I uploaded a couple of old liturgies on Twelvebaskets the other day, which is a great collection of worship resources for those of you on the look out for material to use in services and house gatherings.
I came across an old piece that I wrote from one of our Greenbelt worship events, entitled ‘Prodigals’, and thought it worth re-posting;
Prodigals, coming home
A liturgy for one voice with congregational response, examining our relationship with our Father God.
Our fathering arises from human brokenness
And so is easily broken
We are your prodigals, coming home
Our fathering arises in a place where we struggle for power and control
And so it can become oppressive
Or even abusive
We are your prodigals, coming home
Our fathering finds the limits of our patience, our tolerance and our finances
It can be conditional
And we can be easily angered
We are your prodigals, coming home
Our fathering can be decayed by divorce and marital disharmony
It can become distant and removed
We are your prodigals, coming home
Our fathering can be stolen by death, leaving us in desperate grief
And terribly alone
We are your prodigals, coming home
Yet even we, who are so human
Know how to love
It is shaped within us
Waiting
We know how to give the best for our children
We do not give a stone when they ask for bread
Or a razor blade
When they ask for a plastic toy
Or a used syringe
When they ask for expensive shoes
How much more…
How much more will we encounter
When we meet you-
Heavenly father?
We are your prodigals, coming home
There is no Father
Unless there is also a son
Or a daughter
We were made for relationship
All of us- with no exceptions
Every one of God’s children
From the star pupil,
To the remedial
Poorly clothed
Last-to-be-picked
Back-of-the-classroom loser
Who becomes the favourite
The Chosen One
The last-
Now made first
There is no Father
Without us
The sons and daughters-
The beloved
Of the most high God