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In the tradition of the medieval cycle plays performed for education, enrichment, and entertainment, A New Corpus Christi: Plays for Churches presents 25 short plays and skits with one or two scripts for each of 21 events in the church year. The scripts range from celebratory pieces to problem plays to liturgical dramas to plays that call for no worship setting accouterments. The scripts will also provide discussion starters for Sunday school classes or small groups. And some of the plays might be grouped together as programs on particular topics such as poverty and homelessness or death and dying. This book also provides a resource for university and seminary courses in liturgics and worship.
List of contents
Preface - Acknowledgements - Part I. Plays for Winter - A Play for the First Sunday in Advent - Two Plays for Christmas Eve - A Play for Christmas Day - A Play for New Year's Day - A Play for Epiphany - Two Plays for the Baptism of the Lord - A Play for Black History Month - Part II. Plays for Spring and Summer - A Play for Transfiguration Sunday - Three Plays for Lent - An Entrance Liturgy for Palm Sunday - A Play for Maundy Thursday - A Play for Good Friday - A Play for Easter Vigil - A Play for Easter - A Play for the Lord's Ascension - A Celebration for Pentecost - Part III. Plays for Autumn - A Play for World Communion Sunday - Two Plays for All Saints Day - A Play for the Feast of Christ the King - A Play for Thanksgiving.
About the author
Norman A. Bert received his Ph.D. from Indiana University and teaches playwriting at Texas Tech University.
Summary
A New Corpus Christi presents 25 short plays and skits with one or two scripts for each of 21 events in the church year-festival days such as Christmas and Easter and less frequently observed occasions such as the Baptism of the Lord and Christ the King Sunday.
Report
"Norman A. Bert is priested with a rare gift: his writings offer a unique theological dialectic where not only do scripture and the Christian faith speak to the human condition, but the human condition imaginatively 'speaks back' to scripture and the Christian faith. If your faith community struggles each holiday season with how to bring fresh spiritual insights into the most familiar and sometimes hackneyed Christian narratives and holy days, Bert's plays offer creative and thought-provoking alternatives to celebrating our most treasured Christian traditions." -Rev. David Lee Jones, Th.D., Director, Doctor of Ministry Program, Nashotah House Theological Seminary