Worship Guide for February 8, 2026
Like TV Guide, but from God! Find the text of the Prayers of the People and Sermon below. Use the buttons provided to find other worship materials.
To see the Worship Guide for other weeks, click here.
To see the Book of Common Prayer online, click here.
Let your Light Shine
The Reverend Mark Sutherland
Fifth Sunday after the Epiphany
Sermon Audio
Sermon Text
In my summation delivered at the end of my report to last week’s Annual Meeting, I warned that all our extensive ministries must always be more than good works by good people doing what good people do. We need a larger context in which to situate our activity. This is the collaboration with God in the unfolding of the divine dream of the world’s healing. So that which has been made low will be raised up, that which has grown old will be renewed, and that which is wrong about our world, the perpetuation of injustice and oppression, will be put to rights.
Which leads me to the question quietly pulsing beneath both Isaiah 58 and Matthew 5. It is not a question about belief, sincerity, or religious effort. It is a far more unsettling question: What does faith look like when it becomes visible?
Both Isaiah and Jesus are wary of private devotion. They are suspicious of religious practices that leave the world unchanged. And both insist—each in their own way—that when faith does not show up in how we live with others, something essential has gone missing.
Isaiah offers the diagnosis with unsettling clarity. The people are doing everything right—or so they believe. They fast. They humble themselves. They seek God daily and delight to draw near. Their religious lives are active, intentional, and disciplined.
And yet God interrupts them with a piercing question: Why do you fast, but do not see? Why do you humble yourselves, but do not notice?
What is striking is what God does not say. God does not accuse them of bad faith. God does not dismiss their prayers as insincere. The problem is not that their devotion is false; it is that it has been carefully contained. Their religious practices have been sealed off from the rest of their lives.
Even on their fast days, they pursue their own interests. They pray while preserving systems that exploit others. They bow their heads in humility while keeping their hands closed. Repentance is performed, but never allowed to reorganize how they live, relate, or share power.
Isaiah’s critique endures because it names a temptation that never quite disappears—the temptation to mistake religious performance for faithfulness.
God’s response is blunt: This is not the fast I choose.
The fast God desires loosens the bonds of injustice. It breaks the yoke of oppression. It feeds the hungry, shelters the homeless, and honors the fragile web of human responsibility that binds us to one another. True devotion, Isaiah insists, is not measured by how much we withdraw from the world, but by how deeply we enter into its suffering with courage and generosity.
Only then—only then—does the promise appear: Then your light shall break forth like the dawn. Then healing shall spring up quickly. Then I will hear when you cry.
Light, in Isaiah, is the consequence when justice lies at the heart of religious practice.
It is at precisely this point that Jesus speaks.
“You are the salt of the earth. You are the light of the world.”
Jesus does not tell his listeners to become light. He assumes they already are. Light is not something the disciples manufacture; it is something entrusted to them. The danger Jesus names is not weakness, but concealment—light rendered harmless by being hidden or contained.
Salt only matters when it dissolves or is used to season. We have the expression to cast light on something. Jesus is asking us to cast light on the practice of our faith.
When Jesus says, Let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven, he is not inviting religious self-display. He is decrying religious invisibility. He stands firmly in Isaiah’s tradition: “good works” must be more than random acts of kindness. They must be justice-shaped, mercy-grounded, community-forming practices that make God’s character visible in the world.
Light shines not because we talk about God. Light shines through the way we choose to live our lives.
This is why Jesus immediately turns to the commandments. He is not abolishing them, nor replacing obedience with stricter rule-keeping, but a deeper commitment to faith as action. Being right with God happens when worship, ethics, prayer, money, power, and relationships stop being sealed off in compartments and begin to inform one another in our daily lives.
In this sense, Jesus echoes Isaiah in warning against devotion without justice. Jesus warns against faith that insists on remaining hidden. Both insist that a faithful life must be recognizable—not because it draws attention to itself, but because it changes the texture of the world around it.
These texts press on us because they name our own habits so precisely. We are adept at faith that stays interior, at spirituality that comforts without challenging, at worship that lifts our hearts while leaving our habits untouched. Scripture refuses to let us linger there.
The question is not whether we believe the right things. The question is whether our belief is reorganizing our lives in ways others can see. Does our fasting loosen anyone’s burden? Does our worship make room for others to come to the table? Does our faithfulness cast light on the shadows?
Isaiah promises that when justice takes root, light breaks forth. Jesus trusts that when lives are aligned with God’s purposes, light cannot help but shine. The world does not need more self-preoccupied religion. It needs a truer witness.
And the promise that holds these readings together is simple and demanding: when faith stops being something we perform and becomes something we practice—when devotion reshapes how we live with others—then light illuminates a world where what has been made low is being raised up, that which has grown old is being renewed, and wrongs- the perpetuation of injustice and oppression, are being put to rights.
Prayers of the People
Fifth Sunday after the Epiphany
8 February 2026
The response to the bidding, “God made visible,” is “Hear our cry”
Jesus, God’s living Word, eternal in heaven, at your baptism by John in the river Jordan, you affirmed the fullness of your identity as our Savior. May we have the courage to hear your call to resist evil and stand with the oppressed by proclaiming the gospel of our Savior in acts of service and costly witness. God made visible: hear our cry.
We pray for our nation in a time of grave instability. Hear us, Lord, as we decry the perilous state of the Republic:
- Where paramilitary forces are no longer subject to Constitutional restraint and legal accountability, as they openly oppress law-abiding communities.
- Where summary arrest, detention, and deportation are sanctioned on the basis of racial profiling.
- Where the ugly face of corruption is practiced in plain sight.
- Where sycophancy has replaced sound government, and incompetence is masked by loyalty, and cruelty is celebrated through the abuse of Justice and Federal law enforcement.
May we have the courage to embrace non-violent resistance through actions, standing as witnesses to the evils of this time. God made visible: hear our cry.
We pray for the Church and her life: for Sarah, 146th Archbishop of Canterbury; for Sean, Presiding Bishop, and for Nicholas, our bishop; for the brave witness of Hosam, Archbishop of Jerusalem. We give thanks for Pope Leo’s courageous and inspiring leadership, and we pray for him along with Bartholomew, Ecumenical Patriarch. We continue to pray for a witness and commitment to service and nonviolent resistance by all Christian leaders. God made visible: hear our cry.
In a world of pressing needs, we decry Israeli destabilization in Lebanon and Syria, amidst continued Settler violence against Palestinian communities in the West Bank. We continue to cry out against the utter degradation of the people of Gaza, and we decry the collusive silence of our leaders. We echo the age-old prayer, let peace with justice come to the Holy Land, for without justice, there can be no peace.
We pray for the people of Iran as they protest and make the ultimate sacrifice of their lives in resistance to the yoke of oppression. We decry our abandonment of them in their hour of need. We do not forget the plight of the Sudanese people, pawns in a wider Middle-East powerplay.
We continue to pray for a negotiated peace in Ukraine that honors a commitment to Ukrainian sovereignty and future self-determination. God made visible: hear our cry.
We remember the Earth and the threat of climate change, praying for the strengthening of emergency services and necessary infrastructure to meet the challenge of climate instability. We remember communities suffering severe cold without power following the recent winter storms. We pray for others in the path of wildfires and rising sea levels.
God made visible: hear our cry.
We pray for all in need and in trouble: for those whose strength is failing through ill health; whose spirits are flagging through depression; whose determination is being sapped through addiction; that they might know God’s comforting presence and healing. God made visible: hear our cry.
We remember with love those who have asked for our solidarity in prayer: Ellen, Bill, Sam, Liz, Jill, Mark, and those we name.
We pray for our own needs, together with those nearest and dearest to us, remembering those celebrating birthdays this week: Jeffrey Bartsch, Denny Scott, Beth Shearer, Hazel Bozokowski, John Brooks, and Jock Knowles. God made visible: hear our cry.
Rejoicing in the fellowship of so great a cloud of witnesses, along with those we love but see no longer, especially Phil McMaster, whose memorial service will take place on February 21st, Mary Worrell, and others we name: [pause]. We pray for all who grieve. God made visible: hear our cry.
Celebrant adds a concluding prayer.





