United Methodist Resources for September 2015 based on the Revised Common Lectionary

Similar documents
Sky Sunday. (Australian Version 2) Introduction. Setting. Special Focus. Themes

Sky Sunday. Introduction. Setting. Special Focus. Themes. Optional Liturgies

Here is Our God! (lectionary-based)

2018 Camp and Conference Ministry Emphasis Sunday Worship Service. Transformation

EVANGELISATION PLAN. Helping Students Develop as Whole Persons. St Benedict s School, Applecross

Universe Sunday. (United States Version 1) Introduction. Setting. Special Focus. Themes. Optional Liturgies

VITAL CONVERSATIONS: HOLY CONFERENCING IN OUR CHURCHES ENTERING GOD S PRESENCE

Worship Responsibilities of a Presbytery Moderator. David Gambrell Associate for Worship Office of Theology & Worship

Earth Day Reflection REFLECTION

World AIDS Day Theme for 2017 WORSHIP RESOURCES FOR WORLD AIDS DAY

A guide to WORSHIP. at McClure United Church Edmonton, Alberta. Introduction to A Guide to Worship

Mountain Sunday. (Australian Version 2) Introduction. Setting. Special Focus. Themes. Optional Liturgies

Twentieth Sunday after Pentecost

Fauna Sunday. (Australian Version 2) Introduction. Setting. Special Focus. Themes

St. Bartholomew s Episcopal Church Poway, California

WHY WE SING THE CHURCH AT PRAYER

Services for the Ordering of Ministry in The United Methodist Church, as Revised by Action of the 2016 General Conference

2. For a Leadership Retreat. 3. For Times of Discernment. 4. For Small Group Meetings (1) 5. For Small Group Meetings (2)

LITURGY AND WORSHIP POLICY

Seventh Sunday of Easter

Guidelines for Worship Planning, part 1 Assembly Mennonite Church

July 12, 2015 Outdoor Worship

Celtic Evening Prayer and Communion

The Sun will be Turned to Darkness and the Moon to Blood

Cosmos Sunday. (Australian Version 1) Introduction. Setting. Special Focus. Themes. Optional Liturgies

CORRELATION 2014 Parish Edition to the Archdiocese of Baltimore Religion Course of Study and Curriculum Guidelines Grades 1 6

A SERVICE OF CHRISTIAN MARRIAGE I

Open our eyes to see Open our ears to hear Open our life to live your calling Open us Lord, to you.

The God Who Speaks Psalm 19 (#2 in a series through selected Psalms)

Prelude. Spirit in the Sky by Norman Greenbaum

K H P C (U.S.A.) FAMILY SERVICE OF THANKSGIVING NOVEMBER 24, 2016

This pamphlet was produced by Leadership Ministries.

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

Sample Liturgy. Revised Common Lectionary, Year B. Prepared by the Very Rev. Ken Gray, Kamloops, BC

A NEW AGAPE WORSHIP RESOURCES

SLICE: EVALUATING AND IMPROVING WORSHIP

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

(Genesis 1:1 31, JOHN 1:1 18)

Twenty-Third Publications

CLAREMONT UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

ADVENT A Season of HOPE and EXPECTATION

ORDER OF WORSHIP December 16th, rd Sunday of Advent ~ Love

Welcome. We are aware that many who attend this service come from

Tenth Sunday after Pentecost

Rivers in the Desert Psalm 126 by Richard Bruxvoort Colligan

Planning Worship at McCormick

O N - L I N E E D I T I O N. a reconciling congregation

A SERVICE OF CHRISTIAN MARRIAGE I

Liturgy January 8, 2017 (Baptism of the Lord)

Wilderness Sunday (United States Version 1)

The Directory for Worship: From the Sanctuary to the Street A Study Guide* for the Proposed Revision

CHRISTIAN EDUCATION SUNDAY (TENTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST) August 13, :30 a.m. THE GROWING SEASON. in the year of worship

A GUIDE TO THE SERVICE OF HOLY COMMUNION

FAITH FORMATION CURRICULUM

PRESENTER NOTES Please note:

WHY ARE WE ON THE EARTH? IMPORTANT QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THE BIBLE

An Order for Night Prayer during Creationtide

Long Green Valley Church of the Brethren Long Green and Kanes Rds., near Glen Arm, MD February 4, 2018

Features Editor s Perspective...2 Meet Our Writer: Jack Gilbert...3

Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Directory for Worship DRAFT OF REVISION

LITURGY AND WORSHIP POLICY

Further Reflections on Worship. Donald Goertz

A Service of Ordination of a Minister of the Word with Induction (Approved in its present form by the July 2013 Assembly Standing Committee)

St. John Bosco Catholic Primary School CATHOLIC LIFE POLICY

St. John Bosco Catholic Primary School

Hymn Recommendations for Season of Creation

KIRK OF KILDAIRE, PRESBYTERIAN. Word and Music in Worship

Second Sunday in the Season of Creation (United States Version 2) Land Sunday We worship with creation on the land

A. A church is a special place where people can worship the Lord together. B. Worship is to think about the Lord with love in our hearts.

Earth and All Creation Day

Glory to God. the presbyterian leader.com. Introducing the New Hymnal. the presbyterian hymnal. Introduction. I Love to Tell the Story

Creation Laws: Discovering Your Super Self

Instructed Eucharist

Original bulletin cover is under copyright so cannot be reproduced.

June 3, 2018 West Valley Presbyterian Church. Called to Worship

A. Everything the Lord created is for the sake of mankind. (TCR 67)

HYMN SUGGESTIONS FOR SUNDAYS AND SOLEMNITIES

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

A Great Prayer of Thanksgiving, with Commentary

Season of Creation. Walking Together. September 1 to October 4

Gathering. WEEk 1 SERIES INTRO:

TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH

Service for Ash Wednesday 14 February 2018 Introductory Notes. Background to the drought situation

Growing in our understanding of Holy Eucharist:

Recognize examples of the power of the Holy Spirit in Creation and in sustaining His creation.

Ocean Sunday. (United States Version 1) Introduction. Setting. Special Focus. Themes. Optional Liturgies

Planet Earth Sunday. (Australian Version 1) Introduction. Setting. Special Focus. Themes. Optional Liturgies

2017 OLDER ADULT RECOGNITION SUNDAY

Passion Sunday April 14, 2019

A Falling Muse. Salua Rivero

order of service What does God require of us? (based on Micah 6:6-8) rcav.org/christianunity

Earth Day Third Sunday of Easter

LENT 2018 RESOURCES FOR COORDINATORS

How To Be Right All The Time Text: Psalm 146:1-10 Series: The Psalms [#28] Pastor Lyle L. Wahl November 7, 2010

BREAD FOR THE DAY DAILY BIBLE READINGS AND PRAYERS. Minneapolis

Worship Service. Meditation. Welcome and Announcements. Prelude. The Summons: based on Psalm 111. Processional Hymn

K-8 Religion Curriculum Guide for Catholic Schools and Parish Faith Formation Programs

Believe Chapter 11: Worship

Sunday, April 2, 2017 Fifth Sunday in Lent Worship at 9:30 AM GATHERING. Prelude Ah, Holy Jesus arr. Susan Ullom Berns

Holy Spirit Coming, by He Qi. Pentecost Sunday May 20, am. St. John s Lutheran Church Salisbury, North Carolina

Transcription:

A Season of Creation: United Methodist Resources for September 2015 based on the Revised Common Lectionary A Season of Creation is an opportunity to spend the month of September focused on creation-centered themes. Begun in Australia nearly two decades ago, this initiative has spread worldwide and generated substantial resourcing, some of which is captured on the website, http://seasonofcreation.com. However, as you may note by reviewing these resources, they are not based on the Revised Common Lectionary, and they do not always follow the Basic Pattern that United Methodists and many other ecumenically committed churches tend to use. So here, for our use, is an organization of the themes of A Season of Creation based on the Revised Common Lectionary readings for each Sunday, plus additional suggestions for music from several United Methodist resources, along with ideas for visuals, media, prayers, planning, preaching and Great Thanksgivings. A Season of Creation: Purpose The overarching purpose of A Season of Creation is to enable Christians to offer their worship to God in a more creation-connected way than we might during other times and seasons of the Christian year. The logic of this focused time is much the same as any other established season of the Christian year. For example, we focus on the suffering and death of Jesus during Holy Week, and on his second coming during Advent. We focus on these things intently at these times with the hope that such focus may come to infuse our whole way of life as the body of Christ in the world year-round. So it is with the Season of Creation. By spending time each year in a more focused way on God s many gifts in creation, we are not seeking to compartmentalize creation to just a few weeks a year, but rather deepen our appreciation for creation as an integral part of our

worship and discipleship throughout the year and throughout our lives. Using the Lectionary The use of the lectionary during this series is a bit different than in other seasons. The scripture readings for each Sunday that follow below are extracts from the lectionary readings that seem best to support the theme for each week. The lectionary at this point of the year (Season after Pentecost) generally designed for semi-continuous readings, and there are actually no intended connections between the readings. However, for this Season of Creation we are pulling out parts of the texts across each week s selections that have some connection with the theme for the day. Generally speaking, such selective reading is not recommended, nor is it part of the design of the lectionary. We make an exception to that general rule in order to celebrate this season while still drawing on the lectionary texts for each week. What A Season of Creation Isn t And Is A Season of Creation is not about worshiping the created world. Nor should these weeks be seen primarily as an opportunity for social activism or messaging of one form or another regarding ecological issues. The first is idolatry worshiping the creature rather than the Creator. The second is not even idolatry because it is not even worship. It is perhaps merely a form of persuasive drama. Instead, this season is a call for us to spend considerable focused time as the body of Christ blessing the Triune Creator for the many gifts of creation, listening for the Spirit s encouragement toward stewardship and our failures as stewards of these good gifts. In each service and across the whole series, we seek to reaffirm our relationship to God as God s creatures, completely dependent on God and the whole of God s creation for our lives here and now as foretaste of the fulfillment we groan for inwardly in the promised New Creation. It s a bit hard to reaffirm our creaturehood or our connection with creation if our worship is entirely indoors. So at some points in this series, and especially for the final week, if not every week, consider worshiping outdoors. And when you do need to worship indoors, find as many ways as you can to bring the outside in. The brief video This Is Your Brain on Worship may help you and your worship planning team consider ways you may do this where you are. The Feel of the Series Keep in mind that because the theme of each of these services differs from week to week, the feel of the individual services may change as well. Some services will be more contemplative, while others may move toward more expressive praise. Since the feel from one week to the next may be so different, it will be important, for the sake of the series feeling like a series, to maintain some common elements across the weeks.

Some of these repeated elements might be musical. For example, you might begin each service with the first verse or the at least the melody of Creation Sings (Worship & Song 3018), and maybe introduce the prayers or interweave them with the singing of the second verse. Others might be artistic. Consider prominently displaying an anchor image that unites all five Sundays of the entire series. This may be an image of the earth, or some aspect of the natural world. It doesn t have to be exactly the same image each week. It doesn t even need to be in exactly the same place. But it should be recognizably the same thing, even if its particular form or location is varied a bit week by week to fit the feel of each week s service. Consider, too, repeating a basic ritual action. Celebrate Holy Communion each week using the same basic Great Thanksgiving with additions that fit the theme for each week, or at least celebrate Holy Communion each week. If you choose the former, you may want to use Word and Table II (UMH 12-15) as the underlying repeated prayer, adding appropriate thematic words at the asterisks (on pp. 13-14). Or you may want to invite persons to touch the water in the font each week as they enter and are sent from worship as a reminder of our connection with the gift of water and the Holy Spirit in baptism. Finally, some repeated actions might be kinetic. Perhaps each week s service might begin with raising hands in blessing, later involve inviting all who can to kneel in confession and contrition, and end with a call for worshipers to march out with the determined step of those who are prepared to live as Christ s body, redeemed by his blood, with gratitude for and partnership with all of God s gifts in creation. Repeated music, art, ritual and movement across a series create a subtle and powerful set of links from one week to the next that give the whole series coherence in the minds and bodies of worshipers. That basic sense of coherence will help worshipers make more links across these four weeks themselves and may open them to making links beyond worship into daily life. The Four Weeks: Themes, Scriptures, and Suggestions for Visuals, Music and Media Mountains and Valleys Sunday (9/6) Art and media: Commission and display images of mountains and valleys in a variety of terrains and climates (desert, jungle, forest, snow-covered, etc.) if possible, being sure to include images of either that may be near you. Be sure to ask any photographers you have in your congregation or wider community for their contributions. Also consider collecting and showing several flyover videos of mountains and valleys. You might do this as a visual prelude to worship, or part of the sermon, or even during the distribution of communion. Here are some possibilities online:

Cossatot River Flyover http://arklahomahiker.org/2011/12/19/asp-cossatot-river-flyovervideo/ TVA Coal Ash Disaster, Mountaintop Removal and Mountain Windfarm video: http://www.southwings.org/page.php?110 and photo gallery: http://www.southwings.org/page.php?140 Sierra Nevada Mountain Range: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xuxgyzbmhq&feature=related Mountain flyover: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eom4fosgv4 Not free: Mountain View Worship Background Video: http://www.worshipvue.com/media/video/mountain_flyover_long_play Scriptures: Psalm 125:1-2, Proverbs 22:1-2, James 2:8-9. Music: Consider two songs to enwrap the readings today, as follows: As an act of praise during the entrance Mountains Are All Aglow (UMH 86) Verse 1 Psalm 125:1-2 Mountains Are All Aglow, Verse 1 Around the readings proper: God of Great and God of Small (W&S 3033) Verse 1 Proverbs 21:1-2 God of Great and God of Small, Verse 2 James 2:8-9 God of Great and God of Small, Verses 3-4 The Prayers: Use the TFWS 2201 or UMH 877 with the sung responses on UMH 485 as the pattern for intercessions. Be sure to add these two intercessions: Together, let us pray for the earth, for all that lives and moves and rests upon it, and for the wisdom and the will to be good stewards of its many gifts and Together, let us pray for the forgiveness of our sins. Conclude the prayers with silence and a word of pardon. Then sing together verse 2 of Creation Sings (W&S 3018) and share the peace of Christ with one another. If you use the complete version of An Appalachian Lord s Supper (linked below), you may omit the prayer for forgiveness, the act of pardon and the sharing of peace and proceed directly to the invitation to the table in that prayer. The Great Thanksgiving: Word and Table II, with the addition of the propers for Festival of God s Creation or, if this fits your setting, An Appalachian Lord s Supper. Thoughts on the theme: Today we consider not only the gifts of mountains and valleys as part of the created order (Psalm), but also the ways we have distorted the gifts of each. We have done so literally, through such destructive processes as mountaintop removal for coal

mining that leads to massive erosion and water pollution in the valleys below. We have also done so metaphorically in how we see and treat others-- arrogating the rich (the high ) above the poor ( the lowly ). The video suggestions give visual witness to some of what Mountaintop removal does to the land. The Appalachian Lord s Supper includes prayer for the Holy Spirit to breathe new life into scarred hilltops, black water, wounded earth. Sky Sunday (9/13) Arts and media Skies and clouds of all types day, night, dawn, sunset, day storms, night storms (with lightning), snowy skies, foggy skies, skies during eclipse, starry skies, moon in many phases, aurora. Consider the ambient lighting where you worship and how well you can control it. If you can make the space reasonably dark and fairly bright, consider starting worship with an evening or night feel, moving through darkest, starriest night to daybreak, and then from daybreak to twilight at the sending, following the biblical and ancient near eastern understanding of the day beginning at sundown. And if you have a way to project to the walls and ceilings, consider projecting a night sky with moon and the stars as atmospheric surroundings during the reading of the word and the preaching, moving toward a dawn feeling (with images of sunrise surrounding you) during the prayers, full sun at during the Great Thanksgiving, then moving the lighting through the course of the day during receiving at communion, toward late afternoon in the hymn of sending, and to twilight again at the final word of sending or benediction. NASA s Visible Earth website may be an excellent resource for images, many of which will be in the public domain. You may wish to check Wikimedia Commons for others that are either in the public domain or licensed for shared use. Scriptures: Proverbs 1:26-27, Psalm 19:1-6, James 3:4-5, Mark 8:27-28 Music: For transition from twilight (evening) to night, consider Eric Whitacre s Virtual Choir performance of Water Night, or surrounding the praying of Psalm 119:1-6 with the hymn The Spacious Firmament on High (Tune:Haydn, Text: Addison). As a response to the sermon, consider singing God of the Bible (Worship & Song 3020), Verses 1-2. Prayers: Continue using the intercessions you started with last week, replacing the intercession for the earth with For the gift of the skies rain, snow, light, air, protection, winds, and window to the universe that we may be truly grateful and wise stewards of all these gifts, let us pray to the Lord. Sing Father, We Praise Thee (UMH 680) as musical frame for the intercessions, as follows: Sing Father, We Praise Thee Verse 1 Intercessions for the world, its peoples and its leaders, the church universal, and the skies Sing: Father, We Praise Thee Verse 2 Intercessions for the people of the congregation, the sick, the suffering, the concerns of the local community, and the communion of saints Sing: Father, We Praise Thee Verse 3

Then move into the Invitation to the Table, Confession, Pardon, Peace, Offering and Great Thanksgiving. Great Thanksgiving: A Great Thanksgiving for Transfiguration Sunday includes images of brilliant light. This newer Great Thanksgiving for Festival of God s Creation has a more cosmic feel. If you use the latter, be sure to add an Invitation to the Table, confession, pardon and peace. The intercessions are already built into this prayer, so you need not do them earlier. Thoughts on the Theme: By day, the sky diffuses solar light. By night, the sky offers a window on the galaxy, and, with the aid of other instruments, the wider universe. By day or by night, the sky helps to regulate the balances of water and CO2 on the planet, and the magnetosphere protects earth s life from much of the harmful radiation of the sun. Sky is also where we sense at once hope for rescue (Christ returning with the clouds) and menace (storms, aerial attack). Sky in the Bible is also seen as the firmament a dome keeping the waters above the earth from falling on the earth all at once and destroying all life in the deluge. Sky is where many cultures, including biblical cultures, have pictured God to be. This is why in biblical sacrifices, the highlight of the sacrifice is when the largest billows of smoke rise from that altar to the sky. And sky is both a means of transport and an erstwhile home for billions of creatures ("the billion bug highway") Humanity Sunday (9/20) Arts: As people enter the worship space, fill screens or walls with images of humans in every shape, size, form, and culture in classic art, photography, and new art commissioned from your congregation or community. Today we give thanks to God for human beings in all times and places. Media: One of the Playing for Change videos, such as Stand by Me As call to worship, prelude or response to sermon or prayers, or as communion anthem http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=us-tvg40exm Scriptures: Psalm 1:1-2, Proverbs 31:10-20, James 3:13-18, 4:3, 7-8, and Mark 9:30-37 Music: Think global this week. Sing what your congregational culture knows, but be sure learn and sing at least two pieces from cultures very different from your own, even if in English. United Methodist resources for global music include The Upper Room Worshipbook, The Global Praise Series from GBGM-Musik, The United Methodist Hymnal, The Faith We Sing, and Worship & Song, not to mention the whole of Mil Voces para Celebrar (Spanish UM Hymnal) and Come, Let Us Worship (Korean-English UM Hymnal). Particularly consider

singing There s No One in This Work Like Jesus (Worship & Song 3036) before and after the reading of the gospel. Prayers: Wrap the intercessions this week with God of the Bible. Sing Verse 3 before beginning the prayers, and sing verses 4-5 to conclude them. Then move into Invitation to the Table, Confession, Pardon, Peace, Offering and Great Thanksgiving. Great Thanksgiving: Consider The Great Thanksgiving for World Communion Sunday or Holy Communion from General Conference Day 5. The latter includes a form of intercession wrapped with the song from Zimbabwe, If You Believe and I Believe (Worship & Song, 3121). Thoughts on the texts: God saw all that God had made and said, Tov meod! Very good! The scriptures for this week are rich with descriptions of the amazing competence and at the same time sinfulness and foolishness of the human species. We are conversionists, we humans constantly converting one thing into another toward human and sometimes also larger ecological thriving. But we are not entirely converted by God s love and wisdom ourselves especially when it comes to our self-centeredness. Self-preservation is a virtue to a degree, but the failure to recognize the proper limits of our self-interest can drive us to the most dunderheaded and destructive of behaviors. On this Humanity Sunday, we celebrate and seek God s Spirit to empower the virtue of human wisdom wisdom in mutuality of relationships (Proverbs), wisdom in meditating on God (Psalm 1), wisdom in building community (James), and wisdom in self-release as leadership (Mark). Blessing All Living Creatures Sunday (9/27) Arts and Media: This is a service for the blessing of all kinds of creatures plant and animal alike. The creatures brought to this blessing, and the people who bring them, are the only artwork necessary for this day. Some of these creatures may provide their own media to enhance the soundscape of this service. Those bringing plants and flowers for blessing have provided additional visuals. If possible, worship outdoors today. If not, worship with the doors or windows open, or in a covered indoor-outdoor space. Music: Open worship with a procession including choir/praise ensemble, clergy, other worship leaders and all who have brought creatures or photos or pictures of creatures with them while all sing either with All Creatures of Our God and King (UMH 62) or All Things Bright and Beautiful (UMH 147). Scriptures: James 5:13-18, Mark 9:40-41 Sermon: Minimal! The one response you are inviting today is to join in blessing all of God s

creatures. Reflect very briefly on how the prayers of the people described in James and acts of compassion for others as described in Mark are ministries of blessing for others we are all invited to participate in and offer on behalf of all who need them humans, plants and animals alike. The Blessing: Move from this very brief reflection after the readings directly into the Prayer for the Blessing of Plants and Animals (see United Methodist Book of Worship, 609-610). To the blessings listed there add this: Blessed are you, O Lord of the Universe; you create the plants that give oxygen for all animals to breathe, food for many species, enrichment to the soil, and blessing to our souls by their beauty. // O God, how wonderful are the works of your hands. Depending on the size of the crowd that gathers for this service, you may find it helpful to have more than one station for individual blessing of the plants or animals. Long lines are to be avoided! There is nothing about this service that requires clergy to offer the individual blessings, so consider creating multiple stations hosted by either a clergy person or a lay person so each plant or animal (or photo!) brought may be blessed without rushing and without the blessing taking too long a time. Be sure as well to have bowls of water available for animals that may be brought today. What Jesus said about a cup of cold water to disciples applies to disciples offering this basic hospitality to our animal guests today as well! When the blessing is complete, move to the Invitation to the Table, Confession, Pardon, Offering and Great Thanksgiving. Great Thanksgiving: Holy Communion from General Conference 2012, Day 8 This form of the Great Thanksgiving may have several clergy (elder or local pastor) as presiders, or just one. Its advantage is its interactivity, something well-suited for the outdoor and perhaps more informal setting a service with a blessing of all creatures in the midst of it may require. For a song of Sending, sing All Things Bright and Beautiful, whether for the first time in this service or as a reprise.