You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
What would life look like if we sought out those we don't know, asks Teri McDowell Ott?
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.
"All manner of things are not well," writes Carol Holbrook Prickett. "Yet, I have seen nothing more rule-breaking, more transforming than God’s love ... and the people who carry it to one another."
Who are the people who showed you the gospel? Each one of those relationships is the church, just like Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch are the church, writes Tara Bulger.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
We shall not look away. We shall not ignore the atrocities. We pray for the killing to stop. We pray for peace. — Teri McDowell Ott
"Fostering a sense of belonging means giving up some of our control, allowing ourselves to be guests instead of hosts in a space that feels like ours," writes Teri McDowell Ott.
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.
Resurrection is happening all around us, all the time, writes Ellen Williams Hensle.
Early on Tuesday, March 26, 2024, a container ship crashed into a 1.5 mile bridge in Baltimore, Maryland. Several vehicles fell into the waters below.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
We, like the disciples in John 20, are called to leave the security of locked doors and closed minds, to leave the safety of status so we the Holy Spirit can send us into the world God loves, writes Chris Currie.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
The original end of Mark's Gospel is one full of questions and fear, writes Teri McDowell Ott. And that's ok. It’s not a fear without faith or hope.
"We want salvation now and the celebration to begin today. But sometimes the colt goes around in circles, and we have to start again tomorrow," writes Matthew A. Rich.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
Jesus teaches his disciples that death is a necessary pre-condition to life. What in our lives might need to fall into the earth and die so that something else might be born? — Ginna Bairby
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
"In life, we will be bitten, but we will also be healed," writes Baron Mullis of Numbers 21.
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
Jesus teaches that his body is the new temple in which God’s presence dwells. If the church is called to be Christ’s body, where does that mean we should be? — Ginna Bairby
You are welcome to use this liturgy in your online worship services and distribute it to your congregation.
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