WorshipWell

WorshipWell WorshipWell provides progressive, inclusive, grace-infused Narrative Lectionary worship resources that lighten your load and inspire and invite creativity.

04/19/2023

No hay evangelio sin inclusión radical. Jesús incluye a pecadores, a mujeres de mala fama, a samaritanos de rituales y lugares de consagración diferentes, a recolectores de impuestos, a zelotas, a pobres, a ricos, a desechados ¿a quiénes crees que Jesús nos invita a incluir hoy?

Worship-Well is busy thinking about Lent! But as we enter Advent we want to offer some lyric videos of hymns in order to...
11/26/2022

Worship-Well is busy thinking about Lent! But as we enter Advent we want to offer some lyric videos of hymns in order to enhance your worship. You can find the first one at worship-well.com.

We have been hard at work this summer and are so happy to offer resources for the fall. This new series titled “Re-membe...
08/13/2022

We have been hard at work this summer and are so happy to offer resources for the fall. This new series titled “Re-member” *mostly* follows the Narrative Lectionary texts and includes prayers, grounding moments, confessions, original artwork, children’s messages, weekly commentary and preaching helps, scripture as story, music suggestions, and reflective videos to accompany the theme.

We hope and pray this lightens your load and gives you a well of resources to deepen your congregation’s worship life and enrich your preaching and planning.

Find the complete series at worship-well.com.

08/13/2022

One of the paradoxes of Judaism is that joy is often linked to suffering. For instance, we break a glass at weddings to recall the destruction of our Holy Temple. Remembering the bad when times are good also helps remember the good when times are bad, thereby diluting the pain.

We just came out of Tisha b’Av, the saddest day in the Jewish calendar. The Shabbat after Tisha b’Av is Shabbat Nachamu, named for the emotional opening lines from this week’s haftarah (prophetic reading): "Nachamu, nachamu ami [comfort, comfort my people]” (Isaiah 40:1). The Prophet comforts us with the message that our millennia of suffering and exile will soon come to an end. Only a few days ago we were deep in mourning; now it’s time for feasting and joy. Shabbat Nachamu is more festive than any other Shabbat, and is celebrated like a holiday, with special food and lively song. (It’s no coincidence that Shabbat Nachamu comes right after Tu B’Av, the holiday of love.)

Tisha b’Av looks backward, to the loss of our Temple. Shabbat Nachamu looks forward, to the Final Redemption when the Holy Temple in Jerusalem will once again be God’s home on earth. What’s the thematic connection between these two very different days, less than a week apart? Our Sages teach that “All who mourn the destruction of Jerusalem will merit to see it in its joy” (Ta’anit 30b). We need to experience sadness before we can truly be happy.

Image: Isaiah by Jean-Louis Ernest Meissonier, 1838

Check the WorshipWell website tomorrow afternoon for the complete fall series called Re-Member! We're posting the whole ...
08/11/2022

Check the WorshipWell website tomorrow afternoon for the complete fall series called Re-Member! We're posting the whole thing at once to give you more time to plan. The package contains commentary, children's messages, music suggestions, prayers and other words for worship, a couple video links and artwork. Everything you need!

Fascinating side by side comparison.
07/16/2022

Fascinating side by side comparison.

Old Testament scholar, Michael J Rhodes, tweeted a glimpse into his research on the Top 25 Christian worship songs, after spending months studying the Psalms. Here are his main insights (lightly edited by me for readability):

1. Justice is mentioned only once in one Top 25 song. In contrast, the Hebrew word for justice “Mishpat” alone can be found 65 times in 33 different Psalms.

2. The poor are completely absent in the Top 25. By contrast, the Psalter uses varied language to describe the poor on nearly every page.

3. The widow, refugees, and the oppressed are completely absent from the Top 25. The orphan gets two mentions, one occurrence of which appears to refer to a "spiritual" orphan.

4. Whereas "enemies" are the third most common character in the Psalms, they rarely show up in the Top 25. When they do, they appear to be enemies only in a spiritual sense.

5. Maybe most devastatingly, in the Top 25, not a SINGLE question is ever posed to God. The Top 25 never ask God anything. Prick the Psalter and it bleeds the cries of the oppressed pleading with God to act. This is completely lacking in the Top 25.

Rhodes goes on to say, “Indeed, there is very little evidence that the Top 25 are ever speaking clearly about situations of social and economic harm.

‘Are you hurting and broken WITHIN’ sums up the way these songs transform the holistic nature of the psalms into songs about spiritual healing.

Worse yet, we deny the poor and oppressed the "First Amendment Right" to protest the psalms offer them.

Meanwhile, those of us who are not poor and oppressed continue to refuse to learn how to mourn and protest alongside them.”

FALL SERIES at WORSHIPWELL!To remember. To be remembered.We remember birthdays and anniversaries. We remember loved ones...
07/12/2022

FALL SERIES at WORSHIPWELL!

To remember. To be remembered.

We remember birthdays and anniversaries. We remember loved ones departed and friends far away. We are humbled when someone sends a note or a text to say “I was thinking of you today.” Sometimes the power of memory – of remembering and being remembered – is a gift.

Sometimes this power unseats us. Our memories can drag us back to a painful event. We encounter a person we had tried to forget. We recall choices made in haste or anger or fear or frustration. We are tormented by traumas past – harm done to us or harm we have caused others.

Reading the Bible is a kind of remembering, of being remembered. Check out our newest blog post for an overview of our fall series, Re-Member.
https://www.worship-well.com/blog

Scripture is a story of refugees and immigrants. God’s people have always been on the move – sometimes as refugees, runn...
06/29/2022

Scripture is a story of refugees and immigrants. God’s people have always been on the move – sometimes as refugees, running from danger; sometimes as immigrants, running toward a distant shore.

Our next series, "You were strangers," is now available as a complete package on our website! It includes commentary, series art, prayers of the day, and song suggestions for $30. Check it out at worship-well.com

How should we talk about gifts from God? The final installment of Rushing Wind is on the website: worship-well.com
06/22/2022

How should we talk about gifts from God? The final installment of Rushing Wind is on the website: worship-well.com

Our third installment of the Holy Spirit series is online: The Intimacy of God. Find it at worship-well.com.
06/14/2022

Our third installment of the Holy Spirit series is online: The Intimacy of God. Find it at worship-well.com.

Check the website for Rushing Wind: The Feminine of God. worship-well.com
06/08/2022

Check the website for Rushing Wind: The Feminine of God. worship-well.com

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