embodied liturgy Archives - Full-of-Grace

The Age of Radical Inclusion – Pentecost Sunday, Year A: Biblical Background

The Spirit of Pentecost does not arrive to rebuild your reality. It arrives to change what your tongue can taste of this one. This biblical background traces the age of radical inclusion through all five liturgical texts – Acts 2's dismantling of the temple system, the Hebrew nefesh of Psalm 104, Paul's throwaway sentence that is actually the heart of everything, John's locked-room breath, and the Wisdom antiphon that has been saying it all along: the Spirit has already filled the whole world. What changes at Pentecost is not the Spirit's presence. It is our capacity to recognise it – by name, in our own language, from inside our own life.

Divine Mercy Sunday: Open My Ear: Experience

This week’s Sunday Experience is distributed across three moments of the Mass: a thirty-second prayer before the Liturgy of the Word inviting the assembly to close their missalettes and receive the Word through the ear alone; a two-to-three minute somatic exercise after communion, placing the community in the upper room in the moment before Jesus breathes, attending to the quality of their own auditory anticipation; and at the Final Blessing, the ancient formula from the Rite of Christian Initiation – “Receive the sign of the cross on your ears, that you may hear the voice of the Lord” – spoken as the assembly traces the cross on their own ears. Full script with pacing notes for presiders and ministers.

Divine Mercy Sunday: Turned Toward the Voice: Prayer of the Faithful

A complete Prayer of the Faithful for Divine Mercy Sunday (Second Sunday of Easter, Year A, April 12, 2026), with celebrant introduction and conclusion. This week’s intercessions are centred on the sense of hearing: praying for the Church’s attentiveness, for leaders who must learn to listen, for all whose vocation is to receive another person’s reality, for confessors emerging from the Easter season, for those who confessed at Easter, for families, and for each person making room for the breath of God. Includes practical notes for readers and presiders.

Now You Are Light – Fourth Sunday of Lent Year A: Resources

It is Laetare Sunday — the midpoint of Lent, the Sunday of rose vestments and the first glimpse of where all this is going. The Fourth Sunday of Lent Year A readings move the arc of hiding-and-unhiding to its deepest point yet: from wilderness, to face, to well, now to the eyes themselves. God presses clay on a blind man's face and re-enacts Genesis. David the overlooked son is anointed king before he has done anything to deserve it. And Paul tells the Ephesians something that should stop us cold: not that you were in darkness, but that you were darkness — and now you are light. Free resources for liturgy teams, presiders, and anyone preparing for this Sunday.

You Are the One They Went to Call: 4th Lent Year A: Experience

This embodied penitential rite for the Fourth Sunday of Lent Year A centres on one claim: God chose David knowing exactly who he would become — adulterer, the man who covered sin with death, the man who wept on the floor. And still called him a man after God's own heart. From that starting point, the rite moves into a participatory Psalm 23 where each person in the congregation speaks their own name into the gaps — stripping the familiar psalm back to something personal, unavoidable, and true.

Sunday Toolkit

Exploring what Sunday Mass can be when a community truly gathers, and providing the liturgical tools to help make it happen. For liturgy teams, priests, and everyone who believes Sunday is not just worth showing up for – it’s the heartbeat of personal and parish life.

Fourth Sunday of Advent (Year A) – Free Liturgical Resources

We light the fourth and final candle of the Advent wreath. Traditionally called the Angel's Candle, it reminds us that God speaks through messengers—angels who appear in dreams, prophets who declare signs, voices that bypass our rational defenses and speak directly to sleeping, vulnerable hearts. At the threshold of Christmas, we encounter two fathers—one who refuses God's sign through control, one who receives it through surrender—and discover that Emmanuel comes anyway, calling us to belong to a family built on receptivity rather than our own orchestration.