Dear
friends,
A blessing and a challenge of liturgical
worship is that the words of the service become so familiar. The blessing is that those familiar words can
be a source of great comfort, and anchor in the midst of life’s changes and
uncertainty. The challenge is that
familiar words sometimes become stale, so well known to us that we no longer
truly hear what they are saying.
During worship this summer, we will be
exploring some prayers and liturgies that differ from what we typically use in
our worship during the “program year” (September through May). At the 8:00 a.m. service, we will pray
Eucharistic Prayer I instead of Eucharistic Prayer II. At the 10:30 service, we will incorporate
wording from an Episcopal resource called Enriching
Our Worship, and toward the end of the summer we will use the service of
Holy Eucharist from A New Zealand Prayer Book. If you are paying close attention (and I hope
you will be!), you may notice slight differences in the wording of the Nicene
Creed: the dropping of the phrase “and the Son,” which invites us into a
centuries-old theological debate about the nature of the Trinity.
My
hope is that these less familiar and perhaps unexpected words will catch your
attention and invite you into fresh and deeper understandings of Jesus, who is
himself the Word. In the words we hear
and speak in worship this summer, may we indeed hear anew what the Spirit is
saying to God’s people.
Anne+
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