Some years ago, we went to Taizé, a place where
Christians and many others who are seeking God go to find him. They find him in
many different contexts, different ‘mansions’, to quote the word used by Jesus as
a figurative way of talking about heaven and the hereafter. At Taizé, these
‘mansions’ are really different kinds of spaces in which surprising encounters
take place. They are the moments which together make up a new friendship,
perhaps a first experience of what it really means to live in community, but at
Taizé the most significant moment happens in the context, the space, in which
collective worship takes place.
The summer I visited Taizé, was extremely hot. We sat,
several hundred or more, in a huge tent with all the entrances opened to allow
a cross breeze. The altar, or focal
point for worship, was very close to where we were seated, but at about a third
of the way through the singing the whole gathered community turned to face a
different focal point, at the other end of the tent. Suddenly we were out on
the edge. Others were now at the centre.
There are many people today who feel out on the edge of
things when it comes to questions of faith and ultimate meaning. Perhaps the
Church they have known in the past has failed them in some way. It has either
left them behind by failing to address crucial life issues in a way which is
both credible and hope giving, or it has become introspective, concerned with its
own career prospects and with a very partial understanding of the real meaning
of tradition. These concerns have caused
it to become stuck in a place which makes it impossible for it to ‘turn’ in the
way the worship focus at Taizé allows people to turn, so that those on the edge
can also be near its centre. As with the Taizé community, the ‘turning’ is what
gives life to the wider Church as well as to its worship. It is also,
coincidentally, the root meaning of the greek word for repentance, greek being
the language of the New Testament.
For the Church, repentance is about turning outwards towards
God and towards all those who are on the outer edges of its life, but who are still
rather wistfully seeking God within its walls. It does not really matter how
this turning is done, as long as it is done because the Church, in all its
denominations and groupings, wants to connect more deeply, more compassionately,
and more truthfully, with God and because it wants to make it possible for
those on its peripheries to do the same. These are the only ends which matter
when it comes to ‘turning’.
One of the signs
that the Church, in its different denominations and sub-divisions, is failing
to ‘turn’ is that it is becoming increasingly introspective. It is looking
inwards, but without allowing the deeper questions to surface. Something has
happened to its heart with the result that it is unclear of what it is really
about. It is anxious about numerical growth and relevance. At the same time, it
does not want to be seen to capitulate to secularism. So pragmatism rules the
day, with the result that the Church is perceived by many as becoming
increasingly secular and, ironically, increasingly irrelevant.
With its heart growing cold, its anxiety feeds on itself,
so the Church has little choice but to resort to managerialism on the one hand,
or crowd-pleasing tribal religion, as well as the manoeuvring of party interest
groups within its own walls, on the other. Both are forms of retreat inwards, rather than
a forward movement of turning outwards.
Nevertheless, management does have its uses. Creative
outward-looking management liberates and empowers. It enables movement. It can also
provide a little mental space in which to allow the things which really matter
to emerge and focus in the collective mind while the Church, as an organisation,
gets on with reorganising itself. It is a little like dreaming of the next blog
post while sorting out the cutlery draw. This kind of mental break, or ‘space’,
allows important questions to surface. When the Church is not allowing important
questions to surface while it sorts out its cutlery drawer it is simply
managing a static situation. It is no longer reaching out through leaders with
vision and contemplative zeal to those outside who need the fruits of such
vision and zeal – and who the Church also needs without always realising it. So
perhaps the Church needs to forget itself for a while and allow the old walls
to crumble without being in too much of a hurry to put up new ones.
The Church endures wherever there are enough rooms
without walls, or ‘mansions’, to allow everyone to meet Jesus Christ and live
in them in his love. In other words, where it focuses outwards in such a way as
to allow those on the edge to also be at its centre. It seems, to those on the
edge, that the Church is often afraid to let go of the familiar in order to
grasp at what is unfamiliar, but which resonates with the truth they need to
hear spoken from the pulpit, conveyed in the sacraments and lived out in the
care of the least of the Church’s members. People on the edge have already
heard this truth in their own hearts. Perhaps
it is they who are called to convey it into the heart of the Church.
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