Opening Prayer
Note to leader: Let silence settle before beginning—this prayer invites arrival, not speed.
God who calls us by name,
We come from many places this morning—
hurried breakfasts and slow coffee,
worries we couldn’t leave at the door,
joys we carry like light in our pockets.
You meet us here,
not because we have arrived perfectly
but because you are already present,
waiting with the patience of one
who knows the terrain of our hearts.
Some of us long for clear maps,
step-by-step directions,
guarantees before we move.
Others of us are weary from wandering,
hungry for a place to rest.
Gather us now into this hour—
these songs, these prayers, these words—
that we might hear again
the voice that calls us forward,
the voice that calls us home.
Through Jesus Christ, who walked dusty roads without certainty,
trusting you at every turn.
Amen.
Call to Worship
Based on Psalm 50
selected verses
The mighty one summons the earth:
From the rising of the sun to its setting.
Not from temples made of stone,
but from every place where your people gather.
We come not bearing our sacrifices,
but offering our thanks and our very lives.
For God already owns the cattle on a thousand hills,
every creature of the forest, every bird of the air.
What God desires is not our abundance,
but our trust, our praise, our honest hearts.
When we call in the day of trouble, God delivers us.
We will honor the One who hears and answers.
Come, let us worship the God who speaks.
Hymn of Praise
God of Great and God of Small, GTG #19
Grace Spoken
Hear the good news:
God calls us not because we have everything figured out,
but because we are loved beyond measure.
Christ meets us in our uncertainty
and walks with us into the unknown.
God speaks, and we listen.
God calls, and we follow.
God leads, though we cannot see the path.
God guides, though we do not know the way.
God promises, and the promise holds.
God loves, and that love will not let us go.
Trusting in God’s grace and mercy, let us confess our sins and brokenness together.
Responding to God’s Grace
Unison Prayer of Confession
God who calls us into the unknown,
we confess that we prefer our plans to your promises.
We calculate the cost before counting the blessing.
We demand guarantees before we take the first step.
We have made an idol of certainty.
We have ignored your voice
when it asked us to leave comfort behind.
We have stayed silent when you called us to speak.
We have chosen safety over faithfulness,
security over service.
We have judged those who journey without maps,
who trust what they cannot yet see.
We have withheld welcome from the stranger,
forgetting that we too were once called to go
to a land we did not know.
(A time of silent prayer)
Through Jesus Christ, who left heaven’s glory
to walk the uncertain road with us.
Amen.
The Written Word
A Reading from the Hebrew Scriptures
Genesis 12:1–9
The Call and Blessing of Abram
The Call and Blessing of Abram
Abram and Sarai in Egypt
Notes
Notes
Vocabulary
Vocabulary
A Reading from the Psalms
Psalm 50
Notes
Vocabulary
Shared Reflection
- God tells Abram and Sarah to leave everything familiar—land, family, identity—without giving a clear destination. What stands out to you about what God says—and what God does not say? Where do you notice the absence of detail or certainty?
- Abram and Sarah are asked to move forward without a map. What emotions do you imagine they experienced in that moment? Which of those emotions resonate with your own experience when facing uncertainty?
- God’s call begins with “Go… to the land I will show you.” How do you discern when an invitation into uncertainty is from God rather than pressure, fear, or impulse? What patterns or markers of God’s voice do you see in this passage?
- Abram and Sarah go “as the Lord had told” them, before knowing the outcome. What does this passage suggest about the relationship between trust and clarity?Why do you think God often calls people without providing the full picture?
- Sarah and Abraham do not complete the whole journey at once—they travel in stages and build altars along the way. What might a “next faithful step” look like instead of a fully mapped plan? How can you tell the difference between a faithful step and a reckless one?
- They pause to build altars—moments of worship and grounding in the middle of uncertainty. What practices help you stay rooted in God when the path ahead is unclear? How might worship, prayer, or remembrance function as “altars” in your life?
- Abraham and Sarah’s journey becomes a blessing not only for themselves but for others. How might your willingness to step into uncertainty impact people beyond you?What encouragement do you need right now to take your next faithful step?
Hymn of Reflection
We Cannot Measure How You Heal, GTG #796
Affirmation of Faith
Spoken together.
We believe in God,
who calls us into journeys we cannot yet see,
who promises presence more reliable than any map,
who goes before us and walks beside us.
We believe in Jesus Christ,
who left certainty to enter flesh,
who invited fishermen to follow without explanation,
who trusted the Father’s voice more than the crowd’s approval.
We believe in the Holy Spirit,
who disrupts our plans with better ones,
who gives courage when the destination is unclear,
who whispers “go” when we want guarantees.
We trust that God’s call is enough,
even when we cannot see the ending.
We trust that obedience begins with one step,
not a complete itinerary.
We trust that faith is built on the road,
not before we leave home.
Amen.
Prayers of the People
God who calls us into the unknown,
hear our prayers for a world still finding its way.
For communities uprooted by war and disaster,
for refugees who walk without knowing where they will sleep,
for all who have left what they know
and cannot yet see what lies ahead—
give them courage for the next step,
and raise up companions for the journey.
God of the faithful,
guide us when the path is unclear.
(pause)
For leaders who must choose without all the answers,
for teachers who plant seeds they will not see grow,
for parents raising children in uncertain times—
grant them wisdom beyond their own understanding,
and trust in your presence when certainty fails.
God of the faithful,
guide us when the path is unclear.
(pause)
For our own lives, cluttered with plans and contingencies,
our calendars full, our routes mapped,
our futures plotted as if we could control them—
teach us to hold our certainties lightly,
to listen for your voice beneath our strategies,
to follow even when we cannot see.
God of the faithful,
guide us when the path is unclear.
(pause)
For those whose suffering has no clear end,
for patients waiting on diagnoses,
for families navigating grief without a map,
for all who cry out, “How long?”—
be their companion in the wilderness,
and sustain them when hope grows thin.
God of the faithful,
guide us when the path is unclear.
(pause)
For those the world overlooks:
the unhoused who move from place to place,
the forgotten elders in understaffed facilities,
the children in systems that shuffle them along—
make us see them,
and make us willing to walk beside them.
God of the faithful,
guide us when the path is unclear.
(pause)
For this community of faith,
that we would become a people who trust your voice
more than our own plans,
who follow even when the destination is hidden,
who journey together rather than arrive alone—
form us into companions for the long obedience.
God of the faithful,
guide us when the path is unclear.
(pause)
(A time of silent prayer)
Holy God,
you called Abram without telling him where he was going,
and you call us still.
Gather these prayers, spoken and silent,
and lead us forward in faith,
trusting not in our own sight
but in your promise to go with us.
Through Christ, who is the Way.
Amen.
We pray together, saying:
(The Lord’s Prayer is prayed in the words familiar to the community.)
Hymn of Sending
The Lord Now Sends Us Forth, GTG #747
Sending
Go now without a map,
trusting the voice more than the route,
the call more than the certainty.
Go to speak hope into places
where the future feels predetermined,
where possibility has grown small.
Go to walk with those who wander,
who don’t yet know where home is,
who are learning to trust the journey.
Go to build altars in unfamiliar ground—
small markers of what God has done,
signs that grace arrived here too.
And may the God who called Abram into the unknown,
the Christ who walks the unmarked path beside you,
and the Spirit who whispers “yes” when the way seems uncertain
go with you now and always.
Amen.
Reflections for Later
Sharing God’s Word Together
For Newcomers
If you’re here today and you’re not sure why—or if you came with someone and you’re just along for the ride—welcome. There’s no test at the end, no membership card required. You heard a story this morning about a man named Abram who was asked to leave everything familiar and go to a place he didn’t know, for reasons that weren’t entirely clear. If that sounds absurd to you, you’re in good company. It sounded absurd to him too. The remarkable thing is that he went anyway—not because he had all the answers, but because something in him recognized the voice calling.
You don’t have to have that kind of faith to be here. You don’t have to be ready to leave anything behind or sign up for a journey you can’t see the end of. But maybe you showed up today because some small part of you wondered if there might be more—more to your life, more to the world, more than what you can see and control and plan. That wondering is enough. In fact, that wondering might be exactly what God’s voice sounds like when it first starts to get through.
The claim we make here is that God is already near to you—not waiting for you to get your act together or figure out what you believe. Already present, already speaking, already at work in ways you might not recognize yet. Abram didn’t have a map. He had a promise and a voice he decided to trust, one step at a time. If you’re not sure what you believe about any of this, that’s okay. You’re welcome to keep wondering. You’re welcome to come back. You’re welcome here.
For Those Rooted in This Community
You have heard Abram’s story so many times that you might miss what it asks of you. When God says “Go,” Abram does not know where. He has no map, no plan, no five-year strategic vision. He walks. And you—who have walked with God for years, who know the stories and the prayers and the shape of faithfulness—you know how rare that is. You know how easily certainty replaces trust. How often have you mistaken your theology for God’s voice? Your experience for God’s leading? The God who called Abram into the unknown does not stop asking us to go simply because we have already arrived somewhere.
There is a particular temptation that comes with long faithfulness: the belief that you have learned enough, prayed enough, risked enough. That discipleship is something you have completed rather than something that continuously unmakes and remakes you. But Abram’s obedience is not the fruit of knowledge—it is the fruit of listening. And listening requires that you set aside what you think you already know. It requires that you become, again, unfamiliar with yourself.
The people around you—the ones newer to faith, less certain of the answers—they may be closer to Abram’sposture than you are. They know what it is to walk without a map. What if God is asking you not to teach them certainty, but to learn from them how to trust again?
Where has your knowledge of God made it harder to hear the voice of God?
For Churches Without a Pastor
Abram didn’t know where he was going. He had no map, no itinerary, no guaranteed outcome — only a voice calling him forward and the company of those willing to walk with him. Your congregation knows something about that journey. Without a settled pastor, you’ve had to trust the voice more than the destination, to lean on one another when the way forward isn’t clear. Today’s text doesn’t promise you a pastor will appear; it promises you what Abram had: God’s presence, God’s call, and a community willing to move together when the path isn’t obvious.
Here’s what you already have: each other’s voices in prayer and song, the Spirit’s movement in your midst, the scriptures that have guided the faithful for generations, and the tradition that holds you even when leadership shifts. Abram built altars along the way — places to pause, to remember, to worship before moving on. Your worship today is one of those altars. It marks that you are still here, still listening, still trusting that God is leading you somewhere, even if you can’t see it yet. That’s not a second-best faith. That’s the faith of Abram, who left home without knowing the address.
The weeks ahead will require patience, trust, and the willingness to share the load. Let today’s worship remind you: God called Abram before providing the map. God calls your congregation now, not because you have it all figured out, but because you are willing to go. Keep building those altars. Keep gathering. Keep listening for the voice. The destination will come clear as you walk.
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Rights and Use
© Church Commons. 2026
Written by Rev. Matthew J. Skolnik unless otherwise noted. All rights reserved.
These materials may be used and adapted for worship and educational purposes within Christian communities. They may not be sold or redistributed for commercial purposes without permission.
Resource Details
Date: June 7, 2026
Scripture: Genesis 12:1-9
Theme: Called Without a Map (Psalm 50, Genesis 12:1-9)
Lectionary: RCL Year A
Scripture on this page is from The Shared Word Translation (SWT), an ongoing translation project within ChurchCommons.org.
Scripture on this page is from The Shared Word Translation (SWT), an ongoing translation project within ChurchCommons.org.