Sunday, March 1

This Sunday we are going to begin our liturgy in a slightly different way. I promise this will not be totally foreign as it is exactly what we did during Lent last year. Instead of beginning with those familiar words, “Blessed be God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit” found on page 355, we will begin with something called “A Penitential Order” found on page 351 of the Book of Common Prayer.
The opening sentence during Lent (regardless if we were beginning on page 351 or 355) is “Bless the Lord who forgives all our sins,” but unlike other times of the year over these next few weeks, instead of saying the Gloria (the prayer which begins “Glory to God in the highest”) we will kneel together and say the Decalogue (aka the 10 commandments). This is followed by a verse of Scripture (one of three options listed in the Prayer Book) and then the confession. Immediately after the confession and absolution we will say (or sing as the case may be) the Trisagion (Greek for “thrice holy”). This prayer, found at the bottom of page 356, invites us three times to proclaim something of God’s identity and then ask for God’s mercy (Holy God, Holy and Mighty, Holy Immortal One, Have mercy upon us). After this comes the collect of the day and then the services proceeds in the usual way.
There are a variety of reasons for us to do this. First, there is a tradition in the church of using the penitential order during our penitential seasons (Lent and Advent). Second, it builds from the tradition where clergy and servers would say particular prayers prior to the start of the service to prepare themselves for ministry at God’s altar. Third, it is one of the many resources in the Book of Common Prayer that are available to our use. Fourth, it is good to do things differently from time to time so we do not get stuck in a routine - doing the same thing over and over again until it looses its meaning. Finally, I think there is something deeply appropriate to begin our worship of God in this humble posture.
Lent is a time when we are invited to take a good, hard look at our lives that we might be honest with where we are. It is a time for us to be honest about our mortality and our sinfulness - though it is not about being self-deprecating or beating ourselves up. Lent is a time when we look deep within ourselves and admit that we do not always act as we ought to, and we do not always do things as we should. We all have moments we look back on to think, “Yup that was not my brightest moment.” Sin is everything that separates us from the love of God, and puts distance between us and our neighbors. Lent is a time when we can look at our behavior, recognize the sin, and make the choice to start again, striving to live into the fullness of the covenants we have made with God and one another.
Beginning the liturgy with the Penitential Order allows us to enter into the house of God and begin our primary (and most important work) from a place of honesty and vulnerability. As God’s absolution is announce we rise from our knees keenly aware that it is only by the grace and mercy of God that we are able to do all which God has called us to do. In other words we begin our liturgy with a clean slate that we might try again we clear hearts and minds, not weighed down by the burdens we carry.
Let us join together this Sunday, making a right beginning again, confessing our vulnerability, our brokenness, our shortcomings and failings to God, that together we may stand again, going forth into the world as a people who are strengthened, healed, and renewed.









