose You • Text: Josiah Conder, 1789–1855, alt. • Tune: Erbaulicher Musicalischer Christen-Schatz, Basel, 1745 • Text and tune: Public domain • 521 Christ the Eternal Lord • Text: Timothy Dudley-Smith, b. 1926 • Tune: George J. Elvey, 1816–1893 • Text: © 1999 Hope Publishing Co. Used by permission: One License no. 728956 • Tune: Public domain • All information and music for this service was printed, streamed and displayed during this service with the following Copyright licenses: One licenses, Licenses number A-728956 and CCLI , Licenses Number 21688622 and 21688639
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