Video Transcript: Unit 4, Video 3
Well, welcome back last segment for this week, and we're going to talk about Universal Design in worship, meaning our corporate worship. So we had fun thinking about our children and youth ministry context, and now we're going to talk about our corporate worship context, and I'm going to explain a little bit more about what I had started a while back talking about universal design for learning and that idea of show, engage and express. And so I'm going to kind of revisit that idea, and we'll look through what that looks like in our worship settings, meaning our corporate worship settings. When we're all together, we kind of have our song time and our preaching time and and we're all together in that. So here we go. When we're talking about show, we're talking about multiple means of representation. So I want to share with you, this is a guideline from the idea of the Universal Design for Learning, and I think it really resonates a lot with a lot of what we do in our worship services. So we're showing a lot of information in our worship services. We're showing God's Word. We might have Bibles. We might have hymnals. Centuries ago, we had illustrated manuscripts. We have stained glass windows in our churches, right? There's a lot of depiction of what it is that's supposed to be happening in these worship settings, some modern settings have projection screens with the song lyrics on them, right? But we're showing a lot of information, so thinking about the options we can provide to show the information, is it written and in a book? Is it projected up on a screen? Is it in pictures, right? So these are the kinds of things that we're talking about. So for example, in our order of worship and the information we really want people to get a hold of, maybe our church bulletin, right again, multiple means of representation. So do you have some icons and some images in your order of worship? Do you have children's bulletins that have some engaging ways for them to follow along with what is happening. Are you using pictures and printed materials? I know a lot of churches around the world are trying to be very eco friendly and not use printed paper anymore, so they just have digital versions of their announcements and things like that, or they simply verbalize it. But remember what an individual said, if I didn't see it, you didn't say it. And we'll come to that idea a little bit later on. But just thinking about right, we need to provide a lot of different handles to grab onto. As one pastor put it, I like to give a lot of different handles for people to grab on to. And so that's what I want you to be doing as you show the information within your ministry settings, because then people can engage in the way that works for them. So this is the second guideline of Universal Design for Learning, and we're going to borrow it for our ministry context, and say, universal design for worship, thinking about our engagement, the element of learning in worshiping is to do the things of the worship service. So again, thinking about options, we may consider how everybody's connecting with the information and the opportunities offered. So as I mentioned once, it's about how can people give their offering? Well, how can people give their prayer requests? Can they type them in? Can they kneel to
pray? Can they use their words? Can they use sign language? What are the options that you're allowing for them in order to express their prayer requests within the community. So yes, God can hear us all the time, but how about sharing our prayer requests among one another? What are the ways that we can engage one another in that? And so thinking of multiple different ways that we can do that. Now, I was a part of a church service, worship service with some others, not that long ago, and I will just lovingly call it my experience of fish guts, our worship too. We were trying to involve options for all of the senses to engage in this worship service. And so what it meant was that we, we took Jesus’ example of being the good teacher. And took it quite literally and said, Okay, if he taught us to remember me, and gave us something that we could not only hear in words, but also experience other sounds, and we were able to see it and to feel it and to smell it and to taste it and to move with it. What would that look like in our worship setting? And so we picked a passage of scripture, and we happened to pick a passage in Luke. And so yes, we heard scripture by actually listening to it read out loud, but then we also watched the ASL version of Scripture. That's the American Sign Language version. So if English is not your first language, I encourage you to look into sign language in the language and the culture that you're experiencing. But we watched this or heard scripture spoken in ASL and out of a written scripture. And then we watched scripture. We watched this video put together by the LUMO project, and what they have done is created a bunch of videos of direct translations of scripture in many, many languages. So I encourage you to look at links to the LUMO project videos. So we watched scripture unfold in front of us by watching this segment of Jesus. And so that was our sort of seeing the word. Then we we felt it. So I had brought some fishing net into the room with us. And so we got to touch fishing nets. And then I also brought some fish, some sardines with and so we could touch the fish. We could definitely smell the fish. And some of us even tried tasting the fish. Even though I'm not a fish eater, kind of Gag a little bit, but, but I engaged in it because I thought I want to engage my whole body and experiencing scripture right now, and experiencing this worship opportunity, and experiencing what Jesus experienced, and really be with him in this. And so fish guts are a part of worship too. And so we offered options, so that even if I didn't connect personally with the sign language version or the watchable version of scripture or the fish, but among them all, it offered me options for how I could hear God's word and engage with it. And so I just want to encourage your imagination to be sparked to think about the options that you could offer for people to engage in worship in your ministry settings. So let's move on to express so multiple means of action and expression. So this is thinking about the third guideline of Universal Design for Learning, and again, we're borrowing it to say Universal Design for worship. So this is how we, the congregation, express our faith, our learning, our relationship with the Lord. So thinking options should have us
considering the ways in which everyone can praise. We can ask for help. We can express what we've been learning. So this is our opportunities to express love for God and understanding of His Word and His will, our praise for his presence, our gratitude for his salvation and and these are, these are all developing habits, which we're going to talk some more about really quickly. But in this in education, this guideline also wraps into supporting the formation of strategy in our personal goal setting and our achievement, and that's something that we could consider as as as we think about our faith or our faith formation and our opportunities for options. So this isn't just about, can people actually, you know, verbalize or pick a different way to express something within our worship service, but it's actually also thinking about, how do we form who we are as worshippers? How do we grow in our relationship with Jesus and grow in maturity in our faith. And so this Express kind of has a lot to it, but I think it's really important to think about, are we offering some simple ways to engage in this, like a yes, no, thumbs up, thumbs down, way of responding when you know when, when we're posed a question, or when we're engaging in Bible study. And so really offering simple options, including simple options for something like the Lord's Prayer, which many of us might know by heart. Maybe we say it quite often, but could we move it? And so I was introduced to a beautiful version of this prayer, and I will have this also in the resource links here within the course so that you could practice this as well. But I did this in that multi sensory worship service, and it was such a beautiful thing to corporately have all of us using our entire bodies to offer the Lord's Prayer as we said it together and moved it together. We did it with just words, and then we did it with words and motions, and then we did it with just motions. How powerful is it to pray with your body and not words? So thinking about these things and offering multiple ways to express our faith, our growth, our worship, I think are really important things. So I hope that this has inspired a little bit for you to think about, and now we're going to move on to our next segment, which will talk about examples of universal design, and specifically thinking about what I hinted at a few minutes ago, some habits that we develop in our faith formation and in our worship services that we will call vertical habits, which we'll get to next week. But as we wrap up this week, we're just going to think about these ideas of Universal Design in worship. And next week, I want to share with you some examples from students and churches, just like I've done with some other things previously in the course. And then you'll hear again from Barb about those vertical habits, that idea of a conversation with God that we call worship, that we develop habits in in our faith formation. So all of that is yet to come. Wrapping up this week, enjoy some of the resources, and we'll see you next week.