Showing items filed under “The Rt. Rev. George Sumner”

Irenicon

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It is easy to feel ourselves to be pawns, or statistics, or leaves blown about in the wind. We seem to be subject to larger and impersonal forces, for the most part working to our detriment. One type is the virus, another deep and disturbing social ills. In the midst of all this society, usually stolid and taken for granted, seems more tenuous than usual. In the moments when we feel the floor boards soggy under our feet, we are unsettled. But there is a moment of clarity here too: in post-modern society we often assume that the prevailing and decisive forces are secular or political or material, and we subject to them; perhaps religion helps people bear up in the midst of them. Perhaps in this sense that we were deemed 'essential' in the recent lockdown period. 

But if we think harder, we realize the truth is quite the opposite. Never has our faith seemed more essential, our vocation more decisive for society as a whole. Never has it needed more a voice that is reliable above the din, or a home base to which people otherwise at odds could repair. We are indeed, as the Epistle To Diognetus in the second century said, 'the soul of society.' And in keeping with this surprisingly rediscovered vocation, it becomes incumbent on us to offer a distinctively Christian, distinctively theological, distinctively Biblical word for our struggling neighbors. Nothing is more politically pertinent than for us to be persistently and un-politically (and counter-culturally) the Church. We are offering in effect a contemporary theology of the Church and its mission, an important way to proclaim Jesus as Lord in this moment in our history.

  1. Matthew 5:44, ‘but I say to you, love your enemies, and pray for those who persecute you... .’ How hard and impractical Jesus is! But how pertinent. In this riven, angry, distrustful moment, His voice invades the partisan trenches. And this verse is not a suggestion, it is an imperative. The parable of the Good Samaritan means to work itself out in your life.
  2. Ephesians 2:14, 'He is our peace, who has made of the two groups one and broken down the dividing wall of enmity.' We have a painful and guilt-ridden racial history in America. But Jesus is already our peace, the wall already broken down. Always, but especially at this moment, we have to display in our lives to our neighbor who we already are, one people, one diverse Body. How very much does our society need to see this, the reality of the Church of Jesus Christ who has brought down that wall!
  3. Ephesians 4:15, ' ... speaking the truth in love... .' But how does this unity go with the hard work of confronting injustice and naming it? By beginning with me, with the things Ineed to leave at the altar to seek reconciliation. This is not wallowing in guilt, but rather walking the forgiven disciples' path following the footsteps of Jesus crucified, risen, reigning over all this.
  4. Matthew 25:37, 'Lord when did we see you hungry and feed you?' We are in the beginning of a time of pandemic wrought crisis in terms of palpable human need, not in some distant land but up close. We are striving to answer this call, and will need to continue to do so. St.James reminds us that the Gospel of grace is inextricably bound up with what Catholic tradition calls 'the works of corporal mercy.' You have heard, and you are responding.
  5. Joel 2:28, 'And it shall come to pass afterward, that I shall pour out my Spirit on all people ... .' We have no power, of our own accord, to bringrenewal we need to pass on society, of the Church, or ourselves. But we cancall on the Holy Spirit, blowing where the Spirit will. And we are encouragedthat periodically, repeatedly, surprisingly, in American history we have beenrenewed, revived, and greatly awakened. We are as the Church the sign inthe world of this hope and confidence.
  6. John 18:37, 'Everyone who hears my voice listens to the truth.' And remember that Pilate has just uttered his cynical, post-modern 'what is truth?' In response our Lord stands as Himself the truth. What age has been more mendacious than ours with its technological hall of mirrors? Which, more hungry to know whose word is truth, to find a plumb line?
  7. Jeremiah 29:7 'Seek the prosperity of the city to which I have sent you .. .' This includes those who labor for our health, our public safety, our right tospeak, those who advocate for change, and for those whose daily labors allowus to survive these days. Each carry risk. We are obliged every morning tointercede for them all in these hard days.
  8. Revelation 2:29, 'Whoever has ears, hear what the Spirit is saying to the Church ... .' When have we felt more confined and disoriented? Howsurprising that this is the moment for us as Church to recall who we are inthis moment, and to stand and to arise! And how unsurprising in a religionof grace that our moment of seeming marginality and powerlessness shouldalso a moment in which society should come realize itsreal need ... forpeace,solidarity, honesty, courage to carry on, humility, and veracity,things it cannot fabricate these for itself., and ultimately its need of the Onethrough whom they come. Nor can we fabricate these ... Of our own accord wemight be inclined to flee, but who else has the words of life? These words, ourcommon inheritance, of all Christians together, bestowing on us no particularworldly power, are in fact, and increasingly clearly, are the one thing needfulfor our moment and our world.

The Good Enough Parish

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    The great psychoanalysis Bruno Bettelheim wrote a book called ‘The Good Enough Parent,’ in which he tried to banish unrealistic hopes of being the perfect parent, for, when these goals are not met, we end up with something worse. No, the goal should be ‘good enough,’ within the constraints of our situation, our personality, and the child’s, etc. Now if you want constraints, try being a parish or mission priest in May of 2020!  We too ought to banish the hopes of the perfect congregational life, or an experience reflective of the old normal.  But we can aim for a good-enough common life of community, Word, sacrament, outreach, and prayer.  Having worked through liturgical protocols and steps and regions and even a theological rationale for where we find ourselves, I now want to turn to the pressing question for the now emerging season:  how can we find, by God’s grace, an adequate approximation of the good enough parish? And can this adequacy endure for the length of time under which we will continue to be ministering in the Covid era? (I want to acknowledge my debt to the Standing Committee for the formulating of this question).

   Let me put the matter another way. Each of our modes of communication of the faith has some problem. Some will find the laptop off-putting, ditto for in-person worship in masks, while to others the protocols about the communion bread seem too fussy, etc. And each reaction is understandable. At the same time, each has a more positive side: streaming reaches new people, and masked in-person worship shows how much we want to have fellowship in spite of everything, and how seriously we take one another’s welfare, and careful distribution of the bread shows how important an element of our faith is receiving the sacrament.  Each reminds us that ‘good-enough’ is the most appropriate goal. Together these shortcoming tell us that we will need a combination of ‘good enough’ solutions, different and simultaneous angles on our common life.  We will need to develop muscles we don’t often use in pastoral theology. And the very element of difficulty drives us back to the most basic truths which shine out in the midst of the frustrations, and thus show  how much we need these effective signs of God’s grace especially in such an hour. 

        I do not have an set answer to this question of an adequate common life for such a time as this, nor do I believe there is a formula nor a single failsafe solution to the demands of the time.  Nor am I necessarily the best person to generate ideas, since I am not in a parish, though I have been listening intently in various settings as you talk about your challenges. Better that I open a conversation and provide a few inklings of where I suspect the answers may lie. You all are invited into this conversation, and will doubtless help each other here more than I can help you. It goes without saying that our ideas need to cleave to the health guidelines we have developed.

  1. A good season for Richard Foster. How could we teach and encourage spiritual practices in a season in which people are on retreat, whether they like it or not? How might we do this?
  2. Think outside the Church-box. Services outside are fine, and may allow a larger group. (They have their own logistic challenges, but we live for challenges!) 
  3. The day of the small group. Even without Covid, this has been the driving force of a great deal of church growth in our time.  This ministry can be easily advanced in a way which is safe. 
  4. Viva the mixed economy.Obviously in ordinary conditions we ought not to depend too much on the one gathering on Sunday morning, nor on one form of it. So we are looking at a time which is on-line and constrainedly in person, with perhaps multiple forms of each. It is good to convey permission to pray together by means of either or both.
  5. Find the emergent audiences for this moment.We have noted those who have come to (or back to) Church in the new format. We can likewise think of those who suffer from depression in this strange time, or of young adults whose job prospects have plummeted, or of harried parents home with toddlers, etc. We should ask ourselves how these circumstances have reconfigured our potential audiences, and what would reach them especially.
  6. Sacraments of solidarity. Our whole society is going through the same thing. In an otherwise riven society, how can we act in such a way as to be witnesses to this solidarity?  I have been interested in ministries of the hands-on, ‘the least of these…’,Matthew 25 sort, especially with the surprising lines looking for food. A time set apart to pray for front-lines and health care workers would fit here too.  

        Furthermore, with so much suffering related to unemployment and inequality of access to medical care, we should seek out ways to come alongside Churches is south Dallas (or wherever you are), so that this becomes a moment to witness to racial reconciliation, as our Presiding Bishop has summoned us to. This too is a sacrament of our communion as the one Church catholic. (If you are looking for ways to get involved with this, contact the irrepressible Carrie Headington).

  1. What else should be on this list?.... Send me ideas, and I will find ways to disseminate them.

Peace,

+GRS

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Complete the Race (II Timothy 4:17)

At the end of our vacation we find ourselves in Chicago for its Marathon weekend (the fastest, I have read this morning, perhaps because it is cool and relatively level). Marathons offer many good things. You can see world-class athletes from places like Ethiopia and Kenya. There is a feel of fiesta with signs by family members, getups by some for-fun runners, and food for sale.

But as I looked out my hotel window at 7:30 a.m., I watched the race of competitors who have lost legs or their use. Wheeling vehicles by arm for 26 miles means serious fitness and determination.

Those competitors were to me, this morning, a symbol of the Church too. For each is wounded. The larger family cheers them on. Each by grace has risen up to run the race. Ahead is the goal, the prize, the welcome home. We find the companionship of Jesus the Lord, there, and along the route too.

Amen.

GRS