NL Worship Resources: July 17, 2016

Lectionary 16

Color: Green
Readings: Gospel Text: John 12:24 | Sermon Text: Job 14:7-15; 19:23-27 (Hopeful Longing)
Prayer of the Day: God of our redemption, grant us hope and faith in you even in the midst of pain and suffering. Bring resurrection life into the darkest depths of death and despair. We pray all this in the name of our Risen Lord, Jesus Christ. Amen.

Suggested hymns based on the Sermon text:

ELW #846 Amen, We Praise Your Name
ELW #638 Blessed Assurance
ELW #389 Christ Is Alive! Let Christians Sing
ELW #380 Hallelujah! Jesus Lives!
ELW #619 I Know That My Redeemer Lives!
ELW #621 Jesus Lives, My Sure Defense
ELW #624 Jesus, Still Lead On
ELW #435 Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending
ELW #694 Sing to the Lord of Harvest
ELW #391 This Joyful Eastertide
ELW #785 When Peace like a River
OBS #75 Rich in Promise
(ELW=Evangelical Lutheran Worship; OBS=O Blessed Spring)

Suggested hymns based on the Gospel text:

ELW #532 Gather Us In
ELW #737 He Comes to Us as One Unknown
ELW #580 How Clear Is Our Vocation, Lord
ELW #815 I Want to Walk as a Child of the Light
ELW #660 Lift High the Cross
ELW #379 Now the Green Blade Rises
ELW #880 O God beyond All Praising
ELW #810 O Jesus, I Have Promised
ELW #548 Rise, O Church, like Christ Arisen
ELW #667 Take Up Your Cross, the Savior Said
ELW #334 Tree of Life and Awesome Mystery
ELW #803 When I Survey the Wondrous Cross
ELW #798 Will You Come and Follow Me (The Summons)
ELW #659 Will You Let Me Be Your Servant
ELW #506 The Word of God is Source and Seed
LBW #324 O Love That Will Not Let Me Go
WOV #785 Weary of All Trumpeting
ASG #19 Let This Season Be
(ELW=Evangelical Lutheran Worship; LBW=Lutheran Book of Worship; WOV=With One Voice; ASG=As Sunshine to a Garden)

Other options based on both:

Amazing Love” By Graham Kendrick.
Awesome God” By Rich Mullins.
This Dust” By Kip Fox.
More contemporary suggestions here.

Prayers of Intercession:

Let us pray for the whole people of God in Christ Jesus, and for all people according to their needs.

A brief silence.

God of hope; strengthen the hope of your church that we might proclaim your resurrection life to a world trapped by death. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

God of hope; bring healing and wholeness to your creation that the entire earth might proclaim your great providence. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

God of hope; bring hope for peace and justice to the nations of the world that all the world may know your mercy. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

God of hope; increase our hopefulness and lead us to hopeless places and people that we might bring your promise of steadfast love. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

God of hope; heal those in pain (especially,…) that all might know of your care for them. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Here other intercessions may be offered.

God of hope; bless those who died in the hope of resurrection (especially Bartolomé de Las Casas, missionary to the Indies, and …) that the witness of their faith may strengthen our own. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Into your hands, O Lord, we commend all for whom we pray, trusting in your mercy; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

NL Worship Resources: July 10, 2016

Lectionary 15

Color: Green
Readings: Gospel Text: Luke 17:20-21 | Sermon Text: Job 3:1-10; 4:1-9; 7:11-21 (Anguish and Lament)
Prayer of the Day: God above, take away our iniquity and pardon our transgressions. Were you to judge, we could not stand; strengthen our faith in your mercy and love as we work for your kingdom. We pray this in the name of Christ our Lord. Amen.

Suggested hymns based on the Sermon text:

ELW #846 Amen, We Praise Your Name
ELW #331 As the Deer Runs to the River
ELW #638 Blessed Assurance
ELW #698 How Long, O God
ELW #325 I Want Jesus to Walk with Me
ELW #699 In Deepest Night
ELW #624 Jesus, Still Lead On
ELW #696 Jesus Calls Us; o’er the Tumult
ELW #703 O God, Why Are You Silent
ELW #751 O Lord, Hear My Prayer
ELW #701 Once We Sang and Danced
ELW #704 When Pain of the World Surrounds Us
ELW #785 When Peace like a River
ELW #702 You, Dear Lord
WOV #656 By the Babylonian Rivers
OBS #64  In Sacred Manner
(ELW=Evangelical Lutheran Worship; WOV=With One Voice; OBS=O Blessed Spring)

Suggested hymns based on the Gospel text:

ELW #553 Christ, Whose Glory Fills the Skies
ELW #532 Gather Us In
ELW #239 Hark, the Glad Sound!
ELW #805 Lead On, O King Eternal!
ELW #886 Oh, for a Thousand Tongues to Sing
ELW #600  Out of the Depths I Cry to You
(ELW=Evangelical Lutheran Worship)

Other options based on both:

Over Me” By Chris Tomlin, Seth Walker.
You” By Joel Houston.
More contemporary suggestions here.

Prayers of Intercession:

Let us pray for the whole people of God in Christ Jesus, and for all people according to their needs.

A brief silence.

Great God, bless your church with fierce proclamation and hope. Grant wisdom and passion to bishops, pastors, and ministers of every sort. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Gifting God, bless all of your creation with an abundance of life. Grant us hearts full of care for all that you have made. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Glorious God, bless all the nations of the earth, bless tribes and peoples, bless states and provinces, and bless those with no nation or home. Grant justice to your world. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Loving God, bless the brokenhearted with the knowledge of your love for them. Grant us compassion and a willingness to reach out to others. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Healing God, bless all who suffer in body, mind, or spirit (especially, …). Grant hope int he midst of trial and pain. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Here other intercessions may be offered.

Eternal God, bless all the saints who now rest in you (especially,…). Grant sight and faith to us who still walk in their footsteps. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Into your hands, O Lord, we commend all for whom we pray, trusting in your mercy; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

NL Worship Resources: July 3, 2016

Lectionary 14

Color: Green
Readings: Gospel Text: Luke 17:5-6 | Sermon Text: Job 1:1-22 (Introduction to Job)
Prayer of the Day: God, you are the source of all good things. Bless us and keep us from evil; make us to walk in steadfastness and faith. Keep us from trial and bring us safely into our heavenly home. We pray this in the name of Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord. Amen.

Suggested hymns based on the Sermon text:

ELW #846 Amen, We Praise Your Name
ELW #695  As Saints of Old (FOREST GREEN)
ELW #638 Blessed Assurance
ELW #781 Children of the Heavenly Father
ELW #607 Come, Ye Disconsolate
ELW #615 In All Our Grief
ELW #624 Jesus, Still Lead On
ELW #886 Oh, for a Thousand Tongues to Sing
ELW #623 Rock of Ages, Cleft for Me
ELW #785 When Peace like a River
LBW #483 God Moves in a Mysterious Way
LBW #462 God the Omnipotent!
OBS #64 In Sacred Manner
(ELW=Evangelical Lutheran Worship; LBW=Lutheran Book of Worship; OBS=O Blessed Spring)

Suggested hymns based on the Gospel text:

ELW #553 Christ, Whose Glory Fills the Skies
ELW #729 The Church of Christ, in Every Age
ELW #239 Hark, the Glad Sound!
ELW #527 Lord Jesus Christ, Be Present Now
ELW #886 Oh, for a Thousand Tongues to Sing
ELW #405 O Spirit of Life
LBW #378 Amid the World’s Bleak Wilderness
(ELW=Evangelical Lutheran Worship; LBW=Lutheran Book of Worship)

Other options based on both:

Came To My Rescue” By Dylan Thomas, Joel Davies, et al.
I Will Boast” By Paul Baloche.
Through It All” By Reuben Morgan.
More contemporary suggestions here.

Prayers of Intercession:

Let us pray for the whole people of God in Christ Jesus, and for all people according to their needs.

A brief silence.

For your church, O God; that our faith may be strengthened and your love proclaimed. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

For animals and fields, birds and waterways, O God; that the care of your creation may be a priority for us who are charged to steward it. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

For all nations, O God; that your awesomeness might inspire us to justice, peace, and equality. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

For the lonely and despairing, O God; that hope may be found in your presence and love. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

For the sick and grieving, O God (especially,…); that healing and comfort may come into their lives. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Here other intercessions may be offered.

For all the saints, O God (especially Thomas, Apostle of the Lord, and …); that their witness and proclamation strengthen our faith still today. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Into your hands, O Lord, we commend all for whom we pray, trusting in your mercy; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

NL Worship Resources: June 26, 2016

Lectionary 13

Color: Green
Readings: Gospel Text: John 13:31-35 | Sermon Text: 2 Corinthians 8:1-15 (Generosity)
Prayer of the Day: Generous God, your grace reaches to all the ends of the earth through your Son, Jesus Christ. Out of the richness of your grace, inspire in us an earnest desire to give abundantly to meet the needs of others. With praise and thanksgiving for your great generosity, we pray. Amen.

Suggested hymns based on the Sermon text:

ELW #362 At the Lamb’s High Feast We Sing
ELW #729 The Church of Christ, in Every Age
ELW #361 The Day of Resurrection! (ELLACOMBE)
ELW #678 God, Whose Giving Knows No Ending
ELW #401 Gracious Spirit, Heed Our Pleading
ELW #414 Holy God, We Praise Your Name
ELW #697  Just a Closer Walk with Thee
ELW #403 Like the Murmur of the Dove’s Song
ELW #712 Lord, Whose Love in Humble Service
ELW #462 Now We Join in Celebration
ELW #322 Oh, Love How Deep
ELW #786 O Holy Spirit, Enter In
ELW #541 O Jesus, Blessed Lord
ELW #533 Open Now Thy Gates of Beauty
ELW #689 Praise and Thanksgiving
ELW #583/685 Take My Life, That I May Be
ELW #725 When the Poor Ones (Cuando el pobre)
ELW #653 Where True Charity and Love Abide
ELW #642 Ubi caritas et amor (Where True Charity and Love Abide)
LBW #48 All Praise to You, Eternal Lord
LBW #164 Creator Spirit, by Whose Aid
LBW #350 Even As We Live Each Day
LBW #381 Hark, the Voice of Jesus Calling
LBW #47 Let All Together Praise Our God
LBW #303 When in the Hour of Deepest Need
W&P #32 Come to the Mountain
W&P #65 How Can I Be Free from Sin?
W&P #121  Seed, Scattered and Sown
(ELW=Evangelical Lutheran Worship; LBW=Lutheran Book of Worship; W&P=Worship & Praise)

Suggested hymns based on the Gospel text:

ELW #656 Blest Be the Tie That Binds
ELW #804 Come Down, O Love Divine
ELW #470 Draw Us in the Spirit’s Tether
ELW #174/175 Gospel Acclamation
ELW #358 Great God, Your Love Has Called Us
ELW #253 He Came Down
ELW #650 In Christ There Is No East or West
ELW #708 Jesu, Jesu, Fill Us with Your Love
ELW #818 O Master, Let Me Walk with You
ELW #655 Son of God, Eternal Savior
ELW #613 Thy Holy Wings
ELW #445 Wash, O God, Our Sons and Daughters
ELW #566 When Twilight Comes
ELW #359 Where Charity and Love Prevail
ELW #719 Where Cross the Crowded Ways of Life
ELW #659 Will You Let Me Be Your Servant
ELW #484 You Satisfy the Hungry Heart (Gift of Finest Wheat)
LBW #427 O Jesus Christ, May Grateful Hymns Be Rising
WOV #664 A New Commandment
WOV #637 Gloria, Gloria, Gloria
(ELW=Evangelical Lutheran Worship; WOV=With One Voice)

Other options based on both:

Amazing Love” By Graham Kendrick.
The Servant Song” By Richard Gillard.
They’ll Know We Are Christians By Our Love
What Grace Is Mine” By Kristyn Getty.
More contemporary suggestions here.

Prayers of Intercession:

Let us pray for the whole people of God in Christ Jesus, and for all people according to their needs.

A brief silence.

God of grace, bless the leaders of your church; bless bishops, pastors, and lay ministers with hearts full of your love and mercy. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

God of grace, bless fields and farms with abundant life and bring about healing to polluted forests and streams. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Generous God, bless our leaders, bless presidents and prime ministers, bless representatives and judges with a zeal for justice and hearts that are true. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Reconciling God, bless all those who suffer from depression, loneliness, or despair, bless the brokenhearted with friends and family who care for them and reach out to them. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Healing God, bless all who suffer in any way, and bless doctors and nurses, and all who are agents of healing and grace. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Here other intercessions may be offered.

Eternal God, bless our spiritual ancestors, bless those who paved the way for our faith and grant us the sure and certain knowledge of eternal peace in you. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Into your hands, O Lord, we commend all for whom we pray, trusting in your mercy; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

NL Worship Resources: June 19, 2016

Apologies once again, preparing for VBS and our Synod Assembly this last weekend meant I did not complete resources for June 19 as early as I like, and since I am behind, I will not provide quite as much as I normally would. June 26 will be up later today.

Lectionary 12

Color: Green
Readings: Gospel Text: Luke 15:25-32 | Sermon Text: 2 Corinthians 5:11-21 (Reconciliation)
Prayer of the Day: God of new creations, keep us firm in Christ. Make us agents of reconciliation until that time when all things are made new and all of creation is reconciled to you. We pray this in the name of Christ our Lord. Amen.

Suggested hymns based on the Sermon text:

ELW #349 Ah, Holy Jesus
ELW #337 Alas! And Did My Savior Bleed
ELW #442 All Who Believe and Are Baptized
ELW #793 Be Thou My Vision
ELW #638 Blessed Assurance
ELW #654 The Church’s One Foundation
ELW #247 Come Now, O Prince of Peace (Ososŏ, ososŏ)
ELW #807 Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing
ELW #684 Creating God, Your Fingers Trace
ELW #855 Crown Him with Many Crowns
ELW #605 Forgive Our Sins As We Forgive
ELW #358 Great God, Your Love Has Called Us
ELW #673 God, Whose Almighty Word
ELW #650 In Christ There Is No East or West
ELW #661 I Love to Tell the Story
ELW #595 Jesus Loves Me!
ELW #754 Jesus, the Very Thought of You
ELW #676 Lord, Speak to Us, That We May Speak
ELW #631 Love Divine, All Loves Excelling
ELW #763 My Life Flows On in Endless Song
ELW #343 My Song Is Love Unknown
ELW #322 Oh, Love How Deep
ELW #810 O Jesus, I Have Promised
ELW #351/352 O Sacred Head, Now Wounded
ELW #606 Our Father, We Have Wandered
ELW #668 O Zion, Haste
ELW #328 Restore in Us, O God
ELW #665 Rise, Shine, You People!
ELW #583/685 Take My Life, That I May Be
ELW #614 There Is a Balm in Gilead
ELW #449 We Know That Christ Is Raised
ELW #666 What Wondrous Love Is This
ELW #803 When I Survey the Wondrous Cross
ELW #785 When Peace like a River (It Is Well with My Soul)
ELW #359 Where Charity and Love Prevail
LBW #211 Here, O My Lord, I See Thee
LBW #347 Jerusalem the Golden
LBW #336 Jesus, Thy Boundless Love to Me
LBW #411 Lord of All Good
LBW #324 O Love That Will Not Let Me Go
LBW #388 O Spirit of the Living God
LBW #114 There Is a Green Hill Far Away
WOV #669 Come Away to the Skies
WOV #796 My Lord of Light
(ELW=Evangelical Lutheran Worship; LBW=Lutheran Book of Worship; WOV=With One Voice)

Suggested hymns based on the Gospel text:

ELW #779 Amazing Grace, How Sweet the Sound
ELW #553 Christ, Whose Glory Fills the Skies
ELW #816 Come, My Way, My Truth, My Life
ELW #679 For the Fruit of All Creation
ELW #740 God of the Sparrow
ELW #619 I Know That My Redeemer Lives!
ELW #592 Just As I Am, without One Plea
ELW #502 The King of Love My Shepherd Is
ELW #778 The Lord’s My Shepherd
ELW #886 Oh, for a Thousand Tongues to Sing
ELW #608 Softly and Tenderly Jesus Is Calling
ELW #587/588 There’s a Wideness in God’s Mercy
ELW #659 Will You Let Me Be Your Servant
WOV #714 The Thirsty Fields Drink In the Rain
(ELW=Evangelical Lutheran Worship; WOV=With One Voice)

Other options based on both:

Amazing Love” By Graham Kendrick.
Amazing Grace (My Chains Are Gone)” By Chris Tomlin, John Newton, et al.
Broken” By Michael Himes.
Love Has Come” By Brown Bannister, Mark Schultz, et al.
More contemporary suggestions here.

Prayers of Intercession:

Let us pray for the whole people of God in Christ Jesus, and for all people according to their needs.

A brief silence.

Creating God, make your church new. Work in us hearts of forgiveness and reconciliation; that the good news of Jesus Christ prevail over all messages of division and hate. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Creating God, renew your creation. Breath your Spirit of life into the world; that the abundance of your love be known in plants and animals, air and water. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Creating God, reform our systems. Bring about your reconciliation among the nations; that justice and peace might prevail over violence and inequality. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Creating God, bring reconciliation to the broken. Work through us that hope might be proclaimed in the broken places and lives of the world. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Creating God, bring new life to those who know pain and suffering (especially, …). Bring healing and comfort in the midst of sorrow. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Here other intercessions may be offered.

Creating God, renew our faith. Use the lives of the saints who have gone before to deepen our relationship with you. Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Into your hands, O Lord, we commend all for whom we pray, trusting in your mercy; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

Apologies

Running a bit behind as I gear up for our VBS (Grace Wars) week which starts Sunday afternoon. I should be able to post the NL Resources tomorrow by noon! And, out of curiosity…would any of you be interested in the VBS we crafted? I could post the curriculum we made if there’s interest (post a comment to let me know). Though it wouldn’t be available until after our VBS is over (that way I can give you the most up-to-date and tweaked version).

NL Sermon Resources: June 12, 2016

I am leading our pastor’s text study this week, so I thought I’d share with you all the commentary snippets I have collected to share with that group:

2 Corinthians 4:16-5:10:

(Proclamation Commentaries: Paul and His Letters, Leander E. Keck): “What does ‘Spirit’ mean in Paul’s thought? To begin with, Paul shares the early Christian understanding of Spirit as eschatological gift of power; the divine presence is a gift received, not an essence released (Rom. 8:15; 1 Cor. 2:12; Gal. 3:2).
Also he regarded the Spirit as a sign that the New Age is already dawning, and receiving it is a mark of one’s participation in the future. The two metaphors that express this understanding appear to be uniquely Paul’s: down-payment (arrabón; 2 Cor. 1:22; 5:5) and first fruits…The arrabón is not so much a guarantee (as the RSV renders it) as a pledge (as the EB has); the word used to be rendered ‘earnest’ as in ‘earnest money’ in real estate. Earnest money is paid to indicate that the buyer will complete the transaction without delay…In Pauls’ mouth, both metaphors express the conviction that that Spirit means inauguration, not consummation. Both celebrate the present gift as something that points ahead, as a reality that characterizes Christian life between ‘already’ and ‘not yet.’” p. 98

“The ethical significance of Paul’s theology of body manifests itself throughout his letters…the basic theological position, ‘The body is not meant for immortality, but for the Lord, and the Lord for the body.’ (1 Corinthians 6:12-20). Paul provides several warrants for this. (1) ‘God raised the Lord and will also raise us up by his power. Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ?’ Paul’s rationale seems to be the following: (a) Christ’s resurrection transformed him (as sóma/self). (b) His resurrection is the prototype of the resurrection to come, of Christian somatic selves. (c) Christ’s present Lordship lays a claim on the body/self, destined for resurrection. (2) Because body equals self, Paul can express this claim by saying that the sóma of the Christian is an organ (‘member’) in the body of Christ. (3) ‘Your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you.’ The mortal body/self is not a prison for the Spirit but its shrine. The body/self does not inhibit the Spirit; the Spirit, being stronger, sanctifies the body/self. Sanctification is not an intense religious experience but a moral process which hallows the self. (4) ‘You are not your own; you were bought with a price’ – a metaphor derived from the slave market. Redemption means belonging to Christ, whose death was the (implied) price paid. So the moral meaning of having the Spirit is the imperative: ‘Glorify God in your body’ – the actual selves you are. Paul’s ethics is body-ethics.” pp. 105-106

(Augsburg Commentary on the New Testament: II Corinthians, Frederick W. Danker): “In short, Paul is not concerned about winning cheap laurels from human beings in the present time. As he will state in 5:9, his constant aim is to ‘please’ God. And it is God who will reward him amply for his labors. Everything connected with the present is transitory. Paul wants to possess the things that will abide forever…There is no suggestion in 2 Cor. 4:17 that one can improve a relationship with God through virtuous performance. Such a perception would have nullified Paul’s strong protest against attempts to make bargains with God (cf Rom. 3:20), for reconciliation is God’s gift to the world (2 Cor. 5:19)” p. 69

“Facing the fact that death may take place before the return of Jesus Christ, [Paul] states that God will remedy the problem of present dissolution with a dwelling that is not subject to the vicissitudes of time…The life of resurrected body is in continuity with the Spirit-life in the mortal body. Therefore, when the body dies, the person is not found ‘naked,’ for the Spirit-life is not doffed in the process. Rather, there is more to put on; that is, God guarantees that we will be further clothed.” pp.70-71

“Confident that God will not be remiss in generosity, Paul goes on to explain that God “equips” (has prepared) us for the very goal of realizing the glorious expectation of fullness of life in the Spirit…To that end God gives us the Spirit as a guarantee or down payment for the future.” p. 74

“A few sentences earlier [Paul] wrote about groaning. Now he writes about courage, as he ponders the significance of one of the most important words in his vocabulary – faith. In Paul’s thought faith or commitment is intimately linked with uprightness… [through faith] the way is cleared for the Holy Spirit to create the new life of uprightness…Paul’s pneumatology is intimately connected with his Christology. His thoughts about the Spirit-filled and Spirit-permeated life are dictated by his understanding of the role of Jesus Christ in salvation.” p. 74

“The Greek word that underlies the phrase ‘what they have done’ connotes policy. The term good (agathon) refers to quality performance that in some way benefits others. The term evil (phaulon) denotes that which is substandard. Paul in effect says that Christ will judge whether one’s conduct was first or second class, of value to the public or self-centered. And the body is the instrument for production…In view of their familiarity with the Greco-Roman custom of recognition of public-spirited citizens, Paul’s Corinthians addressees would feel the persuasive force of the apostle’s line of argument, and they would agree, ‘We certainly do not want to appear before Christ as second-class performers.’” p.76

(The Second Epistle to the Corinthians, Paul Barnett): “Paul began to develop his teaching on the believers’ hope of glory at 3:12, as amplified in the ‘we all…are being transformed’ in 3:18. This universal transformation of the messianic people is picked up in their general resurrection (4:14) at which ‘we all’ must be made manifest at the tribunal of Christ (5:10). In a word, 4:16-5:10 engages in theological reflection on his
and their present and future.
Paul sets this out as an overarching eschatological contrast between this age, which is temporary and whose elements are visible, and that age which is to come, which is eternal and whose elements are as yet invisible (4:17-18). The present age ends and the coming age begins at that point when God ‘raises us…and presents us’ to Jesus (4:14), when we will be ‘made manifest’ at his seat of judgment (5:10). The general resurrection/judgment is the point at which the present age ends and the coming age begins. That moment is the hinge around which those eschatological ages turn.
Corresponding to and contingent upon this eschatological dualism is an anthropological dualism. The outer person (exo anthropos), who belongs to the present age, is wasting away, while the inner person (eso anthropos), who belongs to the coming age, is being renewed (4:16). The contrast between the two ages, present and coming, and between the outer and the inner person, is the source of powerful antitheses that characterize the majority of the verses in this passage. Whereas the eschatological dualism hinges on the general
resurrection, the anthropological dualism is created by the eschatological Spirit, whom God gives now as a ‘deposit, guaranteeing what is to come’ (5:5). It is the Spirit who creates the sense that the ‘outer person’ is ‘wasting away’ and the ‘inner person’ is ‘being renewed.’” p. 246

“Consistent with his insistence that, as yet, ‘we are at home in the body’ and therefore ‘are away from the Lord’ Paul canvasses the possibility that death, with its nakedness and bodily divestiture (5:1, 3, 4), could precede the arrival of the new age, though this is not his preference (5:8). It would be ‘far better’ to be ‘clothed upon’ with a heavenly dwelling at the onset of the end time than to be found naked — bodiless — at death, ‘far better’ to be ‘away from the body’ and present ‘with the Lord.’ If the dead will be ‘changed’ by resurrection (cf, I Cor. 15:52), the living — Paul’s concern in this passage — will also be changed at the resurrection by transfiguration, by the superimposition of a dwelling/garment from heaven. Thus while ‘we have a building from God,’ as God’s sure promise to be fulfilled at the general resurrection, we do ‘not yet’ have it in our present experience within this age.
How do we live in the time between ‘now’ and ‘not yet’? Against possible romantic or ethically minimal attitudes from a superspiritual worldview Paul’s attitude toward this ‘in-between’ time is carefully balanced. On
the one hand, there is to be confidence, based on the certainty of God’s purposes for those who are ‘in Christ’ (5:1, 6, 8), Of particular interest are the resumptives in this passage — ‘therefore we do not lose heart’ (4:16), ‘for we know . . .’ (5:1), ‘therefore we are always confident’ (5:6), ‘therefore we make it our goal”— which maintain the trajectory of hope. On the other hand, there is the sober recognition that we ‘groan’ with hope mingled with pain, like a woman in the pain of childbirth (5:2, 4); at the same time, however, God has given the Spirit as a ‘deposit, guaranteeing what is to come’ (5:5), Moreover, Paul sounds the strong ethical note that believers must seek to please the Lord, in light of his judgment tribunal at which all that they have done — whether good or evil — will be brought to light (5:9-10).” p. 248

Textweek.com has some more resources as well:
http://www.textweek.com/pauline/2cor4_5.htm
http://www.textweek.com/pauline/2cor5a.htm