You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
As we enter final exam season, Nadine Ellsworth-Moran offers a prayer for the test takers and paper writers.
What would faith look like if we embraced "unknowing"?
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
Daniel Heath pens a prayer for Mother's Day that names the abuse of women and lifts it up to God.
In this lectionary reflection, editor Teri McDowell Ott highlights the danger of refusing to hear dissenting voices and the effectiveness of listening well.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
In this lectionary reflection, editor Teri McDowell Ott reflects on the meaning of awe and the day-by-day pace it sets for the early Christian community.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
"Hope, like fire, like flowers, requires tending. It is not a static object to be acquired and admired, but a living characteristic that we can let die or let loose." — Carol Holbrook Prickett
"Help me stay with the transformative tomb./ Help me trust it’s not over," writes Arianne Braithwaite Lehn.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
Jesus is patient with “doubting Thomas.” Maybe we should be too, writes Editor Teri McDowell Ott.
Brendan McLean offers a prayer that can be used alongside an Easter meal shared with friends and family.
Editor Teri McDowell Ott offers a lament in the style of Psalm 13.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
In a world that seems so confused, Easter can ground us and give us hope, writes editor Teri McDowell Ott.
For warm sunshine and cold air, for the first flowers, for the hope of rebirth...
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
In this Palm Sunday lectionary reflection, editor Teri McDowell Ott draws on Richard Horsley’s scholarship to highlight the dangerous, religious and political tension of Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem.
This prayer draws on the Celtic tradition of the caim, or encircling, prayer that may be familiar in the blessing of St. Patrick.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
In the face of insurmountable problems, it can be tempting to say “Well, that’s just the way it is.” But is it? Can God bring life out of a valley of dry bones?
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
© Copyright 2026 The Presbyterian Outlook. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement. Website by Web Publisher PRO