O Glorious Day

  Worship Services for Good Friday and Easter Sunday.

  This program of narrations, readings, litanies, and music, is built around the hymn by J. Wilbur Chapman, “One Day When Heaven Was Filled With His Praises.”

  Previously published by Lillenas Publishing Company in their Easter Program Builder No.33.

  Were You There?

  Worship Services for Good Friday and Easter Sunday.

  This is a “two act” program, Act One:The Passion, and Act Two: The Resurrection, which revolves around the questions asked by the traditional spiritual, “Were You There When They Crucified My Lord?” These questions are answered in monologs by biblical characters who were there. Poems, litanies, music, and audience participation put everyone in the congregation there, and affirm the resounding truth that God was there.

  Previously published by Lillenas Publishing Company in their Easter Program Builder No.31.

  Undiscovered Genius

  A Short Play. Two women. Six to eight minutes.

  Two women discuss what they are getting their moms for Mother's Day, and how their moms have blessed them.

  A sample from this script follows below.

  To Be a Dad

  A Play. One man, one woman. Approximately 10 minutes

  A young pastor, whose wife is expecting their first baby, wonders if he can be a good dad. The church secretary asks him what kind of dad his father was, and how he can follow his father's example.

  Previously published by Lillenas Publishing Company in their Mother's & Father's Day Program Builder No.12.

  Children's Easter Recitations

  Previously published by Lillenas Publishing Company in their Easter Program Builder No.33.

  Children's Mother's Day and Father's Day Recitations

  Previously published by Lillenas Publishing Company in their Mother's & Father's Day Program Builder No.12.

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  Easter Sample

  Oh, What a Day!

  A Monodrama

  MARY MAGDALENE: (Enters in a whirl and leans back against the door, closing her eyes.)

  “This is the day the Lord has made. I will rejoice and be glad in it.” (She opens her eyes. Her smile glows) I don't know if my mind is big enough to understand all I saw today. It is so high, so magnificent, so—(gestures, searches for a lofty enough word) so glorious. My heart cannot contain it. (Big smile and a laugh) My body can't stay still. (She twirls, laughing) I want to leap and dance. I want to sing and shout. I want to tell everybody in the whole world. (Sings) “Sing, O daughter of Zion; Shout O Israel; Rejoice and be glad with all of your heart, O daughter of Jerusalem!” (She collapses in a heap, gasping and giggling) My head is as light as my heart and feet and I am dizzy. (Surges to her feet in another leap, crying it out) Dizzy with joy! (Sings again) “Sing, O daughter of Zion!” (She flings her arms out in exultation and holds the moment) Jesus is alive!

  ~~~~

  Mother’s Day Sample

  Undiscovered Genius

  A Sketch

  SCENE: Could take place just about anywhere, but let's set it in a church fellowship hall where JOY is preparing for a mother-daughter banquet. She could be making centerpieces, name tags, or folding bulletins. I’ll use bulletins, but you don’t have to be tied to that. This business can be carried on throughout the play. AMY enters carrying a brown paper bag full of—well, stuff. Have a table or counter for working space and maybe a couple of chairs.

  JOY (Looking at the bag as AMY deposits it on the table): What's that?

  AMY: Gifts for my mom.

  JOY: Why?

  AMY: Why? Because Mother's Day is coming up, you nut!

  JOY: Well, I know that, but --

  AMY: I want to show her I love her. To show my appreciation for what she's been to me all these years.

  JOY: You make it sound like you've got one foot in the grave. (She mimics) All these years?

  AMY (Chuckles): You know what I mean. It's been all my life! She's always been there for me. It means a lot to me. I want to tell her that.

  ~~~~

  Leaping Off the Page:

  Any Time of the Year Edition

  Annual Report

  One of the most devastating ploys of Satan is to steal a Christian’s joy. This humorous play has four demons giving an annual report of their year’s activities to a head demon. The most successful minion is the one who convinces a church congregation their salvation is by works. All five roles can be played by men or women.

  Pilgrim’s Pathway

  Using John Bunyan’s metaphor of the believer toiling on a journey with a heavy load, this play shows how both a “anything goes” attitude and a legalistic Christianity can weigh a person down with despair. This is an abstract play highlighting Jesus’ words, “Come unto me all that labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest.”

  Two Captive Maids

  I took the monodrama, “A Leper’s Song” (described below), and expanded it into a three-person one act play. The young maid tells her story of Naaman’s healing to another little girl who has recently been captured and brought into the household. The third character is Naaman’s wife.

  Naaman’s Dilemma

  One of the funniest conversations not recorded in the Bible had to be the one between Naaman and his servants when they persuaded him to bathe in the Jordan River. Lots of fun. Roles are for three men and two women.

  Thine Is the Kingdom

  A play that takes place in Nero’s Rome, it features the Centurion who was present at the cross and a Christian woman, Julia. Persecution against the believers has become intense and Julia has been arrested. Highlighting the Lord’s Prayer and Psalm 145, we see how the courage of the faithful witnesses to the skeptical. One man and one woman.

  Gracious Sakes Alive!

  Have you ever wondered why a small child gets scolded for spilling his milk and then when an adult does something similar it is laughed off? This humorous play asks that question in the context of a discussion about grace. Two women, one boy and one girl.

  Yikes! All Those Fruits!

  This short two-person play is a humorous look at the Fruit of the Spirit.

  Don’t Sweat It

  A very short piece on the relevance of mission work.

  Foul

  A two minute piece about attending church even though golf beckons.

  Home Run

  I must be honest: including this two-person sketch is a little self-indulgent. I wrote it about Charles M. Tanner, the founder of Covenant Players, after his death in 2006. Only people who knew him will get some of the in-jokes, but I'm hoping other people will get some fun out of it as well.

  It’s a Life

  A short play on missions and how living your faith can show in your life.

  No Show

  In a replaying of the Unforgiving Debtor Parable, an athlete gets into hot water with his coach.

  Sisters

  This is a light hearted treatment of the sister relationship. Can sisters also be friends? Delightful if performed by two children. The play is about five minutes long.

  Eve’s Elegy

  I wrote this for some children's ministry. It has an object lesson followed by the story of the Garden of Eden as told by Eve.

  Damascus

  Saul is on his way to Damascus and the followers of Jesus fear for their lives. A brand new believer, still unsure of herself, struggles with her fear and her faith. She works through the Lord’s Prayer and Psalm 145 to a point of peace and victory in the Lord. This monodrama is similar to “Thine is the Kingdom” listed previously.

  A Leper’s Song

  A monodrama, it features the young maid in the Old Testament story of Naaman who recounts the events of Naaman’s healing. The play is fun and energetic. I used much of this material in the one-act play “Two Captive Maids.”

  Saved Alone

  This monodrama deals with a family ripped apart by death and the healing that comes throug
h mourning. It features the writer of the hymn, “It is Well With My Soul”.

  So Send I You

  The great missionary hymn, “So Send I You”, was written by Margaret Clarkson when she was a young, discouraged school teacher in Northern Ontario. This monodrama captures the feelings of her famous poem and culminates with a recitation of it. Please note, the play quotes the full poem, which can be acquired online.

  Who In the World Does Paul Think He Is?

  The characters in the Bible fascinate me. I've written several monodramas about them. But what about those people who merit only passing mention? Who were they? What are their stories? I've long wondered about Euodia and Syntyche, the women Paul asked to try and get along with each other better in his letter to the Philippians. How, I wondered, did they feel when the letter was read in church? This monodrama is my idea of how Syntyche responded.

  Zacchaeus:

  I love the Zacchaeus story. Makes me think of Ebenezer Scrooge. The thing that moves me the most is how Zacchaeus responded to grace. This humorous monodrama, I hope, captures that.

  ~~~~

  Any Time of the Year Sample

  Saved Alone

  A Monodrama

  HORATIO SPAFFORD: A wealthy Chicago lawyer and friend of D. L. Moody, writer of the hymn “It Is Well With My Soul”. His wife and four daughters were on their way to England to join Moody on one of his evangelistic crusades. Spafford, who had been detained in Chicago by business, was to follow a couple of weeks later. The ship his family was on collided with another vessel and sank. His daughters all drowned. His wife was spared. This play takes place about one week after the tragedy. Spafford is now on his way to join his wife in Wales. The captain of the ship he's on has just pointed out to him the spot where it was believed his daughters died.

  SCENE: A small passenger cabin on board a ship enroute to Cardiff, Wales. A lone man, Horatio Spafford, is sitting on the bunk, his head in his hands. It is late November, 1873. The room is small and sparsely furnished - narrow bunk, a chair, a chest of drawers and a porthole.

  (Sitting on bunk) “Saved alone.” (Shakes head, staring at nothing) Two words. That's all. Just two words and they split my life apart. (Beat) “Saved alone.” (He pulls a worn telegram from his coat pocket and smoothes it on his leg.) My wife's telegram pounds at my brain until it is all I can hear. (Looks up in anguish.) Why, Lord? (Paces) How can we ever come through this? First our son, dead after a quick illness. Then our property—burned in that dreadful fire. And now our daughters, lost at sea. (Cries out) Must we endure all the trials of Job?

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  Upcoming Projects

  This is My Story, This is My Song

  Fanny Crosby, the beloved hymn writer of the 19th century, is the subject of this program that explores her story and her songs. It can be performed by as few as four people, or it can involve many people.

  Clean Hands

  A full-length play for six women, Clean Hands delves into how we interpret and apply our deeply-held principles. The women are planning a Christmas program entitled “No Room” to raise money for a local home for unwed mothers. But while they want to help these girls, are they willing to bring them into their own homes?

 
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