'missio dei' Tagged Posts
Toward Sunday
We conclude our worship series, Missio Dei, this Sunday with a celebration of Pentecost. Pentecost is the fiftieth day of the Easter season. The earliest church completed forty days of ongoing teaching from the Risen One, followed by a ten-day prayer vigil. On the day of Pentecost, the church, by the power of the Holy Spirit, began to move. Worship will be a celebration of Pentecost. Our focus will be on the hospitality and hope offered in the practice of worship.…
Book of Worship
“From John Wesley’s Sunday Service of the Methodists of North America in 1784, through the hymnals, rituals, and books of worship of our antecedent denominations, our official worship resources have defined our Church. They celebrated our heritage in worship and formed new disciples of Jesus Christ. Out of this tradition comes The Unted Methodist Book of Worship.” (from the preface of the BOW). I wonder if people are aware of the deep roots of the worship we celebrate at The…
Prayer for your day
Great God in whom I am. Great God, in whom I am,whose being isall Being:Bein me.Dear Christ, near whom I am,thou breath of nearness:do not leave me,but my Mother be.O Spirit,truth of God, and truth of me:be thou my life,that all my living bebut thee. by Steve Garnaas-Holmes
Möbius
In writing about her experience working with a möbius artist Lygia Clark writes: “No separation between subject-object. It is a body to body affair, a fusion. The different responses will come out of your choice.”. How do you experience connection between God’s mission and worship?
Toward Sunday
Worship this Sunday will invite us to reflect upon the relationship of worship to mission through the image of the möbius strip. We often think of worship as separate from mission. This week’s worship will offer an alternative to this thinking. Outline for Missio Dei May 18: Worship & The Mission of God (Acts 17.22-31) May 25: Meaning & Purpose of Worship (Acts 17.22-31) June 1: Understanding the Parts of Worship (Acts 17.22-31) June 8: Pentecost Celebration. Worship as Hospitality…
Family Album?
“Our worship is the medium of our identity over time. Like a family album, our liturgy bears the marks of those who have gone before us-portraits of those we have never met, inscriptions written in many different hands, bits and pieces of treasured correspondence, favorite recipes, prayers, and remedies-all of them left for us by our ancestors in the faith, who have bequeathed us their manual for approaching God.” (from The Preaching Life by Barbara Brown Taylor p 65) How…