Happily at St Nic's they have just uprooted the slab-like nave altar installed in 1978 and moved it to a side chapel where it serves the Romanian Orthodox community who use the church on Sunday afternoons very nicely. The central axis of the building is now clear again all the way up to the high altar at the far end.
Tuesday, 27 February 2024
St Catherine in Guildford
Thursday, 22 February 2024
Erasure
It's arranged that I will do the funeral, and I have an
initial meeting with the deceased’s children. Their requirements are not easy
to meet but I prepare to try. But a week beforehand the undertaker phones me
and, clearly embarrassed, tells me my services aren’t wanted after all. There
will be a civil celebrant instead. It would be untrue to say I’m not saddened,
but it also relieves me of the impossible task of having to keep everyone involved
happy. I imagine I won’t be welcome at the funeral and so stay away: many other
members of the church do attend, and find there’s no mention at all of the faith
that was such a central part of the deceased’s life from childhood.
The family got what they presumably wanted, but they will always carry the awareness that, at the moment when most people try to sum up the life of someone they love, they chose to scrub out whole areas of the life concerned. Saddest of all, I imagine it will never be talked about, never dealt with, a rage that’s never questioned, a wound that never gets healed.
Sunday, 11 February 2024
Further Observations on the Abyss
Being overtaken by black moods and in fact talking about them is nothing new for me or this blog, but I have some revised or additional things to say about it.
1. The episodes seem to get more intense as I get
older. It may be because they are now tangled up with my sense of mortality and
the question of how far I might or might not fight a serious illness should it
come my way (or when it does), or with issues of how far I’ve made the best use
of my life hitherto. I say more intense: that doesn’t mean longer in duration,
rather that they feel more dangerous.
2. There is nothing positive or useful about them.
They bring no new insights or sympathies – except perhaps for other people who
are afflicted in the same way – and in fact they clog up and obscure clarity of
thought and vision.
3. There is no shifting them by effort, or by
trying to spot and avoid the conditions that give rise to them. This is because this
enemy is subtle, and can make use of any stimulus to achieve its result, no
matter how innocuous. Most of the time you won’t even be able to spot or
isolate the origin of the mood: it moves as quick as thought.
4. But if there is no guilt either in suffering
from black thoughts or being unable to dispel them by will (and that kind of
guilt can just deepen and intensify the thoughts), neither should they be
acquiesced in. They need to be positively closed down whenever you find yourself
caught up in them (and ‘find yourself’ is the correct characterisation, because
it will happen before you know it), or they will deepen.
5. In fact, I am reticent about talking about them
at all, for fear that they might catch! The cunning of this condition is such
that recognising that others suffer from it could itself be an encouragement
not to resist it when it comes, not to treat it as the adversary of all things
human it really is.
6. It absolutely needs outside intervention to
cure. If nothing the sufferer can do will shift the black mood, and it can be
fuelled by absolutely anything, the best kind of intervention is a surprise,
including to the person (if there is one) who brings it about.
7. The contribution the sufferer makes is therefore
to be open to intervention, to be willing to put themselves in the kind of position
where something surprising, unchosen and unanticipated can take place. A
deliberate exposure to (say) the company of other people may not work, but it provides
the space and occasion for something to work, and that’s about all we can do.
8. We must always rejoice and offer thanks whenever
the danger passes.
Now then, does that help!
Wednesday, 7 February 2024
Is There Anybody There? Yes, There Is, Says The Lord
Once we got beyond the basics, the conversation with the woman who’s joined the team of one of our regular events went in an unexpected direction as she described the comfort she’d derived from visiting spiritualist gatherings, and how Christian friends had reacted (she said) with horror. We discussed why someone might want to engage in spiritualist activity and what the problems might be from a Christian point of view. She agreed that there were possibly malign things lurking in the hidden world, but stressed how her experience had been positive. ‘You’re not going to hear this church announcing “And now we’ll have a séance”’, I said, ‘but I’m not shocked’, which I’m not.
Curiously the readings at mass the day after were the
consecration of the Temple from 1Kings, and Christ’s critique of the concepts of
clean and unclean practices in Mark 7: these led into a reflection about one of
my recurring themes, the contrast between two opposed approaches to religious
life. The first is that you ring-fence the sense of the divine with rules and
structures to prevent it being contaminated by the profane world and eventually
eroding altogether; and the second that you use the sense of the divine to find
its presence elsewhere. In my own Bible reading in the morning, too, I found
the Lord assuring Moses in Exodus 4 ‘I will be with your mouth and teach you
what you are to speak’, encouraging a degree of trust in God which I fall short
of all too often. ‘He reigns’, I concluded to our small congregation, and if he
reigns there is little to fear in the sometimes wayward spiritual practice we
encounter in others. One of the issues, in fact, with seeking solace in talking
to spirits is that it’s based in a basic lack of trust in God that we are
called to grow away from.
If we are critical of what others do, we must surely
know that they aren’t simply going to change as a result of something we say.
Nobody is going to blink at us and reply ‘You know, I never thought about it
like that. I’m going to stop from this point forward’ – although they might, at
some point distant from now, shift their ideas and reflect that perhaps we were
right. If we don’t expect change in that way, it raises the question of what we’re
doing when we react ‘with horror’ at someone else’s behaviour. I think it may
be that we fear that if we don’t rebuke the sin, God will blame us for not
distancing ourselves from it. The sin will contaminate us and we need to
protect ourselves, to signal to God that we want nothing to do with it, to put
up a protective barrier between us and it. It’s not the other person that’s
uppermost in our minds.
Now, there might well be particular sins that beset us and from which we do need to flee. When Christ says to St Peter ‘get behind me, Satan’, it’s because the Apostle is raising something that’s a genuine temptation for him: it’s actually important. Knowing this is just proper spiritual self-awareness. But that’s not the other sinner’s fault; most of the time it’s not at issue (I have no desire whatever to contact my long-dead relatives); and our words are seldom as much to the point as the Saviour’s.
Sunday, 4 February 2024
Locating Christians
Clearly not every ritualised action will carry out
these personally and socially worthwhile functions, although you can see shades
and reflections of them in everything from the Brownies to golf clubs. Religion
is a bit more all-embracing in its explanatory narratives, and has that element
of pointing to eternity which is harder for the Brownies to manage. But although
many of us may not find it a sufficient reason to engage in religious practice
or to persuade others to do so, for others, perhaps lots, it will be enough.
You don’t have to believe to get something out of it.
Most of modern evangelistic practice is focused around belief,
about bringing nonbelievers to the point of believing, and making sure people
who are already in believe harder, as it were. Now, there have to be some who
believe in order to make the whole thing work, which is why clergy have to make
vows and are encouraged to sharpen and hone their spiritual lives, but perhaps
we ought to be less fixated about belief as such. Experience seems to be that
people who develop what you might call a dogma-based faith are recruited from
the larger number of Will Selfs and Sara Wheelers who have a practice-based
faith, and always have been: they ‘catch’ it as a result of doing it. We seem to need
more of the latter to generate the former, and not the other way around.