Lenten Study Session 6: “The Day is Coming”

Lenten Study Session 6: The Day is Coming with Mark Miller

Watch the Video Clip (5 – 7 minutes)

Listen to Mark’s words of introduction and listen to the song. Listen to the song a second time. Feel free to sing along, joining in with “the day is coming, oh let it come.” If you have purchased the songbook Roll Down, Justice!, a reproducible congregational box of the song is found on page 100.

Mark Miller’s Reflection

My longtime collaborator and friend, Laurie Zelman, penned these words. They speak of the hope that people of different faith traditions can unite across lines of religious difference in peace and prayer. When people utter the prayer, “please”, or “have mercy”, “thank you,” these transcend our particularities and connect us together in a larger community. When we recognize our common humanity, we begin to see our Muslim neighbors not as a threat but as people struggling with the same issues as everyone else.

I envision this song challenging us to come together to live out the values that make meaning in our lives. Working for peace with justice, valuing children and families, caring and nurturing the environment, promoting education, seeking out forgiveness and reconciliation. These are just a few of the critical pieces that can help bring us together and create a brighter future for all who live on this sacred blue marble we call home.

The day is coming, the Lord will move
With the hand of justice and the heart of love
The will of heaven on this earth be done
The day is coming
O let it come.

Moment of Meditation (2 – 3 minutes)

Using a notebook or a sheet of paper, respond individually and silently to the video, the song, and Mark’s introduction. Jot down responses to one or more of these questions:

  • What day do you long to see? (Return of a soldier from war? Pay raise? Job? Healing of a fractured relationship?)

  • Are there places where you feel agreement and/or disagreement with the words that you heard?

  • What does “working for peace with justice” mean to you?

Discuss the Scripture – Isaiah 35:1-3 (10 minutes)

Have the scripture read aloud in two or three translations. Invite members to share with the group any experience they have with the text. Has someone had a desert experience and then began to experience moments of joy and rejoicing again?

Connect with the Justice Challenges (20 minutes)

Give Witness: Invite two people to share what they feel that God is challenging her or him to do as a result of the study or through revelation in other experiences.

Work on Issues: Divide participants in three groups as quickly and easily as possible. Assign a focus area to each group: community, church, and government. Ask the group to make a list of what life would look like if peace with justice came to their area. Feel free to seed the discussion by sharing an idea:

  • Community: Everyone’s roads would be without potholes, not just those in wealthier neighborhoods.

  • Church: The budget would reflect a greater amount for providing child care and resources for vacation Bible study even for children not in our church.

  • Government: People with the best ideas would get elected, not just the ones who have or are able to raise the most money.

Confession (2 – 3 minutes)

Encourage the group to observe a moment of silence as they remember the words of the Scripture, the song, and Mark’s introduction. Tell them that during the time of confession they are free to speak aloud a sentence of confession of how they (their family, church, or community) have “fallen short of the glory of God.” However, as in the previous session, confession is a time of commitment (not sorrow).

Lead the group in this prayer: Lord Jesus, you have shown us the way to be your people. Yet there are boundaries that we dare not reach across. There are people whom we fear, whom we just cannot trust. Forgive us. In this moment, we confess that we will be your witnesses and be your purveyors of justice.

Invite persons to confess using this or a similar statement: “I ______________________ pledge anew to work for peace with justice by ___________ and _____________.”

Prayer of Intercession (2 – 3 minutes)

Lead the group in this prayer (or one from the heart): Lord Jesus, bind us together with cords of love that cannot be broken. Lord God, move in our world to bring about justice. Let your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Please bring about justice for children and families. Please bring about justice for our environment. Break the hearts of stones that live in some of our leaders and give them hearts for love alone. We pray in your name, Amen.

Closing (2 – 3 minutes)

Play the video one more time and sing along. Offer a prayer of benediction and an invitation to see God in every face that we meet in the coming week.

Extending the Study

Invite a person from another faith tradition to share (in worship or at a fellowship time) about ways in which her or his community is working on equality and justice issues.

Hear the testimony of someone who is struggling as a result of injustice (someone who believes that a spouse or child is falsely accused).

Hold a “justice and joy” singalong in the group, in Sunday school or in congregational worship. Use justice songs from United Methodist hymnals such as The Faith We Sing, Global Praise, and Songs of Zion. Peruse hymn and song collections used at General Conferences, United Methodist Women’s Assembly and Mission U and Global Gatherings. (Look from your home or church office for worship books from past district, conference and churchwide events.)

Observe the Peace with Justice Sunday on June 11, 2017, and learn more about how The United Methodist Church is building bridges and collaborations for a just peace.

Additional Resources

Lenten Biblical Reflection, Roll Down, Justice!:


About

Faye Wilson, Ed. D
Study Guide Author

Faye Wilson, writer of this study guide, is a certified lay servant in the Peninsula-Delaware Conference. For twenty-one years she was on the staff of the General Board of Global Ministries, mission agency of The United Methodist Church, leading seminars and writing books and articles to help people become more involved in mission work

She continues to work in the area and has written leader’s guides to the United Methodist Women mission studies Poverty, How is It With Your Soul?, and Food and Faith. She serves as the music leader at the Peninsula-Delaware Mission U, an initiative of United Methodist Women, where she teaches songs of “justice and joy” from around the world.

A pianist, she lives in Salisbury, Md., and is the minister of music and arts for Mt. Zion United Methodist Church in Quantico, Md., and chairwoman the stewardship committee. She also is vice president of the Salisbury District United Methodist Women.

Her favorite scripture is Isaiah 58:6-12; she makes every attempt to live it literally. She has volunteered for ten years with HALO (Hope and Life Outreach), a shelter for women and children. Since establishing her own home in 1978, she has invited more than twenty-five persons to share her space for varying lengths of time.

Mark Miller

Mark Miller is a lifelong United Methodist with a passion for composing and performing music that brings about the beloved community that Christ desires the church to be.

He is associate professor of church music at Drew Theological School and is a lecturer in the practice of sacred music at Yale University. He also is minister of music at Christ Church in Summit, N.J. His hymns are published in several songbooks and hymnals including The Faith We Sing and Zion Still Sings.

Since 1999, Mark has led music for worship at conferences around the United States. He has been a lay delegate to three United Methodist legislative assemblies (“General Conferences”) and directed music for the 2008 General Conference, enabling him to join in Christ’s mission to break down dividing walls in The United Methodist Church through policy, prayer, and music performance. He deeply believes, as scholar-activist Cornel West says, “Justice is what love looks like in public.”

Mark earned a bachelor of arts degree in music from Yale University and a master of music degree in organ performance from The Juilliard School in New York.


This resource was designed with a United Methodist perspective, but we believe the content is also relevant for non-UMC seekers who are doing anti-racism work with a spiritual foundation.

Previous
Previous

Lenten Study Session 5: “God Has Work For Us To Do”

Next
Next

Church: Building the Beloved Community