Farewell & Godspeed

My beloved congregation, Peoples Church of Flint, and I said goodbye to one another May 1, after 8 years together. I wrote this liturgy to mark the day and to help us say goodbye well. It was written to include me, a conference office and three congregational leaders. Adapt it as you want!

I’m not always happy with denominationally-produced liturgies, so this section of my blog is my remedy for that. As with all things, help yourself; adapt to suit your purposes, just please include ©Deborah D Conrad and the web address.

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Call to Worship for Easter Season

Call to Worship for Easter Season (May be spoken by one leader of read responsively.)

Jesus is risen! We shall rise up! 

Jesus is lifted up! We shall lift up those around us! 

Jesus is risen! We shall raise our voices for a world at peace! 

Jesus is lifted up! We shall rise to a vision of justice and life! 

It is Easter, not a day but a season of 7 weeks, during which we celebrate the non-ending of the story of Jesus. 

When he rose up against the powers that oppressed and harmed, they tried to put him down. In an ugly scene, they killed him and likely left his body for the dogs. 

The movement that followed him changed the story, 

changed the outcome, 

and generations later we are part of that story. 

It is a story of life, of transformation, of hope, of resilience, of refusing to concede to the powers of death. 

Jesus is risen! We too shall rise. 

Let’s pray. 

God of life and light, you call us from lives of woundedness and graves of despair to a new life lived in your imagination. Show us again what you desire, and teach us to live. As we walk with our living Jesus, receive our worship and claim our spirits for your own. Let us live only in you. Amen. 

Communion Liturgy for Palm Sunday and other times of defiance.

Riding on a donkey, storming the halls of empire, facing undesirable political retribution, holding us close in the chaos, God is with us. 

From the moment last fall when we sang “O Come O Come Emmanuel” and began our year with Advent, we have been moving toward confrontation, knowing, believing, remembering “God with us.” 

This meal, then, is also God’s way to be with us. We share bread and wine because Jesus did and said that we should also. 

We’ve heard the story.  

The night he was about to be arrested, tried in a bogus court, executed by the state in collusion with religious leaders, 

Jesus gathered for a final meal with his friends.

They ate and drank, perhaps felt the tension, or maybe not. maybe they let their guards down, just for a minute. Maybe they exhaled and thought they had avoided the worst.

But as they relaxed, Jesus took one more piece of bread, one more cup. 

He gave thanks for both, the bread, the wine, and he passed them around. 

This is me, he said; whenever you gather and share this meal, remember. This is me. In all the days to come, all the moments you’ll wonder if there is a point, all the times you believe you’re the only ones still standing, I am with you. This bread, this cup, this movement, this vision: this is me. Do this and remember. Do this and know that I am with you still. 

So, we eat, we drink, we remember, we breathe. There is a movement still, there is hope still, there is the reign of God yet ahead and also in this moment. We breathe in the spirit of the living Christ and we breathe out the same spirit of refreshment and defiance.

Eat. Drink. Breathe. And remember. I am with you, said Jesus. 

Let us pray: 

Bless this bread and cup, O God, and fill us with the spirit of Christ, that all our days may be directed to the world as you imagine. Be with us, O God, as you have pledged, and teach us to love. amen. 

This meal is ready, the gifts of God for the people of God. Please, come and eat. 

post-communion

Let us pray… You feed us on your spirit of love and renewal, and we fall safely once again into your embrace. Hold us, lead us, guide us, O God. Let us feel the depth of your love as powerfully as we feel the depth of depravity and despair in our world. By this meal, by this community, make us the people you need us to be. Amen. 

advent candle-lighting liturgies

Here are candle liturgies for the four weeks of Advent. I’m trying to recast my understanding of Israel as the end-all and be-all, as I find it undergirds the Israeli persecution of Palestinians. To that end, I have written my own lyrics to O Come, O Come, Emmanuel. You can use it, call me a heretic, pray for my soul. But Christians have to stop our unquestioning support of the modern state of Israel. For me, that begins with reconsidering biblical “truths.” By the way, my preferred scripture for worship reading is The Inclusive Lectionary. If you’d like to know why, read my review here.

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communion for a green season

Now we’ve come to the time of a holy meal — the sacred table to which we are all invited.

Sacred community isn’t accidental; it is nurtured by food for our spirits and for our bodies. So we gather, to become what would otherwise be elusive — the community of Jesus….

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communion epiphany

Sages from the East followed a light to find hope and redemption. Joseph packed a go-bag and hustled his young family out of Bethlehem into hiding as refugees.

But before all that, way back in the stories exodus, when Israel was in slavery to Egypt, when passover became a thing, the people were frightened and longing for escape.

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communion for ordinary time V

Somewhere along the way, some people got the notion that God has favorites, that god prefers some of us over others of us.

Somewhere along the way, some people got the idea that there was a holy club of people chosen by god to go righteousness and justice.

Somewhere along the way…

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communion liturgy for pentecost

God is most evident with us in the Spirit of Jesus that guides our days. Fifty days after the festival of resurrection, but only 53 days after that awful night when we were unsure that we would ever see Jesus alive again, we continue to experience all that is new in the realm of god...

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communion liturgy: bread in the wilderness

We gather to share a meal, bread of life, cup of promise, food for the wilderness.

It is the bread that Jesus shared with his friends.

They had traveled together for just this moment: a meal, an arrest, a bad trial, a journey through death to life.

This was the night that resistance claimed his life.

That night was the point of no return…

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