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The
Church/
The
World
A
sermon offered at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Lafayette
February
16, 2003
By
Rev. Hilary Landau Krivchenia
Reading
Country Song
"The
Old Country Church"
There's a place dear to me, where I'm longing
to be
With my friends at the old country church.
There with mother we went, and our Sundays were
spent
With my friends at the old country church.
Precious years of memories, oh what joy they
bring to me
How I long……. once more to be,
With my friends at the old country church
Sermon
Welcome to
church. What is church?
What can it become? Why
do we come here?
While we are here, there is more than a chill
wind outside – there is a storm – there is a storm outside while
we are here – that beats against our walls and that rattles our
precious windows.
In truth, we come here in part to come in out
of that chill wind – as people have sought sanctuary for
generations … Yet, we
have learned, as generations before us have learned again and again
– that the wind follows us here – inside.
It blows in our minds and rattles our hearts.
We knew it was coming – a year ago – 2
years, and longer ago – when our leaders led us to war, to
scarcity, to disappoint the democratic dream – when the so called
powers that be have failed to help shape a good world.
This has ever been. Once,
church was established so that the powerless could endure their
powerlessness – survive this world on the way to the next one.
“Be Ye not Conformed to this world” said the Teacher
Paul. But this church
is different. We are
truly non-conformists – but our hearts do belong to this world and
we long for it’s reform. The
roots of this church were in the impulse to non-conform and to
reform, and to remake the church in a more humane image.
Yet – as the wind blows – vision may be obscured and the
purpose of church may be lost.
But today more than ever we need to know why are here -- to
know what church is. We
need to know and shape what church can be.
I’m well aware that some who are gathered here feel some
discomfort with the label – church – some wish this were a
congregation, some wish it were a meeting house, some wish it were
still called a fellowship – but – you know what they say about
ducks. This isn’t a
theater, a lecture hall, or movie house.
This is a religious gathering – we are drawn together not
simply by social interests – but by the deepest of principles and
values. People drawn
together by meaning and by seeking.
And by expectation. Each
of us arrives here with expectations based upon a lifetime of
experiences. It’s our
experiences and our responses to them that shape at least to some
extent the expectations we have here – that we bring here – that
bring us here.
You
may be drawn here by your intellect -- to attend a church where you
don’t, as they say, have to “check your brains at the door.”
Unitarian Universalist Churches are referred to as the
Thinking person’s church. A
young person I know who attends another church in town asked me
recently -- “is it okay if I think something different than what
my minister thinks.” I replied, trying to stay as much as possible in her
framework, “Well,
that’s why God gave you a brain.”
You may come hoping to have an adventure for your mind –
you may be a seeker, and explorer -- you may hope to do more than
untangle old texts or get tangled up in dogma – you may actually
hope to find new ground – to bring your own and modern
perspectives to ancient human challenges.
You may be drawn by the desire to engage in a religious life
and practice that expands your mind and broadens your intellectual
horizons.
You may be lured by your hunger for some deeper
feeling in your life – a feeling you are allowed to have.
My same young friend asked me – “is it okay if I feel
something different than what my minister tells me that I should be
feeling?” Just
imagine if I told you today how you should feel?
It would be a scandal. Unitarian
Universalists assume that feelings grow and change.
That, complex and challenging as they may be – are part of
our wholeness. You may
come here hoping that this week the hymns will move you – that you
will find yourself connected to the other people here by singing
with them. You may be
listening to the gathering music, the readings, the
intergenerational portion and want to find your feelings stirred.
You may have come here with a heavy heart – and find
yourself seeking solace – as humans do.
You may be attracted here by the idea that
there will be one hour of your week in which you can reach for those
moments of insight that give life real meaning – those times when
the superficial is moved away and you catch a real glimpse of the
wonder of being.
Your children may have brought you here – as
you want them to develop deeper values than they can see modeled in
much of public life. You
may have wanted them to feel less alone as young free thinkers and
part of a community that would cherish them.
You may have learned leadership in some church group and wish
that for your children…or for yourself.
You may have come here because you felt too
long like the only one who ever questioned the truths you were told
– by preachers, teachers, and politicians.
Perhaps you want to find a community of people with the moxie
and the depth to know that the truth grows and changes and that we
shape the world as we learn together.
You may long for history, for continuity: for a
community to cherish, remember, support, tolerate you at your worst
and call you to be your best. To
celebrate and mourn with you.
Church is all of those things and more.
All of those things are the work of the church, the ministry
of the church – and more. A
number of years ago, the interim minister, Reverend Robert Flanders
asked you to think about what sort of church you were and wanted to
be. I’m told that he
described the four types of church that have been defined by
scholars of church life – most notably – James Carroll in his
book Varieties of Religious Presence. Of course, these models blur – but every churches leans
toward one or another. And
the church is never an island – it’s shaped by the world around
it – it breathes in the climate and the times.
Like the wind whistling outside and in.
If you come here seeking a shelter from the challenges of
life, a private peace – you are seeking a sanctuary church.
From small to large – churches have long acted as
sanctuaries –the primary function, to provide an anchor in a wild
world, a setting of pastoral comfort, the creation of a kindred
community, and a time of peace and escape.
A small church was situated in an in-town neighborhood in a
large city. The
minister was a charismatic man who’d been disenchanted with public
ministry and had formed the congregation in the 70’s.
Free thinkers – the congregation refused to be called a
church, though they sang hymns, beat tambourines, gathered every
Sunday morning, took up a collection, signed for membership, and was
lead in every way by the personality of the minister – until his
retirement. The
congregation owned the building, an old church overlooking a park
with a sign over the front door with the word “Sanctuary”
painted in gold letters. Despite
having values reflected in the neighborhood around them, the church
couldn’t find a way to reach out and grow.
They often heard sermons about how unique they were and how
dangerous the world is to freely thinking, freely loving people.
The church was around 50% lesbian.
Many were local activists, the congregation carried a huge
banner in the annual Pride March, and placed an ad in the paper each
week, yet the congregation was basically inward, without a social
action program of its own. Eventually they chose to ordain their own clergy.
The next sort of
church presence in the world is the civic church.
In the center of many New England towns find the oldest
church – it’s usually Unitarian Universalist.
Beside it sits the quiet cemetery, ancient with angels and
skulls etched into gravestones leaning with the passage of hundreds
of years. Families that
can trace themselves back generations belong to that church – and
to the congregational one across the street.
The mayors come out of these churches, the council folk,
doctors, attorneys attend, landed families are charter members.
These churches keep the town going – as once the town kept
the church going. They are civic churches.
The pillars of the church and the pillars of the town can be
seen there every Sunday.
Another grew to more
than one thousand members during the Civil Right’s movement, lead
by courageous members and ministers.
It was active in voter registration drives, in civil
disobedience, and in becoming a meeting place for local civil rights
groups. Although it
changed over the years, it retained some of the activist spirit,
pledging a portion of the operating budget to social justice groups,
supporting a literacy program, and hosting controversial public
speakers. This model of church is the activist model – visibly
serving the community, as Unitarian Universalists, engaged in the
issues of the times and teaching and preaching a gospel of social
responsibility.
Finally, there’s a
church that’s uncommon among Unitarian Universalist churches –
the Evangelist church. Even
the word causes a cringe. The
dictionary says that while this word has roots in the affirmation of
Christian scripture it’s marked by militant or crusading zeal.
The word also has roots in early Christian Church history
when embattled believers worked to share their newfound faith and
then later as they crusaded to bring pagans, Jews, and Muslims to
Jesus or to death. Today
these churches are seldom militant, yet, they seek to reach out –
as the activist church does – but this church does so primarily to
save souls -- to spread their good news and bring more sheep into
the fold.
Okay let’s throw out
the word evangelical and let’s call it, instead, a teaching and
liberating church. What
would it look like in a Unitarian Universalist Context? Going door
to door bringing people our principles, a massive bibliography, and
a blank journal to write their own thoughts in?
Public speakers and a broad education program bringing free
thought to the community? Or a TV show in which different beliefs are honored and
explored? A radio show
that promotes conscience and pluralism?
Somehow, I can imagine us spreading the word that people have
minds to think, hearts to feel, and hands to work with?
We’d share the many good newses? Instead
of threatening people with hell afterlife we’d suggest that
pluralism and free thought are the most hopeful path that can lead
this world in this life out of the hell of ignorance, hatred, and
violence we face. That to me is a saving message worth sharing,
worth building a church for.
These four models of
church are part of our history and experience – whether we
attended any, all, or none of them.
The images of church are all around us and in us.
For a while, I lived in Decatur, Georgia – as you enter
Decatur from Atlanta a sign greets you: Decatur, City of Churches.
I was unchurched for most of my life.
I never attended the Old Country Church – but I know it
from many people. A
small part of me even hankers for that church – its quiet
ministry, long relationships, lazy picnics, long services, family
dinners, births, marriages, and deaths.
For its rootedness in the land around it, rustling trees,
quiet cemetery, the shelter of its routine.
But, our images of these churches all carry the distortions
of memory or the tender wash of illusion.
They are dreams as well as memories.
As a child I never lit
a menorah for Hanukkah or the lights for Shabbas – I had no church
or temple associations with candles, though I spent years using
candles to create peaceful space.
Nevertheless, a few years ago I was in a large Catholic
Church and saw the huge bank of candles – and the moneyboxes close
to hand. I found myself
spinning back to an era I have never personally known -- of
indulgences and a spiritual life purchased from professionals by the
laity.
Church has real as well as symbolic power in
our lives – texture and memory in our hearts and minds.
Church can shape our dreams and our nightmares, our worst
fears and greatest aspirations.
Church can drive us away if it is unwelcoming, too private,
unfocussed. Church can
be a place of betrayal and heartbreak – when trust is broken or
church can be a part of our most positive personal history.
Church seldom sticks with people if it’s just a place
they’re parked once a week. Whole
generations grew up in the urban sixties and seventies when families
began to move away from the church as center and went once a week or
once a year. Church is
a whole life experience: from picnics to meetings, classes, sewing
circles, funerals, outdoor groups, to social action -- the richness
of life supported by a community of kindred spirits.
Despite the weaknesses
of any one of the church models, together they begin to draw a
picture of a healthy church and a whole ministry – a holistic
ministry. In a church
with a holistic ministry you don’t have to leave your brain at the
door, or your heart, your joy or your sorrow, your hunger for
justice, your need for healing, your family, your loneliness. You can come to a church with a holistic ministry and bring
your whole self.
Often when we use the
word ministry it conjures up – even for Unitarian Universalists
– just one picture: the Person in the Pulpit – the Preacher –
the minister. In fact, the ministry is the whole of the church.
It is the partnership of clergy and laity.
The ministry is how the church embodies its mission –
nourishing the members, building its tradition, serving the
community, and shaping the world.
The ministry is the gift the church gives to the world and to
one another.
One great illusion that people have about
churches –is that churches are made by some central office, higher
power, inner circle, holy cadre. The truth is that the church is
every one of us here. No
magic wand, fried minister, burned out or dumped on leader, or
archdiocese will create the church we share here.
When you wonder about a program or service we don’t have
yet, you might ask yourself or wonder how you might help create
that. Our principles
were written and voted on by Unitarian Universalists, ministers are
ordained by the people. The
church is the people – the people make choices and the choices are
the program – the program is the people.
The work of our visions and hands together.
And our church has a
Program Council that has been forming and defining itself and
working to create a strong foundation to support and growing and
thriving church. We
have six program areas that we’ll have time to hear more about
next week as our Program council presents the service.
Our program areas reflect our values and our ministry –
Lifelong religious education, Worship and Music, Outreach, Community
Within, Denominational Connections, and the New Building.
From the walls to the hearts within them
you have the ability to shape this church – as the people
here before you have. Shaped
by volunteers and people dedicated to this church – even if they
wish it were still called something else.
The difference is – mostly none of us now has to start from
scratch. Yet – we
will share the exciting project of building a new home for this
church – to house and empower our ministry, to further create a
church that nourishes and transforms.
Frederick Beuchner said – calling is where your soul’s
deep joy and the world’s deep hunger meet.
That is church and ministry at its best.
Church is the place where yours soul’s joy, cultivated,
rises, and meets the hunger of the world in service and celebration.
Together these
models of Church I mentioned, draw the outlines of a church that can
nourish its members, shape the ethical leaders of the future,
respond to changing times, and share good news without sliding into
zealotry. We can see
the alternative outside our walls raging with the wind.
We have to have a healthy rounded church because the world is
in us and of us as well as around us.
And as a world we have come to the edge -- and whatever
promise the future holds is the same as the promise the church holds
-- it is the promise we fulfill together. This requires our mutual nurture and our work in the world.
It requires a full church program that blossoms and enables
every person here to blossom in their time.
Our times are much
with us and they are times of challenge – but together we are as
strong as you can dream and as great as we can grow.
This is not the old country church – this is our church of
today – stretching and growing in response to vision -- to the
changes, challenges, and the call of our times.
There is no better time to be in such a place of human
shaping and human power and shared endeavor – there is no better
place to be than together making this place – a church – the
home of promise fulfilled.
Closing words by Carly Simon
We're coming to the edge,
running on the water,
coming through the fog,
your sons and daughters.
Let
the river run,
let all the dreamers
wake the nation.
Come, the New Jerusalem.
Silver
cities rise,
the morning lights
the streets that meet them,
and sirens call them on
with a song.
We
the great and small
stand on a star
and blaze a trail of desire
through the dark'ning dawn.
It's
asking for the taking.
Trembling, shaking.
Oh, my heart is aching.
We're coming to the edge,
running on the water,
coming through the fog,
your sons and daughters.
Let the river run,
let all the dreamers
wake the nation.
Come, the New Jerusalem.
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