Sacraments and Seasons

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Sacraments and Seasons"

Transcription

1 Sacraments and Seasons Marney A. Wasserman When our children were growing up, we celebrated baptismal anniversaries as a family. There was a special evening meal, baptism stories were retold, prayers were offered for that child, and a small gift was given appropriate to a growing faith. But the part that all of our children looked forward to the most was the water candle. We had one of those old glass candles, popular from the 1960s, that called for filling a glass container about three-quarters full with water, then pouring a layer of oil on top, and floating a candle wick in a clear plastic disc. For each baptismal anniversary, we got out the water candle and allowed the child who was the honoree for the evening to color the water. They would stir in red food coloring, or blue, or some of each. They could use a little or a lot, they could mix colors or swirl them, or they could even decide to leave the water clear (though none of them ever did!). Over the years, there were lots of different experiments, some more successful than others. But all five of us always looked forward to seeing what color the baptism candle would turn out to be. And the colors always added an element of vitality and surprise to our sacramental family festivities. To wonder, as this article proposes to do, about the relationship between sacraments and seasons, is to encounter a whole host of questions about color and texture and meaning, about the words and the signs of our sacramental celebrations, as we enact them through the full cycle of the liturgical calendar. Is the Lord s Supper in any way different when the table is draped in purple instead of in green? Should it be? Does a baptism celebrated on Easter take on a different meaning in congregational experience than one in October? Is that a good thing? Might there be some reason to use a different kind of bread, because it s Advent? Or to set the dates for baptism by the church s seasons, rather than by the family calendars of those seeking to be baptized? We could do some fruitful wondering about these and other related questions. There may be sacramental implications embedded in the church s cycle of seasons that are worth our exploring. We may discover both possibilities and pitfalls in a sacramental practice that varies with the liturgical calendar. What do the church s seasons have to bring to the celebration of its sacraments? Sacraments at the Center These may seem frivolous questions in one sense, or perhaps to some, even blasphemous ones. Why should it matter what color the table cloth is or when the baptism occurs? Baptism and the Lord s Supper are sacraments, instituted by our Lord for the church yesterday, today, and tomorrow. Whether they take place in Advent or in August, they consist of the same basic components bread, wine, water, and words carefully passed on through the ages from one generation to the next. There is an important truth here that we must not lose sight of. We have inherited from the church a sacramental pattern that is important to uphold, Sunday to Sunday and season to season. Still, within that basic pattern there is room for variation in the words of our sacramental prayers, in the ways we serve the bread or pour the water, Marney A. Wasserman is pastor of Trinity Presbyterian Church in Tucson, Arizona. 1

2 in whether or what we sing as we come to the table and the font. If we take care with these things then why not also attend to the sacramental possibilities in the church s liturgical calendar? Color, texture, light, image, movement, melody, singing, rhythm, mood these may be just as powerful conveyors of sacramental meaning as the words we repeat and the elements we use at the font and the table. Our Directory for Worship affirms that, material realities can be a means for expressing suitable praise and thanksgiving to God, 1 and further identifies the richness of color, texture, form, sound, and motion 2 all as elements that contribute to our worship. So as the church gathers around what liturgical scholar Gordon Lathrop has called the central things 3 word, water, wine, and bread perhaps we may be helped to unpack the full range of meanings contained in these central things, through the thoughtful use of some of the other peripheral things that vary with the seasons. Color, texture, light, image, movement, melody, singing, rhythm, mood these may be just as powerful conveyors of sacramental meaning as the words we repeat and the elements we use at the font and the table. Sacramental Seasons The first and most obvious place to start may be to wonder about the notion of sacramental seasons. Are there days and seasons that are particularly appropriate for celebrations of baptism or Eucharist? The Presbyterian Planning Calendar certainly identifies some of these, primarily in the festival seasons of the church year. There are fifteen days marked with either a chalice, a dove, or both pointing us to fourteen dates for the Lord s Supper (eight of them Sundays), and ten for baptism (including seven Sundays). If we explore sources regarding the worship of the early church in its first five centuries, we see a markedly different pattern with the Lord s Supper celebrated much more frequently as an every-sunday celebration (more than fifty-two chalices) and baptism celebrated considerably less frequently, limited to once a year at the Easter Vigil with the possible additions of Pentecost and Epiphany (only one to three doves). The majority of today s Presbyterian churches probably find themselves somewhere in between these two patterns. But it would be fair to say that in our time there has been significant movement toward reclaiming some of the ancient practices. We see the waning of the Christendom church that lasted for sixteen centuries and the emerging of a much more missional church, which means we are seeing the church with new eyes and noticing the astonishing similarities between our own times and the earliest centuries of Christianity. Like our first Christian ancestors, we are a church that finds itself living in an unchurched culture and having to be quite intentional about expressing to others the profound grace of the good news we know, as well as very clear about defining the lifestyle commitments and boundaries that are a part of following the way of Jesus. These far-reaching changes in the course of our history necessarily affect how the church celebrates its central liturgies of Word and sacrament. Even more, they reveal with renewed clarity that the Word and the sacraments are the primary resources God gives the church to respond to new and changing times. Over the past thirty years, a gradual increase has been taking place in the number of Reformed churches that break bread at the Lord s table every Sunday, or are moving in that direction. 4 The church s liturgical seasons provide one helpful way to work toward the goal of more frequent communion. Trying a season of weekly Eucharist for the Sundays from Ash Wednesday to Pentecost, for example, would allow a congregation to experience that pattern for a significant period of time without having to commit to a permanent change. There would be an opportunity for experience-based reflection on such common stumbling blocks as: Won t weekly communion make it less meaningful? Will it make the service too long? Is it really worth all that setting up and cleaning up? Even more basic, a session might begin by using the liturgical calendar and the Revised Common Lectionary to choose the dozen or so Sundays on which the Lord s Supper will be celebrated rather than just going with the first Sunday of the month. In addition to providing a more satisfying connection between Word and table for those Call to Worship 2

3 Sundays, the pattern itself can remind the church that we keep time differently from the world around us. While the most common practice among Presbyterians is still monthly communion, increasing numbers of churches are finding themselves hungry for more more bread and wine, more Christ, more depth, more community, more nourishment for living the good news, more equipping for ministry. As we add more communion Sundays to more of our congregational calendars, we will encounter a growing need and opportunity for thoughtful variety in the ways we celebrate the sacrament and practical simplicity in the ways we serve the bread and wine. At the same time, a smaller number of our congregations has been moving toward reviving an ancient pattern of preparation for baptism called the catechumenate. 5 It is a pattern of apprenticeship, to use a more widely understood term, that invites thoughtful exploration and claiming of a Christian way of believing, along with the disciplined practice of a Christian way of living, all within the context of prayerful accompaniment by the congregation and its members. Because this intentional pattern of preparing for baptism occurs over a period of weeks or months, it raises the question of how baptism best fits into the liturgical year. Specifically, it invites the church to reclaim the ancient Lent-Easter festival season, with its emphasis on our dying and rising with Christ as the primary occasion for baptism and baptismal preparation. With our long-held Reformed tradition of infant baptism, it seems unlikely that Presbyterians will have an interest in celebrating all baptisms on Easter (and we could probably have a lively conversation about whether or not that was a desirable goal!). But let me lift up two connections between the sacrament of baptism and the church s seasons that I believe are worth claiming. First, for the sake of the world we live to serve, the church in our time is badly in need of a way of inviting people into a life with Christ that is intentional and thoughtful and that integrates Christian faith with Christian practice. Allowing the seasons to help us shape a serious pattern of baptismal preparation, for adults seeking to embrace a new faith and a new way of life as followers of Jesus, could be an enormous gift to the world around us. (Imagine beginning even very simply with a companioning program that invites seekers into friendship and structured faith conversations with a church member over a number of weeks. 6 ) Second, allowing the rich sacramental imagery of the Lent-Easter season to infuse all our worship from Ash Wednesday to Pentecost would be a good gift to the church helping us to remember that we are first and foremost a baptized and baptizing community, living out in our own everyday lives the dying and rising of Christ. Seasonal Sacraments As we think about the relationship between the church s sacraments and its seasons, the questions we need to consider run in two directions. We ve looked at the first one: Are there certain days and seasons that may be more appropriate for sacramental celebrations than others? The second one is this: Should our sacramental practices of Baptism and the Lord s Supper vary in any way according to the seasons of the church year in which they occur? We ve considered some of the opportunities in a sacramental view of the seasons; let s wonder now about the possibilities we might find in a seasonal approach to the sacraments. Consider a church where during Lent the entire mood of the liturgy is a deep, penitential purple. It s more than just a change in the color of the chancel paraments and clergy vestments. There are crowns of thorns hanging on the walls of the sanctuary with purple and lavender and gray and black fabrics hanging elegantly down from them. There is a floral arrangement of dried reeds and grasses and prickly brown branches sitting starkly on the bare chancel floor. On the communion table is a plain cotton table cloth of dark purple, overlaid with a coarse burlap runner; on these sit a pottery chalice of wine and a plate of unleavened matzos. The Kyrie Eleison that is sung after the confession of sin is set in a minor key and played in a slow, somber pace. The baptismal font, a wide glass bowl on a simple wooden stand, reveals an abundance of water, and at the bottom of the bowl an assortment of small seashells, which the congregation is invited to take home as an aid in reflecting on the meaning of their baptism. In this sanctuary, Lent is not just visible, it s palpable, visceral, experiential; it s sacramental that is, the people who gather here see it, hear it, breathe it, taste it, feel it, from the opening call to worship to the closing benediction. It s important that we pause long enough here to consider how seasonal variations like the ones 3 Sacraments and Seasons

4 The best possibilities for varying the sacraments seasonally are not in order to add something ornamental on top, but rather to call attention to something essential and already present within. I ve just described function in the experience of a worshiping community. Are they merely decorative? Or do they serve to point us to the deep layers of meaning embedded in our sacraments? I invite you to consider that the reason for engaging variations like this one is not to spice up our otherwise staid and routine sacramental celebrations. Rather, it is to draw out of our sacraments their hidden depths of meaning so that the church may more fully encounter the living Christ at the font and at the table. The best possibilities for varying the sacraments seasonally are not in order to add something ornamental on top, but rather to call attention to something essential and already present within. We re learning that sensory elements can support the spoken word, helping us to more fully hear it, that using all of our senses in the church s worship can enrich the encounter we have with God there. But always, the seasonal elements we employ need to be integral to, and grow out of, and lift up, and serve the central meanings already present in the Word, the water, the wine, and the bread. The way we celebrate the Lord s Supper during the forty days of Lent could help us recall the sacrifice of Christ on the cross, as we seek to embrace our own baptismal dying to self and sin. By contrast, the way we celebrate the Lord s Supper during the fifty days of Easter could help us experience the joy of eating and drinking together with the risen Christ. For example, the way we celebrate the Lord s Supper during the forty days of Lent could help us recall the sacrifice of Christ on the cross, as we seek to embrace our own baptismal dying to self and sin. By contrast, the way we celebrate the Lord s Supper during the fifty days of Easter could help us experience the joy of eating and drinking together with the risen Christ. Crucified Savior, risen Lord one and the same person whom we encounter in different seasons around the same table. If Lent gives us opportunity to dwell on one set of meanings, Easter can give us an opportunity to lift up a different set of meanings, both of them true and the church s faith may be deepened by that enlarged horizon of sacramental experience. Coloring the Lord s Table So how do we do this? How do we set the elements of the holy meal alongside the possibilities of the current liturgical season in such a way that the congregation gathered to eat and drink together on any given Sunday may encounter the living Christ, be transformed by his story, and be encouraged to go deeper in their quest to know and love and serve him? There are, of course, lots of possibilities. We can vary what we say in the Thanksgiving, what we sing during the distribution, how we serve the bread and wine. Will we partake in our pews or by coming forward? kneeling, standing, or sitting? eating and drinking, or dipping bread into cup? Who will serve the people? Who will prepare the table or bake the bread? Where will the seasonal colors be used? How will the table be appointed? the chancel? the sanctuary? And beyond all of these enticing particulars, there remain the guiding questions of pastoral judgment that those who plan for the church s worship must address. How much variation is wise, how much familiarity is needed in the sacramental patterns of a given congregation? How do the spiritual fruits of sacramental participation grow? What follows is simply a start, a handful of suggestions, possibilities, questions to which I encourage you to add your own ideas and to apply the wisdom appropriate to your setting. In the Easter festival cycle, are there ways to make evident the contrast from Lenten fasting to Easter feasting, Lenten simplicity to Easter finery, Lenten silence to Easter singing and alleluias? Call to Worship 4

5 Maybe we could go from burlap and matzos to brocade and bread made from the finest flour, or from a spare earthenware cup and plate for Lent to an extravagant Easter table filled with breads and sheaves of wheat, grapes, and silver goblets. Might it be fruitful to locate the confession of sin after the preaching in Lent, allowing the Word to lead us to the Lord s table in pointed penitence in this season? Or if the font is ordinarily on the chancel, might it be located at the entrance to the sanctuary or on the way to the communion table for Easter a sign of baptismal grace and obedience? Both the Easter cycle and the Lord s Supper help us unpack the central Christian mystery of Christ s death and resurrection. Let me repeat that: They unpack the paschal mystery of Christ s death and resurrection. So some element of contrast between Lent and Easter Eucharist might really help a congregation sense the possibility that our Lord s Supper is not only a solemn Lenten memorial of his death but also a glad Easter celebration of his resurrection. Rich and sensory seasonal details might even begin to give our churches permission to actually experience the Lord s Supper as the joyful feast of the people of God! 7 Quiet Lenten meditation as the communion trays are passed down the pews might give way to Easter dancing and singing in the aisles as we come forward to eat and drink at the Lord s table. On the fiftieth day of Easter, we might get playful with a bit of Spirit-filled chaos praying the Lord s Prayer in several different languages simultaneously or representing a Pentecost diversity of cultures in the breads on the communion table and the fabrics gracing the sanctuary. Singing is probably the best way to get to the holy joy of the Easter table it s not frivolity or gaiety but deep, resounding, unstoppable, shared joy that we Both the Easter cycle and the Lord s Supper help us unpack the central Christian mystery of Christ s death and resurrection.... So some element of contrast between Lent and Easter Eucharist might really help a congregation sense the possibility that our Lord s Supper is not only a solemn Lenten memorial of his death but also a glad Easter celebration of his resurrection. Maybe Advent is an especially appropriate time to bring to the Lord s table food offerings for the poor alongside the bread and wine for communion. need to sing together from Easter to Pentecost as we invite all who worship with us to meet the crucified and risen Christ in his church! The Christmas cycle points us to the other central Christian mystery, the mystery of incarnation a God who is with us and for us and dwells among us. During Advent, we experience Immanuel primarily in absence, in the pain and sinfulness of a broken world, in the longing for peace of peoples both ancient and contemporary, for a world that s new and whole and good and right. So maybe we could bake an Advent communion bread with milk and honey, to give God s people a sweet and lingering taste of the promised land for which we hope. Or maybe Advent is an especially appropriate time to bring to the Lord s table food offerings for the poor alongside the bread and wine for communion, or to hold an agape feast after worship is over so the abundance we know at the Lord s table can be spread before the hungry in our communities. And if there is ever a good time for that ritually redundant practice of holding the bread until all have been served, perhaps it s in Advent, when the act of waiting upon one another to eat may serve to remind us of the kingdom of God for which the world still waits. While we re at it, maybe we also could wait to indulge the bright and joyous carols of Christmas until we have sung, in solidarity with a hurting world, the deep and desperate longing of Advent. In Advent, the session might invite the church s youngest members to serve the bread and wine, 8 acknowledging that God s reign turns world orders upside down and shows itself when a little child shall lead them. 9 And during the twelve days of Christmas, perhaps the almost excruciating intimacy of a God who is born among us could be experienced by gathering around 5 Sacraments and Seasons

6 the Lord s table in intimate groups of six or eight, passing loaf and cup from hand to hand, feeding and blessing one another by name. Throughout the Advent-Christmas-Epiphany season, can we pay special attention to the suffering of the world in our prayers? Might we invite soldiers home on furlough to help us pray for peace around Christ s table? a peace for which surely they long, in ways the rest of us can scarcely imagine. Even in the long, green time between festival seasons there is room for variation. Only here, instead of marking the place of a particular season in the year, we are attending to the place of Sunday as the first day in the week. In ordinary time, the distinctive character of a particular Sunday will be defined more by the Scripture texts that are read than by the themes of a season. So the Great Thanksgiving may appropriately make use of images from the day s readings, helping to tie Word and sacrament together; and preaching can point to the Lord s table, which unites us. The summer Sundays after Pentecost may be slower times in the church s life, when families could be given an opportunity to bake the bread, or prepare the table, or serve the elements. And the congregation can be encouraged to enjoy the steadiness of familiar sacramental patterns and rest into them, confident of the God they reveal. Getting Sunday Wet Getting the significance of Sunday front and center is important for the ways we set both sacraments alongside the Word of God in our weekly worship. The Lord s Day is the basic building block of the church year. Before there was Christmas or Lent or even Easter in the annual cycle of the church s seasons, there was Sunday the first day of the week, the day to celebrate the Lord s resurrection by gathering at the table with the risen Lord. That s why it makes sense to get Word and table back together on each Lord s Day. That also explains why we need the font visible and full of water not just on the occasional Sunday we have someone to baptize, but on every Sunday so that as we gather week by week to hear the Word and break the bread, we also see clearly before us our baptismal identity as the church and our mission as a baptizing community. The sacrament of baptism may be celebrated infrequently, but the theology and ecclesiology of baptism undergird everything else we do on Sunday mornings. In the ancient church, the Lord s Supper itself functioned as a reminder of baptism it was celebrated weekly as the repeatable part of baptism. 10 These days, on every Sunday we too need regular reminding that whether we are baptizing, the baptismal identity and vocation of the church are central to the Lord s Day. It is important that we get Sunday wet! In practice then, how do we do that? What do we need to consider as we think about church seasons and the sacrament of baptism? We ve already seen that we might encourage at least some of those requesting baptism to wait for a Lent-Easter season and schedule our baptismal preparation opportunities during that segment of the church year. And we may emphasize more broadly in our Lent-Easter liturgy and preaching, the baptismal identity and calling of the church. But even when we ve done that, we will still (thankfully!) have baptisms to celebrate at other times and plenty of additional Sundays when the scriptural texts for worship prompt us to reflect on the baptized life. What else can we do, Sunday to Sunday and season to season, to keep Sunday linked to the missional promise and challenge of our common baptism? Let me offer a start at just two possible answers to that question, both of which I have explored more fully in another article published in Call to Worship. 11 First, parts of the weekly Service for the Lord s Day may be fruitfully led from the font, making use of the water. Just as it is appropriate to read Scripture and preach from the pulpit or to Before there was Christmas or Lent or even Easter in the annual cycle of the church s seasons, there was Sunday the first day of the week, the day to celebrate the Lord s resurrection by gathering at the table with the risen Lord. That s why it makes sense to get Word and table back together on each Lord s Day. Call to Worship 6

7 offer prayers of thanksgiving and intercession from the Lord s table, it makes sense to lead the liturgy of confession from the font, lifting or pouring water so the community can see and hear it. This weekly act of confessing our sin and hearing the assurance of God s grace sounds a clear echo back to our baptism, when we first received this sign of divine forgiveness, when we were washed in the waters of grace and anointed for a lifetime of service. Other good possibilities include leading the invitation to discipleship, or the charge from the font, or even the entire gathering rite so that the service itself moves from font to pulpit to table and back again before we are sent out once more to serve the world. From season to season, leading such weekly acts While we are baptized only once, we pass through many other occasions that are baptismal that is, they invite us to re-engage our baptismal identity and commitments. Confirmation, reaffirmation of faith, transfer of membership, ordination to church office, installation, commissioning for service in church or community. of worship from the water in our midst can help a congregation stay in touch with the centrality and importance of baptism for daily living as followers of Jesus. Second, it s important to recognize that while we are baptized only once, we pass through many other occasions that are baptismal that is, they invite us to re-engage our baptismal identity and commitments. Confirmation, reaffirmation of faith, transfer of membership, ordination to church We miss an important opportunity if we fail to identify the relationship to baptism that is inherent here. office, installation, commissioning for service in church or community all these are occasions in which baptized disciples of Jesus stand before the community of faith to make public commitments to new ministries and maturing faith. We miss an important opportunity if we fail to identify the relationship to baptism that is inherent here. Reformed liturgies for each of these occasions, in the Book of Common Worship (1993) and the Book of Occasional Services (1999), make that baptismal connection explicit in the prayers. Even better, they are designed to be conducted at the font so that the centrality of baptism for Christian living is not only verbal, but visible and embodied. Similarly, we might consider that wedding vows could be spoken at the font, recalling the primary covenant with God that is the foundation for the marital covenant. And at funerals, the church may provide a white pall to drape the casket and pray the prayer commending to God one whose baptism is now complete in We might consider that wedding vows could be spoken at the font, recalling the primary covenant with God that is the foundation for the marital covenant. And at funerals, the church may provide a white pall to drape the casket and pray the prayer commending to God one whose baptism is now complete in death. 12 At every turn, the baptismal possibilities embedded in our worship emerge. death. 12 At every turn, the baptismal possibilities embedded in our worship emerge. All these acts, which occur at significant transition points in the life of the church and the lives of its members, are fundamentally baptismal. They grow out of and connect us back to the life-defining event of our baptism into Christ and his church; and they invite us to live our baptism day-by-day and year-by-year as disciples following the way of Jesus. When these acts of worship are conducted from the font and the 7 Sacraments and Seasons

8 connections are made that link them to baptism, then the whole church is helped to see itself as a baptized and baptizing community a people gathered, formed, and equipped by our baptism to serve the world in Christ s name. Letting the seasons shape our sacramental life is a matter of significance and seriousness for the church. When we rediscover in practice the critical and central link between the sacraments of baptism and Eucharist and the paschal season of Lent- Easter-Pentecost, then the very identity and mission of the church is reoriented to the understanding that we are a resurrection people, nurtured in gratitude at a table of abundance and joy a people who in the end, as John Burkhart says so pointedly, must baptize or die. 13 When we can engage in thoughtful, careful, fresh, beautiful, faithful variation of the peripheral things that come and go with the church s seasons, then we can help people experience the wide and deep range of meanings that lay waiting to be unpacked in the sacramental things at the center of our common life. The church s seasons give us room to shape the liturgy of Word and sacrament in ways that help worshiping congregations taste and see the goodness of God in all its fullness. This is experiential, embodied meaning that engages all the human senses in the service of a sacramental encounter with God that is located in the present tense. We must look back to the past, for sure, but we need deeply to encounter the risen Christ made known among us in the here and now in water and words, wine and bread, in all the rich color and imagery and texture and light and sound and When these acts of worship are conducted from the font and the connections are made that link them to baptism, then the whole church is helped to see itself as a baptized and baptizing community a people gathered, formed, and equipped by our baptism to serve the world in Christ s name. taste of the church s revolving seasons so that we may ultimately be drawn forward in hope toward a future that is everything our loving God promises it will be not just for us but for the whole world. We affirmed at the beginning that the sacraments are central to our life together and that the seasons provide the church not just a chance to change the décor, but a vital opportunity to draw out of the sacraments their various layers of Christian meaning. Perhaps we can go even a step further and say that the calendar of the church s seasons, along with the cycle of Scripture readings from the Revised Common Lectionary that supports it are primary tools for the renewal of sacramental practice in the church. Seasonal variation of sacramental practice offers a way of renewing our central signs, for the present time in the life of the church that avoids the twin difficulties of sacraments made dull and routine, on the one hand, by unbending sameness, and on the other hand, of sacraments obscured by so many overlays of trite and reckless experimentation that they become unmoored from the Word in which they are founded. In this missional time of the church, it is important that we stay rooted in the formative patterns of the ancient church while at the same time inviting passionate engagement with the faith in new ways for a new generation of believers. The church s seasons can help us enlarge our understanding of the central mysteries of the Christian faith and deepen our sacramental practice in ways that help make Christ real and present to those who come hungry and thirsty and longing for a new life. Call to Worship 8

9 Notes 1. Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), The Constitution of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), Part II, Book of Order, (Louisville: Office of the General Assembly, 2007), W Book of Order, W Gordon Lathrop, What Are the Essentials of Christian Worship? (Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress, 1994). See pages 7 and 26 among others. This essay presents in summary form the understandings more fully articulated in Lathrop s Holy Things: A Liturgical Theology (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1993). 4. To learn about other Presbyterian congregations pursuing this path, contact the Office of Theology Worship and Education, or visit the website for Invitation to Christ: Font and Table ( org/sacraments). Resources available through this site include the Rev. Fred Anderson s set of four articles entitled Moving Toward Every Sunday Communion, which also was published in the newsletter of the Association for Reformed & Liturgical Worship. See also the article by Chip Andrus in Call to Worship, Vol (summer 2009). 5. A list of Presbyterian congregations involved in the original Catechumenate Project can be obtained from the Office of Theology Worship and Education in Louisville, Kentucky. 6. In the congregation I serve, we have designed a program called Compañeros, which equips members with eight weeks of conversation starters on such topics as prayer, Scripture, forgiveness, gratitude, vocation, and service. I m happy to share a copy with interested colleagues in ministry. Contact me at marneywass@gmail.com. 7. Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), Book of Common Worship (Louisville: Westminster/John Knox Press, 1993), Book of Order, W d. 9. Isaiah 11: Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), Invitation to Christ Font and Table: A Guide to Sacramental Practices (Louisville: Office of Theology & Worship, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), 2006), Marney A. Wasserman, Leading from Pulpit, Font & Table, Call to Worship: Liturgy, Music, Preaching, and the Arts (40.4), Book of Common Worship, John Burkhart, Worship: A Searching Examination of the Liturgical Experience (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1982), Sacraments and Seasons

Serving Holy Communion

Serving Holy Communion Serving Holy Communion Revised by the Worship Working Group in April 2015 (A paper prepared by the Assembly Commission on Liturgy in April 1984 and updated in 1999.) In the two Uniting Church Services

More information

The following moments of the liturgy are to be carefully prepared. 1. The procession of ministers, candidates, and elements of the celebration.

The following moments of the liturgy are to be carefully prepared. 1. The procession of ministers, candidates, and elements of the celebration. RITE OF CONFIRMATION (Liturgical Guidelines) The confirmation liturgy marks one stage of initiation and celebrates the candidates' gradual and continuing growth into the Eucharistic community. Confirmation

More information

Preparing for The Triduum

Preparing for The Triduum Preparing for The Triduum Holy Thursday As we prepare to celebrate this wonderful liturgy we begin by entering into a new movement. As this liturgy begins, Lent has ended. Our 40 days of Lent helped us

More information

PREFACE. Let us hear the Word of God as it speaks to us as individuals and as the Unity of the faithful:

PREFACE. Let us hear the Word of God as it speaks to us as individuals and as the Unity of the faithful: PREFACE The lectionary which follows contains much that is old and much that is new, much that reflects the collective wisdom of the church universal, and much that flows from our particular spiritual

More information

St. Mark s Lutheran Church Growing Together in Christ. Holy Communion Liturgy Sundays of Lent

St. Mark s Lutheran Church Growing Together in Christ. Holy Communion Liturgy Sundays of Lent St. Mark s Lutheran Church Growing Together in Christ INVITATION TO LENT Friends in Christ, with the whole church we have entered the time of remembering Jesus' passover from death to life, through which

More information

Year Five Religion - May We Be One

Year Five Religion - May We Be One Year Five Religion - May We Be One GENERAL CATEGORY SUB-CATEGORY KEY LEARNER OUTCOME CRITERIA Unit One The Church Proclaims the Good News We are God s Work of Art Explains how community is formed by the

More information

Confirmation Make-up Lesson: Please read, study and prepare a two page essay including and covering the statements following the teaching.

Confirmation Make-up Lesson: Please read, study and prepare a two page essay including and covering the statements following the teaching. Confirmation Make-up Lesson: Please read, study and prepare a two page essay including and covering the statements following the teaching. THE SACRAMENTS OF INITIATION The Sacraments of Initiation make

More information

General Approaches to Classroom Prayer

General Approaches to Classroom Prayer General Approaches to Classroom Prayer For Secondary Schools 1. USE THE LITURGICAL SEASONS OF THE CHURCH Decorate rooms in liturgical colours of each season, building into ritual when possible. You can

More information

Believe Chapter 5: Identity in Christ

Believe Chapter 5: Identity in Christ Key Verse: Yet to all who did receive him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God. John 1:12 (NIV) The word right (exousia) may be misleading since it suggests a

More information

Matthew 25:31-46 Isaiah 58:1-14 October 23, 2016 Preached by Philip Gladden at the Wallace Presbyterian Church, Wallace, NC

Matthew 25:31-46 Isaiah 58:1-14 October 23, 2016 Preached by Philip Gladden at the Wallace Presbyterian Church, Wallace, NC Matthew 25:31-46 Isaiah 58:1-14 October 23, 2016 Preached by Philip Gladden at the Wallace Presbyterian Church, Wallace, NC The Stewardship of All of Life Worship & Works Let us pray: Let the words of

More information

The Ministry of SERVER. Saint Mary Church Solon, Iowa

The Ministry of SERVER. Saint Mary Church Solon, Iowa The Ministry of SERVER Saint Mary Church Solon, Iowa October 2011 THE MINISTRY OF SERVER God calls everyone in the Church to use the special gifts he has given with joy and generosity. I thank you very

More information

FEBRUARY SACRAMENT OF EUCHARIST CURRICULUM CHART. Celebrate and Remember Eucharist, Published by Saint Mary s Press

FEBRUARY SACRAMENT OF EUCHARIST CURRICULUM CHART. Celebrate and Remember Eucharist, Published by Saint Mary s Press SACRAMENT OF EUCHARIST CURRICULUM CHART Celebrate and Remember Eucharist, Published by Saint Mary s Press FEBRUARY Celebrate and Remember Eucharist, Published by Saint Mary s Press MONTH CHAPTER TITLE

More information

God s Gift Intermediate: Reconciliation and Eucharist

God s Gift Intermediate: Reconciliation and Eucharist 1 Jesus Offers Us His Saving Grace God promises to send us a Savior. Identify ways to grow closer to God. Understand that grace is a gift from God. Explain the impact of Original Sin. Identify Mary s role

More information

Glory to God. the presbyterian leader.com. Introducing the New Hymnal. the presbyterian hymnal. Introduction. Old, New, Borrowed, Blue

Glory to God. the presbyterian leader.com. Introducing the New Hymnal. the presbyterian hymnal. Introduction. Old, New, Borrowed, Blue Introducing the New Hymnal Glory to God the presbyterian hymnal the presbyterian leader.com This is one in a series of articles introducing Glory to God, the new Presbyterian hymnal. Introduction Glory

More information

The Easter Vigil. THE LIGHTING OF THE FIRE The people gather in the dark. The following words are spoken.

The Easter Vigil. THE LIGHTING OF THE FIRE The people gather in the dark. The following words are spoken. The Easter Vigil THE LIGHTING OF THE FIRE The people gather in the dark. The following words are spoken. Brothers and sisters! We have gathered in the darkness of the night because the Lord willingly entered

More information

LENT AND EASTER GUIDELINES

LENT AND EASTER GUIDELINES LENT AND EASTER GUIDELINES - 2018 The Lent and Easter regulations are provided here for use during Lent and the Easter Triduum. ASH WEDNESDAY BLESSING AND DISTRIBUTION OF ASHES The blessing and imposition

More information

Worship at St. Paul s

Worship at St. Paul s Items in our Chapel Gospel Book Worship at St. Paul s Burse and Veil that covers the chalice and paten. The pulpit in the chapel where the readings are proclaimed. This book is designed to help you follow

More information

Chapel in the Pines Presbyterian Church North Chatham County, North Carolina

Chapel in the Pines Presbyterian Church North Chatham County, North Carolina A Sample of Our Worship Bulletin with Explanatory Notes Chapel in the Pines Presbyterian Church North Chatham County, North Carolina Reformation Sunday Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time October 25, 2009

More information

Episcopal Worship PARTICIPANTS GUIDE SEGMENT 2: EPISCOPAL WORSHIP

Episcopal Worship PARTICIPANTS GUIDE SEGMENT 2: EPISCOPAL WORSHIP Episcopal Worship SEGMENT 2: EPISCOPAL WORSHIP PARTICIPANTS GUIDE The Book of Common Prayer is our guide to worship. The two Great Sacraments, Baptism and Holy Communion, form the basis of our worship

More information

Lesson 1: God s Plan for All Creation

Lesson 1: God s Plan for All Creation 2017-2018 Grade 5 DATE LESSON FAITH OBJECTIVES September 27 Week 1 Family Prayer in Church followed by October 4 Week 2 In Opening Lesson (in the classrooms) Lesson 1: God s Plan for All Creation Introduction

More information

Objectives for Kindergarten. Creed (K) The learner will be able to understand that God made all things because God loves us. Circle of Grace Lesson 2

Objectives for Kindergarten. Creed (K) The learner will be able to understand that God made all things because God loves us. Circle of Grace Lesson 2 Objectives for Kindergarten Creed (K) all things are gifts of God. Bible tells us about creation, the life of Jesus, and that caring for others is living God's love. God made all things because God loves

More information

HOLY COMMUNION OUTSIDE OF MASS

HOLY COMMUNION OUTSIDE OF MASS HOLY COMMUNION OUTSIDE OF MASS AND THE ROMAN MISSAL Table of Contents Highlights of Revisions 1 Amended Rite of Distributing Holy Communion Outside Mass with the Celebration of the Word of God 2 Amended

More information

Saint Robert Bellarmine Parish. Celebrates the Sacred Triduum. March 28 31, 2013

Saint Robert Bellarmine Parish. Celebrates the Sacred Triduum. March 28 31, 2013 Saint Robert Bellarmine Parish Celebrates the Sacred Triduum March 28 31, 2013 THE SACRED TRIDUUM The Season of Lent ends quietly at sunset on Holy Thursday. With the Gathering Rite of the Mass of the

More information

CONFIRMATION. The Gathering of God s People

CONFIRMATION. The Gathering of God s People The Gathering of God s People CONFIRMATION THE GREETING The bishop greets the people in these or other suitable words: Grace, mercy and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ be with you all

More information

Celebrating the Paschal Mystery of Christ. Liturgy Sacraments. Chapter 14 US Catechism of the Catholic Church

Celebrating the Paschal Mystery of Christ. Liturgy Sacraments. Chapter 14 US Catechism of the Catholic Church Celebrating the Paschal Mystery of Christ Liturgy Sacraments Chapter 14 US Catechism of the Catholic Church What is Liturgy? CCC 1069 The word liturgy (Greek term liturgia) originally meant a public work

More information

Services for a New Beginning

Services for a New Beginning CHAPTER 22 Services for a New Beginning Rites marking transition into stages of the catechumenal process A Service of Welcome and Admission of Catechumens The admission of catechumens may take place at

More information

Maundy Thursday April 2, 2015

Maundy Thursday April 2, 2015 Maundy Thursday April 2, 2015 Maundy Thursday is the beginning of the Three Days -- the ancient observance of the mystery of our salvation, which plunges the faithful into the death of Jesus and brings

More information

Glossary of Terms. A S P E R G I L : The sprinkler, used to bless the congregation and sacred objects with Holy Water.

Glossary of Terms. A S P E R G I L : The sprinkler, used to bless the congregation and sacred objects with Holy Water. Glossary of Terms A B L U T I O N : The cleaning of the chalice and paten after Communion. A D V E N T : The four weeks before Christmas which represent the many centuries of waiting for the coming of

More information

Liturgical Year & Lectionary

Liturgical Year & Lectionary The Spirit of the Lord is upon me. He has sent me to proclaim a year acceptable to the Lord. Lk 4:18-19 Beginning with the Easter Triduum as its source of light, the new age of the Resurrection fills the

More information

Saint Mary First Eucharist Church Search

Saint Mary First Eucharist Church Search Saint Mary First Eucharist Church Search The Church will be set up for you to complete the booklet between: Monday, until Saturday,. The church is opened from 6:30 am until 7:00 pm. The booklet is to be

More information

A GUIDE TO THE SERVICE OF HOLY COMMUNION

A GUIDE TO THE SERVICE OF HOLY COMMUNION BEFORE THE SERVICE A GUIDE TO THE SERVICE OF HOLY COMMUNION From A Prayer Book for Australia (1995) The Anglican Church of Australia You will have been handed a pew slip (usually a single A4 sheet of paper

More information

LENT AND EASTER GUIDELINES

LENT AND EASTER GUIDELINES LENT AND EASTER GUIDELINES - 2019 The Lent and Easter regulations are provided here for use during Lent and the Easter Triduum. ASH WEDNESDAY BLESSING AND DISTRIBUTION OF ASHES The blessing and imposition

More information

Pilgrim Lutheran Church February 25/26, 2017

Pilgrim Lutheran Church February 25/26, 2017 Pilgrim Lutheran Church February 25/26, 2017 Mission Statement Gathering to worship, Growing as Disciples, Loving God s people. Vision Statement We are a people working toward putting Christ first in our

More information

Maundy Thursday. March 24, 2016

Maundy Thursday. March 24, 2016 Maundy Thursday March 24, 2016 Maundy Thursday is the beginning of the Three Days -- the ancient observance of the mystery of our salvation, which plunges the faithful into the death of Jesus and brings

More information

He is Risen! Easter Sunrise Service. March 27, Cobblestone Court Spring Mills, PA Phone:

He is Risen! Easter Sunrise Service. March 27, Cobblestone Court Spring Mills, PA Phone: He is Risen! Easter Sunrise Service March 27, 2016 119 Cobblestone Court Spring Mills, PA 16875 Phone: 422-8417 www.newhopespringmills.org Peace be to you We are glad you re with us this morning. As we

More information

Preparing for the Reaffirmation of Baptismal Vows Our Diocesan process, seeking to prepare Christians for a Reaffirmation of their Baptismal Vows

Preparing for the Reaffirmation of Baptismal Vows Our Diocesan process, seeking to prepare Christians for a Reaffirmation of their Baptismal Vows Preparing for the Reaffirmation of Baptismal Vows Our Diocesan process, seeking to prepare Christians for a Reaffirmation of their Baptismal Vows through the rites of Confirmation, Reception, & Reaffirmation

More information

FONT OF REBIRTH. World Library Publications

FONT OF REBIRTH. World Library Publications Table of Contents Altar Table... 1 Altar Stone... 2 Cross & Crucifix... 3 INRI... 4 Tabernacle... 5 Chalice & Host... 6 Presider s Chair... 7 Pulpit... 8 Vestments... 9 Sacred Vessels... 10 Liturgical

More information

Year B Music

Year B Music Year B 2008-2009 Music First Sunday of Advent Gathering: Candles of Advent Psalm 80: Lord, Make Us Turn to You Preparation of the Gifts: O Come, O Come Emmanuel Hymn of Praise: Awake to the Day Second

More information

HOLY BAPTISM TWO IN HOLY COMMUNION TWO

HOLY BAPTISM TWO IN HOLY COMMUNION TWO HOLY BAPTISM TWO IN HOLY COMMUNION TWO Pastoral Introduction Baptism marks the beginning of a journey with God which continues for the rest of our lives, the first step in response to God s love. For all

More information

THE ORDER OF CONFIRMATION

THE ORDER OF CONFIRMATION THE ORDER OF CONFIRMATION LITURGICAL GUIDELINES The following pages present some directives and helpful information for those responsible for the planning of a parish celebration of the Order of Confirmation.

More information

Liturgy. Helping Children. Liturgy! Understand. and Celebrate

Liturgy. Helping Children. Liturgy! Understand. and Celebrate Liturgy Helping Children Understand and Celebrate Liturgy! BRAIN DUMP Use this space to write down everything that is on your mind Shopping lists, worries, people you are praying for.keep writing for the

More information

The Rite of Installation of Our Pastor On the Feast of the Baptism of Our Lord. January 11, :00 PM

The Rite of Installation of Our Pastor On the Feast of the Baptism of Our Lord. January 11, :00 PM The Rite of Installation of Our Pastor On the Feast of the Baptism of Our Lord January 11, 2015 3:00 PM 1 The Congregation is asked to remain silent during the prelude as a time of prayer and meditation.

More information

He is Risen! Easter Sunrise Service April 5, 2015

He is Risen! Easter Sunrise Service April 5, 2015 He is Risen! Easter Sunrise Service April 5, 2015 119 Cobblestone Court Spring Mills, PA 16875 Phone: 422-8417 www.newhopespringmills.org 2 (Please Gather Outside Weather Permitting) THE CONGREGATION GATHERS

More information

Annotated Holy Eucharist

Annotated Holy Eucharist Seasons of the Church Year During the year, we take a deeper look at different understandings of God and his son Jesus Christ that we learn in scripture. The seasons of the church year are helpful ways

More information

THE SERVICES OF THE BAPTISMAL COVENANT IN THE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

THE SERVICES OF THE BAPTISMAL COVENANT IN THE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH THE SERVICES OF THE BAPTISMAL COVENANT IN THE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH AS REVISED TO ALIGN WITH THE 2008 BOOK OF DISCIPLINE AND BOOK OF RESOLUTIONS Copyright 2009 The United Methodist Publishing House Nashville,

More information

Guidelines for Catechesis of Children Grades 3 to 5

Guidelines for Catechesis of Children Grades 3 to 5 Guidelines for Catechesis of Children Grades 3 to 5 Stages of Development of the Child Grades 3-5 and Implications for Catechesis A GRADE 3-5 CHILD THE CATECHIST possesses high energy identifies himself/herself

More information

BULLETIN SHORTS Dedication of a Church and an Altar page 1 Bulletin Shorts for the Dedication of a Church and an Altar -- Eliot Kapitan TABLE OF CONTENTS The rite of dedication of a new church is a significant

More information

CHURCH ASCENSION ALTAR SERVER HANDBOOK OF THE SACRARIUM

CHURCH ASCENSION ALTAR SERVER HANDBOOK OF THE SACRARIUM SACRARIUM SACRISTY SANCTUARY SANCTUARY LAMP STOLE Covered sink in the sacristy used only for washing the sacred vessels and disposing of holy materials. The room behind the sanctuary where the liturgical

More information

Guidelines for an Installation/Ordination Service in Baltimore Presbytery

Guidelines for an Installation/Ordination Service in Baltimore Presbytery Guidelines for an Installation/Ordination Service in Baltimore Presbytery Installation Process For Minister to be installed 1. The Minister sets a date and time for the installation. This is done in consultation

More information

The Sacrament of the Eucharist What Has Happened to My Devotion? by Thomas Richstatter, O.F.M.

The Sacrament of the Eucharist What Has Happened to My Devotion? by Thomas Richstatter, O.F.M. The Sacrament of the Eucharist What Has Happened to My Devotion? by Thomas Richstatter, O.F.M. What happened to Benediction, kneeling for Communion, and silence in church? I have been going to Mass and

More information

Mary, Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community Interesting, Inviting, Involving, Inspiring

Mary, Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community Interesting, Inviting, Involving, Inspiring Mary, Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community Interesting, Inviting, Involving, Inspiring 1 Vigil of Palm Sunday March 24, 2018 Presiders: Kathryn Shea ARCWP and Lee Breyer Procession Minister: Seth

More information

The Directory for Worship: A Study Guide for the Proposed Revision

The Directory for Worship: A Study Guide for the Proposed Revision The Directory for Worship: A Study Guide for the Proposed Revision This study guide is designed to facilitate understanding and discussion of the proposed revision to the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Directory

More information

Lent: becoming an ambassador of mercy

Lent: becoming an ambassador of mercy Lent: becoming an ambassador of mercy February 21, 2016 Ignite Catechist and Peer Lesson Plan OBJECTIVES For the teens to grow in understanding and faith about the meaning of Lent For the teens to incorporate

More information

Chapter 8 The Church Sanctifying - Worship

Chapter 8 The Church Sanctifying - Worship Chapter 8 The Church Sanctifying - Worship Review from Last Week: Chapter 7 : Authority in the Church Teaching and Obedience How does the Church heal its members today? The 7 Sacraments Baptism, Confession,

More information

MAUNDY THURSDAY - NOTES AND RESOURCES

MAUNDY THURSDAY - NOTES AND RESOURCES INTRODUCTORY REMARKS The service on Maundy Thursday is the first part of the Three Days to Easter (Triduum) celebration. Although communion services in the evening are now commonplace, for many hundreds

More information

Gathering of the Community : Seasonal Option for Lent (Option 1)

Gathering of the Community : Seasonal Option for Lent (Option 1) Gathering Rites for the Paschal Cycle Approved by the Council of General Synod for Trial Use and Evaluation, November 2018 FWM continues to act on the conviction that a robust approach to Christian Initiation

More information

Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit

Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit 3461 Cedar Crest Blvd. EMAIL Info@holyspirit-emmaus.org Emmaus, PA 18049-1599 www.lchsemmaus.org PHONE 610.967.2220 www.facebook.com/lchsemmaus FAX 610.966.3021 Second

More information

Lent & Holy Week 2017

Lent & Holy Week 2017 St. John s Episcopal Church A Guide to Lent & Holy Week 2017 A GUIDE TO LENT & HOLY WEEK 2017 1 2 A GUIDE TO LENT & HOLY WEEK 2017 TABLE OF CONTENTS A Letter from the Rector 3 2017 Lenten Meditation Guide

More information

The Eucharist during Lent

The Eucharist during Lent The Eucharist during Lent 1 An Introduction to the Season Lent may originally followed directly on from Epiphany, just as Jesus time in the wilderness followed immediately on his baptism, but it soon became

More information

Religion Standards Pre-K through 8 th Grade

Religion Standards Pre-K through 8 th Grade Religion Standards Pre-K through 8 th Grade 1615 West Washington Street Springfield, IL 62702 www.dio.org/catechesis April 2014 2 Table of Contents by Grade Pre-K / Kindergarten...7 STRAND 1: Sacred Scripture...8

More information

CONFIRMATION. The Gathering of God s People

CONFIRMATION. The Gathering of God s People The Gathering of God s People CONFIRMATION THE GREETING The bishop greets the people in these or other suitable words: Grace, mercy and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ be with you all

More information

Liturgy. The Entrance Rite The Congregation Gathers Prelude. On the People of God

Liturgy. The Entrance Rite The Congregation Gathers Prelude. On the People of God Liturgy The Entrance Rite The Congregation Gathers Prelude On the People of God It is important to remember that the whole congregation worships together and that includes the liturgical ministers that

More information

Why is there a pink candle in the Advent wreath?

Why is there a pink candle in the Advent wreath? Why is there a pink candle in the Advent wreath? Written by Jonathon Powers Contact Us Rev. Julie Love, Director of Connectional Ministries jlove@kyumc.org Tami Coleman, Associate Director of Connectional

More information

Religion Curriculum. Pre-Kindergarten

Religion Curriculum. Pre-Kindergarten Religion Curriculum Pre-Kindergarten By the end of Pre-Kindergarten, students will develop an understating of the learning outcomes in the following areas: knowledge of faith, sacred scriptures, liturgy

More information

Holy Baptism is appropriately administered within the Eucharist as the chief service on a Sunday or other feast.

Holy Baptism is appropriately administered within the Eucharist as the chief service on a Sunday or other feast. Holy Baptism Concerning the Service Holy Baptism is full initiation by water and the Holy Spirit into Christ s Body the Church. The bond which God establishes in Baptism is indissoluble. Holy Baptism is

More information

SHORTER CHRISTIAN PRAYER

SHORTER CHRISTIAN PRAYER SHORTER CHRISTIAN PRAYER The Four-Week Psalter of the Liturgy of the Hours Containing MORNING PRAYER AND EVENING PRAYER With Selections for the Entire Year Approved for Use in the Dioceses of the United

More information

SESSION AND THE DIRECTORY OF WORSHIP Presbytery of Detroit Clerk Training January 26, 2013 CHAPTER I. THE DYNAMICS OF CHRISTIAN WORSHIP

SESSION AND THE DIRECTORY OF WORSHIP Presbytery of Detroit Clerk Training January 26, 2013 CHAPTER I. THE DYNAMICS OF CHRISTIAN WORSHIP 1 SESSION AND THE DIRECTORY OF WORSHIP Presbytery of Detroit Clerk Training January 26, 2013 W-1.0000 CHAPTER I. THE DYNAMICS OF CHRISTIAN WORSHIP W-1.4004 Session In a particular church, the session is

More information

Voicing and Enacting the Baptismal Covenant

Voicing and Enacting the Baptismal Covenant Voicing and Enacting the Baptismal Covenant As persons come forward, an appropriate baptismal or confirmation hymn may be sung. See suggestions in The United Methodist Hymnal and The United Methodist Book

More information

LENT/EASTER SEASON. February 22, March 1, 2015

LENT/EASTER SEASON. February 22, March 1, 2015 February 22, 2015 At its root, Lent is a name for Spring, and is a 40-day period of preparation for Easter Sunday and one of the major liturgical seasons of the Catholic Church. A penitential season marked

More information

HOLY BAPTISM TWO. Holy Baptism Two when used as a stand alone service 357

HOLY BAPTISM TWO. Holy Baptism Two when used as a stand alone service 357 HOLY BAPTISM TWO Pastoral Introduction Baptism marks the beginning of a journey with God which continues for the rest of our lives, the first step in response to God s love. For all involved, particularly

More information

Jesus Offers Us His Saving Grace

Jesus Offers Us His Saving Grace Chapter 1 Jesus Offers Us His Saving Grace Keep these ideas in mind as you study Chapter 1. Joseph and Mary knew that God would send a Savior. PAGE 1 Jesus died so we could receive salvation. Jesus reconciled

More information

St Mark s Lutheran Church Growing Together in Christ

St Mark s Lutheran Church Growing Together in Christ St Mark s Lutheran Church Growing Together in Christ INVITATION TO LENT Friends in Christ, with the whole church we have entered the time of remembering Jesus' passover from death to life, through which

More information

FIRST EUCHARIST RETREAT OUTLINE

FIRST EUCHARIST RETREAT OUTLINE FIRST EUCHARIST RETREAT OUTLINE The chart below details the curriculum content which the time of retreat will cover from the program, Celebrate and Remember Eucharist, Published by Saint Mary s Press.

More information

Year 6: You Shall be my Witnesses (Born in the Spirit: CCCB)

Year 6: You Shall be my Witnesses (Born in the Spirit: CCCB) Year 6: You Shall be my Witnesses (Born in the Spirit: CCCB) Outcomes by Units and Themes Cognitive Unit 1: You are my friends Know what a friend is and understand that God is present in our friendships

More information

HYMN SUGGESTIONS FOR SUNDAYS AND SOLEMNITIES

HYMN SUGGESTIONS FOR SUNDAYS AND SOLEMNITIES HYMN SUGGESTIONS FOR SUNDAYS AND SOLEMNITIES 182 The following hymn suggestions are offered to assist those respon - sible for the selection of music for the eucharist on Sundays, solemnities and feasts

More information

UNITED IN HEART AND MIND A

UNITED IN HEART AND MIND A UNITED IN HEART AND MIND A Pastoral Letter by Bishop William Murphy On the Life of the Church in the Diocese of Rockville Centre in Preparation for the Upcoming Eucharistic Congress and Diocesan Synod

More information

An Overview of the Process By Which St. Raphael s Parish Welcomes and Prepares Adults Who Want to Become Catholic

An Overview of the Process By Which St. Raphael s Parish Welcomes and Prepares Adults Who Want to Become Catholic An Overview of the Process By Which St. Raphael s Parish Welcomes and Prepares Adults Who Want to Become Catholic St. Raphael s Parish welcomes and prepares adults who want to enter the Roman Catholic

More information

LENT AND THE PASCHAL TRIDUUM, Fasting and Abstinence Regulations

LENT AND THE PASCHAL TRIDUUM, Fasting and Abstinence Regulations Office of the Chancellor LENT AND THE PASCHAL TRIDUUM, 2014 Fasting and Abstinence Regulations All Catholics 14 years and older must abstain from meat on the Fridays of Lent, Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.

More information

St. John the Apostle Liturgical Music Schedule (Cycle C)

St. John the Apostle Liturgical Music Schedule (Cycle C) December 1 st & 2 nd, 2018 December 8 th & 9 th, 2018 1 st Sunday of Advent 2 nd Sunday of Advent Gathering: #326 Lead Us to Your Light #344 On Jordan s Bank Psalm: #900 #995 Pres. of Gifts: #336 My Soul

More information

Concerning the Deacon in the Liturgy A customary for the Diocese of New Jersey 27 October 2015

Concerning the Deacon in the Liturgy A customary for the Diocese of New Jersey 27 October 2015 Concerning the Deacon in the Liturgy A customary for the Diocese of New Jersey 27 October 2015 Introduction When the Bishop ordains a deacon, the Bishop charges the candidate to " assist the Bishop and

More information

LITURGICAL GUIDELINES LENT / EASTER 2019 FOR THE DIOCESE OF WHEELING-CHARLESTON LENT

LITURGICAL GUIDELINES LENT / EASTER 2019 FOR THE DIOCESE OF WHEELING-CHARLESTON LENT LITURGICAL GUIDELINES LENT / EASTER 2019 FOR THE DIOCESE OF WHEELING-CHARLESTON LENT Lent begins on Ash Wednesday, March 6, 2019 and concludes just prior to the Evening Mass of the Lord s Supper on Holy

More information

Introduction to Lutheran Liturgy, PT 670 Trinity School for Ministry/North American Lutheran Seminary Spring 2018

Introduction to Lutheran Liturgy, PT 670 Trinity School for Ministry/North American Lutheran Seminary Spring 2018 Introduction to Lutheran Liturgy, PT 670 Trinity School for Ministry/North American Lutheran Seminary Spring 2018 Instructor: Dr. Amy C. Schifrin, STS Contact Information: Email: aschifrin@tsm.edu Office

More information

The Emmaus Journey: Mystagogy for God s People

The Emmaus Journey: Mystagogy for God s People The Emmaus Journey: Mystagogy for God s People A Workshop by Rev. Bryon Hansen NAAC Conference 2004 (Niagara Falls, ON) Two people are walking together on the Road to Emmaus. Their heads are down and their

More information

If you grew up Catholic, you re probably familiar with

If you grew up Catholic, you re probably familiar with the meaning of the season of lent l i v i n g t h e e u c h a r i s t 1 A Personal Guide to Lent for Teens By Rita Ferrone If you grew up Catholic, you re probably familiar with a lot of practices that

More information

Lent, Holy Week & Easter: A User s Guide

Lent, Holy Week & Easter: A User s Guide Lent, Holy Week & Easter: A User s Guide The first Christians observed with great devotion the days of our Lord s passion and resurrection, and it became the custom of the Church to prepare them by a season

More information

LiturgyNotes December 2008 Agnoli Page 1 of 7

LiturgyNotes December 2008 Agnoli Page 1 of 7 LiturgyNotes December 2008 Agnoli Page 1 of 7 Dear companions at the Table, Happy (liturgical) new year! May our year together with St. Mark draw us closer to Jesus Christ the Son of God (Mk 1:1), whose

More information

Highlights for the Liturgical Calendar for 2010

Highlights for the Liturgical Calendar for 2010 Highlights for the Liturgical Calendar for 2010 This calendar is not intended to replace the use of the Ordo but instead to act as a supplement to it. Its purpose is to be an easy reference sheet and highlight

More information

Spirit Alive! upbeat Christ-Centered

Spirit Alive! upbeat Christ-Centered Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit 3461 Cedar Crest Blvd. EMAIL Info@holyspirit-emmaus.org Emmaus, PA 18049-1599 www.lchsemmaus.org PHONE 610.967.2220 www.facebook.com/lchsemmaus FAX 610.966.3021 Spirit

More information

The Language of our Church, space and furnishings (1/3) The Language of our Church, space and furnishings (2/3) From the 2016 Committee:

The Language of our Church, space and furnishings (1/3) The Language of our Church, space and furnishings (2/3) From the 2016 Committee: From the 2016 Committee: The Language of our Church, space and furnishings (1/3) Spaces within the Church Chancel The chancel is the front part of the church from which the service is conducted. The chancel

More information

Catechesis Vision and Practices. The Real Reasons We Do. Building Bridges Faith. and World

Catechesis Vision and Practices. The Real Reasons We Do. Building Bridges Faith. and World Catechesis Vision and Practices The Real Reasons We Do Catechesis Building Bridges Faith Your context for faith formation Draw a heart in the middle of a sheet of paper and write in it what you think is

More information

Sunday, July 29, 2018 Tenth Sunday after Pentecost

Sunday, July 29, 2018 Tenth Sunday after Pentecost Sunday, July 29, 2018 Tenth Sunday after Pentecost Today is the first of five Sundays with gospel readings from John 6, the first four of which focus on Jesus as bread of life. Today Jesus feeds thousands

More information

Year Six Religion You Shall Be My Witness

Year Six Religion You Shall Be My Witness Year Six Religion You Shall Be My Witness CATEGORY SUB-CATEGORY KEY LEARNER OUTCOME CRITERIA Unit One You Are My Friends Love Is From God Demonstrates of how to use the Bible in researching themes such

More information

Year Three Religion In the Spirit We Belong

Year Three Religion In the Spirit We Belong Year Three Religion In the Spirit We Belong CATEGORY SUB-CATEGORY KEY LEARNER OUTCOME CRITERIA Unit One We Welcome and Gather In The Spirit Welcome Demonstrates the meaning of gathering as God s people

More information

Joy Kids. Our Church Service. Joy Lutheran Church 9940 S. Yale Ave. Tulsa, OK (918)

Joy Kids. Our Church Service. Joy Lutheran Church 9940 S. Yale Ave. Tulsa, OK (918) Joy Kids Our Church Service Joy Lutheran Church 9940 S. Yale Ave. Tulsa, OK 74137 (918) 299-3292 Page 2 Liturgical Colors Black The liturgical color for Ash Wednesday symbolizing ashes, mourning and death.

More information

A VARIETY OF WORSHIP

A VARIETY OF WORSHIP CHURCH OF ST. PETER & ST. PAUL KING S SUTTON A VARIETY OF WORSHIP AN EXPLANATION OF THE VARIOUS SERVICES HELD IN THE PARISH CHURCH Fr. Roger Bellamy Vicar 50p. The Mass The principal service is the Mass.

More information

Holy Eucharist. For use in the

Holy Eucharist. For use in the Holy Eucharist For use in the The Order for the Administration of the Lord s Supper or Holy Communion, commonly called The Holy Eucharist Common Form Approved for Provincial Use The Anglican Church in

More information

Frequently asked questions about Church of the Holy Cross, Episcopal

Frequently asked questions about Church of the Holy Cross, Episcopal Frequently asked questions about Church of the Holy Cross, Episcopal First Visit I ve never been to an Episcopal church. What should I expect on my first visit? If I don t know how to participate, is there

More information

David Anointed King. St. Paul Lutheran Church. Reformation Sunday October 25, 2015

David Anointed King. St. Paul Lutheran Church. Reformation Sunday October 25, 2015 St. Paul Lutheran Church In Jesus name, Do justice, Love kindness, Walk humbly with God. St. Paul is an open, affirming, and inclusive church, welcoming all who seek God. 515 South Wheaton Avenue - Wheaton,

More information

The House of the Church's Liturgical Celebrations

The House of the Church's Liturgical Celebrations The House of the Church's Liturgical Celebrations Catholics have always come together, especially on the first day of the week for the Breaking of the Word and of the Bread, to praise God, to give him

More information

What You Should Know About. Baptism

What You Should Know About. Baptism What You Should Know About Baptism PREFACE CONGRATULATIONS TO YOU! All of us share the joy and excitement of the new life that has been entrusted to you or that soon will come into your life. Whether by

More information