Apprentices and Eyewitnesses: Creative Liturgies for Incarnational Worship: Lent, Holy Week and Easter
By Chris Thorpe
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About this ebook
Chris Thorpe
Chris Thorpe is a parish priest in Shropshire and the author of three seasonal collections of creative liturgies, as well as numerous resources for the Royal School of Church Music.
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Apprentices and Eyewitnesses - Chris Thorpe
Apprentices and Eyewitnesses
Creative Liturgies for Incarnational Worship: Ash Wednesday to Ascension Day
Chris Thorpe
Canterbury_logo_fmt.gif© Chris Thorpe 2019
First published in 2019 by the Canterbury Press Norwich
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The Author has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the Author of this Work
Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, Anglicized Edition, copyright © 1989, 1995 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
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Typeset by Regent Typesetting Ltd
Printed and bound in Great Britain by CPI Group (UK) Ltd
Contents
Introduction: What is Incarnational Worship?
lent
Dust and Ashes – Living mindfully on Ash Wednesday
Who am I? Provider, celebrity, hero, or servant – temptations for today
Wilderness – Desolation and consolation in the desert places
Mothering God – All shall be well
Compassion – Stations of the Cross – The gift of tears in a desperate world
Traditional Stations of the Cross
Biblical Stations of the Cross
holy week
Palm Sunday – Called to follow – Laying down our cloaks, taking up our cross
Holy Monday – Called to action – Overturning tables, prayer for the nations
Holy Tuesday – Called to forgive – Debts and debtors, perfume and tears
Holy Wednesday – Called to trust – Scene changers and second fiddles, learning humility
Maundy Thursday – Called to service – Love that gets its hands dirty
Good Friday – Called to honest faith and doubt – In the shadow of death
easter season
Holy Saturday – Called to wait – Loss and grief, harrowing our hearts
Easter Day – Called to be alive – Not living and partly living, but fully alive
Bread of Hospitality – Agapé on the Road to Emmaus
Behind Locked Doors – Overcoming fear and doubt
Ascension – Stretching our vision
Resources
Sources and Acknowledgement of Illustrations
Dedicated to
Sarah, Sophie and Jake, to Rachel and Theo
Introduction: What is Incarnational Worship?
How can we connect with a generation of people who are unfamiliar with the Christian story, and have lost touch with the language of faith? How can we break through the carapace of our own over-familiarity with words and traditions that have become routine? When much of our liturgy can seem wordy and doctrinal, designed to be understood rather than felt, how can we move from head to heart?
These acts of worship start from a different place. They start with our experience of human life, using language that does not rely on religious familiarity and formulation. This worship starts with the joys and sorrows of our lives in relationship, as communities, and in the wider world. It ends with an opportunity to offer ourselves, engaging wholeheartedly with the process of becoming the good news we proclaim.
The incarnation is a paradox, a mystery – God made one of us in the life of Jesus Christ, connecting heaven and earth. These acts of worship are incarnational: they speak of the divine, but from a perspective that is earthed, rooted and grounded in human lived experience. They are incarnational, too, because they invite us to be fully involved, participating and creating the worship, opening ourselves to allow the word to become flesh in us. Incarnational worship resists the false separation of secular and spiritual, and recognizes that we are whole people, body, mind and spirit. Worship has often engaged our minds, but incarnational worship seeks to involve our heart and gut as well!
At their heart, these resources are an invitation to experience silence, in a shared contemplative space. It is easy for our worship to pile words upon words, barely drawing breath in our talking at God! The real transformative encounter comes when we stop talking and allow space for reflection and listening, both to our own inner voice, and to the still small voice of God. There is so little silence in our noise-packed, information-crowded, activity-paced lives; so these moments can be an oasis of calm in a frenetic world, and can allow us to discern what is really going on in our lives, connecting us with ourselves and with God.
Creative prayers for incarnational worship centre on an encounter with the living God that can change our perceptions and our actions. Each act of worship is intended to open the possibility of change in us, for us to be different as a result of our encounter with God. This is not worship for its own sake, or as religious entertainment, but worship that expands our horizons, as we connect with the living God and with our topsy-turvy world, in all its pain and possibility. It can be transformational, if we risk opening our hearts and lives to be changed by it.
We are all apprentices, life-long learners, and as Christians, followers of Jesus, that is especially true. There is a long tradition of using Lent to take up some form of learning, reading a book, attending a Lent discussion group or course of study. This is rooted in the practice of preparing people for baptism and confirmation during the forty days of Lent, then for the catechumens to come to profess their faith on Easter Day. In a powerful service at midnight on Easter Eve in Coventry Cathedral, these apprentices are brought up out of the ‘tomb’ of the old ruined cathedral, and into the light of the Easter fire and to the heart of the new building. Apprenticeship carries a connotation of hands-on learning, of applied experience, of practical knowledge. It calls us to grow in a faith that begins with Jesus inviting us to ‘come and see’.
The liturgies for Lent offer material for five weeks, starting with Ash Wednesday. They explore traditional themes, of self-examination, temptation and repentance, but with a contemporary connection. They look at our deepest motivations, alongside those of Jesus being tempted in the desert. For Mothering Sunday they explore the insights of Lady Julian of Norwich who could see God as both Mother and Father. The two alternative Stations of the Cross provide material for those with traditional Stations, and for many churches who are interested to explore the newer biblically-based stations.
Holy Week offers a unique opportunity for people to grow in faith. In busy lives many struggle to make space for time with God. These liturgies can be a framework for people to be involved in planning and leading worship. They include radical prayer and action for equality, an opportunity for the laying on of hands for healing and wholeness as well as the more familiar themes of the last supper and the crucifixion. The week gives scope for the slow building up of a visual focus, added to each day, or for the learning of new music, or for trying new kinds of worship that are very different to the usual Sunday service. They could be used as the heart of a retreat in daily life, where apprentices can journey together with Jesus through the days of his passion.
But apprentices can also be eyewitnesses! Not just those who saw the risen Jesus in the flesh, but us, who bear witness to the reality of resurrection life breaking through the little deaths of our own daily lives. We are called to bear witness, to dare to speak of our experiences, of our faith. We believe, not just because of a story long ago and far away, but because that story keeps on breaking into our world, here and now!
The Easter season starts in darkness. Holy Saturday offers an opportunity to focus on grief and loss, and to invite those who have been bereaved in the past year to recognize how hard it is to move on. Easter Day is all about learning to recognize Jesus in new ways, and to see the life that breaks through again and again. We are called to a culture of encounter, of taking time to be open to one another, to listen deeply, and to offer radical hospitality, that we might come to meet Jesus in the face of neighbour and stranger. To be credible eyewitnesses we will need to face our own fears and doubts, and to find a new confidence with our faith, to break out of the habitual armour of our public selves.
The season finishes with the Ascension and a challenge to go global in our vision! We often limit the possibility of what God can do with us by being too narrow and parochial, so we are invited to share the breadth of what God dreams for the world.
These acts of worship may be used by individuals, small groups or in larger settings as frameworks for silence and reflection. They have been used in church services, in quiet days, retreats, and at the end of small group discussions.
Planning and preparation
It is helpful to invite people to participate in preparing and in leading worship. It can be good to invite a group of people to come together to plan and to prepare for the service. A range of voices and faces leading worship can encourage people to identify more readily with the liturgy.
Context
The liturgies are intended to help people to reflect deeply on their personal faith, so time given to arranging an intimate setting will be well spent. Seating, lighting, shape and ambience of the room will all be important. Attention to posture and stillness will allow people to enter into the worship more fully. Even large church buildings can be made to feel more intimate with the careful use of lighting.
Visual focus
To worship God as whole people, body, mind and spirit, it can be helpful to have a visual focus, to create ‘stations’ in different places, or gradually to build up a place of encounter. Leaders can involve other members of the team in creating a strong visual focus, using a wide range of materials, and objects from the natural world, projected images, art and colour.
Creating a service sheet/PowerPoint presentation
The liturgies in this book are set out for the worship leader, with full notes for running the service, reflections and often the full bible passage. This is not the form that would be used in a service sheet or PowerPoint presentation where you would want to show a running order, and words of prayers but probably not print all of the reflections.
Pace
The liturgy is intended to be spacious, taken slowly and with pauses to allow people to reflect deeply on their experience. It is good to hear a variety of voices, so it may be possible to invite people to participate in reading different sections.
Silence
Silence is the key to the whole liturgy, but the leader may need to gauge how much silence a particular group can cope with. If people are completely unused to silence, it may feel uncomfortable at first, so it is essential to introduce the silence, and say how long the silence will last to help people to know what is going to happen. Some people will need a question to take with them into the silence, something to think about; others may be comfortable with a word of scripture, such as ‘Be still and know that I am God’, or the