Monday, March 25, 2013

Olive Branch Worship


March 23, 2013
St. Andrews Scotts Memorial Church


Land

To tend a garden is a precious thing.
But dearer still the one where all may roam,
the weeds of poison, poverty, and war,
demand your care, who call the earth your home.
Kathy Galloway, Soul Weavings


Come and be still surrounded by candlelight darkness, meditative liturgy, prayers, chants and readings. Providing space for interior reflection and quiet, this meditational Saturday evening service is offered when the work of the week is completed and the calm of the weekend’s eve settles over our hearts and minds. Come and be still.

About our altar: Each month the gathered community will create the sacred space according to the theme of the month. You are invited to bring a reading or an object to share. We will also provide some materials for you to create a response to our theme.

The service begins with the sound of the bells

Welcome

 Music
                  Kristen plays flute

Lighting of candles in bowls while we sing 
God to Enfold Us (Iona) singing 3 times

God to enfold us, Christ to uphold us,
Spirit to keep us in heaven’s sight;
So may God grace us, heal us, embrace us,
Lead us through the darkness into the light

Opening Prayer  (from Rabbi Arthur Waskow)

One:     In the beginning, darkness covered the face of the deep.
Many:  Then the rushing breath of life hovered over the waters.
All:       Let us breathe together.
One:     Let us catch our breath from the need to make, to do.
Many:   Let us be conscious of the Breath of Life.
One:     We breathe out what the trees breathe in.
Many:   We breathe in what the trees breathe out.
All:       Together we breathe each other into life.
     Blessed is the One within the many.
     Blessed are the Many who make one.
        
This is My Song (tune Findlandia)     verse 1
This is my song, Oh God of all the nations,
a song of Peace for lands afar and mine.
This is my home, the country where my heart is;
here are my hopes, my dreams, my sacred shrine.
but other hearts in other lands are beating,
with hopes and dreams as true and high as mine.

Reading or Sharing


This is My Song   verse 2
My country’s skies are bluer than the ocean,
and sunlight beams on cloverleaf and pine.
But other lands have sunlight too and clover,
and skies are everywhere as blue as mine.
Oh hear my song, oh God of all the nations,
a song of Peace for their land and for mine.

Reading or Sharing

This is My Song  verse 3

May Truth and Freedom come to every nation;
may Peace abound where strife has raged so long;
that each may seek to love and build together,
a world united, righting every wrong;
a world united in its love for freedom,
proclaiming Peace together in one song.

Reading or Sharing

“Come and fill our hearts” (Taize) three times

Come and fill our hearts with your peace.
You alone, O Lord, are holy.
Come and fill our hearts with your peace, alleluia

Prayers for Ourselves, Others, and Creation

“Were You There When They Crucified My Lord”

Chorus: Were you there when they crucified my Lord?
Were you there when they crucified my Lord?
Oh! Sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble.
Were you there when they crucified my Lord?

Were you there when they nailed him to the tree?
Were you there when they nailed him to the tree?
Oh! Sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble.
Were you there when they nailed him to the tree?

Were you there when they laid him in the tomb?
Were you there when they laid him in the tomb?
Oh! Sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble.
Were you there when they laid him in the tomb?

Were you there when God raised him from the dead?
Were you there when God raised him from the dead?
Oh! Sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble.
Were you there when God raised him from the dead?

Reading or Sharing

Sharing the Sign of Peace

Sending Song    Bless Now, O God, The Journey
Tune: Nettleton 339       Words: Sylvia Dunstan

Bless now, O God, the journey that all your people make,
the path through noise and silence, the way of give and take.
The trail is found in the desert and wends the mountain round.

Bless sojourners and pilgrims who share this winding way;
your hope burns through the terrors, your love sustains the day.
We yearn for holy freedom while often we are bound;
together we are seeking the road where faith is found.

Divine eternal lover, you meet us on the road.
We wait for lands of promise where milk and honey flow,
but waiting not for places, you meet us all around.
Our covenant is written on roads, as faith is found.

Sending Prayer

Sending Blessing
Deep peace of the running wave to you.
Deep peace of the flowing air to you.
Deep peace of the quiet earth to you.
Deep peace of the shining stars to you.
Deep peace of the infinite peace to you.

Readings


My homeland is not a traveling bag.
Nor am I a passing traveler.
It is I who am the lover.
And the land is my beloved.
Mahmoud Darwish, Diary of a Wound

Genesis 8: 6-12
At the end of 40 days Noah opened the window of the ark that he had made and sent out a raven; and it went to and fro until the waters were dried up from the earth. Then he sent out the dove from him, to see if the waters had subsided from the face of the ground; but the dove found no place to set its foot, and it returned to him to the ark, for the waters were still on the face of the whole earth. So he put out his hand and took it into the ark with him. He waited another seven days, and again he sent out the dove from the ark; and the dove came back to him in the evening, and there in his beak was a freshly plucked olive leaf; so Noah knew that the waters had subsided from the earth. Then he waited another seven days, and sent out the dove; and it did not return to him anymore.

I thank You God for most this amazing
day for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
and a blue true dream of sky, and for everything
which is natural which is infinite which is yes

(i who have died am alive again today,
and this is the sun’s birthday; this is the birth
day of life and of love and wings: and of the gay
great happening illimitably earth)

how should tasting touching hearing seeing
breathing any---lifted from the no
of all nothing---human merely being
doubt unimaginable You?

(now the ears of my ears awake and
now the eyes of my eyes are opened)
                  ee cummings

Good people,
most royal greening verdancy,
rooted in the sun,
you shine with radiant light.
In this circle of earthly existence
you shine so finely,
It surpasses understanding.
God hugs you.
You are encircled by the arms
of the mystery of God.
         Hildegard of Bingen


Deuteronomy 8: 6-10
Therefore keep the commandments of the Lord your God, by walking in his ways and by fearing him. For the Lord your God
Is bringing you into a good land, a land with flowering streams, with springs and underground waters welling in valleys of vines and fig trees and pomegranates, a land of olive trees and honey, a land where you can eat bread without scarcity, where you will lack nothing, a land whose stones are iron and from whose hills you may mine copper. You shall et your fill and bless the Lord your God for the good land that he has given you.


The dignity of nature as creation needs to be bound up with our responsibility for the preservation of life.
                           World Council of Churches


We know that in all Creation
Only the human family
Has Strayed from the Sacred Way.
.
We know that we are the ones who are divided
And we are the ones who must come back together
To Walk in the Sacred Way.
.
Sacred One,
Teach us love, compassion, and honor
That we may heal the earth
And heal each other.
-- A prayer of the Ojibway Nation

…A small evening
a neglected village
two sleeping eyes
thirty years
five wars
I witness that time hides for me
An ear of wheat
The singer sings
Of fire and strangers
Evening was evening
The singer was singing
And they question him
Why do you sing?
He answers them as they seize him
because I sing

And they have searched him:
in his breast only his heart
in his heart only his people
in his voice only his sorrow.
Mahmoud Darwish from poem of the land


I have always found it difficult not to be moved by Jerusalem, even when I hated it---and God knows I have hated it for the sheer human cost of it. But the sight of it, from a far or inside the labyrinth of its walls, softens me. Every inch of it holds the confidence of ancient civilizations, their deaths and their birthmarks pressed deep into the city’s viscera and onto the rubble of its edges. The deified and the condemned have set their footprints in its sand. It has been conquered, razed, and rebuilt so many times that its stones seem to possess life, bestowed by the audit trail of prayer and blood.  Yet somehow, it exhales humility.  It sparks an inherent sense of familiarity in me---that doubtless, irrefutable Palestinian certainty that I belong to this land. It possesses me, no matter who conquers it, because its soil is the keeper of my roots, of the bones of my ancestors. Because it knows the private lust of my foremothers. Because I am the natural seed of its passionate, tempestuous past. I am a daughter of the land, and Jerusalem reassures me of this inalienable title, far more than yellowed property deeds, the Ottoman land registries, the iron keys to our stolen homes, or UN resolutions and decrees of superpowers could ever do.
         From Mornings in Jenin  by Susan Abulhawa












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