Ploughshares and First Fruits: A Year of Festivals for the Rural Church
By Chris Thorpe
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About this ebook
As well as providing many fresh ideas for keeping the established festivals, it provides ready-to-use, participative liturgies that engage all the senses, appeal to all ages and give small churches a round-the-year resource.
Included are creative liturgies for:
• A pet service for the Feast of St Francis
• Walking and pilgrimage
• Lambing season
• Riders’ Sunday
• Lammas
• A Summer Festival (an instant jam-jar flower festival)
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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Ploughshares and First Fruits - Chris Thorpe
© Chris Thorpe 2020
First published in 2020 by the Canterbury Press Norwich
Editorial office
3rd Floor, Invicta House
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London EC1Y 0TG, UK
www.canterburypress.co.uk
Canterbury Press is an imprint of Hymns Ancient & Modern Ltd (a registered charity)
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Norfolk NR6 5DR, UK
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, Canterbury Press.
The Author has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the Author of this Work
The author and publisher acknowledge with thanks permission to use copyright poetry: Malcolm Guite, ‘Daily Bread’, in Parable and Paradox, Canterbury Press, 2016 Malcolm Guite, ‘Mothering Sunday’, in Sounding the Seasons, Canterbury Press, 2012.
Scripture quotations are from New Revised Standard Version Bible: Anglicized Edition, copyright © 1989, 1995 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
978 1 78622 290 9
Typeset by Regent Typesetting
Printed and bound in Great Britain by CPI Group (UK) Ltd
Contents
Introduction
january
Holy White Birds – Plough Sunday – Blessing the plough and the ploughman
Mosaic of Grace – Week of Prayer for Christian Unity – Seeing the whole picture
february
Kindled Light – Candlemas – Lantern festival in the darkest part of the year
Seven Whole Days – George Herbert – Sharing a faith for every day
march
On the Level – St Chad – Celtic liturgy and pilgrimage prayer walk
Simnel Share – Mothering Sunday – Gathering the fragments of family life
april
Harrowing and Hoping – Easter – Breaking through to new life in tough times
Night Watch – Lambing Sunday – Celebration of the Good Shepherd
may
All Shall Be Well – Julian of Norwich – Cherished and held in the hand of God
Daring to Ask – Rogation Sunday – Blessing the growing crops
june
Day by Day – Richard of Chichester – Knowing, loving, following
Hedgerow Abundance – Midsummer Solstice – Jam jar flower festival
july
Water of Life – St Swithin – The gift of rain in changing times
No Fear! – Scarecrow Sunday – Facing our fears, finding new heart
august
First Fruits – Lammastide – Offering the best of ourselves
Gathering the Fragments – Outdoor Service – Feeding the multitude
september
Horses and Humans – Riders’ Service – Celebrating a unique partnership
Light and Dark – Michaelmas – Finding a point of balance around the autumn equinox
october
Bread of Community – Harvest Festival – Bringing the whole of ourselves
All Creatures of our God – St Francis – Welcoming our animal companions
november
The Light of Life – All Souls – Remembering loved ones
Rockets and Sparklers – All Saints – Not hiding our lights
december
Jesse Tree – Advent – Deep roots preparing the way
What’s in a Name? – Advent – Exploring holy wisdom, the unfolding name of God
Resources
Dedicated to
Sarah, Sophie and Jake
and with thanks to Rachel.
Introduction
Ploughshares and First Fruits explores traditional agricultural feasts, new countryside festivals, saints’ days and themes to bring rural communities together in worship.
How do we get rural churches to grow? How do we connect with our communities again when churches can sometimes seem to have been left behind? For many it will only be at Christmas or the Harvest Festival when we see the pews filling up. Sunday by Sunday, it may be only a handful who come to worship, very often an increasingly aged congregation. Rural churches are today often part of multi-parish groupings with clergy spread very thin, trying to cover the ground, and worship frequently needs to be locally planned and led by people other than the clergy. Of course, these issues are not limited to rural churches: many in urban and suburban communities will see the same picture.
What are we offering people when they come to church? Sometimes the words and music, the themes and concerns seem disconnected from the reality of people’s lives. Much of our worship assumes a level of knowledge of the Christian faith that people no longer have. Many today also want to be involved, to participate, not simply to listen in a passive way to what is presented. Some of our worship can be very wordy, very ‘head-level’, and can fail to connect with the heart, with the lived experience of people’s lives.
Ploughshares and First Fruits is a mission-led response to some of these questions and realities, offering stepping stones, opening connections between the heart of our own lives and the heart of faith. It contains resources for hard-pressed church leaders, whether clergy or not, to enable churches to reconnect with the local community. It seeks to draw the occasional visitor, who might attend church at Christmas, Easter, Harvest and Remembrance, to attend on a more regular basis, perhaps at a monthly ‘festival’. It provides suggestions for involving people in preparations before the service, as well as participating in music, readings, prayers and reflections in the service itself.
We have been using this approach for the past ten years in three parishes in rural Shropshire and it has been fruitful. The aim is to offer worship that is well prepared, that has involved a wide number of people in its creation and that connects with real lives and concerns. The aim is also to go deeper, to enable people to make real connections with the good news of God’s love so that our lives are changed by the experience. Jesus used parables to connect with people and to challenge them. Often, he used instances from rural life, like the sowing of seed, the harvesting of crops or the managing of animals, to illustrate a deeper message about our walk with God. But these rural illustrations are not simply a way of celebrating country life! When Jesus tells a parable it provides a bridge, a way in, to a deeper conversation with our communities and with God. It offers a question to think about, a challenge to take away, an opportunity for transformation.
This book contains outlines of 24 festival services, providing two years’ worth of material if festival services are offered once a month. It is for each church to decide what it feels it can offer wholeheartedly, so it may be appropriate to hold these festival services less often, spread over a longer period. Each service follows a similar pattern of resources.
Preparation and invitation
Start by drawing together a group to plan and prepare for the service. Each festival begins with a suggestion of how to engage people beforehand, to enable them to participate in some way. It encourages proper advertising and promotion of the event, using the power of invitation to encourage people to come. From good old-fashioned word of mouth to the latest social media, we need to find ways of reaching out beyond the usual people who attend church. There may be local organizations that will share our interests and values and be pleased to take part, or we may be able to involve individuals or companies who have a stake in the issues we focus on. Even if you create the best service in the world, its impact will be limited unless people come to share it. So preparation and publicity, engagement and invitation, are all essential.
In a rural area, it is likely that there will be a folk memory of some of the traditional agricultural festivals of the year. Plough Sunday, Rogation, Lammas and Harvest Festival are all important moments in the farming year. To reawaken the traditional connections between farming and worship, you may choose to write to all the farmers and farmworkers in your area, specifically inviting them to the services. The National Farmers’ Union may be willing to help to compile this list, or a friendly local farmer may assist. A letter can give an opportunity to say how much the farming community is valued, and to stress the important role it plays in the community. Other interest groups may also share some of our values and concerns, so it is worth thinking about how you can engage them in these festivals: consider any local National Trust properties or land, nature conservancy and wildlife groups, groups that value the countryside and the natural environment, walking and rambling groups.
Welcome and hospitality
Even for those who already come to church occasionally, it can be daunting to come to a church service. So give some thought to the welcome! For some of our festival services, we have chosen to share a simple breakfast ahead of the service. Bacon sandwiches or pancakes work well. People can make connections over breakfast, in a relaxed social environment, sharing conversations and naturally catching up with local news. New folks can be welcomed over a cuppa. On a practical note, the time around breakfast can give anyone who is taking part in the worship time to check out their role and place in the service.
It can help to have some background music playing as people arrive, to overcome the silence or formality of church that is sometimes off-putting. Gathering music is suggested for each service. In one church locally, a community choir has formed to support these festival services: they are often rehearsing as people arrive, which can make it very easy to share or teach a new song or hymn.
Sacred space
Church buildings can be places of great beauty and atmosphere: this can help people to find the mental space to connect with their deeper selves and with God. There are suggestions as to the layout and visual focus for each service. Sometimes a simple visual image can convey so much and help people to make new connections. The transition into worship is important to manage – it may be helpful for someone leading worship to introduce a time of silence to help people to prepare. Just as God called Moses to remove his shoes as he approached the burning bush, so it is important that we enable people to approach worship with a sense of expectation, a sense of awe and of wonder. Silence is such a rare thing in many people’s lives today: we can easily fill every spare moment with noise. In these services, there will be time for silence and reflection: sometimes, silence can speak to us more deeply than the most eloquent of words!
Hymns and music
There are suggestions for music to be played at various points in the festival services, to give space or to allow time for movement. Choose from a range of hymns, songs and chants to suit your local church or congregation, whether traditional or contemporary, for young or old. These suggestions are not exhaustive, so feel free to use other music that might be better for your local situation. Hymns, chants and songs should be chosen to be sing-able! If there are local musicians available, why not invite them to play in the service or to accompany the singing? It is important that there is enough music that is familiar to people to make them feel they can join in. Any unfamiliar items should be taught at the beginning of the service.
Reflection and conversation
Each festival service includes Bible readings and short reflections to go with them. Sometimes a reading from another discipline has been included to give an insight into the theme. Readings from science or from history, especially local history, can be helpful to show how the good news of God’s love is not separate from the real lives we live and the real places to which we belong. Sometimes poems convey a deeper truth than prose can ever manage. There may even be a local poet who could write something for the occasion.
Long sermons and complicated theology or doctrine can alienate people, and easily leave the congregation as passive recipients. On the other hand, there is a danger of offering religious entertainment rather than engagement. A short reflection followed by a brief conversation around a key question can be both participative and informative and may possibly lead to real change in a person’s attitude or action. The reflections are not intended to be printed: they are there to help whoever is leading that section of the service.
It can help to have some people unobtrusively move and sit near to a new person, to make conversations as easy as possible.
Symbolic action
For each festival service there is a time of action. In some services this is a symbolic action that helps to reinforce the theme of the service, inviting people to bring their own personal concerns to God; in others it may be a way of embodying our response to God through commitment to change. At its best, worship engages us as whole people: body, mind, heart and spirit. So as well as involving our minds in thought and reflection, and allowing time to make connections with our hearts, we seek to embody our worship to engage our physical senses. It can help us to have something tangible to take away, a visible reminder of the good news of God’s love for each person in their own particular situation. This can help anchor the theme, reflection and conversation in our memories, and be a continuing reminder at home of any commitment to change that we may have made.
Prayers and responses
For each service a framework of possible prayers and responses is provided. However, it is important that people feel free to create their own words if they wish, and to be confident in using them: the most powerful prayers arise out of the context of those praying.
The services include prayers and responses that seek to avoid formal religious or doctrinal language. They are intended to arise from human experience and to use language that is familiar, yet also to connect with the biblical text. Those leading prayers and responses are encouraged to take the pace slowly, speaking with meaning and feeling. The prayers should be spacious and unhurried, giving time for people to hear and understand, making their own connections with the words.
Eucharist or not?
In some churches, it will be important to face the question of whether the service should include the Eucharist. If we want new people to try coming to church, we need to put ourselves in their shoes: a Eucharist can make the service quite long and can exclude those who are new to faith or just dipping their toe in the water. We choose to make these festival services non-eucharistic and all-age, seeing them as a means of outreach in the wider community. However, if it is decided to include the Eucharist, it is possible to use the festival service format as the Ministry of the Word and to add the Peace and a Eucharistic Prayer to complete the service.
JANUARY
Holy White Birds
Plough Sunday – Blessing the plough and the ploughman
dove.jpgPreparation and Invitation
You may like to contact local farmers and farmworkers to invite them personally to this service. Farmers could be asked to take part, reading or being interviewed. You could locate a traditional plough to have in church and/or a modern plough for outside the church.
Gathering Music – suggestion
Warhorse – Ploughing theme, John Williams
Welcome and Introduction
We come to give thanks for the fertility of our land, to pray for a good harvest and to bless the plough and the ploughmen and women of our community. So much has changed in farming, from horse-drawn single furrow-ploughing, to eight-share machines of great power, and now to minimum tillage where we plough the land less often to retain the soil structure. Plough Sunday is also a time to think of our own lives, of what needs to be cut through, of what needs to be overturned, of what we may need to do to create