Ten Ways to Participate In Worship1. We participate in worship through frequent communion. This is the most important way of participating in the Divine Liturgy. When the deacon comes forward with the holy chalice and lifts it high, he says, , 'With fear of God, with faith and love, draw near' " Come close to commune with God. That's a command, an instruction. After all, what is the holy Eucharistic Liturgy all about? Simply, it's the way the Church prepares, consecrates, and administers the sacrament of Holy Communion. Receiving Holy Communion, receiving Christ, is the central act of the Divine Liturgy. 2. We participate in worship
through our gathering together as the Church. The Divine Liturgy
begins with the words, "Blessed be
the Kingdom of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit." What's
a kingdom? The place where a king reigns. Who's the King? GOD. Who
are the subjects? CHRISTIANS. Where does the king reign? Where God
is present and the Christians are present. God's kingship is made
manifest in us during worship. One cannot be manifesting the Kingdom
liturgically if he's not there. Being present is crucial to the liturgical
life. 3. We participate in worship through entering into
it responsively The language of the Liturgy contains a number of
dialogues in various parts of the service. For example, the priest
says, "Let us lift
up our hearts." 4. All Orthodox
services include "litanies" for example "Let
us pray unto the Lord", in which the deacon names a petition,
and the choir responds either "Lord, have mercy" or "Grant
this, 0 Lord." The deacon is not actually addressing himself
to God in these petitions: He's addressing the whole congregation.
He's saying (for another example), "For the peace from God and
salvation of our souls, let us pray to the Lord." The choir
sings the response but they are not really praying either. They give
the same response to all the petitions. It's really the congregation's
role to pray these prayers. If the congregation does not enter in,
then nobody is praying! 5. We participate in worship through singing. Many Orthodox people are not accustomed to singing in Church, they are afraid of being conspicuous. But even in a parish where the Choir does all the singing; it's possible to sing along with the choir softly. You don’t have to sing loud enough to be heard, but sing! The patristic tradition tells us that in the past they did sing. We need to revive this tradition in all our Churches. 6. There are two places in the Divine Liturgy where we generally say the words, instead of singing or chanting them - the Creed and the Lord’s Prayer. The people say the Creed and the Lord’s Prayer as a body. In the Lord’s Prayer it is clear that we are taking to God; our challenge is to make the prayer our own, so that it truly expresses our thoughts and feelings. But the Creed is different. To make the creed come alive, you must consider to whom you’re confessing. I find if I think of talking to God, it really becomes personal. Because I’m telling God what I believe, it is a prayer and it touches my head and soul. 7. We participate in worship through physical action. Instructions such as “Let us bow our heads to the Lord” require you to worship with your body. There are many ways we use our bodies in worship in the Divine Liturgy. The most important way is when we make the sign of the Cross. This is one of the most profound things a Christian can do. It identifies ourselves as Christians. 8. We participate in worship through listening to the readings and the sermon. What are told at the beginning of the readings? “Let us be attentive.” Unfortunately we tend to make those words into mere ritual. But the words actually are saying to us, “Pay attention, Listen! There is something very important here.” That’s an instruction! Christians ought to really perk up and listen to the what the Holy Epistle and the holy Gospel has to say. 9. We
participate in worship through involvement in its structure. The
Divine liturgy has an organization and pattern. That structure is
revealed primarily in what the call the Little Litanies, in which
we pray, “Again in peace let us pray to the Lord.” The little Litanies
come at the ends of the nine significant portions of the Liturgy.
If you understand this structure, you’re able to participate in it. 10. Finally,
we participate in worship through personal devotion. The Liturgy
can be understood in a literal sense, and ti can also be understood
as symbolic. Some of the things we do in the Liturgy today have no
real meaning except as symbols. Take the Great Entrance. The Great
Entrance (when the Priest and the deacon carry the gifts around the
church) originated in constantinople where they would begin the Holy
Divine LIturgy in one Church, then move to a special saint’s Church
or chapel to conclude it. In order to conduct the Liturgy, they had
to move the bread and wine, the chalice and paten, to a new location.
So it became a grand procession, the great Entrance, when we sing,
“Let us receive the invisible King.” |
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