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Friday, May 29, 2026

A Practical Guide to Developing an Inclusive Catholic Mass by Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP



Inclusive Catholic liturgy is rooted in the Gospel vision of radical welcome, shared discipleship, healing, justice, and the full participation of the People of God. In inclusive communities, liturgy becomes more than a ritual led primarily by clergy. It becomes a sacred gathering where all are invited to pray, reflect, share leadership, and celebrate the Divine Presence in their midst.

An inclusive Catholic Mass seeks to embody the spirit of Jesus’ open table hospitality where everyone is welcomed, valued, and affirmed. Women and men, LGBTQ+ persons, married and single people, seekers and long-time believers, those wounded by institutional religion, and those searching for spiritual community all find a home at the table of Christ.

This guide offers practical steps for developing meaningful, participatory, and spiritually nourishing liturgies for inclusive Catholic communities.


1. Begin with a Vision of Community

Before planning prayers or choosing music, ask:

Who is this liturgy serving?

What are the pastoral needs of the community?

What hopes, struggles, and joys are people carrying?

How can this liturgy foster healing, justice, compassion, and belonging?


Inclusive liturgy begins with relationships, not simply ritual structure.

The goal is to create sacred space where people encounter Divine Love, experience community, and deepen their commitment to Gospel living.


2. Create a Welcoming Environment

Hospitality is one of the most important ministries in inclusive worship.

A welcoming environment includes:

Greeters and hospitality ministers

Accessible worship space

Inclusive signage and language

Warm introductions

Invitations to participate

Sensitivity to newcomers and marginalized persons


Whether worship occurs in homes, churches, community centers, or online through Zoom, the atmosphere should communicate:
“You belong here.”


3. Use Inclusive and Expansive Language

Language shapes theology.

Inclusive liturgy expands traditional language for God and humanity to reflect the fullness of Divine Mystery and the dignity of all people.

Examples include:

Holy One

Divine Wisdom

Creator

Spirit Sophia

Sacred Presence

Holy Mystery

Shekinah

Christ Presence


Inclusive language also avoids exclusively male references for humanity and ministry.

For example:

“Brothers and sisters” may become “Beloved community” or “Friends.”

“Men” becomes “people” or “humanity.”

“Kingdom of God” may become “Kin-dom of God.”

Inclusive language can be profoundly healing for those who have felt excluded or invisible within traditional worship.


4. Encourage Shared Leadership

Inclusive Catholic communities reflect a discipleship of equals.

Shared leadership may include:

Multiple liturgical ministers

Shared preaching or dialogue homilies

Community-written prayers

Lay leadership in ritual roles

Shared Eucharistic prayer

Collaborative liturgy planning


The presider serves the community rather than dominating it.

Shared leadership reflects the understanding that all the baptized are called to ministry.


5. Plan the Liturgy Around a Theme

A meaningful liturgy often grows from a central theme grounded in Scripture and contemporary life.

Themes may include:

Compassion

Healing

Justice

Resurrection

Ecological spirituality

Inclusion

Hope

Forgiveness

Courage

Peace


The theme shapes:

Opening prayer

Music

Homily

Ritual actions

Community prayers

Blessings


A clear theme helps unify the worship experience.


6. Select Scripture Thoughtfully

Many inclusive communities use:

The Roman Catholic lectionary

The Comprehensive Catholic Lectionary


Additional readings from women mystics, poets, theologians, and justice leaders

Scripture reflection should connect:

Ancient wisdom

Contemporary struggles

Personal experience

Social transformation

Inclusive communities often incorporate voices historically excluded from liturgical proclamation, including women theologians, Indigenous wisdom, and ecological spirituality.


7. Create an Interactive Homily

The homily becomes a sacred conversation rather than a lecture.

A brief reflection by the presider may be followed by questions such as:

What speaks to your heart in today’s Gospel?

Where do you see God’s presence today?

What challenge or invitation do you hear in this reading?


How are we called to respond as a community?


Interactive preaching:

Encourages participation

Builds community

      Honors shared wisdom

Deepens engagement with Scripture


The Spirit speaks through the gathered assembly.


8. Develop Inclusive Prayers

Inclusive liturgies often create original prayers grounded in community experience.

Important elements include:

Opening prayer

Transformation or penitential rite

Prayer of the community

Eucharistic prayer

Communion prayer

Blessings


Prayers should:

Reflect compassion and justice

Include diverse human experiences

Address contemporary concerns

Invite healing and hope

Use accessible and inclusive language


Community members may help write or lead prayers.


9. Celebrate Eucharist as the Prayer of the People

In inclusive communities, Eucharist is understood as the sacred action of the entire gathered community.


Many communities invite all to pray portions of the Eucharistic prayer together, including:

Epiclesis

Words of institution

       Memorial acclamation

Great Amen


This reflects:

Baptismal equality

Early Christian communal worship

Shared participation in Christ’s presence


The Eucharistic table is open to all who seek spiritual nourishment and connection with Divine Love.


10. Use Symbol, Ritual, and Creativity

Inclusive liturgies often integrate:

Candles

Anointing

Shared blessings

Movement

Sacred dance

Art

Silence

     Water rituals

      Healing rituals

Ritual touch

Ecological symbols


Symbolic actions engage body, heart, mind, and spirit.

Creativity helps communities experience worship as alive, meaningful, and transformative.


11. Incorporate Music that Invites Participation

Music should encourage communal singing and spiritual engagement.

Choose music that reflects:

Inclusion

      Justice 

Compassion

Peace

      Ecological awareness

Hope


Many inclusive communities incorporate:

Contemporary liturgical music

Taizé chants

Global music traditions

Feminist hymnody

      Meditative music


Music becomes prayer that unites the community.


12. Honor Diversity and Accessibility

Inclusive worship intentionally considers:

Physical accessibility

Neurodiversity

      Cultural diversity

Gender diversity

      Intergenerational participation

Online accessibility


Ways to foster inclusion include:

Printed or digital worship aids

Large print materials

       Closed captioning

Flexible participation options

        Sensitivity to trauma and spiritual wounds


True inclusion requires continual listening and learning.


13. Include Rituals of Healing and Justice

Inclusive communities recognize that liturgy must connect with the realities of the world.

Services may include:

Healing rituals

      Blessings for caregivers

Prayers for migrants and refugees

Ecological lament and commitment

      LGBTQ+ affirmations

Memorial rituals

Justice-focused prayers and actions


Liturgy becomes both prayer and prophetic witness.


14. Evaluate and Reflect Together

After liturgy, invite reflection:

What touched people spiritually?

What fostered participation?

What could be improved?

      Did people feel welcomed and included?

Did the liturgy reflect the Gospel values of justice and compassion?


Inclusive communities grow through ongoing communal discernment.


Sample Structure for an Inclusive Catholic Mass


Gathering Music and Welcome

      Opening Prayer

Transformation Rite

Scripture Readings

Interactive Homily

      Profession of Faith or Communal Statement

Prayers of the Community

Preparation of the Table

Inclusive Eucharistic Prayer

Communion Rite

Prayer After Communion

Blessing and Sending Forth


Final Reflection

An inclusive Catholic Mass is more than revised language or shared roles. It is a spiritual vision of Church rooted in Gospel equality, compassion, healing, and co-responsibility.


Inclusive worship proclaims that:

All are created in the Divine image.

All are welcome at the table.

All are called to ministry.

The Holy Spirit speaks through the entire community.


As inclusive Catholic communities continue to grow around the world, they offer a living witness to a renewed Church where liturgy becomes a sacred celebration of love, justice, healing, and hope.


In these communities, Eucharist is no longer centered on clerical power, but on Christ alive within the gathered people of God.


And perhaps this is the renewal the Spirit is bringing forth in our time.