Our inclusive language liturgies set the structure and theme of Sunday morning worship. All liturgies are written by the Celebration Circle Mission Group.
Click here for an archive of our liturgies.
Feel free to use what is helpful from these liturgies. We only ask that when substantial portions are abstracted or used in a written work, please credit Seekers Church and cite the URL.
Advent 2007 – Who’s Got the Power?
December 2 – December 23, 2007
REFLECTION
God saw the world falling into ruin because of fear and immediately acted to call it back with love. God invited it by grace, preserved it by love, and embraced it with compassion.
Peter Chrysologus, Fifth Century, An Advent Sourcebook pg.64
Advent 2007 – Who's Got the Power?
December 2 – December 23, 2007
REFLECTION
God saw the world falling into ruin because of fear and immediately acted to call it back with love. God invited it by grace, preserved it by love, and embraced it with compassion.
Peter Chrysologus, Fifth Century, An Advent Sourcebook pg.64
Jubilee 2007 – Restoring Hope
October 28 – November 25, 2007 REFLECTION
Life Is
Amazing
Baffling
Crazy
Devilish
Energizing
Fearful…
Janet Sharp
Poetry of N Street Village 2007,
edited by Cynthia Dahlin, pg 8
Recommitment 2007 – Incarnate Hope
September 9 – October 21, 2007
REFLECTION
The days are surely coming, God says, when I will make a new covenant with my people. It will not be like the covenant that I made with their ancestors when I took them by the hand out of the land of Egypt…I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. No longer shall they teach one another, or say to each other "Know God" for they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, for I will forgive their iniquity, and remember their sin no more.
-Jeremiah 31:33-34
Green Season 2007 – Prophetic Hope
July 22 – September 2, 2007
REFLECTION
The hope-filled language of prophecy, in cutting through … despair and hopelessness, is the language of amazement. It is a language that engages the community in new discernments and celebrations just when it had nearly given up and had nothing to celebrate. The language of amazement is against the despair just as the language of grief is against the numbness.
Walter Brueggemann, The Prophetic Imagination, pp 67-68