January 18, 2026 – Second Sunday after Epiphany

January 18, 2026 – Second Sunday after Epiphany

Revised Common Lectionary Readings:

Isaiah 49:1-7
Psalm 40:1-11
1 Corinthians 1:1-9
John 1:29-42

Our main job as ministers of the Gospel is to point to Jesus. Everything that we do – preaching, texts, song selection, Bible Study, outreach, etc. – is in service of that obligation. Liturgy is literally “work of the people.” Though it can be a bit hard to define, I look at it in terms of its purpose: “work of the people in coming to Jesus.

The “order of worship” – particularly in a traditional service or mass – is typically what people mean when they say “liturgy.” It gets to the point, though I think that definition is unfair in the context of a contemporary service. If it is a worship service, it is liturgical. Yes, even that service by St. Mega Man with the lasers and the fog machine that blows during the offering is liturgical. Dismissing the formal structures of traditional liturgy does not make what replaces it any less “liturgical.” It just means it is a different “context” of liturgy.

I liken the “traditional vs. contemporary” designation much like “classical vs. jazz” music. They are two dialects of the same language with all sorts of mixture, interactions, and crossover in between. (Yes, they do borrow from each other.) This is not even getting into the cultural innovations that shape and influence them. Worship and liturgy are alive with the Breath of the God who inspires both.

God did not make everyone, everything, or every place the same. He did not make everyone, everything, and every place the same as they were ten minutes ago! That’s one of the reasons it is important to understand what liturgy is and its role in the life of the church.

In an earlier entry, I referenced the Wesleyan Quadrilateral – Scripture, Reason, Tradition, and Experience. There are people better suited to explain it – and some faith traditions disagree or consider different routes – but these are essentially ways that we come to understand faith.

We can tell “a” story of Jesus in 5-10 minutes, as we do every time we come to the communion table.  It is going to be a different story than can be told in thirty minutes. Or an hour. Or a season. Or a year. Or three years. Or a lifetime. The lectionary is one way we tell the story over a three year cycle. The liturgical calendar with all the celebrations – Advent, Christmas, Epiphany, Easter, Pentecost, All Saints Day, etc. – is one way the story is told over the year. There are layers to it.

This week, I was inspired by the Gospel reading John 1:29-42. In it, John the Baptist sees Jesus and declares Him as the “Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.” (Yes, of course there is more.) This also happens to be the words to the Agnus Dei – aka Lamb of God – which (in a traditional service) is sung just before Communion is distributed.

Instead of a psalm response, I decided to write a Lamb of God.

As always: adopt, adapt, or discard at your leisure.

January 6, 2026 – The Feast of the Epiphany

Writer’s Note: This entry was originally posted on December 30, 2025. (I have been trying to post at least a week before the Lectionary Date.) For some reason, when my website updated to WordPress 6.9, it deleted this entry as well as the one for January 11. I did not find this out until I was about to put up my entry for January 18. It was a big mess that has set me behind on this project. Anyway… Things happen. This project is more about “reclaiming my space” – both this website and my liturgical background – than it is about getting everything out on time. It is also helpful in getting me to practice some writing and working on content. Much love and – as always – adopt, adapt, and discard at your liesure.

January 6, 2026 – The Feast of the Epiphany

Isaiah 60:1-6

Psalm 72:1-7, 10-14

Ephesians 3:1-12

Matthew 2:1-12

Even if you had not gotten to the Matthew reading yet, Isaiah and Psalm 72 should have you screaming “We Three Kings.” One thing I love about this song is that it embodies liturgy as “the work of the people.” Our faith is divinely inspired (otherwise it would not be faith). God uses a number of ways to shape it such as Scripture, tradition, reason, and experience.

Yes, I just used the Wesleyan Quadrilateral. Lutherans may feel free to direct all hate mail to sunstrikellc@gmail.com. (I’m joking! I think…)

If we relied solely on Scripture, we would never sing that song. Matthew does not say that the magi number three nor that they lead nations. The arrival at “three kings” – much less the names Caspar, Melchior, and my dude Balthazar – came about much later. Yet, these figures had such an impact on the story of Jesus and the unfolding of faith that they have been venerated as saints. These magi – regardless of how many there really are, their actual names, their royal status, or even the lands they came from – have staying power because they represent rulers – powerful people in this world – subordinating themselves to 1.) an infant, 2.) conceived (albeit by the Holy Spirit) out of wedlock, 3.) the (presumed) son of a builder, 4.) in an occupied land, and 5.) among an oppressed minority.

Baby Jesus both had ultimate power and yet at the same time no power. These wise men – who were so esteemed that Herod kissed up to them – sought Him out and bowed down to Him.

Yes. Epiphany is actually a pretty big deal, which the rest of the world already knows and yet here in the United States, we go “Oh… That’s cool.” I have more thoughts, but I’ll save those for another day.

To be clear, Epiphany is not just about the Wise Men. It is about the revelation of Jesus as the Christ: the Wise Men, Jesus’s Baptism,  and the miracle of the Wedding at Cana. Ask your pastor about those; this article is already getting long!

There are a number of liturgical possibilities in these readings. Isaiah screams to me “Call to Worship.”

One possibility for the Psalm Response is to simply take the refrain from “We Three Kings.” (“Star of wonder, star of light…”) People generally already know it and it points to the Lord. The refrain that I am presenting is definitely inspired by “We Three Kings.”The purpose of liturgy – and anything we do – is to point in some way to the Holy Trinity. The Three Kings of Christian tradition do not strictly adhere to Scripture, but we cannot deny that they point to Jesus. They sought Him out. They brought offerings to Him. They bowed down to Him. They recognized Him as Lord. We as the Church are supposed to do all those very things.

Happy Epiphany!

January 11, 2026 – The Baptism of the Lord

Writer’s Note: I originally had a different version of this entry. For some reason, when my website updated to WordPress 6.9, this particular post (and my post on Epiphany) got wiped out. To add to it, I had previously written my blog entries on Microsoft Word and then copy + paste; this time I did not! So, this is a brand new version written from scratch except for what I copied over from the Facebook excerpt. (It wasn’t in the “Trash” bin. Trust me; first place I looked.) Well… Here goes it!

In earlier entries, I had mentioned reclaiming my “space”, which includes this website and associated social media profiles. Beyond that, I am also “reclaiming” my liturgical background. You can read more about it here. As I work my way through the Revised Common Lectionary, I am challenging myself to not only put my thoughts on it but to write out “something” liturgical/musical.

The readings for January 11, 2026 set up the Baptism of the Lord.

Isaiah 42:1-9
Psalm 29
Acts 10:34-43
Matthew 3:13-17

These four readings share some strong thematic ties and images. As I said in the first version of the entry (that got wiped out by WordPress 6.9) “This a masterful display of scriptural juxtaposition. Can this picture possibly be more developed?” Isaiah lays out from God’s perspective what pleases Him in what would be His servant. Psalm 29 talks about the glory of the Lord and makes repeated mention of His voice. 29:10 speaks particularly about being “enthroned above the flood.” Acts specifically mentions the incident of the Lord’s Baptism and sets it into the context of His ministry and makes the connections to His anointing and His resurrection. Matthew 3 narrates it. And what happens? Everything is tied together.

Jesus rises out of the water and God says “This is my Son with whom I am well pleased.” God is pleased in His servant. God’s voice comes out over the water, “enthroning His Beloved Son over the flood at His feet. The anointing – The Holy Spirit – is all over Him. Beautiful.The key signature may be 1 Sharp, but rest assured that the Psalm response is not in G Major. It is in the Mixolydian mode, which you will often find in folk music, be it Appalachian or its ancestor across the ocean.

As with every entry, feel free to adopt, adapt, or discard as you wish. My own views may change as the year goes by.

January 4, 2026 – Second Sunday after Christmas

Personally, I would probably focus on the Feast of the Epiphany (which lands on Tuesday January 6) rather than proceed lockstep with the Revised Common Lectionary (RCL).

The main thing to keep in mind when considering the Liturgical Year is that it is a structured, long-form way of telling the story of Jesus. Not every celebration – major or minor – is going to land neatly on Sunday. Christmas (12/25), Epiphany (1/6), All Saints (11/1), and All Souls (11/2) are all tied to specific dates. Christmas (Eve), everyone is going to do regardless. The others all too often get glossed over (in the United States).

And I think that is a shame. I’ll mention a few thoughts about Epiphany later. Liturgy is literally “the work of the people.” It’s about Jesus AND us. Exactly what that means, I hope to expound over time. My “philosophy” – for lack of better word – is that we prioritize Jesus AND His Beloved aka US.

Now, if I was serving a faith community that had a specific dedicated celebration on Epiphany (on Tuesday), then I would have no problem sticking with the RCL in this case.

Here are the listed readings in the RCL:
Jeremiah 31:7-14 OR Sirach 24:1-12
Psalm 147: 12-20 OR Wisdom 10:15-21
Ephesians 1:3-14
John 1:(1-9), 10-18

Scanning through them, no particular themes stick out. (Praise, Adoration, Deliverance, etc. are appropriate ALL of the time.) One thing that somewhat irks me is that this is still Christmas (or Christmastide, if you will). You CANNOT cram everything on Christmas Eve. I don’t see why another Christmas reading isn’t acceptable except for the reason “Gifts have been exchanged and people are ready to move on.” Jesus Christ has just been born and the Magi have not reached him yet; pull out four more songs!

One thing I do like is the choice of John 1 for a number of reasons. This is the first Sunday service of the year. John 1 is a scriptural callback to Genesis 1, albeit this time with the express focus on Jesus. It explicitly reveals Jesus as GOD. (Which ties into Epiphany, but that’s another discussion.)

I would take Verses 1-9 and organize them into a Call and Response, either by literally reciting them or turning them into a Call to Worship.

C: In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.

E: He was in the beginning with God.

C: All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being.

E: What has come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of all people.

…and so on.

As with everything, it is all contextual. Adopt/Discard/Adapt however you like.

January 1, 2026 – The Holy Name of Jesus

As I said in my previous post, one of my goals is to reclaim my spaces, one of which happens to be this website.

Two other goals are to write more and to dig more into my liturgical background. It has been over a decade since I last worked regularly with a lectionary (back in my days as an Archdiocese employee). Over the past decade, I have been serving in primarily Wesleyan spaces and have taken my path. The way I am describing my spirituality these days is “Wesleyan for sure, but not sure if I am much of a Methodist anymore.” Without getting into the nitty-gritty, I am not sure about what I am seeing/have experienced in any part of the whole Methodist debacle. It is what it is. I still serve in a Methodist church, though its flow is more series-driven than lectionary-driven. (This is not a criticism; I have an appreciation for both approaches.)

A friend (and later teacher) got me into the Revised Common Lectionary and I decided to start working with it for a while. I often compare two sites: Vanderbilt and the UMC Worship planner. I have not checked, but I am sure the Global Methodist Church also has – or is developing – a tailored lectionary to work from. The readings – Old Testament, Responsorial, Acts/Epistles, Gospel – will be largely the same with some minor differences. Vanderbilt often has multiple options for a slot and also addresses non-Sunday services (such as Epiphany or All Saints). UMC is more tailored to the United Methodist Church.

Again, I am not putting this into practice in my faith community. It is series-driven. This is solely my digging into it for kicks.

The theme for New Year’s Day 2026 is “The Holy Name of Jesus” and suggests the following readings:

Numbers 6:22-27 (The Aaronic Blessing)
Psalm 8:1-9 
Galatians 4:4-7 OR Philippians 2:5-11
Luke 2:15-21

Since I am also practicing writing Psalm Responses… Here you go.

The Holy Name of Jesus


New Year’s Day is on Thursday this year and is not a regular service, though many faith communities still meet. The readings – and the homily (message) – will likely suggest a number of different possible liturgical and musical responses. Here are some possibilities off the top of my head. Right now, they are tilting toward CCM because I work with them regularly.

“The Blessing” picks off from the Numbers reading.

“No Longer Slaves” (for Galatians)

“What a Beautiful Name” or the hymn “He is Lord” (Philippians)

You could probably do anything referring to the exaltation of Jesus or the incarnation. “Here I Am to Worship” also comes to mind.

For Luke – Anything involving shepherds, the child in the manger, or Bethlehem. I’d hold off on the Magi until Epiphany myself.

Take/discard whatever you need to. These are just suggestions/thoughts to spark ideas.

If any of these are any help to you or maybe I could be of help, please don’t hesitate to drop me a line! Either comment below or email me at sunstrikellc@gmail.com.

Reclaiming my space!

As you can see if you have looked over the site, I have had this website Sunstrike Files for sometime. The original idea was something of an online journal focusing on people creating art and doing inspiring things. Given that this was in the throes of the Covid-19 Pandemic, I was unemployed, and people were essentially staying apart, it did not exactly happen that way. I got so busy trying to survive life that I never got back around to it…

…until now.

Yep. Still plan on taking pictures.

In this next season of my life, I am feeling driven to more actively “reclaim” those areas either “taken” from me or that I had set aside. Part of picking up the “Sunstrike Files” again is reclaiming my space, both on this website and on social media. Whatever form it winds up taking will be what it is.

Another area where I think “reclamation” fits has to do with my background and appreciation for liturgy. I am primarily just putting my thoughts down as I go about 2026. People – if they even come across this page – are invited to do whatever they wish, whether that is adopt, adapt, or discard. I don’t claim special expertise in this area. Admittedly, some of the motivation behind it is to just to get creative practice in. This is primarily just an open road, but one I am looking forward to continuing.

All the best. Wish you a Merry Christmas and a joyful and glorious 2026!

TKP
12/26/25

Multi-Track Video #2: Amazing Grace

If you haven’t checked out my first stab at creating multi-track videos, it’s an original setting for Psalm 27. I kept it short and sweet just to give it a shot. Though my vocals are weak, I actually was pleased with how it came out.

The second one was a little more challenging than I had originally planned, but the idea came to me about 4 AM when I was trying to sleep, so I went and sketched it out. (I sketched #3 immediately after it. Yeah, I got no sleep.) It’s a setting of Amazing Grace, but not the melody you’re used to. I wanted to play with some harmonies in there. Originally, I wrote it in C because I was going to hit up one of my friends to help me out, but I decided not to get ahead of myself. (Second stab at this. Let me get used to messing around with videos of myself for now.) SO… I transposed it down to G. I knew it wouldn’t be pretty, but I can sometimes get a G out.

One thing when it comes to transposing songs is that the further you get away from the “original” key, the more likely you are going to have to revoice the “accompaniment” – or the background vocals – and depending on where the notes wind up, you may at times even have to tweak the harmonies. Even when I play a piano part and change keys, I make adjustments like that to stay within the area of the piano that works best for the song. It’s exactly the same when you are arranging for voices. You write for who you have and your particular circumstance.

I used the exact same process as I mentioned in the previous entry, but I ended up using a Jazz Waltz drum groove to keep the tempo this time. (I used an Afro-Cuban one on the last one. It beats dealing with a metronome click BY A MILE.) The Finale track was helpful as a reference track to line everything up. Then, I just yanked it before rendering the video. I’m aggravated a bit at this one note I didn’t catch when I recorded the parts, but I made a rule that I would not get bogged down with any more than two takes.

Anyway… Here it is. My second Multi-Track Video. Amazing Grace.

Feel free to let me know your thoughts.

-TKP
1/23/21

Multi-Track Video #1: The Lord Is My Light

So… One of my “projects” for 2021 is learning how to do multi-track videos.

There are a number of reasons the idea came to mind, particularly in light of the COVID-19 Pandemic that has killed 406 Million Americans in the last ten months. If you haven’t checked, virtual ensembles – bands, choirs, etc. – have EXPLODED during that time. The people who already knew how to do this had a leg up on everyone else.

Though I’m primarily a pianist and music director, I also happen to love arranging. Pulling together the people to learn the arrangements – much less during an uncontrolled pandemic – is a bit of a challenge. Straight out: That is often one of those areas that either 1.) you need good friends to help you pull it together or 2.) you gather people who might not be as experienced, but haven’t been told they can’t do it. The time you waste trying to convince people in-between the two that it is possible and you know what you’re doing is better spent actually doing it with people who will actually try it.

Rule of thumb: Professionals can do it easily, just expect to pay them or trade favors. Amateurs are receptive to coaching. It’s that spectrum in-between where you tend to get the most resistance, because it is actually a referendum on whether they consider you “worthy” enough to lead them, much less coach them. (And it will likely have nothing to do with your actual skill or talent.) Work with people who will work with you and don’t waste time with the rest, because they’ll just get in your way jockeying for position.

Anyway… Before I actually work with people on this thing I’ve never actually done, I decided to maybe figure out a bit more about what I’m doing. Keep things simple. Particularly when your equipment is a cell phone, a tablet, a video editing program that is 12 years old, and a computer with memory problems that will throw the blue screen of death if you look at it the wrong way. I decided to just stick with one performer – aka ME – and one instrument – aka my B- voice – and keep the distance between me and the cell phone about the same. Keep in mind, I know nothing about either video or sound editing beyond what I’ve stumbled into. There are people better than me who can pull this stuff.

So I began by writing out a quick arrangement. Since I’m at the Book of Psalms, I took a line from Psalm 27 (The Lord Is My Light) and the first melody that came to mind and just spun harmony from that. (I’m not sure, but I’m suspicious that first line may be the Avengers theme. I haven’t watched the movies in a while.) Then I scored the arrangement in Finale – which is the ONLY current software on my computer – and added an Afro-Cuban drum groove. (The Metronome Click was driving me up the wall.) Then, I printed out the vocals and then exported the sound file as a WAV. The sound file is extremely important if you want to keep everything together. Once I emailed the sound file to my tablet, I was ready to start recording.

For recording, I used a set of over-ear headphones. It’s important to hear yourself if you’re doing vocals, especially if you’re not using a microphone. I know there are a lot of people who jam buds in their ears, but that drives me up the wall. I paired my headphones to my tablet and then used my phone to actually do the recording. Because I wasn’t in the mood to spend a lot of time on it, I went with two takes for each part, singing along with the track I made in Finale. My tone was crap, but there’s nothing wrong with my ear at all. Once I had my videos, this was the part I was the most nervous about.

My video editor is 12 years old. It’s Adobe Premier 10 and – as I mentioned before – my desktop has memory issues. Dealing with updated versions may have made things simpler, but I don’t have the income to dedicate to that right now, particularly with something I’m just learning how to do. Since my videos were short, I hoped that would get them through. Straight out: If you want to learn how to actually use a video editing program, do what I did: get on YouTube. Fortunately, there was a video of someone actually using Adobe Premier Elements 9 and  what he did worked for me. Since I knew how it was supposed to sound – aka… D’UH, I’m a music director and that is what I do – the most tedious part was actually getting the videos to line up. Fortunately, the sound file I exported from Finale made that fairly easy. Using that as a reference, I just had to get used to bumping the individual parts backwards and forwards one at a time with the track and then checking to see if they lined up with each other. I expect that as I practice this more, I’ll get better at it.

So… Here’s my first stab at doing this. I’ll probably mess around with vocals some more until I get the hang of it and then maybe start expanding outward from there. Got any suggestions that I could try? Drop me a reply.

All the best,

-TKP
1/21/2021

 

What are The Sunstrike Files about?

I assume that if you made it to this website, this is something that you want to know yourself! Put simply: There are a lot of artists and people out in this world doing cool things and having awesome adventures. I decided that there needed to be a platform which could tell and share their stories.

So… I made one! This is basically what Sunstrike Files is about.

The video below gets a little bit more into detail about it.

It was taken on a bike path (operated by the Miami Conservancy District) just north of Crains Run Nature Park.

Welcome to The Sunstrike Files!

Yep. This is my handsome mug. Don’t all of you swoon at once.

Hey Everybody! Welcome to the Sunstrike Files!

My name is Kareem Powell and – as you can guess – I’m the guy behind this. So… What is the Sunstrike Files all about?

Like many musicians around the world, my livelihood has been put “on hold” due in large part to the COVID-19 Pandemic. Being the caregiver to my 77-year-old mother, playing out publicly in crowds is just too risky… particularly as we near the winter months where more activities are going indoors and the infections are surging.

THAT SAID… The world is still a beautiful place, even if we can’t go out and see it. There are billions of people out there creating amazing art, whether you are talking music, photography, painting, etc. I’m fortunate enough to know more than a few and decided “Well… We’re still creating art. Our stories still need to be told. Why not just have a site dedicated to doing just that?”

And so… “USA Election Eve”, I bought the domain name and set up the media channels. While everyone is watching tonight’s insanity, I’ll be working to put these different parts together and start lining up friends to start bragging about.

Now… As awesome as Facebook and other forms of social media are, the ONLY way we’re going to reliably keep in touch is if you sign up for The Sunstrike Files mailing list.

And who knows… Are you doing anything cool? Drop me a line. It’s time to get some art out there.

Peace out!

-TKP
11-3-2020

Contact:

Sunstrike Entertainment LLC
PO Box 416
Miamisburg, OH 45343

SunstrikeLLC@gmail.com
(937) 219-5814