Last week at the Create in Me retreat, we did some worship planning. In a way, it's a familiar aspect of the retreat. But this year was different: we had one person who had done the prep work in advance (choosing texts and music, thinking about the order of worship, recruiting some leaders) and worship prep was an afternoon option, not a morning requirement.
We didn't have as many people who wanted to participate, so some approaches wouldn't work as well. For example, in the past, a Word team might have acted out the Bible reading, but with just one person, that's not as viable. In the past, the Movement group might have put together a performance or brought silks for the congregation to use, but not this year.
In some ways, the final worship service was more participatory, which I didn't anticipate. We didn't have a Movement group, so we adapted one song to have movements that the whole worship congregation would do--and it worked.
I was in charge of the Word team, which was one other person. She read one passage, which was fine. But I wanted to do something different with the other two Bible passages. I thought about drafting people to help me act out a scene, and there probably would have been people who were willing. But in the worship prep afternoon session, we came up with a different idea: a responsive reading.
Most of us probably think of responsive reading as something we do with a Psalm. But I was happy to experiment, and so I spent an hour with the Ruth and Naomi text and the David and Jonathan text (our retreat had a friendship theme this year) and created the following. I'm posting it here, because the responsive reading went well, and I wanted to remember that it worked:
The Story Ruth, Read Responsively
Right Side
All our men have died, husbands, sons, and we are left alone.
Left Side
Right Side
We know that I am too old to remarry, but they are not.
Left Side
I cannot give them new sons. They should find someone else to marry.
Right Side
Orpah leaves, but Ruth does not.
Left Side
Ruth says, “Wherever you go, I will go; wherever you live, I will live.
Right Side
Your people will be my people, and your God will be my God.
Left Side
Wherever you die, I will die, and there I will be buried.
Right Side
May the Lord punish me severely if I allow anything but death to separate us!”
Left Side
If Ruth wants to come, I will not stop her. We go to the land of my people, Bethlehem. We get home just before the barley harvest.
The Story of David and Jonathan read responsively
Right Side
Jonathan loved David—the bond was immediate. They made a pact.
Left Side
Right Side
David was successful in war—too successful.
Left Side
Jonathan’s father, King Saul, vowed to kill David.
Right Side
Jonathan warned David and came up with a plan to save him.
Left Side
David hid, while Jonathan reminded King Saul of all the good David had done.
Right Side
King Saul changed his mind and vowed that David would not die but live.
Left Side
In this way, Jonathan saved both David and his father.
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