liturgy team resources Archives - Full-of-Grace

Lend God Your Flesh – 11th Sunday in Ordinary Time Year A: Biblical Background

Jesus looks at the crowd and his entrails move. The Greek word Matthew uses – splanchnizomai – is not sympathy observed from a distance. It is the same gut-response he has when he meets a mother walking behind her dead son's coffin. What does he see in the living that registers at the same depth as death? The 11th Sunday in Ordinary Time Year A takes us through Exodus 19, Psalm 100, Romans 5 and Matthew 9-10 – from the wilderness of Sinai to the missionary sending of the Twelve – following the thread of God's womb-mercy, the heartbeat that never stopped, and the cost of lending your flesh to carry it forward.

The Sealed Place: Fifth Sunday of Lent, Year A — Biblical Background

What dies first is not hope but the capacity to expect. The Hebrew yetzer — the forming impulse, the faculty that reaches toward what doesn't yet exist — can seal itself so quietly we don't notice it's gone. The Fifth Sunday of Lent arrives with Ezekiel's promise, Paul's present-tense Spirit, and Jesus shouting into a four-day-old tomb. Free in-depth biblical background with rabbinic and Kabbalistic keys for liturgy teams, homilists, and Bible study groups.

Untie Him and Let Him Go: Fifth Sunday of Lent, Year A — Prayer of the Faithful

One Sunday before Holy Week, we bring everyone to the tomb: the elderly abandoned in care homes, the imprisoned and rejected, those who cannot stop grieving, those in whom hope sealed itself shut so quietly they didn't notice. A complete Prayer of the Faithful for the Fifth Sunday of Lent Year A, ready to use, with a celebrant introduction and conclusion. Stands completely alone — no liturgical background required.

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.