DISCOVERING CHURCH
I have wondered, sometimes, if I am especially called to be a Christian on the West Coast.
If that’s right, if I am more or less heeding God’s call by hanging out and serving in Anglican[1] parishes in British Columbia, California, Washington, and now Oregon, then what does that mean? What is the West Coast Anglican context? What does it mean to do church here? Are we even capable of finding an answer to that question? Or are we stuck borrowing Potter Stewart’s famous line and saying of West Coast Anglicanism: I know it when I see it. Recently, some colleagues, all of whom serve as priests on the West Coast, organized a convivium. (“Convivium” is not a word that I’d ever before had cause to use in a sentence. I’m glad that’s changed. “Convivium” is a wonderful term, it means something like a feast or a banquet, a gathering of friends. Maybe we could make the case that it is a synonym for “Eucharist.”) And through it I was motivated to wrestle a little more with these questions and with their implications. In my explorations, I chose to focus on something that is often framed as a liability, and that is that the West Coast is a place in which Christendom (i.e., a society in which the church is utterly interwoven with government and day-to-day life) is well and truly over. I wonder, however, if the end of Christendom is actually something to mourn. I wonder, rather, if the end of Christendom might be a gift to Anglicanism. Here’s where I’ve got so far.
What else belongs on this list? If you love Anglicanism, what draws you to it? How do you see it functioning on the West Coast? How does it – and how can it – best and most fully proclaim the love of Jesus? - Martin Elfert ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [1] I am going to use the term “Anglican” in its traditional sense, which is to say members of the worldwide Anglican communion. For the purposes of this reflection, therefore, all Episcopalians are Anglicans. [2] Full disclosure: I am not 25. Although that is more or less the age that I was when I first started dipping my toe into Anglicanism’s waters. [3] Do not misunderstand me. Going to church and giving to church matter. The Eucharist is the foudation of my spiritual practice, and our family has found joy and meaning in tithing. I am by no means suggesting that these practices are unimportant. I am suggesting that Jesus is too wild, holy, and free to be confined to them. [4] See Timothy D. Wilson’s Redirect: The Surprising New Science of Psychological Change.
1 Comment
Leave a Reply. |
Mission
Cracking the code of the Episcopal Church in the West.
Categories |