Lent 2026

Worship resources are designed to be participatory, accessible, and readable on phones and tablets, allowing communities to gather without printed orders of worship. You can use them as they are or adapt them as you need in the formats that you may need.

Support Files

Introduction for Leaders

Introduction for Congregations

Guide for Leaders

Worship Template for Leaders

How This Season Works: What to Expect in Worship During Lent This Year

  • Staying Long Enough to Hear

    Staying Long Enough to Hear Easter Sunday for April 5, 2026 Call to Worship Responsive Early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark, we come, carrying what we do not yet understand. The stone has been rolled away. and still, we are searching. Why do you look for the living

    Continue to Worship


  • Staying with God at the Cross

    Staying with God at the Cross Good Friday for April 3, 2026 Before Worship Begins Leadership Notes Orientation for the Night Tonight’s service is quiet and simple. We will hear the story of Jesus’ suffering and death. After each reading, there will be silence. The light will gradually fade. You may notice restlessness, or distraction,

    Continue to Worship


  • Love That Stays

    Love That Stays Staying with God at the Table in the Deepening Night for April 2, 2026 Opening Prayer A Night of Love and Betrayal Tonight we gather at the table with Jesus, on the edge of the night—to receive again the love that does not turn away. Please pray with me. Holy God, on

    Continue to Worship


  • Beyond Hosanna

    Beyond Hosanna Staying with God When the Shouts Fade for March 29, 2026 Before Worship Begins Realigning Palm Sunday Opening Prayer Staying with What is Missing God of mercy, we come to the gate with palm in our hands. And we come with questions in our hearts. We know how to shout “Hosanna!” when hope

    Continue to Worship


  • Staying with the Void

    Staying with the Void for March 22, 2026 Before Worship Begins Staying with What is Missing In life, we experience all kinds of voids—places where something is missing, where love used to be, where loss has left an empty space. Mary and Martha knew that void when Lazarus died. It was deep. It was wide.

    Continue to Worship


  • Staying with God as Our Eyes Are Opened

    Staying with God as Our Eyes Are Opened for March 15, 2026 Before Worship Begins Entering without Certainty Before we begin worship, I invite you—if you are willing—to close your eyes for a moment. There is nothing you need to do. Nothing you need to figure out. Nothing you need to see clearly yet. Simply

    Continue to Worship


  • Staying When Trust is Tested

    Staying When Trust is Tested for March 8, 2026 Before Worship Begins Trust Begins by Staying In today’s gospel, a woman meets Jesus at a well. She does not come believing the right things. She is tired. She is guarded. She expects a short, practical conversation. But when the conversation gets uncomfortable, she does not

    Continue to Worship


  • Staying When the Way Is Not Yet Clear

    Staying When the Way Is Not Yet Clear for March 1, 2026 Before Worship Begins Naming Uncertainty Before worship begins, take a moment to name to God one uncertainty you are carrying. There is no need to fix it or make sense of it. This time is an invitation to stay with God, even when

    Continue to Worship


  • Choosing to Stay

    for February 22, 2026 Before Worship Begins Beginning Without Pressure You are welcome here exactly as you are. Some of us arrive eager and open. Others arrive tired, distracted, unsure, or carrying more than we expected. There is no right way to begin worship today, and nothing is required of you. If at any point

    Continue to Worship


  • Ash Wednesday

    Ash Wednesday Learning to Stay February 18, 2026 Preparing Yourself For Worship This Lent, our worship will feel different on purpose. We are practicing learning to stay—staying present with God and with one another, without rushing toward answers or resolution. You may notice more silence, slower pacing, and fewer explanations. That is intentional. Silence is part

    Continue to Worship