Yesterday, I responded (in negatives) as to why I placed a request for the return of the liturgical ribbon from the L7 home page in the Verbum forum rather than in the general forums.(See VERBUM 9 SUGGESTION re: "liturgical ribbon") So I thought today I should add (in positives) what I think is essential if FL is to truly support lectionaries. I am making some assumptions about pastors', religious ed directors', and faith formation directors' use -- I suspect I am wrong on some of them, especially across different faith traditions and parish sizes so please jump in and correct me:
VIEWS OF THE LECTIONARY
- In all cases below, treat "Sunday" as meaning "Sunday and Feast days"
- In writing a Sunday sermon, one needs context so a lectionary view showing this Sunday, the previous Sunday, the upcoming Sunday is needed; if the Sunday has multiples service, including a vigil, all the services for the day must be a lectionary view.
- In writing a Sunday sermon, if one is using the RCL daily lectionary, a lectionary view showing the readings from the previous Wednesday to the upcoming Tuesday is required as they are thematically related
- Outside Ordinary Time, the ability to see the entire season - Sundays only, full season including daily Note this should handle optional seasons such as the Season of Creation.
- For weekday sermons one should be able to see the weekday preceding and the weekday following as well as the current day
- Make it easy for the user to override their default lectionary as religious orders, dioceses, church name, current events all may adjust the calendar/lectionary. This should also allow for the use of short lectionaries overriding the standard lectionary as is done in the Season of Creation.
- To the extent possible, offer all the (English) Bible translations that are allowed for use with a particular lectionary - yes, for some churches this is a long list for others it is very restricted.
- Nice to have but not essential: ability to see what passages are and are not included in books given semi-continuous readings
- A nice to have: where there are options in the readings, allow the users options to be retained and shown by something such as bold print
- Nice to have: a pericope viewer based on lectionary pericopes
LECTIONARY PASSAGE GUIDE MODIFICATIONS
- Using resources such as Treasures Old and New: Images in the Lectionary by Gail Ramshaw for the RCL based lectionaries, create a Liturgical ThemeImage section that parallels the preaching theme sections. Sites such as https://episcopalchurch.org/library/article/lectionary-and-theme also carry thematic information.
- Add a section that highlights other times the Bible passage is used (a) in your preferred lectionary, (b) in historical/alternative lectionaries in your tradition, and (c) in all lectionaries - in historical or theological stream order
- Add liturgical date as a selection criteria for the Sermons section - yes, this requires a basic ability to account for the differences in liturgical date names across time and traditions
- Allow one to enter a liturgical date/lectionary id to generate a passage guide. This requires two changes: (a) allowing non-contiguous passage notation which Verbum/Logos converts to a single, continuous passage (b) open each of the passages in a passage guide that either allows you to tab through all the readings OR display them side by side.
- A section of links to sermons sites chosen by the user e.g. generic sites such as The Text This Week and denomination sites such as Torch: The Dominican Friars - England & Scotland. This provides some of the same functionality as the sermon sites in Logos but puts the choice of sites in the users hands.
- Nice to have: a compare text function that compares the pericope in the lectionary to the pericope in the appropriate Bible translation
- Nice to have: a section for history of the liturgical calendar/explanation of lectionary resources that lists references to the liturgical date.
SERMON TOOL MODIFICATIONS
- Add liturgical date to the metadata
- Allow auto-entry of lectionary readings
- Allow identification of preaching text - note some lectionaries include preaching texts outside the usual lectionary (lesson) texts esp. in the European Lutheran tradition IIRC
LAYOUTS:
- Allow the building of layouts that (a) have a fixed portion for lectionary level data and (b) have a portion for each reading that overlays ... this gives quick access to the layout for switching back and forth between readings
NICETIES:
- clip art that allows one to build a Sunday calendar for kids showing them the liturgical year
- clip art can also double on church bulletins
- create workflows for multi-passage Bible study and Sermon writing
- make it easy to identify the correct milestone format so that notes can easily be added to a liturgical date and the readings associated with it.
Okay, it's your turn to shoot holes in the above and to add to it ... I've probably missed as much as I included.