A Labyrinth for LentLucy Moore |
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On your marks:
This labyrinth was first devised
and used on an all-age parish weekend. It is something that, once set up, can
be allowed to run on its own, to be visited by individuals or groups at their
convenience. The idea is to provide a way of taking time out for a spiritual
check-up using the format of a visit to a health spa. Lent is the time for this
sort of self-examination and perhaps you could set aside part of the church or
a hall for a weekend for this activity at the beginning of this season of the church
year. Get set:
Setting up the labyrinth will
need some time and thought. You will need eleven spaces at which those
travelling this journey can stop, reflect and take part in a simple activity. A
traditional labyrinth has these spaces on the way to and from the centre of a
winding path. You can find out more about labyrinths and their patterns on the Internet. However, keep this simple and
merely use whatever large space you have and divide it up into a series of 'rooms',
with some partitions if possible (even just chairs) and leave enough space for
up to three or four adults and/or children at a time in each area. In each room there are some
objects to be placed (see below) and also some instructions about what to do,
including an appropriate Bible verse for reflection. If you have the time and
equipment, then recording the words on to MP3 players for individuals to use
would be a great idea. The next section introduces the eleven
'rooms' with the objects needed, the instructions and the Bible verses. Go!
1. Safe space You are welcome here. This is
your space. This is a safe space. A space to remind yourself who you are and
why you're here. A space to wind and unwind; to retreat and to advance; to
withdraw and to move out refreshed. A space to be apart from other people and
yet to be aware that you are sharing the space with them, that they are walking
alongside you; that their journeys touch yours. And it's a time to remember who
brought you here, who paid for you to come in, who designed and made you and
who has a plan for your life; someone who wants only the best for you, the very
best. You are invited to walk this
labyrinth at your own pace; to race through or to walk slowly. You might go
through it just once or return to it a second time. You cannot do it wrong. The
way you enjoy it is the right way for you. You are welcome here. This is your
space. This is a safe space. When you're ready, walk on to
the first zone. Matthew
11:28-29 (CEV) If you are tired from carrying heavy burdens, come to me
and I will give you rest. Take the yoke I give you. Put it on your shoulders
and learn from me. I am gentle and humble, and you will find rest. 2. The changing room Pile of heavy bags/cases and a variety of clothes - some tight and some
baggy, some ugly; and a cupboard to place them in Here you are in the changing
room. A place to change. This is a place to leave behind you the things that
stop you living life to the full. You can pick them up again later. They will
be looked after. Is there anything you would like to take off and put down for
a while? Anything that's like a heavy suitcase weighing you down or like a bag
that you're ashamed to be carrying? Perhaps you're feeling uncomfortable, as if
you're wearing clothes that don't suit you, or that restrict you and cramp your
style. Perhaps there are some valuables which are precious to you but which you
need to place in safe keeping for a while to allow you to move freely. Place one
or more items into the cupboard to symbolise the things you want to leave
behind for a while. Make sure you've left them behind before you move on to the
next zone. Hebrews 12:1 (NIV) Since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw
off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us
run with perseverance the race marked out for us. 3. Personal trainer Card file box. Set of filing cards divided into two with healthy habits/unhealthy
habits as headings. Pencils. Imagine meeting a personal
trainer. This is someone who needs to know everything about you in order to
discover what you really need to change: kind, but clinical, detached and
non-judgmental; safe. This trainer may ask incredibly searching and intimate
questions, but you can't detect even a trace of criticism, just real and active
interest. He or she puts your whole lifestyle under review and is most
interested in the things which have become habits: your eating habits, your exercise,
and your rest habits. The trainer wants to know what you watch, read and listen
to, even enquire about your thought habits! This trainer seems to be asking
about everything, including things you'd really rather nobody knew about at
all, either because you're proud of them or because you're ashamed of them. Which of your habits do you
think you would feel most uncomfortable about telling them? Which would you
feel delighted to share with them? Take a review card and fill in
your healthy habits and unhealthy habits that you think are most significant.
You can use drawings or notes that nobody but you will understand. Look at what
you've noted. What would you like to have changed if you came back in a year's
time? Circle it. Is there anything in particular you would like to remember?
Underline it. Either take the list with you, or place it safely in the filing
box. Now move on to the next zone when you are ready. 1 Corinthians 9:24-27
(CEV) You know that many runners enter a race, and
only one of them wins the prize. So run to win! Athletes work hard to win a
crown that cannot last, but we do it for a crown that will last forever. I don't
run without a goal. And I don't box by beating my fists in the air. I keep my
body under control and make it my slave, so I won't lose out after telling the
good news to others. 4. Exercise A piece of a racetrack on a flat surface; pipe-cleaners We're all at different stages of
our journey. What does this stage of your life feel like to you? If it were a
race, what sort of race might your life be like at the moment? A treadmill, a hard slog,
getting nowhere and no way of jumping off? A sprint - using every ounce of
energy for a finishing line just ahead of you? A cross-country run - gritted
teeth, pacing yourself for the long-term goal, conserving your energy, enjoying
the scenery? An uphill slog? An exhilarating but out-of-control plummet
downhill? A refreshment stop? A relay race, taking on the baton from the last
team member, looking forward to handing it on to the next? Hurdles - just one
obstacle after another? A three legged race tied to someone slower? Or someone
faster? Make a pipe-cleaner figure of yourself on your race
and place it on the racetrack. 1 Timothy 4:9-10
(CEV) 'Exercise is good for your body,
but religion helps you in every way. It promises life now and forever.' These
words are worthwhile and should not be forgotten. We have put our hope in the
living God, who is the Saviour of everyone, but especially of those who have
faith. That's why we work and struggle so hard. 5. Diet A tray of pieces of chopped fruit, vegetables, bread and sweets Food and a healthy diet are crucial
to allow you to be the person you're meant to be. Try some of the foods here...
give your taste buds time to sense them fully. How much do you enjoy them? Keep
trying them as you think... People don't just need food to live on; they need
every word that comes from God. God gave Moses and his people bread, meat and
water in the wilderness. Daniel and his friends refused the rich diet of royal
food, because it compromised what they believed in; they ate only vegetables
and they stayed healthily. Jesus turned down the possibility of satisfying his
hunger in the desert because magicking up food would have been the easy way out
for him. Yet he fed the 5000 in the wilderness with more than they could manage
to eat. He became a miracle and offered himself as living water poured out, as
the bread that gives daily life, as the wine poured out for our forgiveness.
These ordinary everyday foods keep not only our bodies going but our whole
human selves in every part of us. Are you what you eat? John 4:13-14 and John
6:35 (NIV) Jesus said, 'Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, but
whoever drinks the water I give him will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give
him will become a spring of water welling up to eternal life'. Then Jesus declared, 'I am the bread of life. He who comes to me will
never be hungry, and he who believes in me will never be thirsty.' 6. The jacuzzi Either have a few foot spas to use or simply comfy chairs to sit on.
Bubble mixture and wands. Jump into the jacuzzi! There you
sit in the lap of luxury, warm, scented water lapping around you, which starts
quietly to churn and bubble until you are gently pummelled and massaged on
every side! You can feel each part of your body being soothed and relaxed. You
have all the time in the world. You become very conscious of each of your limbs...
toes... feet... ankles... shins... knees... thighs... bottom... hips... waist...
stomach... chest...neck... face... head... shoulders... arms... wrists... hands...fingers...
You are a delicate yet tough machine, a beautifully balanced piece of art, an
intelligent, sensitive, marvellous, incredible detailed organism. Some parts of
you have taken a knock or two over the course of your life. Some parts don't
work as well as they used to. But what a wonder you are! A poet marvelled at his own
self. As you hear his words, blow some bubbles in this jacuzzi and as they pop,
give thanks for the different parts of your body and the wonderful way they
work together. Psalm 139:1-16; 23-24
(NIV) O
Lord, you have searched me and you know me. 7. The temple A picture of a 'red' carpet leading up to a temple door, divided into
squares to colour in; some crayons You are
a safe space. You are a space where holy things can happen. A space where
beauty and mystery dance together. A space so irresistible that the Spirit of
God delights in moving in and setting up house. Location, location, location! A
space designed for worship. Like the temple on the hill in the city, your life
lights up the lives of those around you at work and at school and at home,
because of the dynamic energy of the Spirit of God inside you. Your body is a
temple, not of getting more stuff, not of scrambling to the top of the tree,
not of being the best at everything but a temple of the Holy Spirit, where God
loves to hang out. Like a pearl necklace hidden in the darkness inside a clay
pot. Like the CPU of a PC. Like a SIM card in a mobile. How would you walk into this
temple? How would you expect other people to walk in? Colour in the red carpet... a
sign that because of God's spirit in you, you are someone to treat with
respect, and someone who treats themselves with respect. 1 Corinthians 6:19
(NIV) Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in
you, whom you have received from God? Ephesians 2:22 And in him [Jesus] you too are being built together to become a dwelling
in which God lives by his Spirit. 8. Jesus on the cross A set of objects, some designed for luxury and some for torture, for
example, cotton wool, sharp nails, velvet, thorns, silk, a (safe) plastic knife. Look at these things. Some of
these you would pick up carefully so as not to hurt yourself; you would be
anxious if you saw a child anywhere near them. Some are designed for softness
and luxury, to make you feel good. Some are designed to damage and destroy a
body. It's hard to imagine someone choosing to put themselves on the receiving
end of things that hurt. Carefully pick up and feel the
different objects here. Isaiah 53:2-9 (NIV) He grew up before him like a tender shoot, and like a root out of dry
ground. He had no beauty or majesty to attract us to him, nothing in his
appearance that we should desire him. 9. Jesus in majesty Full-sized pictures of Jesus in majesty with postcard-sized copies to
take away The last time the women saw
Jesus' body, as it was wrapped in cloths and placed in a cave, his body had
been broken and useless, ugly and untouchable. But three days later, they saw
him again, transformed, renewed, remade; the same but different. Scarred but
complete and whole; filled with energy and beauty beyond their wildest dreams.
Not just better, but healed and complete, so that through him the world can be
healed and completed. Artists have tried to show what this risen Jesus is like:
they draw him on a throne or holding a sceptre, a symbol of power and
authority. Here are some examples. Which do
you like best? Can you imagine how it would feel to be best friends with this
person? Take a copy of the picture you
like best as you journey out of the labyrinth, to remind you of the way he is
both ruler of the universe and at home in your life. Philippians 2:5-11
(NIV) Your attitude
should be the same as that of Christ Jesus: 10. The team Lengths of string in different colours and lengths; the start of a web
tied on to a cross As we turn towards the outside
world, we begin to think of our life outside the labyrinth. We don't leave
Jesus behind us; instead he comes with us, goes before us, and walks beside us
wherever we go. And he gives us all the amazing resources of his church to
support us on our walk with him - the different people both local to us and in
the church across the UK and across the world to stand by us as brothers and
sisters in a great web of relationships, where we are needed and loved and
valued. Tie some pieces of string on to
the web as you thank God for members of the church who have supported you, and
commit yourself to being a support to other people in this great worldwide
family. Colossians 3:15 (NIV) Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, since as members of one
body you were called to peace. And be thankful. Ephesians 4:2-3 Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in
love. Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of
peace 11. The vision Small mirrors; a light Use the mirrors to make the
light dance across the walls. Where's the darkest spot to light up? Jesus asks
us to join him in stepping out towards a world in need, bringing his light to
dark places at home, at school, at work, in the places he can only go through
us. He longs for a world full of wholeness and health, full of that deep down 'shalom'
peace that comes from being at peace with God himself. As you let the light
dance, think about the different people you'll meet today, tomorrow, in the
coming week and imagine Jesus' light dancing into their lives, perhaps through
something you say or do. Imagine it bringing wholeness and healing and peace.
Let the light dance on to you. And as you go out into the world, take away with
you the knowledge that although you can't see it, that light of wholeness and
healing and peace goes with you wherever you go. When you're ready, go in the
wholeness and healing and peace of Christ. Luke 4:18-19 (NIV) The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to release the oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favour. |
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