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Welcome to this ecumenical website of resources and reflections on liturgy, spirituality, and worship for individuals and communities. It is run by Rev. Bosco Peters.

“I’ll be gone” visual rubrics

Occasionally, I acknowledge, it is difficult to help people with a service solely by instructions in the Prayer Book’s rubrics. Sometimes it is better to provide a video of the rite, especially in this technological age. I hope, hence, you all find the following video very helpful in implementing this in your worship community. Especially watch the font at 0:55 – a good discussion here would be: how do we implement this part of the rite with inherited smaller fonts? This would be a good clip to use in your community’s worship committee discussion if you are advocating for a larger font to be part of the renewal of your worship space.

H/t @RobinwoodChurch

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7 Responses to “I’ll be gone” visual rubrics

  1. Mike Crowl says:

    Absolutely fabulous! God-crazy people….we could do with some of that in our church occasionally…(definitely occasionally!) The interesting thing is he doesn’t seem to be singing a song that’s particularly rousing!

  2. I can truthfully say that I have never seen anything like this before!

    I guess I’m a bit of a geek because when you said something about the font at :55 I was waiting for text on the screen. Totally missed the larger/smaller font meaning until splash down!

  3. Gary Smith says:

    I don’t recognize this rite. Looks like something from Rite I.

  4. Brian says:

    I can make out president, deacon, subdeacon, acolyte, cantor and perhaps crucifer, but it’s a bit grainey; I don’t see a thurifer. I’d almost say this is an unusually academic interpretation of the Sarum use Baptismal rite; perhaps this is a Canadian parish.

  5. Maria says:

    Oh, my, Bosco, I am having a flashback to my childhood, when the tent revival came to town. Growing up in a small town in Missouri, one of the more interesting things that happened in the summer were the “tent revivals” that would pop up for a week. I used to ride my bike over to them and peep under the bottom of the tent and watch a lot of stuff just like this!

    Imagine my horror, the time I got caught, and dragged up to the front, being told I’d burn in Hell unless I got “saved.” I broke free and ran off, grabbed my bike and was out of there!

    I did worry for a little while I was going to Hell, but I also thought that if Heaven was full of such goings on, maybe it wasn’t all it was cracked up to be. LOL

  6. Mary says:

    What the…???
    Scarey stuff!!!!!!

  7. Tim Hurd says:

    Decently AND in order!

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