Let There Be Graphics






Let There Be Graphics
[These graphics are included in our Advent 2017 Bundle of resources]
DIGITAL DOWNLOAD FOR ONE-TIME LICENSE
These graphics offer a visually engaging way for you to build on our Let There Be Light theme, or create your own seasonal or weekly themes by filling in the blank, "Let there be ____________." Perhaps you may wish to follow the traditional weekly themes of Advent by adding "Hope," "Peace," "Love," or "Joy" to the "Let there Be" logo. If you use our Longest Night Worship Service, you may wish to use these Let There Be graphics for that service as an invitation and reminder to simply "be."
Download includes files for print and web so you can use them for projecting images and slides in worship, printing on bulletins, study materials, church publications, and advertising your worship on your website and online.
Download Includes:
The Let There Be logo in black and white with files for print and projection
The hand icon in black and white with files for print and projection
Four paint palette background slides to use as background slides in worship or graphics online
Credit Info:
Graphic art by Lauren Wright Pittman | A Sanctified Art LLC | sanctifiedart.org
You may wish to pair this resource with our Longest Night Worship Liturgy and our Let There Be Worship Film:
[This resource is also included in our 2017 Advent Bundle of resources]
DIGITAL DOWNLOAD FOR ONE-TIME LICENSE
This worship film offers a visual meditation on love and loss, creating safe and sacred space for those wading through the tides of grief. Featuring spoken word poetry by Sarah Are, the film offers imagery of stormy chaos slowly curving into calm. The end result is not an erasure of the chaos, but, instead, a sense of groundedness for being held by God even in the midst of the storm.
Poetry by Sarah Are | Art & film by Lisle Gwynn Garrity
[This resource is also included in our 2017 Advent Bundle of resources]
DIGITAL DOWNLOAD FOR ONE-TIME LICENSE
This liturgical resource is for hosting a "Longest Night" service (alternatively titled, "Blue Christmas" or "Service of Light") on or around the winter solstice (December 21st in the Northern Hemisphere) designed to honor those grappling with loss and grief. Our hope is that this worship service will create a safe and sacred space for those who are struggling to feel the joy and light of this holiday season due to loss of any kind. We do not intend for this service to be a service of healing, for what we lose cannot always be replaced. Instead, we hope this service will acknowledge the hole that grief leaves in one’s heart while simultaneously remembering that we worship a God who is with us, even in the darkest of times.