Jeff at his licencing to be a Reader
 
JEFF'S WEBSITE
1. Introduction
 
 
MORAY, ROSS & CAITHNESS DIOCESE
3. Diocese & Bishop
 
 
HOLY TRINITY CHURCH, ELGIN & 'THE CLUSTER'
4. SEC
 
 
ST MARGARET'S CHURCH, LOSSIEMOUTH
5. SEC
 
 
ST MARGARET'S CHURCH, LOSSIEMOUTH (continued)
6. (continued)
 
 
ST MARGARET'S CHURCH, ABERLOUR
7. SEC
 
 
ST MICHAEL'S CHURCH, DUFFTOWN
8. SEC
 
 
SERVICES OUTWITH OUR CLUSTER
10. Other locations/outreach
 
 
LYNNE'S CHURCH
12. Bellie & Speymouth Kirks
 
 
CATHEDRALS - ELGIN
14. 'Lantern of The North'
 
 
ST REGULUS CHURCH, CROMARTY
16. A church on the Black Isle
 
 
THE BIBLICAL GARDEN, ELGIN
18. Biblical Garden
 
 
ELGIN
20. My nearest 'city' Elgin
 
 
WORSHIP IN CHURCH
22. Background to Worship
 
 
JEFF BEING LICENCED AS A READER
24. The Service
 
 
AIDS OR IDEAS FOR MEDITATION & SERMONS
26. Photo's to think about
 
 
ACTIVITIES, EVENTS & ODD THINGS
28. Church linked activities
 
 
OUR BUSINESSES
30. Fochabers Framer & Gallery
 
 
ARMY SERVICE
32. A Sapper for 23 yrs
 
 
FAMILY
40. Our family
 
 
THE RUSSELL FAMILY - Daughter Nicola & Her Family
42. Daughter's Family
 
 
SON - DEE & HIS FAMILY
44. Son's Family
 
 
WHERE WE LIVE - MORAY, SCOTLAND
50. Area & Home
 
 
HOLIDAYS & HOBBIES
60. Hobbies & Interests
 
 
RUTH - The Motorhome
62. Ruth - The Motorhome
 
 
TRAVELS & CAMPSITES WITH 'RUTH'
64. Camp Sites and their area
 
 
MY PHOTOGRAPHS
70. Mainly flora & fauna
 
 
MY PHOTOGRAPHS
72. Mainly landscapes
 
 
FAVOURITE PHOTOGRAPHS
76. Taken by Jeff
 
 
WILDLIFE & PETS
80. Wildlife & Pets
 
 
CALEDONIAN CANAL
104. At Neptunes Staircase
 
 
LOCH NESS & INVERMORISTON
105. Invermoriston
 
 
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS
108. Items yet to be 'catalogued' .
 
 
MOTHERS UNION
110. Mothers Union
 
 
LATEST PHOTOGRAPHS
112. Photos to be filed
 
 
CHRISTIANS ON THE INTERNET (COIN)
 
 
CHURCH SERVICE PEW LEAFLET
 
 

WORSHIP IN CHURCH

(Photographs taken by Jeff Lowndes)

The Christian Church keeps track of time and seasons of the yearby using calendars that provide us with opportunities to observe, commemorate, and celebrate cerain events or occasions.
The changing seasons of the year also provide us with recurring opportunities to celebrate the Christian Faith in Worship.
The church has long used the seasons of the year as an opportunity for festivals and holidays - sacred time set aside forthe worship of God.

While Jewish celebration revolves around the Exodus from Egypt, the Christian Church Year focuses on the life and ministry of Jesus.
The sequence of festivals from Advent to Resurrection Sunday becomes an annual spiritual journey for worshippers as they "kneel at the manger, listen on a hillside, walk the streets of Jerusalem, hear the roar of the mob, stand beneath the cross, and witness the resurrection"! The rest of the church year provides opportunity to reflect on the meaning of the coming of Jesus and his commission to his people to be a Light to the World.

Many churches in the Protestant tradition do not celebrate in any deliberate or sustained way, the various seasons of the church year beyond Christmas and Easter. However, the observance of the seasons of the church year has a long history in the life of the Christian Faith. When most of the people in the church were poor and had no access to education, the church festivals and the cycle of the church year provided help in teaching the story of God and his actions in human history.
Even in the Old Testament, the concept of sacred time became a vehicle for teaching the faith (for example, Exodus 12-13).
Planned and purposeful observance of the Christian seasons and festivals can become an important tool for education and discipleship in the Faith, as well as a guide for spiritual growth and vitality.

As a congregation moves through the church calendar, they are presented in an organised way with the opportunity to talk about, reflect upon, and respond to the entire range of faith confessions that are at the heart of the Christian Faith. This is important, not only for the vitality of the whole community, but especially for children to become aware in the context of community celebration, those things that are essential to their Faith (Deut 6:20-25).

The Christian Calendar is organised primarily around two major cores of Sacred Time:
These are:- Advent, Christmas and Epiphany, followed by Lent, Holy Week and Easter, concluding at Pentecost. The rest of the year following Pentecost is known as 'Ordinary Time', from the word 'ordinal', which simply means counted time (1st Sunday after Pentecost, etc). Ordinary Time is used to focus on various aspects of the Faith, especially the mission of the church in the world.

Following the church year is more than simply marking time on a calendar or a note in the church bulletin. Every effort should be made to use the various aspects of the church year as an opportunity to tell (and remind ourselves), of the story of God's redemptive work in the world.

Many churches have relied almost solely on the spoken word to carry the burden of proclamation. However, even in the Old Testament the services of worship involved alll of the senses: Sight, smell, taste, touch, as well as hearing. Modern learning theory also indicates that the more senses are involved in an experience, the more impact it makes, especially for children. This suggests that the worship experience should be concerned with more than just preaching.

One simple guide that can asist in tracking the seasons of the church year for worshippers, as well as providing a visual context for worship, is the use of Colours of the Church Year in the Sanctuary. Different colours are associated with different seasons and events, and the changing colours of vestments, communion table and pulpit coverings provide visual clues for the seasons.

In the churches that I attend we use the Revised Common Lectionary (RCL) and follow the seasons indicated therein and above.

What I like especially in the churches that I attend is that the basic instinct behind all that we do is to not to hide behind clever rhetoric and high theological teaching but to have 'love' at the core of all that we do. If we can reflect the love of Jesus Christ then we cannot be far out!


Love expressed in caring for those 'outside society' or who may not be the kind of people we are comfortable with.
This is a scene from the Biblical Garden in Elgin.
Photo: Jeff Lowndes

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