| |
The
Ministry Of Prayer And Worship
The ministry of prayer and worship with teens
has several distinct dimensions that provide direction to comprehensive
ministry efforts.
Specifically,
the ministry of prayer and worship
- Promotes the authentic
participation of youth in liturgy
(Parishes and schools can acknowledge teens faith issues at all liturgies
in ways appropriate to the rites, provide opportunities for young people
to be trained as liturgical ministers, schedule periodic youth event
liturgies that are prepared with young people's input and assistance,
and invite young people to help prepare the community liturgies.)
- Attends to the diversity
and ages in the assembly (All liturgy
takes place within a cultural within a cultural milieu and context.
Respect for cultures and inclusion of native art, music, and expressions
are visible components of vibrant worship. The rites need to reflect
cultural diversity through the use of symbols, traditions, musical styles,
and native language. Parishes and schools can provide opportunities
for liturgical celebrations in which young people of different ethnic
groups express their own language, symbols, and tradition. Parishes
and schools can also provide experiences of other cultural worship styles
and multicultural liturgies that bring people from all ethnic backgrounds
together to celebrate. Teens reflect a distinct age group and "culture"
within our society. Their language expressions, musical styles, and
ways of life are often quite different from those of older generations.
Those who prepare the liturgy need to find appropriate ways to incorporate
the world of young people into worship, remembering that the "pastoral
effectiveness of a celebration will be heightened if the texts of the
readings, prayers, and songs correspond as closely as possible to the
needs, religious dispositions, and aptitude of the participants"
(GIRM no. 313). Parishes and schools can explore new music and song
texts being composed for liturgy, and invite youth to act as cultural
resources-letting the individuals or group know about current trends
and expressions that may be reflected in the prayers, songs or rituals.)
- Provides opportunities
for creative prayer with teens in peer, family, and intergenerational
settings (Ministry with teens fosters
and promotes the development of a personal prayer life in young people
and celebrates the ritual moment of their daily lives in prayer. The
symbols and rituals of liturgy become more meaningful for young people
when they draw from their experiences of private prayer. Likewise, private
prayer is revitalized by meaningful experiences of the liturgy. Ministry
with teens also promotes opportunities for communal prayer. The liturgy
of the hours, liturgies of reconciliation and healing, ethnic rituals
and celebrations, and other ritual devotions allow for creativity and
adaptation to the life issues and cultural expressions of young people.
Communal prayer provides opportunities for young people of different
ethnic cultures to express their faith in their own language, symbols,
and traditions and young people to experience multicultural prayer that
brings people from all racial and ethnic backgrounds together to celebrate.
Parishes and schools can schedule seasonal prayer experiences for and
by youth for the parish community, involve young people in the preparation
of prayer experiences for their peers, provide prayer and ritual resources,
include personal prayer time within programs, and provide prayer mentors
for young people. Parishes and schools can provide prayer and ritual
resources for home settings that address the unique needs of families
with teens, the calendar and church year celebrations and rituals and
family rituals, rites of passages and milestones.)
- Promotes
effective preaching of the word
(Parishes and schools can invite young people to reflect on the seasonal
readings and to offer suggestions to the homilist for connections to
young peoples' lives, provide regular opportunities for teens to study
the Scriptures encourage those who preach to use current examples and
storytelling techniques, and investigate the development within culture
for their impact on the "vernacular.")
- Allows music and song
to express the vitality of young people
(The music of the young brings freshness
and variety to our current musical genres and can perform the same infusion
of energy and vitality to sacred music. Music is a significant part
of personal expression for young people and that desire carries over
to their participation in liturgy. Parishes and schools can invite to
participate in the choirs and musical assemblies, explore contemporary
accompaniments and focus on the song and pace of the music, expand the
local repertoire of hymns and songs to include songs that young people
would select, and encourage singing by the whole assembly so that teens
feel more comfortable in adding their voices.)
- Prepares the symbols
and ritual actions with particular care for their visual dimensions
(Today's young people have been educated through multimedia, Their visual
sense is one of their primary ways of learning and responding to the
environment. Parishes and schools can invite adolescents to assess the
visual dynamics of the rituals and symbols prepared for liturgy, provide
visual aids to encourage young people's participation, and explore the
appropriated use of multimedia at liturgy.)
- Develops the interpersonal
and communal dimensions of the liturgy.
(Parishes and schools can focus on the hospitality provided at liturgy;
encourage young people to attend liturgy with their friends, build a
sense of community among young people prior to liturgy, minister in
a personal way, and affirm the presence of young people whenever possible.)
- Provides teens
with effective and intentional catechesis for liturgy, worship, and
sacraments (Young people
are catechized by their participation in the liturgy, therefore, care
must be taken to ensure that their experiences lead them to greater
faith. Teens need catechesis for liturgy and the sacraments, but are
also catechized by their experiences of liturgy. Through immersion in
the symbols, stories, and rituals of the communal prayer life, teens
gain not only knowledge but also an appreciation of the power of the
sacraments. A specific objective of intentional catechesis for liturgy
is to assist teens in exploring how liturgical symbols and rituals celebrate
their experiences of God and life events. Parishes and schools can provide
opportunities for intergenerational and family-centered catechesis for
liturgy and can offer experiential, liturgical catechesis for young
people.)
- Apprentice
teens in liturgical ministries
(Ministry with teens can advocate for youth involvement in liturgical
ministries and connect young people with established liturgical ministers
for training and experience of actually performing liturgical ministry.)
|
 |