I recently had lunch with my friend Clay Morris, who also happens to be the chief liturgical officer of the Episcopal Church, and he gave me an interesting thought puzzle. How could one do a low budget but meaningful morning prayer for a community of people who work together in the same building, but who don’t necessarily arrive at the same time?

First, it seems that the ritual should allow people to spend as much or as little time as they wish, preferably delivering a significant ritual experience whether someone gives it five minutes or thirty. The most obvious way to do this is with an art installation - unlike a traditional liturgy which has a fixed a beginning, middle, and end, an art installation allows participants to manage their own experience. An installation can also be left up all day if folks would rather experience it during lunch or on their way home.

The ritual installations should be useful both for those who want to participate every day and those who would only participate occasionally. It probably wouldn’t be a good idea to do a series in which each day is predicated on the one before it. Further, each day ought to be different enough from the preceding one that it’s worthwhile to come back each day, which means that the installation either needs to be replaced each day, change each day, or have a high repeatability factor.

I think the best way to accomplish this would be focusing on user-generated content, a method that a lot of websites use to bring in traffic. Basically, the website puts up a story, article, or something similar and then allows visitors to the site to either comment on it or alter it. Occasionally visitors to the site just read the articles, but others come back multiple times a day to check on conversations, etc. It started with blogs and webforums but it’s become mainstream - even CNN.com is allowing comments on its stories these days.

Thinking in this way would allow the design team to create weekly installations rather than daily ones, saving time, money, and energy, and it also creates a very emergent atmosphere in which the participants become co-creators.

What would this look line in practice? Here are some ideas:

Simple installations:

  • place a pad of yellow stickies on an altar and write a prayer request on the top sticky. When a person comes to the altar, they tear off the sticky and take it with them, promising to pray for that thing throughout the rest of the day. They then write a new prayer request on the next sticky down. This extremely low-budget option allows folks to come back as often as they wish and builds community by getting the entire building praying for each others concerns.
  • Buy one of those “make magnetic poetry” kits, the kind in which you can write your own words, and make a magnet for every word in that week’s psalm. Put them up on a white board, along with all the left over blank magnets, and allow folks to write their own psalms with the magnet poetry. You might need several kits for this since some folks will be hesitant to destroy someone else’s creation and replace it with their own. The majority of folks will probably just stop in each morning to read what others have created, but some inspired people will go nuts with this.
  • Display a large print out of the week’s gospel reading, along with a poster-sized piece of paper with the word “questions” written at the top. Invite folks to write down the questions they are left with after reading the scripture (and discourage answers). I’ve seen these sorts of question lists become brilliant discussions as each question is influenced by the ones written before it.
  • For a penitential season, Build a wooden cross (or more, if you need them). Leave little slips of paper on which participants can write an anonymous confession. Leave a hammer and nails so that they can nail these to the cross. Encourage them to read the other confessions and pray for absolution for those who have come before them.

Complex installations:

  • For All Saints Day, create a flickr account and leave instructions for how folks can upload pictures to it. Set up a projector and an internet-connected laptop that projects a slideshow from the flickr account. During the work day, folks can take a five minute break from what they’re doing to look around on google for a picture of someone they consider a saint and upload it for the rest of the community to see. Since the slideshow would be constantly changing, there’s plenty of reason to come back each day.
  • Set up a wiki online with pages for the Apostles Creed, the Nicene Creed, and the Athanasian Creed. In the chapel, set up three projectors, one for each page. Hand out the url for the wiki and encourage people to change the creeds to reflect what they actually believe, including the option of resetting it to the original. This could also be done with a white board and erasers, or it could be done by allowing people to annotate (rather than edit), the text.
  • For Advent, borrow ten sets of computer speakers (shouldn’t be hard in an office building) and set them up in a circle around the room. Also set up a recording station (like a confessional) in which participants can record the hopes they have for God’s plan in the world. Send these recordings as separate channels, one to each speaker, so that participants can walk up to individual speakers to hear what they have to say, or stand in the middle and hear it all as one big cacophony. Note that this requires an audio interface with multiple outputs, like a MOTU ultralite, as well as an audio program that can manage multiple channels, like Live or Logic. You could also go low-tech with 10 walkmans.
  1. One Response to “Some Thoughts on Ritual Installations”

  2. building off the ideas above…

    For “magnetic” poetry, you don’t actually need magnets (which can be quite expensive). Just print out the psalm, somewhat large, and cut it into words or phrases. Leave several sets scrambled on tables and allow people to compose their own psalm, choosing as many or as few words and phrases as they wish. There are also message boards that are sticky and do not require tape or push-pins. With several of these, you could hang people’s creations.

    For a more complicated installation, I once set up several overhead projectors in a sacred space along with overhead film and markers. People were invited to write or draw their images for God on the walls of the chapel. This was a very powerful thing to do and to watch. You would need a of writing prompt that would inspire someone to “carve” something into stone.

    It also occurs to me that part of the appeal of daily prayer is that it is predictable. Does the experience really need to change every day or every week? What about really simple installations that are used in churches around the world: lighting candles as you pray. Or, along those lines, writing a prayer and then burning it or placing it in a bowl of water. A bowl of water in which you wash your hands. A stone that you take with you, or pick up at the door and leave behind. A box of sand that you write into and rake clean. Removing your shoes at the door. Singing a song as you enter or leave… there are so many ways to make prayer ritual, sensory, or tangible.

    By Sarah on Sep 6, 2008

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