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Calvin News

Grant program dedicated to revitalizing worship across borders

Fri, Jun 29, 2018
Connor Bechler

A growing multitude of lively conversations rapidly drowned out the live jazz music as a crowd of clergy, academics, and community members poured into Prince Conference Center鈥檚 Great Hall.

The topic of discussion? How to revitalize Christian worship across congregational, denominational, racial, and generational lines. Seeking to answer this question, the聽 (CICW) operates the , which annually provides grants of $6,000 to $18,000 to a range of organizations for the implementation of projects aimed at improving worship.

The evening gathering was a poster session showcasing the 2017 grant recipients鈥 projects, held to both inform the 2018 grant recipients鈥 project planning and to encourage others to apply in the future. It was part of a three-day colloquium which represented the end of the previous year鈥檚 grant projects and kicked off the 2018 grant recipients鈥 projects.

Formational worship across borders

鈥淭he goal is that everybody鈥檚 public worship would be revitalized,鈥 said , the associate director of the institute and the program manager for the grant program, 鈥淸that it] would become more formational for the people there, and more honoring of the triune God who鈥檚 present in worship.鈥

To that end, Smith said, 鈥渢he [program] is very ecumenical,鈥 with more than聽20 denominations represented among the 2017 grant recipients. 鈥淚t enriches all of us,鈥 she added, and explained that the colloquium includes varied worship services modeled after both Protestant and Catholic worship. 鈥淲e try to make everybody comfortable sometimes, knowing everybody will be uncomfortable sometimes,鈥 Smith said, 鈥渂ut that鈥檚 part of our learning, that鈥檚 part of the whole idea of vitality in worship.鈥

Diverse expressions of faith

At the poster presentation, there was dramatic diversity in both institutions and grant projects: churches, seminaries, universities, high schools, nonprofits, retreat centers, and a prison ministry were all represented. Projects ranged from Fredericktown United Methodist鈥檚 work on making worship accessible to people with disabilities to Carey Theological College鈥檚 work strengthening intergenerational worship in multilingual Chinese-Canadian churches.

鈥淭he beauty of our worship is dependent on our liturgical artistry,鈥 said Christine Salzman, a presenter for Saint Philothea Greek Orthodox church of Watkinsville, Georgia. She noted the intergenerational problems facing Orthodox worship in the United States, adding 鈥測oung people need to take up their place at the chanter鈥檚 stand.鈥

To address this issue, Saint Philothea used their grant to operate a liturgical arts training program with workshops on chanting and iconography for both their congregation and other American Orthodox churches.

Mount Aery Baptist Church, of Bridgeport, Connecticut, used their grant to train clergy how to respond to trauma from a biblical perspective.

鈥淭hrough the [grant project鈥檚 training], preachers better understand how God is still in control,鈥 said Nancy Kingwood, an associate pastor at Mount Aery. She added that the training was intended to help answer 鈥渉ow do we respond when God moves through us?鈥听听听

鈥淐hurch is a place to come to both find fulfillment and gain instruction鈥 said Kingwood, 鈥渋nstruction in dismantling unjust systems and how to minister to the least, the last, and the left out.鈥