
(Exploring the Alternate Liturgy, Pt. 5)
The centrepiece of the Celtic Service is a weekly time of Communion (or Eucharist). In both our main and alternate liturgies, we’ve avoided the standard “words of institution” just as we’ve avoided hierarchical and formulaic means that may be supposed to determine any “validity” to what we are remembering and celebrating. We trust in the Presence of the Spirit of Christ in our midst as celebrated and welcomed by the hearts and intentions of those meeting together.
And so the words, as we approach and celebrate Communion together, are primarily words of welcome and invitation. The New Testament passage (1 Cor. 11) that is often misinterpreted as a reason to guard who participates is meant to convey the opposite – “unworthy” participation does not refer to those who aren’t sure what they believe but those who participate divisively based on class differences: feasting on a full meal while the poor are elsewhere with a meager Communion.
The heart of our Communion is a time of experiencing the taste of our Welcome – a time of participating together with gratitude in the love that draws us together. The self-giving Love of Jesus forgives, enables and empowers us communally and individually as we are symbolically nourished by the bread and wine.
The words in this section of the Alternate Liturgy are perhaps a quirky blend, and specific origins have not been well-traced. Some are traditional (Book of Common Prayer – perhaps to make up for our avoidance of formulae), some are borrowed and tweaked bits from liturgies of the Iona community, and some are original to us:
(Approaching the Table)
Welcome now to the unity of God’s table,
Friend and stranger, saint and sinner.Listen, all you who gather here:
Come with hope or hesitation,
Come with joy or yearning.
All you who hunger,
All you who thirst for the fullness of life:
Come.Generous God and gracious Saviour,
Touch us through your Spirit.Knowing that God delights to liberate and forgive,
We embrace our identity as God’s Beloved.
Let us lay down the burdens of sin and shame
that we no longer need to carry.God of love and justice,
Have mercy on us.Hear now the teaching of Jesus,
That as we confess our sins and weakness,We are set free
and invited into the life of the Spirit.(Holy Communion)
Liberated and reconciled,
[Leader lifts and breaks the bread.]
We participate in God’s welcome to the world.
Together in suffering,
Together in love.May we know your Presence
[Bread and wine are shared.]
In the sharing of this bread and cup,
So that we may know your same touch
In all of our lives.We celebrate the life that Jesus has shared
Among his community through the centuries,
And shares with us now.Made one with Christ
And one with each other,
We offer ourselves
As a holy and living sacrifice.
AmenThe Lord be with you.
And also with you.
Lift up your hearts;
We lift them up to God.
Let us give thanks to God;
It is right to give both thanks and praise.Lead us now O God
As we acknowledge your gift of grace
And live our lives as forgiven people.Heaven and earth rejoice,
And the whole earth cries Glory through Christ our Lord.

Communion has been celebrated with our Celtic liturgy in many places including here under olive trees in Assisi.