NewsA bowl of flames reminds us of Spirit's presence moving us to Love

On Friday November 19, 2021, Kyle Rittenhouse was found not guilty of all the charges with which he was indicted for the killing and injuring of activists who gathered in Kenosha, Wisc. to protest the shooting of Jacob Blake by police in August 2020.

Sunday, November 21, 2021 will be celebrated by many Christian communities as Reign of Christ Sunday, the festival that marks the liminal space in the liturgical calendar between the seasons of Pentecost and Advent. This feast day was first celebrated in 1925 as a counter to the sovereign claims of fascism.

This litany, created by Dr. Sharon R. Fennema, hopes to offer congregations a way of responding to the Rittenhouse verdict, and other similar verdicts, using the symbolic and theological resources of this feast day. (with references to Revelation 1:4-8) – from United Church of Christ Justice and Local Church Ministries

 

Leader: Holy One, Ruler of rulers, Sovereign of sovereigns, Judge of judges,

we come to you with feelings more than with words,

trusting that there is nothing that a prayer is better suited for

than the weariness or rage or confusion

that lives in our breath and bones, our cells and sighs.

 

Assembly: O God, we need your fierce love,

Christ, we need your tender rage,

O God, we need your collective power, so we can know freedom.

 

Leader: We pray with those of us whose anger ignites at this miscarriage of justice,

whose deep hurt at the reminders of how little some lives matter

and how broken our systems remain, has become the bright light of rage.

 

Assembly: Christ, who is our only Ruler, we are desperate for your reign of prophetic fire.

Empower us to pledge our hearts to embody the kind outrage

that turns the tables on the violence inflicted on your beloved children.

 

Leader: We pray with those of us who are not surprised by this verdict,

who know what a mostly white jury means,

who recognize how small and furtive justice must be in a system bound by white supremacy.

 

Assembly: Christ, who is our only Sovereign, we are longing for your kindom to come.

Find us in our pessimism and lead us in the ways of accountability that transforms

that our hope may be renewed by your vision of just mercy.

 

Leader: We pray with those of us who trust this decision,

who have confidence that this outcome shows us the truth of what happened,

who want to believe that equality and fairness are the heart of our legal system.

 

Assembly: Christ, who is our only Judge, we are praying for your righteousness.

Convert our unquestioning allegiance

and deepen our understanding of the histories that shape us, that we may be convicted by your love

to change our minds about what is true, and right, and just.

 

Leader: To the one who loves us and frees us, we lift up our prayers,

that our anger might become sacred fire, cleansing and renewing the earth;

that our despair might become hopeful vision, guiding us toward freedom;

that our confidence might become humble curiosity, bringing your promised reign closer to us.

 

Assembly: To God be glory and dominion, forever and ever. Amen.

 

Copyright 2021 Justice and Local Church Ministries, United Church of Christ, 700 Prospect Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44115-1100. Permission granted to reproduce or adapt this material for use in services of worship or church education. All publishing rights reserved.

Find this litany on the UCC website here.

We thank Dr. Fennema and the UCC for making this litany available for our prayer this week and in the days ahead.