Always With You: A Different Liturgy for Mother’s Day

NEEDED: A candle and lighter, something to represent bread and wine for communion (a cracker and juice, toast and milk, etc), and a little cup of dirt (plus a seed, if available). If reading with people, one voice will read all unbolded sections while the group joins in for the bolded sections.

“If ever there is a tomorrow when we’re not together, there is something you must always remember. You are braver than you believe, stronger than you seem, and smarter than you think. But the most important thing is, even if we are apart, I will always be with you.” –Winnie the Pooh

Right now, we push aside all the feelings we “should” have and people we “should” be, and we open wide our doors to what is

Welcome, old grief; 

Welcome, new reality; 

Welcome, fear; 

Welcome, worry; 

Welcome, exactly who we are right now

As we light this candle, we declare this space for remembering and honoring the children and parents we miss during Mother’s (and/or Father’s) day(s)

Be with us, saints; 

Be with us, Spirit

Song: Let It Be

For children who had to say goodbye to parents when they should have had so much more time

We hold you now: (name any names aloud)

For children who have watched the minds and bodies of parents deteriorate, no longer able to recognize or remember

We hold you now:

For children whose parents were unable to offer their presence or resources, children who ached to know a different kind of paternal or maternal love

We hold you now:

For children who have lost parents to suicide, disease, estrangement

We hold you now:

For children who wrestle with the complexities of their birth parents, adoptive parents, and foster parents

We hold you now:

For children who are navigating the milestones of life without their mothers or fathers there to call for recipes and family histories and old stories that have faded with years

We hold you now:

For LGBTQIA+ children who do not have homes to which they can return 

We hold you now:

For children who were abused in a multitude of ways:

We hold you now:

For children who dread the holidays because of their voids

We hold you now:

Scripture: Matthew 5:1-12

For parents who birthed babies straight into the arms of God

We hold you now:

For parents who have lost young children to disasters that make this life seem too unfair for the human heart

We hold you now:

For parents who have raised their grandchildren or other relatives because of a lost life or reality

We hold you now:

For parents who have lost children to suicide, disease, estrangement

We hold you now: 

For parents whose children were unable to offer their presence or connection, parents who ached to know a different kind of familial love

We hold you now:

For parents who have received a gutting diagnosis

We hold you now:

For parents who are raising children, and working jobs, and running households by themselves

We hold you now:

For birth parents who wrestle with the complexities of hard decisions and limited resources

We hold you now:

For adoptive and foster parents who wrestle with the complexities of hard questions, identity narratives, and ethics

We hold you now:

For migrant and refugee parents who are risking everything (even separation) for a better life for their children

We hold you now:

"If I had lost a leg—I would tell them—instead of a boy, no one would ever ask me if I was ‘over’ it. They would ask me how I was doing learning to walk without my leg. I was learning to walk and to breathe and to live without Wade. And what I was learning is that it was never going to be the life I had before." –Elizabeth Edwards

To those who are not biological parents, but who step in to mother and father so many around them

We honor you now:

To those who chose not to be parents in a culture that so often pressures otherwise

We honor you now:

To those who would choose to be parents, or parents again, but who grieve the loss of a dream

We honor you now:

To those who have redefined family to go past lines of biology, nationality, and economics

We honor you now:

To those who did the best they could with what they had when they had it

We honor you now:

To those versions of ourselves that we never turned into, and the versions of ourselves that we did

We honor you now:

To the voices we wish we could hear say “Happy Mother’s and Father’s Day”

We honor you now:

To the ears to which we wish we could say “Happy Mother’s and Father’s Day”

We honor you now:

Scripture: John 1:5

“Sorry, but you don’t really get a choice—you keep waking up and you keep breathing and your heart keeps on beating. And because your blood hasn’t stopped moving through your body, your stomach gets hungry, and then your mouth eats. This is how it goes. Your sad little heart becomes a force of nature. Despite the depth of its wounds, it just keeps going and then the rest of your body has to follow. You eat. You sleep. You sit, and stand, and walk. You smile. Eventually, you laugh. It’s like your heart knows that if it keeps going, so will you. And your heart hasn’t forgotten how good it is to be in the world, so it pushes on, propelling you along to the fridge, the shower, a family dinner, coffee with a friend. In doing these things, your spirit catches up with what your heart already knows; it’s pretty good to be alive. I guess what I’m getting at is that if you too are mired in the early days of unimaginable loss, the only thing to do is follow your heart. Then listen to your body. And keep…going.” –Jamie Wright 

Song: Great is They Faithfulness

Hear our words to those we miss

Meet us in our celebration and in our grief 

Communion

The body of Mary’s son, broken for us

The blood of God’s son, poured out for the world

Thank you Jesus for the bigger picture of resurrection

God’s family table is open to all who wish to partake, in your homes, on these screens, though separated we are one.

(Participants hold cup of soil—and a seed if possible—in their hands.)

Remind us, God, that our faith makes room for death, that our faith can hold endings, though they are excruciating and devastating.

(Participants push seeds into dirt.)

Remind us that in a backwards kingdom, end is beginning, last is first, and burial is birth…eventually.

Thank you for love that was, is, and is to come. Amen.

Go now in the peace that passes our understanding.

Previous
Previous

Identifying Spiritual Abuse

Next
Next

Darting Beaks, Imploding Worlds