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Ideas about Worship

Sacred banner.
Paper banner by Laurie Rudel at Queen Anne Christian Church, Seattle, Wash.

Good worship

Good worship is three things:

Simple: less is more.

We don't need to create elaborate services of worship. We do, periodically need to look at our services and ask what is needed here, or what no longer contributes to a sense of worship.

Spacious: time disappears.

There is a flow to worship that leads us from one place to the other, that effectively opens our hearts. It is like a blossoming that actually takes place during the act of worship. If we are bored, disengaged then it is time to either ask some questions of the forms we have created, or ask our hearts what is missing from our lives.

Sincere: not cute or clever.

Running after the latest fad does not necessarily lead to deeper more meaningful worship. Good worship finds grounding through tapping into the flow of energy between God and the people.

The Rev. Laurie Rudel is Pastor of Queen Anne Christian Church in Seattle, Wash.

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What we need in worship

We need:

  • to step away from the turmoil of the world;
  • to be quiet;
  • hope;
  • to feel real joy;
  • to be seen and loved;
  • to remember who and whose we are;
  • to confess our weaknesses and mistakes;
  • to forgive and to be forgiven;
  • to pray for the things that cloud our minds and break our hearts;
  • to discover and express our deepest gratitude;
  • community; to touch, to share; to give and receive;
  • to sing and move our bodies;
  • to practice our sacred rituals within a real respect for humanity's diverse religious life;
  • to anoint one another with the peace of Christ, a peace the world cannot give, not an easy peace, not an insignificant peace, not a half-hearted peace;
  • to be stripped of all that keeps us from coming to the common table with compassion for ourselves and others;
  • to feel safe to tell the truth in love;
  • to play;
  • to celebrate small victories in our efforts to make the world a better place;
  • to expect God/Christ/Spirit to be present and powerful; and
  • to leave room for surprise and be willing to be vulnerable.

We do not need:

  • to think we know when those times will be in any given worship;
  • to be bombarded with words as we are in culture.

The Rev. Joan Dennehy is Pastor of Findlay Street Christian Church in Seattle, Wash.

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Sacred space

What makes space sacred? In my mind I conjure up the grandeur of my home congregation University Christian Church in Seattle, Wash. No natural light penetrates the enormous space but diffused light from stained glass gives benevolent warmth. As a child I entered in hushed reverence. As someone recently observed,: "That space worships for you."

What makes space sacred? Soft rolling hills of wheat fields; tall redwood trees; rushing streams; a room or space set aside for prayer; pounding surf; a crowded public market abundant with fresh fruits, vegetables and flowers; a dinner table lit with candles and graced by a circle of hands; and some of it even exists inside church buildings.

What makes space sacred? First of all we make space sacred by our intention. The simple act of gathering with the intention to open ourselves to God and to our neighbors creates a sacred space. We light candles, we pause, we pray. Through simple actions we make room for unpredictable nature of the Spirit to enter into the equation of our lives.

Second, we make sacred space through sharing life together. Weekly worship, memorial services, weddings, baptisms resonate throughout sacred space. This can also lead to a sense that we can't change anything in the space because then it won't look the same as when we were married or baptized. However, preserving a memory does not make a space more or less sacred: it simply anchors us in the past.

Third, our capacity to experience sacred space lies in our capacity to move from moment to moment, in other words: to be present to what is now. The more we practice this, the more we experience the now-of-life, and each moment presents itself in all its God-drenched sacredness. Throughout Jesus' life we see his immense capacity to be present to what is and remain connected to God through the worst that human beings can inflict upon one another.

When that kind of life begins to stir in us then the act of coming to worship becomes a joy! What amazing grace to join with others in thanksgiving for what is, tell the truth about the complexity of our lives, offer it all up to God and receive strength to walk through this world as agents of God's purposes for the world. Sacred space occurs when you and I join with God/Jesus/Holy Spirit to become bread for the world, offer healing and hope, and work to promote true justice and lasting peace.

Finally, we can attend to some basic details of our sacred space. How does the stranger find a welcome? Has clutter piled up in various corners? Does the space have a strong visual focus that lifts us out of ourselves? Do colors change with the changing seasons of the church year? Do we encourage imagination, creativity, spontaneity?

What makes a space sacred? Not any one thing in particular, but rather everything held gently in love.

The Rev. Laurie Rudel is the Pastor of Queen Anne Christian Church in Seattle, Wash.

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Paper banner by Laurie Rudel at Queen Anne Christian Church, Seattle, Wash.

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