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Singing a new song is not an optional extra, but a faithful response to a divine command. This command is the opening phrase of Psalms 96 and 98. And, St John the Divine says, this is what the saints in heaven are doing all the time.But, on earth, things are not so easy. Sometimes it's because the latest new song in the old hymnbook is two centuries old. Or the congregation has been told by some sadist that it 'doesn't sing well'. Or sometimes the organist can only play what s/he hears on the radio. Or the guitarist can do anything, as long as it's only three major chords. However, even in such dire straits, the divine command has to be obeyed.So what if we kept familiar tunes - hymn tunes o...
New, revised and expanded edition of this much-loved unrecorded dialogue between Jesus and his eager disciple, Peter. Ideal as discussion starters or scriptural reflections in small groups and church services or for personal study. These scripts use up-to-date language and present a modern perspective on perennial issues such as faith, money, marriage, vocation, sex, healing, taxes, ecological concern, committment, children, the kingdom of heaven and many more.
A completely revised and expanded edition of this collection of liturgies for morning, day, evening, Holy Communion and healing services and there are revised liturgies from the original edition. Aimed primarily at participative worship with shared leadership, it includes optional methods of scriptural reflection and prayer with symbolic acction. There is also a preface of comments on leading worship, dealing with all the issues which ordained clergy never tell lay people but presume they should know.
The services and resources in The Iona Abbey Worship Book reflect the Iona Community's commitment to the belief that worship is all that we are and all that we do, both inside and outside the church, with no division into the 'sacred' and the 'secular'.
The second 'book of bits' for worship produced by the Wild Goose Worship Group, which has been received with great enthusiasm by clergy and laity alike. Tracing Jesus's road to the cross through Lent, Holy Week and Easter, its prime purpose is to resource worship that enables people to sense the hope, apprehension and joy of Easter as felt by Jesus's friends. The range and diversity offer a unique source of elements for lay and clergy worship planners and enablers.
This text is a highly accessible analysis by John L. Bell, one of the world's leading experts on congregational song.
This is a songbook by the Wild Goose Collective (an ad hoc collection of ex-Wild Goose Worship Group members and other collaborators) and the Macappella Ceilidh Band.
Includes over 850 hymns and psalms, with a ranging mix of traditional, modern and material drawn from across the Christian world - primarily the USA and New Zealand, but also translations and adaptations of material from Hong Kong, Singapore, Korea, Japan and Zimbabwe.
An additional 25 World Church songs with an emphasis on Central and South America.