Skip to main content

11.15.20

Welcome to First Presbyterian Sterling Online! 

Visit past services at firstonsecond.blogspot.com
Click here for an automatic playlist that plays this week's videos. (Click "Play All.")
Click here for the online bulletin.



Good morning, friends! Welcome to this week's service! You will find the service videos available here. Just click on "Play All" or choose the individual videos that you want to watch. (Scroll down and look at the picture at the bottom if you need help.) For those that like to read along, here is the online bulletin! Online giving at bit.ly/FPCsterling. Thank you for joining us!






And for anyone who needs a little extra help....here's what the service looks like and where to click once you get there!




Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Holy Humor Sunday

Worship Service First Presbyterian Church Sterling, Illinois Holy Humor Sunday April 15, 2012 This was our third annual Holy Humor worship, and I think our best ever. The week before Palm Sunday, we handed out postcards for our folks to invite their friends and neighbors for Palm Sunday, Maundy Thursday, Easter and Holy Humor Sunday. We sent a press release (see it at the end of this post) to the local paper, and it ran on Saturday the 14 th . We also put the word out on Facebook. We used our regular order of worship, but the bulletin had rebus pictures instead of words (for example a picture of a phone, the numeral 2, and a picture of a battleship – “Call to Worship” Get it?!) The chancel was strewn with balloons, red Solo cups, party hats, streamers and confetti. There was confetti up and down the aisles, and smiley face helium balloons where the flowers normally are. There were “joke breaks” and the jokes are included here, plus a few brave members shared their

Rock, Paper, Scissors

A Trinity Sunday sermon Psalm 8; Proverbs 8: 22-31; John 16: 12-15 May 22, 2016 First Presbyterian Church, Sterling, IL Christina Berry Today is Trinity Sunday. It is the only Sunday on the church calendar that addresses a doctrine rather than an event.If you are familiar, which many of you are by now, with the church year, we start with Advent, move on to Christmas and Epiphany, then Lent and Easter, and fifty days later, Pentecost. But on this Sunday, the Sunday after Pentecost, we celebrate the Trinity – a doctrine of the universal church. Not all who fall under the appellation of Christian are believers in the Trinity, and for some people, that makes them “not Christian.” Mormons, for example, believe in Father, Son and Holy Ghost, “united in purpose and separate in person.” [1] Jehovah’s Witnesses do not accept the doctrine of the Trinity, nor do Christian Scientists. But for the last several centuries –actually since the year 451, the year of the council of Chalce

The Great Commission: Go. Make Disciples. Teach. Baptize.

Rather than the text of the sermon, this week I'm posting the entire order of worship. Sources are cited wherever we could. The opening song is sung to the tune of "Morning Has Broken," and the words were adapted from the Presbyterian Hymnal song, "Baptized in Water." The James Howell story came from an article he wrote in Christian Century magazine in 2007. Some of the liturgy was adapted from a baptismal article on the website of Reformed Worship magazine. The acolyte enters and lights the candles. Musicians sing: Baptized in water, called as disciples; we are the lights of Christ our King; flames of the Spirit light up our pathway Following Jesus, we joyfully sing. Person one comes up as the musicians sing, sets the candle on the communion table and lights it, and after the singing is finished, announces, “The light of discipleship.” They stay at the table. Musicians sing: Baptized in water, nurtured in scripture, teaching