Worship Guide for October 26, 2025
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.
The Scarcity-Abundance Paradox
The Reverend Mark Sutherland
The Twentieth Sunday after Pentecost, Proper 25
Sermon Recording:
Any attempt to speak about money in the church runs the risk of provoking a cynical or defensive response. We’ve all heard it before — “the church just wants my money.” But this reaction misses the point.
Money, in the life of faith, is only ever a metaphor for values. When we commit to financially supporting an organization — especially the Church — our hope is not only to contribute value but also to derive a sense of value. Both are essential to living meaningfully with purpose.
One of the great paradoxes at the heart of Christian life is that spiritual renewal is so much more than money, and yet financial generosity is a key expression of our deepening awareness of our need for God. But money and religion often make for a volatile mix.
Putting religion aside for a moment, our attitudes and feelings about money evoke in many of us a deep-seated anxiety — the scarcity–abundance paradox.
I can trace my own anxiety about money back to my parents arguing about it. As the eldest child, I witnessed the early days of their marriage when money was the powerful metaphor for their fears of scarcity as they struggled to build a stable life.
What about you? What are your earliest memories of family conversations around money? Was money, in your home, a metaphor for enoughness or for scarcity?
We internalize — without being conscious of doing so — the anxieties transmitted to us during infancy and childhood. In my case, an expectation of scarcity was implanted in me, even though enoughness — even abundance — has been a much stronger feature of my adult life.
This tension between expectation and experience is exactly where God begins to work.
The Old Testament reading from Joel speaks into this space. After years of drought, famine, and devastation, Joel delivers a word of hope:
The threshing floors shall be full of grain,
the vats shall overflow with wine and oil.
That would have been miracle enough — but Joel goes further:
Then afterward, I will pour out my spirit on all flesh;
your sons and your daughters shall prophesy,
your old men shall dream dreams,
and your young men shall see visions.
God’s promise is not only enough to survive, but enough to dream again.
We often associate “abundance” with endless surplus. That’s why I prefer the word enoughness. Abundance means sustained enoughness — a way of living rooted in trust rather than fear.
Trusting this promise is risky. It requires relinquishing the illusion of being in control — the illusion that we are the authors of our own security. For those of us shaped by scarcity fears, God’s promise of abundance is not easily believed.
So we must ask: Which is more real — our fear of scarcity, or the evidence of our own experience?
Scarcity says: there won’t be enough.
Enoughness says: there is always enough.
Fear blocks generosity. Trust makes generosity possible. When we look honestly at our lives, we discover how often fear has misled us. Most of us live every day with enough — and more than enough. The critical question becomes: Which story do we choose to inhabit?
America may well be the most prosperous society in human history — and yet, paradoxically, we experience the highest levels of scarcity anxiety fueled by the myth of self-sufficiency. In the land of plenty, we too easily condone poverty and inequality, justifying these conditions as the consequences of personal and moral inadequacy.
To abundance understood as enoughness, God calls us to add the practice of justice. Generosity is not just an act of kindness — it is a protest against the myth of scarcity and the injustice that flows from it.
In today’s Gospel, Jesus tells of two men who go up to the Temple to pray: a Pharisee and a tax collector.
The Pharisee believes himself the author of his own salvation. He stands tall, proud of his accomplishments, loudly proclaiming them before God.
We know we are supposed to side with the tax collector, and yet — if we are honest — many of us live more like the Pharisee, designing our lives so we will never need anything from anyone.
But the tax collector — standing apart, unable even to lift his eyes — knows his need of God. In that posture of honest dependence, he discovers a truth the Pharisee cannot: everything — even the good we do — flows from God’s grace, not our control.
The source of all our loves in life flows from God’s love for us. Only when we acknowledge this can we begin to understand our need for God.
Generosity is not a financial transaction — it is a spiritual practice, a way of saying:
I trust in God’s unstinting generosity.
This stewardship season invites us to remember that none of us is an island — our lives are bound together in God’s shared abundance. Through mutual generosity we accomplish far more than any one of us can do alone. Through giving, time, participation, and compassion, we remind each other that abundance is not personal achievement but the fruit of life in community.
Between now and November 24th, I invite each of us to cultivate practices of generosity — for our spiritual, emotional, and societal flourishing. Generosity is not simply about sustaining a budget — it is about extending ourselves to realize God’s promise of enoughness.
Every act of generosity participates in God’s dream for justice.
And so we return to Joel’s vision:
I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh;
our sons and our daughters shall prophesy;
our old men shall dream dreams;
our young men shall see visions.
So this Stewardship season, let’s dream of unleashing our generosity to achieve yet-to-be-imagined possibilities.
Prayers of the People
Twentieth Sunday after Pentecost, 26 October 2025
The response to “God of Mercy” is “hear our cry.”
Lord, empower us, in our struggle for justice and truth, to challenge one another without bitterness or rancor so that together we may accomplish so much more than any one of us alone.
God of Mercy, hear our cry.
Lord, remember our nation. In a time when violent words fan violent actions, we pray for the Congress and the courts to uphold the integrity of the Constitution and the protection of those who defend the rule of law.
Lord, our hearts go out to government contractors, civil servants, and their families whose employment has been callously terminated with a spirit of vindictiveness. We mourn the loss of essential government services, the absence of which puts all of us at increased risk. We pray earnestly for the courts to grant relief from the administration’s illegal overreach. God of Mercy, hear our cry.
As random ICE intimidation escalates on our streets, we pray for the courage to stand in solidarity with immigrants and immigrant communities living in increasing fear. God of Mercy, hear our cry.
We pray for the Church and her life: for Sarah, Archbishop of Canterbury-elect; for Sean, Presiding Bishop, and for Nicholas, our bishop; for Hosam, Archbishop of Jerusalem; for Pope Leo; for Bartholomew, Ecumenical Patriarch. We pray for a witness and commitment to service among all Christian leaders.
God of Mercy, hear our cry.
In a world of increasingly pressing needs, we pray with renewed energy for a successful outcome to the Hamas-Israeli peace process. We pray for peace with justice to come to the Holy Land.
We continue to pray for a negotiated peace in Ukraine that honors a commitment to Ukrainian sovereignty and future self-determination.
We pray for an alleviation of the enormous suffering of the Sudanese people and an end to civil wars in Sudan, Yemen, and Myanmar. We pray for all forced to flee from their homes and homelands due to the violence of war and threats to life and livelihood.
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 in the path of hurricanes, wildfires, devastating floods, and rising sea levels.
God of Mercy, 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 of Mercy, hear our cry.
We remember with love those who have asked for our solidarity in prayer: Beth, Bill, Mary, Ron, Sam, Ralph, Wendy, B.G., and others we name. God of Mercy, hear our cry.
We pray for our own needs, as well as those nearest and dearest to us, remembering those celebrating birthdays and other anniversaries in the coming week, especially Diane Merdian, John Bracken, Dorianne DeFeo, Faith Fogle, Gail Hamel, and Harvey Skonieczny. God of Mercy, hear our cry.
Surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, we remember those we love but see no longer, especially Hal Conner, husband of Beth Shearer, who died early Wednesday morning, Muriel Wiklund, grandmother of Kaela Wiklund Hastings, who died on October 13, and those we name. We pray for all who grieve.
God of Mercy, hear our cry.
Celebrant adds a concluding prayer.





