Wednesday, April 08, 2009

this hymn that I love

"Lord, who the night you were betrayed did pray that all your church might be forever one: Help us at every Eucharist to say with willing heart and soul, "Your will be done." Tht we may all one bread, one body be, through this your sacrament of unity.
For all your church on earth we intercede; Lord, make all our sad divisions soon to cease; draw us all closer, each to each, we plead, by drawing all to you, O prince of peace; so may we all one bread, one body be, through this blest sacrament of unity.
And hear our prayer for wand'rers from your fold; restore them too, good shepherd of the sheep. Back to the faith your saints confessed of old, and to the church still pledged that faith to keep. Soon may we all one bread, one body be, through this blest sacrament of unity.
So, Lord, at length when sacraments shall cease, may we be one with all your church above---one with your saints in one unbroken peace, one as your bride in one unbounded love; more blessed sill in peace and love to be one with the Trinnity in unity." William Turton, 1856-1938.

Sacraments. That the sacred is found in certain practices or rituals, to many, is a rejection of the spontanaeity of the Holy Spirit at work in peoples' lives. Especially as the sacraments were coopted by Christendom to centralize spiritual authority and power in the papacy and in an exclusive priesthood. Luther and the reformers sought to correct medieval abuses of the sacraments, but the result has been a Protestant rejection of them. maybe rejectin is too strong a word, but clearly a departure from their centrality. The result has been deep fragmentation of the body of Christ, without a center to unite us. We can't even share! When were you taught to share? As a child, right? The church's lack of devotion to sacramental unity has been responsible, in part, for the spirtual infancy of most Western Christians.
Sadly, the sacraments divide us into our personal theologies and kingdoms where we avoid the other or judge them unworthy to be called brother or sister. Often people seek peace and unity in their own terms and with conditions. Conditional grace is not grace. This Easter, when we gather for ecumenical easter dawn worship in the park I will lament that we are not gathered around the sacramental presence of Christ in the Eucharist. I will lament that the visible, edible expression of Christ's love for us and our love for one another will not be offered. I respect the theological assertions of other Christian traditions and don't seek to impose a way of understanding the gospels, Jesus, or the church on anyone. But the mystey of the meal as the locus of His presence among us, inviting us and nourishing us, is a significant part of my faith and an aspect of the way of Jesus we simply cannot avoid or ignore any longer.
Some friends of anabaptist roots and I gather monthly for eucharistic fellowship. We believe we are transcending sad divisions by living into a table fellowship that is strengthened by ecclesial diversity. May others join us in this endeavor to be an open and hospitable table, where Christ is revealed at the center, in a culture that is decentered, unhinged, and spiritually fragmented.

No comments: