Tag: Ash Wednesday
Ash Wednesday Interactive Liturgy
Ash Wednesday
February 14, 2018
East Rochester United Methodist Church
Greeting
*Hymn Lord, Who Throughout These Forty Days, No. 269, v.1&3
Old Testament: Joel 2:1-17
Silent Reflection
Epistle Reading: 2 Corinthians 5:20b-6:10
Silent Reflection
Gospel: Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21
Meditation
*Hymn: Just As I Am, Without One Plea, No 357
Four Prayer Stations
(Individuals are encouraged to move between the four prayer stations set up in the sanctuary and atrium of the church building. Remain as long as necessary until so moved to approach a new prayer station. When completed, rest in silence in the sanctuary until all return.)
- Create “Lent in a Bag”
Create a “tool box” to use on your Lenten journey from
Ash Wednesday to the resurrection celebration.
- John 3:1 Greeting Project
Sacrifice some time weekly to pray for people, then share a
personalized message of encouragement or connection.
- Prayer Net, based on the Lord’s Prayer
Praying the Lord’s Prayer involves trusting Him. Reflect
on where you hope to increase trust and dependence
on Him. As a visual representation of your commitment
tie a ribbon on the net.
- Imposition of Ashes,
(Ashes are imposed with these words: “Remember;
from dust you have come, and to dust you shall return.”)
Prayer
Let us pray a prayer for repentant hearts and lives: These days, the fabric of the world is shredded.
We are coming unraveled in hatred and division.
So many voices are raised in fear, in anger,
We can hardly hear the Spirit who calls to us.
We enter this season of ashes and sackcloth
Standing before the Holy in our brokenness.
Heal us, God of mercy, of our hardened hearts,
Our judging natures, our fears of The Other.
Walk with us, God of Love, through deserts of
Hopelessness,
Stay with us through valleys of brokenness.
Take us, God of love, and transform us
As we find the path that leads to resurrection.
Amen.
[By- Beth A. Richardson, 2017 Alive Now]
*Hymn: More Love to Thee O Christ, No. 453
The Lord’s Prayer
*Benediction
As you have been blessed with the mark of repentance
you are now called to go out from this place and live out
your repentance.
Go forth to love and serve the Lord.
Amen.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Those who are able are invited to stand in body or spirit.
Bold print indicates a congregational response.
Thank you for silencing your cell phone during our time of worship
An Accessible and Meaningful Ash Wednesday
If it is January than Ash Wednesday must be soon! We are preparing our annual interactive Ash Wednesday service that is accessible and meaningful to all people. That sentence is much easier to type than it is to put into action. Accessible and meaningful to all people…
The congregation of East Rochester United Methodist Church (Upper New York Conference) and their downstairs tenants (a group of people who volunteer at various not-for-profit organizations in the area and who use disability services) are accustomed to celebrating the holidays of the church calendar together.
The process we use to create this annual interactive Ash Wednesday service is simple but time consuming. It requires much time in prayer. I start with reading the lectionary scriptures, available online from Vanderbilt. . Next is a time of pondering and meditating the scriptures, mingled with prayer. The prayer flows around questions:
What do your people need from this season?
What do I need from this season?
How can this diverse community unite in seeking your face and heart for the next 40 days?
How can our senses of touch, taste, hear, smell, and sight be used to prepare our hearts for Lent?
My next step is to visit Pinterest! There are hundreds of interactive faith and prayer stations pinned by myself and other Pinterest users. My Pinterest board for Lent is this link.
Please check back to AbleFaith as I will be sharing my plans and interactive stations for the 2018 service.
Have you used interactive stations for your congregations? What worked? What did not work?

Ash Wednesday Tears
I shed some tears today during the Ash Wednesday service at a local church. These were not tears of repentance for sin (although I could shed tears concerning my sins). These were tears of joy for community.
Almost three years ago the congregation at East Rochester United Methodist Church (New York State), dived off the deep end to become an inclusive congregation. They put mission ahead of margin and invited a local human services organization (Heritage Christian Services) to share their building. The organization serves, among others, people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. The East Rochester church opened their doors to become a day habilitation site for a handful of people who volunteer in the community and use disability services.
Since the doors opened the two groups have sought to become one community. They built bridges of communication, accepted diversity, overcame stereotypes and asked deep questions. The church people invited their new tenants to join their midweek Bible study and potluck luncheons. The new tenants invited the church people to volunteer with them as they made bread for communion and sorted clothing donations for charity. They celebrate holidays together, and (as Methodists are prone to doing) they often share a dish-to-pass meal. There have been some bumps along the way, but they believe that the relationships are worth the effort to overcome the bumps.
The pastor at East Rochester UMC has been diligent about including me in worship planning for the holiday services and events that include both groups of people. When we began our planning of an Ash Wednesday service I made the suggestion that we create a service that would be universally accessible and participated in by all of the attendees. Pastor Todd Goddard did not have to think twice about working together to create a non-traditional service for this traditional Christian observance of the beginning of the Lent season.
The service began with a prayer in unison and the singing of “Have Thine Own Way Lord.” After the song we introduced the four interactive stations that we created in the sanctuary and narthex. The four stations ran simultaneously and the worshippers had as much time as they needed to prayerfully participate in each station. Rocks represent disciplines to commit to practicing; strips of cloth serve as reminders of the work that Christ did for each of us; woven ribbons express love for God and neighbor; and, ashes represent God’s love for us with the ancient words, “Ashes to ashes, dust to dust.”
Here is where my Ash Wednesday tears happened. I watched as these two formerly separate groups of people worshiped as one. They assisted each other, prayed together and loved as one. Where there had been fear their was love. Where there had been distance there was acceptance. Names were spoken. Hugs were given. Ashes were received.
One devout man stood in the center of the sanctuary, gazed heavenward and repeated, “I love you God, praise you God” as the other worshippers silently bowed their heads at the simplicity of his expression of love.
Our Lenten discipline- community. Being the beloved community.
Amen.
