Wednesday 15 August 2012

Preaching trees pilgrimage worship

In response to requests, Rowena Francis and David Herbert have made the following material available. It represents the main services of worship shared during the three days of the Synod Pilgrimage in Coquetdale, August 3-5 2012.



Friday 6 Aug:
Gathering and opening worship  (REF)


Introduction:

Rivers and trees form the basis of our pilgrimage as we walk up the Coquet Valley to the preaching trees over the coming days.

Introduce yourself by sharing your name, where you come from – a river and / or tree that are significant to you and briefly why.


Hymn:  Guide me O thou great Jehovah  (v 2 sung in Portuguese)

Selected verses Psalm 104:



Praise the Lord my soul!
O Lord, my God, how great you are!
You are clothes with majesty and glory;
You cover yourself with light.

You make springs flow in the valleys
And rivers ruin between the hills.
They provide water for the wild animals;
There the wild donkeys quench their thirst.

In the trees near by the birds make their nests.
From the sky you send rain on the hills,
And the earth is filled with your blessings.

I will sing to the Lord all my life;
As long as I live I will sing praises to my God.
May he be pleased with my song
For my gladness comes from him.

Praise the Lord, my soul!
Praise the Lord;


Reading: Genesis 2: 10-14 

Comment:

We start not from the source of the river and walk down to the sea but over the next days we will be following the river Coquet. Rivers and water are a significant part of creation and the story of God involvement with us. As we have heard from Genesis the garden of Eden at the beginning was watered by a river that had significant trees by it and when we come to the preaching trees on Sunday we will reflect on the end of the bible when God’s kingdom is realised and there again there is a river with trees for the haling of the nations.  As we walk together let us consider the significance of rivers and trees as places of encounter with God and as places where the liberation we have in God is perceived.


Prayer:

Creator God
At the beginning of creation
You planted a garden, watered by a stream.
Join our walking along the Coquet River
Enlivening our love and hope.

Jesus Christ,
Baptised in the river Jordan
Offering living water to a woman at a well
Bringing salvation in blood and water
Be present with us on our journey.

Holy Spirit
Spring of power within us
Refresh us through this pilgrimage
Flow into the world through our lives
With compassion and justice. Amen.

Lord’s prayer.


Song
Peace is flowing like a river...



____________________________

 Fri 6 Aug  5.30 pm
at St Mary the Virgin, Holystone  (DAH)


“My soul glorifies the Lord and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour”
(Luke 2: 46 – 47, Mary’s Song)



Opening Sentences: Isaiah 44: 3 – 4

Hymn:  The king of love my shepherd is

Reading:  John 19: 25 - 27

Mary and flowing waters at Ephesus

Reading:  John 7: 37 – 44

Bowl of water passed – we make sign of dove on one another’s foreheads

Hymn:  O Lord you are the life of the world

Silence

Prayer

Hymn:  Tell out my soul


Benediction:

Go in peace to serve the Lord:
May the eye of the Great God be on you,
The eye of the God of glory;
The eye of the Virgin’s Son;
The eye of the gentle Spirit,
The kindly eye of the Three be on you,
To aid you and to shepherd you.Amen.


________________________________



Sat 7 Aug
10.30am  at Ladywell  (REF)


This Special Place

Here at Lady's Well clear, clean water bubbles out of the hillside and this is a place which has probably been special since human beings first ventured this far north.

Legend has it that it was a Holy Place on Easter Day in the year of grace 627 when Paulinus, Bishop of York, made use of the water that flows here to baptise many people. But it was probably a Special Place long before that.

Perhaps those early Stone Age men and women who lived on fruit, nuts and seeds and the wildlife which abounded here and whose descendants carved the cups and rings that adorn rocks in this valley, drank at this well and gave thanks to their gods as they drank.

Maybe the Bronze Age people who buried their dead in stone-built kists, watered their flocks here and gave thanks to their god of the water.

Their time passed and they were succeeded by people who worked iron, who built camps upon the hilltops and who worshipped the goddess they called Bridgit.

The Romans tramped this way, drank at this well, and here they honoured their gods.

And for generations after Paulinus, this remained a Holy Place. A group of nuns built a priory, probably where the church now stands, and may have used this well as a source of water. Perhaps it is from the name they gave to their priory - St Mary the Virgin - that we get the name "Lady's Well".

And so Lady's Well has remained, a Special Place upon the hillside.

Water began the life of this well and, though human beings, frail creatures of the passing day, come and go, water remains, water bubbling up from the earth through guessed-at geological formations in the rocks and soil below.

And this remains a Special and a Holy Place, a place able to touch our inner souls.

Praise responses    (Touch Holiness p139 Duck and Tirabassi adptd)

We are a people of the water!
We worship a God whose love flows through water.

Love, like little drops, drips from fingertips to forehead.
Through baptism, the family of faith makes room for one more

Love, like a rain shower, awakens the sleeping seed within the soul
and lures it to blossom.
We worship a God whose love flows through water.

Love, like a wading pool, inspires the delight of children, jumping,
splashing, spraying each other, shivering with wet joy.
We worship a God whose love flows through water.

Love, like a hot shower after a long day's work,
cleanses us, reawakens us.
We worship a God whose love flows through water.

We are a people of the water!
We worship a God whose love flows through water.


Song :  As the deer pants for the waters


The story of Genesis 16: Hagar meets God at the spring/well


Reflection

Water is a blessing and sign of new birth. The waters break cleansing the birth canal before a new baby is born. The waters of baptism purify a person as they die and rise with Christ – a new being. The waters of rain bring an end to drought bringing forth fruit and crop for the nourishment of people bringing life. For all this new life we give thanks.

We invite you to reach into the pool, a pool similar to where Hagar in her distress met God and was called to return home to Sarah and Abraham and gave birth to Ishmael. A pool of water signifying possibly a refreshing of your baptismal promises. A pool of water showing the fruitfulness of the earth that we are called to give thanks for and share.

In quietness let the water run through your fingers and give thanks for life, yours and that of the whole earth.


Prayer

Gracious God,
It is from water that life came forth.
It is with water that your Spirit signifies your claim upon us in baptism.
It is water that quenches our thirst, and without it, no life is possible.
For those children for whom water is a luxury, we pray.
For those who rely on dried up wells; who sit parched and find no relief.
For those whose water is contaminated by industry or ignorance--who sit by the water but cannot drink.
For those whose water is tapped by others for profit. What once was a gift to drench the fields and to supply the table and the bath is now a commodity sold at a price.For those whose water is a dwindling resource --
where streams that once watered cattle and fields are now a source of violence and conflict--
for who owns this gift will survive.


Gracious God,
Drench us with your Spirit.
Saturate us with your grace.
Enable us to see the world as you see it; to see all of your children as our own.
In your Spirit make us wise, that we may show well what you have given us so that all may be sated. Amen.

©Presbyterian Mission Agency PC(USA)


Blessing: (based on Brian Wren I have no bucket and the well is deep)

God of the living waters
Refresh our longings with your Word.
Liberate us with your love.
Raise us to new life.
Bless us with springs of -
Unending joy and worth.
Renew us with your life
Tonight, tomorrow and always. Amen.


Song:    Peace is flowing like a river..


___________________


Sat evening 7 Aug
at Little Church Rock  (DAH)


“Let justice roll on like a river,
righteousness like a never failing stream!” (Amos 5: 24)


Opening Sentence: Exodus 17: 5 - 7

Rock, springs, pools, mountains, lambs, rams… familiar landscape to our spiritual forbears, early dissenters, who may have well worshipped here, and sung:

Hymn:   All people that on earth do dwell

Reading:  Psalm 114

Cuddy’s Spring – last year’s pilgrimage on St Oswald’s Way

Reading:  Amos 5: 21 – 24

Dissent and nonconformity often go hand in hand with prophecy and a hunger for justice

 Hymn:  Father hear the prayer we offer

Prayer for a river of justice and righteousness

Build a cairn – mindful of that rich stream of faith in which we stand,
and upon which we build.

Hymn:  Glorious things of thee are spoken

Benediction

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Sun 8th Aug 
at
Rothbury Church   (REF)

Theme:
Encountering God and experiencing liberation at trees.


Call:

To the people in exile in a strange land God says:
You will leave Babylon with joy

You will be led out of the city in peace.
The mountains and the hills will burst into singing
And the trees will shout for joy.

Cypress will grow where now there are briars;
Myrtle trees will come up in place of thorns.
This will be a sign that will last for ever,
A reminder of what I, the Lord have done.


Prayer of approach and confession:

The trees shout for joy
And sing your praise
As now your people do.

The tree of life
Brings healing and peace
To all in its shade .

Fruit bearing trees
Replace the thorns
As your people hope too.

Forgive our sin, Holy God,
Prune the dead and living growth
Bring a new harvest.

Gather us home from exile
To a land of living water
Where we can grow in your Word.

Hearts overflow with thanksgiving
Roots drink up your forgiveness
The tree of our lives grows strong in you.

We thank you, creator
Praise and glorify you, Christ.
Rejoice in you, Holy Spirit. Amen.

 Lord’s prayer


Hymn :  Think of a world without any flowers


The tree of life

Reading:  Galatians 3: 10-14

Reflection on the tree on which Christ died.

Discussion on what trees can mean to people?

 In the Bible there are two words – cross and wood in the original language that is translated as cross. Sometimes the word for wood is translated by the word tree. Artists have often used that as a means for depicting the cross as a tree.

From the tree of life in the garden of Eden at the beginning of the bible, through to the tree on which Christ was crucified, through to the tree with leaves for the healing of the nations in Revelation at the end of the bible trees are a significant part of the history of God’s relationship with humanity as part of creation.

It is difficult to understand and explain the power of the cross for our healing and salvation today. Yet we can trust that God acted in Jesus voluntarily undertaking to die on the cross and let humanity do the worst it could do to him so that through that vulnerable self-giving love it would become clear that nothing anymore could separate us from the love of God that desired for each of us and all creation life in all its fullness. We are reconciled to God by Christ being lifted up on the tree. We are forgiven and liberated from all that enslaves us. We are freed to live as God’s beloved children and in the power of the Spirit to be part of the coming realisation of God’s kingdom today.


Hymn:   When you prayed beneath the trees, it was for me, O Lord
              (Singing the Faith 339  Tune Kelvingrove RAS 558)

Announcements

Offering and prayer of dedication.


Preaching trees

are significant like church buildings as sacred ground.  On mountain top and by the tree people have met with God, been called, entered into covenant relationship, cried and laughed and experienced liberation.  Let us hear of an early preaching tree when God himself visited Abraham and Sarah with a message for them.

 Reading dramatic: Genesis 18 v1-16   Trees of Mamre


Reflection on preaching trees in black American history

Janie McGee is an artist who present black American history in various media and who has done some work on preaching trees in the history of her people. She speaks of how on the plantations where black people were often enslaved they would have a tree which was where services would be held. Often men would work at a different plantation to avoid seeing their wives and children raped and suffer. Services became a time for families to meet. The preaching tree then was a place for slaves to gather and encourage themselves in the midst of trials and where God was present for them.

Many revivals took place at the tree far away from the white man’s house. But also they were a sign of much suffering. One of Billy Holliday’s early protest songs tells of the lynchings of many black folk on the trees so that their bodies hung like fruit. It is called strange fruit in the trees.

Janie McGee says ‘The preaching trees have an intense history: lynchings and revivals.  The preaching tree is the place of birthing, praying, giving, sharing, loving and believing that brighter days will come.

Foundational to the understanding of the preaching tree is the Christian faith. Again McGee says ‘And yet through 400 years of oppression .. we are still here. We are wounded, but will be healed. We lived in poverty, but through God were made rich. We were torn apart and yet we still stand together. It is the distant tree 2000 years old that gave us shade, hope and faith.

Janie likens the suffering people to the preaching trees and to Christ in these words:

The jails could not hold us. We marched with Martin, Sang with Mahaila Jackson, and cried for Emett Till’s. Over the last 400 years we have survived lynching, beating, Jim Crow, slavery and hatred.
Our family birthed writers, scientists, jazz musicians, artists, and engineers the jail could not hold us.
Freedom is more than a reality, it is a journey of the heart, the dreams and people trusting God…
we are the preaching trees.


Reflection on preaching trees in our own churches history

Some 350 years ago in 1662 the newly formed government after civil war passed the act of uniformity. This required everyone to use the same prayer book, pledge obedience to the King and to the authority of the  Bishops.  Some felt that this do not go far enough in establishing good order. Others felt that an opportunity to reform the church and bring it back into faithfulness with Christ and the word of God had been missed. The consequence was pain and conflict.

Many Priests of the Church of England were ejected, hence it was called the ‘Great Ejection’ from their parishes and pulpits because they could not agree with it. For many years they were denied civil rights such as a university education and government office. Some were martyred as traitors. Folk who dissented from this act could not be buried on consecrated church of England ground and were not allowed to worship within a certain distance of a Parish church.

Thus preaching trees such as those at Windy Heugh came into being. Dissenters to the act and therefore to government travelled away from the parish churches and worshipped and were buried in distant places. Great Bavington United Reformed Church is one example of an early building far away from another Parish church that was built at that time.

The Preaching Trees at Windyhaugh are part of the Coquet Valley’s tradition.  They, like the United Reformed Church in Great Bavington, are in an isolated place, some 6 miles from the nearest formal place of worship, the Church at Alwinton.  There are two other places in the Valley where it is possible that Dissenting Preachers are believed to have led worship.  We do not know when any of these were first used - even whether they were in use before the Act of Uniformity made worship at un-licensed premises illegal.  In the Medieval period, the valley was much more densely populated than it is now under the auspices of the monks of Newminster Abbey in Morpeth.  Though the area became deprived in the time of the Border Reivers, the area became re-populated until the 1950s when changing economics made farming in such isolated places unrewarding.

But the tradition has persisted that, here at the Preaching Trees,  Dissenting Services were held, when as the Valley’s historian, David Dippie Dixon reports, “the vigorous voices of the hill-folk sang metrical Psalms and Scriptural paraphrases, surrounded by the dark shadows of the everlasting hills, beside the murmuring ripples of the Coquet river and with the clear blue canopy of heaven above them”.

This afternoon, the Pilgrims will visit this once holy place and you are welcome to join us for our final act of worship - meet by the Barrowburn bridge at 4 o’clock and join the final steps of our pilgrimage and make this place a holy place again.

For, as we have heard, Preaching Trees are holy.  They are places of encounter with God. They are places of gathering for God's people to meet.  They are places where Christ on the cross with all its pain and suffering is found.  But also they are places where hope for liberation and where healing are found.


We sing of that now as we prepare to join in prayer by singing

Hymn:  We meet you O Christ

Prayers of intercession, thanksgiving dismissal and blessing

(with leaves to write prayers on in the quietness that can then be hung on a prayer tree during the singing of the final hymn – with some led prayers)


Christ we bring to your tree
The simple and wise,
The governments of the world and unemployed.
The rich in their palaces and poor in their sleeping bags.
May justice be realised here.

Christ we bring to your tree
Prisoners of conscience and the disappeared
Those trapped in abuse and addiction
The financial and political systems that cage us
May freedom be realised here.

Christ we bring to your tree
Protesters and campaigners who will not be silenced
Artists and writers who bring issues to light
Those in the public eye for good or for ill
May your Word be realised here.

 Christ we bring to your tree,
The new lives and those dying today
The sick and the troubled in body and mind
Ourselves in whatever pain and need we bear
May your new life be realised here.


In quietness we add our prayer to the leaves we have been given....


Let us go forth with joy and peace
Shouting for joy and clapping our hands
Giving thanks for our God, who meets us at the tree
And blesses us with new life, love, justice and peace.  Amen.


Hymn:    You shall go out with joy

_____________________________


Sun 8 Aug  4.30 pm
at The Preaching trees  (DAH)


Jesus began to preach,
‘Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is near.’
(Matthew 4: 17)

Opening Sentences:   Matthew 13: 31

 Hymn:    O Lord my God, when I in awesome wonder

 Unveiling of the plaque

 Prayer of praise

Reading:   Ezekiel 47: 1 – 12

Reading:   Revelation 22: 1 – 5

Hymn:   Jesus is Lord, creation’s voice proclaims it
Reflection:  Kingdom living – an end in itself, or a process?

Hymn:   God’s spirit is deep in my heart

Prayer activity – watering can –
pouring God’s blessing into lives lifted up to God in prayer                                           

Hymn:   You shall go out with joy

Benediction

 and then maplets distributed  (old map of Northern Synod cut up into small squares with the text ‘On the Edge, Synod Pilgrimage 2012’ printed on reverse)


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