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Ministry & Liturgy magazine was created with integrated ministries in mind. For more than 35 years ML has been an independent, thought-provoking source of ideas and solutions for all ministers working in an ever-evolving church. If you are looking for solid, practical ways to connect your ministries, you need this resource.

In addition to features and regular columns on topics of interest to the entire parish team - rites, music, faith formation, Scripture, art and architecture, hospitality, and many more - you will find valuable tools and inspiration in every issue. Click here to find out how to subscribe.

  Click on a cover to link to its table of contents.
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
ML goes green!
Ministry & Liturgy magazine has switched to a 100% recycled paper. ML is committed to saving trees without compromising quality. We appreciate your support.
May 2008
June/July 2008
August 2008
September 2008

Below you will find tables of contents of recent issues.




September 2008
Volume 35 Number 7

Faithful, true, and bold
 

ON THE COVER: Symbolic Gates, by Alexander Tylevich, is the Best of Show in ML's Visual Arts Awards Sacred Art competition. To see more winners, click here.
From Inside ML: We don’t think too much or too often about the communion of saints. We celebrate them individually on our liturgical calendar, and maybe we seek the intercession of one or another of them on occasion. But rarely do we deliberately look to find our place among them. Not often do we call on them as a whole to walk with us, pray with us, be with us. We tend to envision them on a spiritual plane far above us, and in doing so we miss the opportunity to interact with them as well as with the saints here on earth. It is our loss indeed, for there is great wealth there. Surely in a church in which so many of us are in need of courage and reassurance that the path to which we have been called is true, the saints who have gone before as well as those here on earth are a company to which we can and should turn as we struggle on. There is power in that communion that spans eternity — past, present, and future. All we have to do is reach out to it. It is no wonder that we use the Litany of the Saints at liturgies that form a sacramental crossroads. Not only do we call on the saints for their intercession and blessing, we invite them to rejoice with us and to continue to walk with us in our journey of faith. By their example, we are called to be living saints, true believers, boldly proclaiming our faith before all the world. Being always open to those graced moments when we are able to see in ourselves and in others the seeds of holiness offers us the ability to be true to the people God has called us to be. (More)

FEATURES

Visual Arts Awards Online: Sacred Art

The yellow pages
Ronald Raab
Finding grace in the ordinary

Sabbath posture: Awe, wonder, and grace
William C. Graham
Awe in the presence of majesty

Saints triumphant
Donna M. Cole
Saints in everyday life

Until we all meet in Christ: Remembering the dead
Mary Ann Paulukonis
Remembrances with assurance of faith

Q&A on the Roman Missal
Paul Turner
Understanding new translations

DEPARTMENTS

  • Inside ML / Donna M. Cole
  • Worship Times / Todd Flowerday
  • Calendar
  • Liturgy Formation: All Saints — Christ the King 2008 / Kay Murdy, Matt Reichert
  • The Word Alive / Anne Louise Bannon
  • Sung Prayer / David Haas
  • Moving Rite Along / Ada Simpson
  • Keeping the Faith / Leisa Anslinger
  • At the Table of the Word / Bruce Janiga
  • Pray, Believe, Learn, & Live / Eliot Kapitan
  • Bridge Work / Ron Raab
  • Bulletin Insert: AMDG / Paul Turner

  • Bulletin Insert: Baptismal Formula / Paul Turner

    For more bulletin insert resources, try the Index of Bulletin Inserts

Marketplace




August 2008
Volume 35 Number 6

Triumph of the Cross
 

ON THE COVER: Tree of Life by John Collier (Hillstream LLC) is installed at Sacred Heart Co-Cathedral, Charleston, W.V. Bronze 8'h. www.hillstream.com
From Inside ML: People often ask me about my work as editor of ML, about the process of constructing each issue as well as planning each volume year. Some people think that articles just fly in from the ether, I pick the ones I want for each issue, look them over for typos and doctrinal errors, and send them on to be published. That’s an interesting scenario, but it couldn’t be further from the truth.

Each year, in early summer, we conceptualize the overall focus that ML will take for the following year. From that general focus, I draw thematic concepts that I feel are a good match for each of the 10 issues. From those concepts I consider what types of articles our readers might benefit from or enjoy, and then I begin the long process of finding writers with the skill and background to address those areas. I propose titles to them, and they generally tweak them a little to fit their own style. A similar process exists for recruiting our column writers. They are challenged to write in a general subject area but are also asked to focus their attention on the theme of each issue. This whole process is guided and informed by prayer and reflection by all involved. (More)

FEATURES

Preaching in many voices
Patricia A. Parachini
Lay preaching in the United States

Fancy and fact in liturgical theology: Getting real about what happens when we worship
Joseph Martos
Liturgical practice and theory

Singing always: Building choir community (part 2)
Paige Byrne Shortal
Sustaining and supporting parish choirs

The symbol of the cross
Barbara C. Krug
Artifact and action

DEPARTMENTS

  • Inside ML / Donna M. Cole
  • Worship Times / Todd Flowerday
  • Calendar
  • Liturgy Formation: Triumph of the Holy Cross — 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time 2008 / Kay Murdy, Matt Reichert
  • The Word Alive / Anne Louise Bannon
  • Sung Prayer / David Haas
  • Keeping the Faith / Leisa Anslinger
  • At the Table of the Word / Bruce Janiga
  • Moving Rite Along / Ada Simpson
  • Pray, Believe, Learn, & Live / Eliot Kapitan
  • Bridge Work / Ron Raab
  • Bulletin Insert: Our Lady of Sorrows / Paul Turner

  • Bulletin Insert: Sign of the Cross / Paul Turner

    For more bulletin insert resources, try the Index of Bulletin Inserts

Marketplace



June – July 2008
Volume 35 Number 5

The Giver of song
 

ON THE COVER: Sanctuary of St. Joseph Church, Middletown, DE, by Lawrence R. Hoy (Renovata Studios Inc.), won Best of Show in ML's Visual Arts Awards Sacred Symbols & Architecture category. For more VAA winners, click here.
From Inside ML: If not for music, how could we communicate as disciples, as Christians, as lovers of our Lord? Words alone fail utterly to express the anguish, passion, union, and joy that is our lot. Our worship, our praise, is given form, texture, color, and life by the music that weaves in and around it. Our liturgy is whole only when music is an integral part, not adding to our common prayer nor completing it but rather forming its essence, permeating its very root. In our sung prayer, we find communion with each other and with all who have sung before, bound together with the Holy Spirit. “God has bestowed upon his people the gift of song. God dwells within each human person, in the place where music takes its source. Indeed, God, the giver of song, is present whenever his people sing his praises” (Sing to the Lord: Music in Divine Worship, 1 [USCCB, 2007]).(More)

FEATURES

Visual Arts Awards Online: Sacred Symbols & Architecture

When adoration leaves no room for pride: Praise in music ministry
James Savage
Crying out to the Lord

Common ground in the midst of the liturgy wars
Michael R. Prendergast
Moving toward reconciliation

Singing always: Building choir community (part 1)
Paige Byrne Shortal
Forming and nurturing a choir

Through hymns, with hymns, and in hymns: The catechesis of sacred music
Joe Paprocki
Hymns teach theology

DEPARTMENTS

  • Inside ML / Donna M. Cole
  • Worship Times / Todd Flowerday
  • Calendar
  • Liturgy Formation: Late Summer Ordinary Time 2008 / Kay Murdy, Matt Reichert
  • The Word Alive / Anne Louise Bannon
  • Sung Prayer / David Haas
  • Keeping the Faith / Leisa Anslinger
  • At the Table of the Word / Bruce Janiga
  • Moving Rite Along / Ada Simpson
  • Pray, Believe, Learn, & Live / Eliot Kapitan
  • Bridge Work / Ron Raab
  • Bulletin Insert: Instrumental Music / Paul Turner

  • Bulletin Insert: Greeter / Paul Turner

    For more bulletin insert resources, try the Index of Bulletin Inserts

Marketplace



May 2008
Volume 35 Number 4

Window to eternity
 

ON THE COVER: The Reign of Christ by Nancy Chinn, part of a series of banners she created for Washington National Cathedral.
From Inside ML: Our homes reflect who we are, how we think, what’s important to us. They offer insight into how much time we spend there and how welcoming we are to neighbors, friends, and family. What is given pride of place shows what matters to us, what we treasure. How our furniture is arranged speaks of how we regard one another; our décor is a window into our imagination. Applying these metaphors to our worship and community spaces is nothing new, but the principle is worth revisiting. Somewhere along the line we became more interested in where we place the tabernacle than in the worship needs of the living Body of Christ. Tabernacle placement is significant, as we are a sacramental people for whom Eucharist is central. But it is only one consideration in many as our liturgy challenges us to put our faith to work as we go out into the world to serve as we have been commanded. Adoration without action in Christian service falls short of what we are called to be. (More)

FEATURES

Pixels, paint, and print
Nancy Chinn
National Cathedral's "banner year"

Church of Corpus Christi: Reflection of community identity
James Hundt
Community theology in design

Green isn't just for Ordinary Time:
How Presentation Retreat Center uses its green building to demonstrate the importance of all creation
Elizabeth J. Asborno
Sustainable community life

DEPARTMENTS

  • Inside ML / Donna M. Cole
  • Worship Times / Todd Flowerday
  • Calendar
  • Liturgy Formation: Feast of Sts. Peter and Paul / Kay Murdy
  • Liturgy Formation: Summer Ordinary Time 2008 / Kay Murdy, Matt Reichert
  • The Word Alive / Anne Louise Bannon
  • Sung Prayer / David Haas
  • Keeping the Faith / Leisa Anslinger
  • At the Table of the Word / Bruce Janiga
  • Moving Rite Along / Ada Simpson
  • Pray, Believe, Learn, & Live / Eliot Kapitan
  • Bridge Work / Ron Raab
  • Bulletin Insert: Infant Jesus of Prague / Paul Turner

  • Bulletin Insert: Sanation / Paul Turner

    For more bulletin insert resources, try the Index of Bulletin Inserts

Marketplace



April 2008
Volume 35 Number 3

As I have done for you …
 

ON THE COVER: Station 8 by Michael R. Kapetan won Best of Show in ML's Visual Arts Awards: Devotional Category. For more VAA winners, click here.
From Inside ML: Some days the work of ministry is easier than other days. Sometimes what we are called to do and how we’re called to do it seems clear. The path ahead seems certain, straight, and true. Most of the time, though, that’s not the case. We walk on a path shrouded in a mist of options. We know there’s a path and we know we belong on it. We just don’t get to see much more than one step ahead at a time. We struggle with identity and relationships in ministry. What do we call ourselves, what do we call each other, and how do we fit into the grand scheme of discipleship? We grapple with humility always. Eager to serve, we often find it hard to let others minister to us. We fill our days with the busy labor of ministry but so often neglect the quiet time, the retreat time, the just-being-with-God time. We are good at washing feet but not so good at letting others wash our feet. Still, we do the best we can, confident that the Spirit will lead us on. (More)

FEATURES

Visual Arts Awards Online: Devotional Arts

Liturgy and leadership
Mary Ann Paulukonis
Living the liturgy

As I have done for you: Discerning the vocation of lay ministers
Kathleen H. Brown and David M. Orr
A call to discipleship

Grace in everyday life: The shawl-knitting ministry
Susan S. Jorgensen
Prayer in every stitch

DEPARTMENTS

  • Inside ML / Donna M. Cole
  • Worship Times / Todd Flowerday
  • Calendar
  • Liturgy Formation: Trinity – 12th Sunday in Ordinary Time 2008 / Kay Murdy, Matt Reichert
  • The Word Alive / Anne Louise Bannon
  • Sung Prayer / David Haas
  • Keeping the Faith / Leisa Anslinger
  • At the Table of the Word / Bruce Janiga
  • Moving Rite Along / Ada Simpson
  • Pray, Believe, Learn, & Live / Eliot Kapitan
  • Bridge Work / Ron Raab
  • Bulletin Insert: Easter Octave / Paul Turner

  • Bulletin Insert: First Letter of Peter / Paul Turner

    For more bulletin insert resources, try the Index of Bulletin Inserts

Marketplace



March 2008
Volume 35 Number 2

Sacramental signs
 

ON THE COVER: Bridal Veil Falls, Yosemite National Park. "Water is a sign … [of] the presence and action of God in our world." (Inside ML, page 4).
From Inside ML: We are a sacramental people. Oddly, that sacramental nature both unites us and divides us. By our sacraments we are initiated, transformed, reconciled, commissioned, united, and healed. Through these we discover and are filled with grace. Somehow, though, we find a way to quarrel over when and how we celebrate them and who may preside over them. Still, they define and guide us because they form our imagination and help us to grasp the mystery of a God who is always present if seemingly unseen. Each of our sacraments transforms the ordinary into the extraordinary, taking our common human experience and converting it into an encounter with the holy. The imagery of our baptismal rite is rich with words and symbol that swirl around the paschal mystery. (More)

FEATURES

Set free from sin: Baptism and reconciliation
Paul Turner
The grace of baptism

If the sacraments give grace, how do I know when I've got some?
Gary Macy
Love as evidence

Not quantification but transformation in Christ
William C. Graham
Spirit-filled lives

Forming the "lost generation"
Leisa Anslinger
Seeking the seekers

To intercede for the world: The duty and the privilege of all the baptized
Paige Byrne Shortal
Ministry of intercessor

DEPARTMENTS

  • Inside ML / Donna M. Cole
  • Worship Times / Todd Flowerday
  • Calendar
  • Liturgy Formation: Easter – Pentecost 2008 / Kay Murdy, Matt Reichert
  • The Word Alive / Anne Louise Bannon
  • Sung Prayer / David Haas
  • At the Table of the Word / Bruce Janiga
  • Moving Rite Along / Ada Simpson
  • Keeping the Faith / Leisa Anslinger
  • Pray, Believe, Learn, & Live / Eliot Kapitan
  • Bridge Work / Ron Raab
  • Bulletin Insert: Easter / Paul Turner

  • Bulletin Insert: Pentecost / Paul Turner

    For more bulletin insert resources, try the Index of Bulletin Inserts

Marketplace



February 2008
Volume 35 Number 1

Raising the cup
 

ON THE COVER: 
Monastic Chasuble, by Dirk Slabbinck and Jeroen Kerre, won Best of Show in ML's 2008 Visual Arts Awards: Ritual Objects competition. For more VAA winners, click here
From Inside ML: Ministry & Liturgy follows a deliberate path. That path is the response to a call to speak words of challenge and passion, of hope and support. Over the past few years ML has labored in a determined way to keep the flame that drives us to do the work of ministry burning strongly. We have drawn on the waters of baptism to strengthen us for the work of ministry. We listened to the song of the great Vigil and through its imagery found new light for the work of ministry. Now in ML’s 35th year, we focus deliberately on how we are challenged to call on the name of the Lord and how we then do the work of ministry in that name. To do that, we look at the most powerful liturgies we own. The words we pray and sing throughout Triduum give us direction and insight about how we are to live and serve. Those words and the images they convey can be formative tools, and so they will be our guide throughout this year. (More)

FEATURES

Visual Arts Awards Online: Ritual Objects

The personal poverty retreat
Ron Raab
Encountering the faces of suffering

Lifting the cup: Changing directions in ministry
Paige Byrne Shortal
Plans of fulness

Calling on the name: Faith expressed in ministry
Jean Marie DuHamel
Imaginative expressions in ministry

Before all God's people
Donna M. Cole
Commitment in ministry

DEPARTMENTS

  • Inside ML / Donna M. Cole
  • Worship Times / Todd Flowerday
  • Calendar
  • Liturgy Formation: Triduum – Easter Sunday 2008 / Kay Murdy, Matt Reichert
  • The Word Alive / Anne Louise Bannon
  • Sung Prayer / David Haas
  • Keeping the Faith / Leisa Anslinger
  • At the Table of the Word / Bruce Janiga
  • Moving Rite Along / Ada Simpson
  • Pray, Believe, Learn, & Live / Eliot Kapitan
  • Bridge Work / Ron Raab
  • Bulletin Insert: Holy Thursday / Paul Turner

  • Bulletin Insert: Good Friday / Paul Turner

    For more bulletin insert resources, try the Index of Bulletin Inserts

Marketplace



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