17 July 2012

Youth in Revolt


I have been a part of the governance of the church as some level since I was 15; I was selected by my rector as the first youth representative to the vestry of the parish. From that moment on, I have been told countless times that the youth are the future of the church. In fact I am still told fifteen years later, as an ordained priest, that I, as a youth, am the future of the church. What can I say; it’s an old church. The first time that someone said it, the phrase was empowering. I felt supported and included in the working of the church. As I have gone along, and heard every single variant of this phrase that you can imagine, I began to be troubled by it. I have come to a point in these latter days where I dislike the phrase intensely. Don’t get me wrong, young people are great. Much of my ministry has been in their midst and I have been immensely enriched by them. They are an integral part of the body of Christ. But they are not the Church’s future. That position is already filled. Christ is the churches past, present and future.
As the Church bless the paschal candle at the beginning of the Great Vigil of Easter, the celebrant marks the paschal candle with a cross, Alpha, Omega and year and says “Christ Yesterday, Christ today, the Beginning and the end the Alpha and the omega to him belongs time and the ages to Him be Glory and Empire throughout all ages of Eternity Amen.” This acclimation of the Kingship of the Risen Christ is for all time begins the celebration of the Resurrection when it is still dark. In the midst of the cloying dark we assert that Jesus is the lord of all time, the past present and future. Better him than me. If the future were really left up to me, I would weep for the fate of the world. No body wants me in charge of the future, most especially me. Youth, Young People, Those Damn Kids – what ever you call them – aren’t going to save the church; Christ is. We are not, cannot be savior. The position is filled. We can be only what we are, laborers in God’s vineyard, recipients of the grace of a merciful, faithful God, and heirs of a Kingdom we have no earthly right to.
The Episcopal Church just finished its triennial General Convention in Indianapolis. Having been a deputy to the House of Deputies I can tell you that it is thankless, sleepless, mostly delirious work, and I was left wondering whether what I did meant anything at all. I loved it and wanted to be there this time. There are many reports of what happened there. Some say it was a bold step forward, some, such as this commentator for the WSJ say that it was more of the decadent death of a church that has lost Jesus. Neither is true. We can’t know what happened in Indianapolis because it is more complex than an op-ed, and takes far longer to unfold than that machination of any one person. I met a priest once who suggested that it was possible that the Anglican expression of Christianity was only supposed to last 500 years, that it could only make it for so much longer, maybe 25 years. I didn’t like to hear that, because it made the work that I have been called to sound futile. As I have had time to chew on those words, let them get past my defenses, I have come to think that whether or not Anglicanism and the Episcopal Church survive is up to God. If we as a church have run our course, then God’s will be done. But, if we have not, then there is no power on earth that can really make it over. I cannot worry about the future, that is Christ’s domain. I can choose for Christ, to continue what has been started in me.

1 comment:

Mike Bickel said...

After seeing a blog with unrest about Katharine's sermon and about what was being asked of the ECUSA I posted the last comment:

I am afraid that we are guilty of white washing our own traditions and our own behavior in order to point the accusing finger of judgement at others. We are distressed because we are called to change… to repent… to turn back / re-think. We need to take a close look at what Christ would have us do. Are we Christians or Anglicans or Episcopalians? Are we followers of Jesus or tax collectors or sinners or fornicators or cheaters or liars? We should get used to checking the box “ALL OF THE ABOVE” and thanking God that He puts up with us.

Remember that you were bought at a price. Remember that you now owe your life to Christ in order to be part of the body of Christ – and thus, to act like Jesus.

The rant going on in this stream reminds me of how many people left the church when we were asked to “pass the peace” and actually touch each other, when we were asked to accept girls as acolytes, when we were asked to accept women as priests and bishops, when were asked to actually participate in the eucharist instead of mostly daily office, when we were asked to change the prayer book and the hymnal. We do a GREAT job of emoting over things that Jesus could not care less about, and yet when it comes to the greatest commandment that Jesus expressed specifically for us to follow, that of actually loving each other – loving your enemy – a sacrificing love that Jesus knew only too well… we just can’t do it. So we cling to the old ways, to the “traditions” that have nothing whatever to do with why our Savior came to earth. The Pharisees did the same thing.

We need to reach out and touch the corpse, we need to touch the leprosy and touch the pain of the lost sheep in this church and in so doing we may actually heal ourselves!

Mike Bickel