Easter season Year A Archives - Full-of-Grace

These Hands, Ordinary and Holy – The Ascension of the Lord – Year A: Sunday Experience

This Sunday experience for the Ascension of the Lord (Year A) invites the gathered community into an embodied encounter with their own hands –  exploring the same hands that wipe and feed and type and receive communion –  before gathering what is too heavy to carry alone, lifting it in offering, and resting in the silence that follows. Part of the Born to Recognise series on the blessing of the senses.

Five Prayers for Open Hands – The Ascension of the Lord –  Year A: Prayer of the Faithful

Five prayer intentions for the Ascension of the Lord (Year A, May 17, 2026) –  praying for church leaders who hold the sacred and ordinary together, for communities that stay busy with the Gospel, for the wisdom to know the difference between service and avoidance, for the Ephesian spirit of perception, and for the grace to carry Sunday into Monday. Includes closing collect.

Divine Mercy Sunday: We hear before we see: Resources

Complete free Sunday toolkit for Divine Mercy Sunday, Second Sunday of Easter, Year A (April 12, 2026). This week opens the Born to Recognise series – a seven-week Easter journey through the blessing of the senses toward Pentecost. Week 1 is the ear: the Shema, Thomas’s refusal of secondhand faith, the enephysesen as second creation, and the community breathed into by the risen Christ as the body through which hearing becomes possible. Includes biblical background, three-part embodied liturgy experience, Prayer of the Faithful centred on listening, and a personal reflection from the Scattered to Whole pillar.

Divine Mercy Sunday: The Story Beneath the Story: Biblical Background

Biblical background for Divine Mercy Sunday Year A (April 12, 2026). Acts 2 gives us the community that has already been breathed into – their response is exultant, embodied, common. 1 Peter addresses those who have not seen, and tells them their joy exceeds description. And John gives us Thomas: the body-knower who refuses secondhand faith, and the Christ who comes back through locked doors to meet him exactly where his body is. Research and exegesis for liturgy teams, homilists, and Bible study groups.