Monthly Archive for July, 2008

Ignatius of Loyola

Ignatius LoyolaToday, July 31, Anglicans and Roman Catholics celebrate the feast of St Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Society of Jesus, the Jesuits. Ignatius was a Basque who had his own approach to the issues which precipitated the Reformation. He himself was brought before the Inquisition. His spirituality was strongly apostolic, bringing the insights of monasticism further out into the world – contemplative even while active. Today I want to highlight his clarity in distinguishing means and the end – so often confused.

Principle and Foundation from the Spiritual Exercises of St Ignatius

You are created to praise, reverence, and serve God our Lord, and by this means to save your soul.

And the other things on the face of the earth are created for you and that they may help you as means to the end for which you are created.

From this it follows that you are to use them as much as they help you on to your end, and ought to rid yourself of them so far as they hinder you as to it.

For this it is necessary to make ourselves indifferent to all created things in all that is allowed to the choice of our free will and is not prohibited to it; so that, on our part, we want not health rather than sickness, riches rather than poverty, honor rather than dishonor, long rather than short life, and so in all the rest; desiring and choosing only what is most conducive for us to the end for which we are created.

We are made for God. Church, prayer, liturgy, all else – are means to that end. We so often turn that around, making peace, or money, or whatever our goal – and God the means.

More on Ignatian Spirituality

Lambeth and Second Life

The Anglican Cathedral in Second Life was presented at a “fringe event” at Lambeth. MikeCamel Albert (the Rev. Mike Bursell) presented “Web 2.0 and the Church”. It was sponsored by Bishop Tom Brown (Wellington, NZ) and Bishop Christopher Hill (Guildford, UK). Previous reflections on this site have included caution about virtual sacraments and a response to the surprisingly negative article at Anglicans Online.

It seems to me inevitable that the virtual world will develop, and short-sighted for the church to be reluctant to have mission and ministry in this new land. There are many issues that need positive, imaginative reflection. Struggles over episcopal oversight in First Life may soon appear very antiquated and meaningless if more and more of our lives are spent in some form of Second Life.

The printing press revolutionised our world, our church, our liturgy. Web 2.0 is inevitably transforming world, church, and liturgy. Some are suggesting the next Lambeth Conference, if there is one, ought to be held in another place – in the Southern Hemisphere, for example. Am I the first to suggest that a forthcoming Lambeth Conference be held in Second Life?

video: Anglican Cathedral Flyby Tour

Prince Caspian

I gave an address on the Prince Caspian movie on Monday. With it still running in several cinemas there is opportunity for some to still catch it on the big screen.

I moved a motion in our synod to have CS Lewis considered as a name to be added to our church calendar. That has now passed our General Synod and needs a majority of diocesan synods and General Synod’s approval again and then he will be on our calendar. CS Lewis has strong New Zealand connections – including family connections.

From the opening shots of the movie you know you are in a New Zealand movie: New Zealand scenery, technology, and director.

In 1939 a group of school children had been evacuated from London to stay with CS Lewis at Magdelen College in Oxford. Lewis started a story for them based on a picture that he remembered from when he was sixteen of a faun from Greek mythology carrying an umbrella and parcels, walking home through a snowy wood. He picked up this story again nine years later and in 1950 published The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.

Lewis was part of a group of writers, the Inklings, which included J. R. R. Tolkien who had just finished his long epic about a ring. Tolkein didn’t like the mixture of unrelated mythologies – Roman fauns and nymphs, Germanic dwarfs, Father Christmas, and so on. “It really won’t do, you know!” was his response. However, the book was an instant success. And although possibly Lewis had not intended a series he published a book a year in this series. There is dispute amongst CS Lewis fans about which order the books should be read in, but Prince Caspian was the second to be published, and the second to be filmed in this series.

Lewis was trying to create new myths: “a real though unfocused gleam of divine truth falling on human imagination.” This was not just allegory. “In the enjoyment of a great myth we come nearest to experiencing as a concrete what can otherwise be understood only as an abstraction.”

This is a key to understanding Prince Caspian. Caspian had grown up in a world where, like many of us, they had through off myth and magic and lived in a reductionist reality. Lewis wants to re-enchant the way we look at reality, to re-awaken our imagination.

It is a violent film. With a clever strategy I have not seen in any other story or movie. But I conclude by placing a question mark alongside the violence. As one who wants to be able to present the gospel to young men I do not want to emasculate the gospel, and I am conscious of the battle imagery in our scriptures, in our hymns. But is life primarily a battle? Does Aslan join our lives not to bring something quite different but only better and stronger moves to beat the other guy? If so, are we in danger of a slide into Manicheeism?

Lambeth “Buddhist chant” smear spreads

Bishop Duleep de ChickeraBishop Richard Elena (Nelson, New Zealand) emailed his diocesan clergy that he decided he was unable to receive communion at the Lambeth opening service because of the, to him, unacceptable sermon. Bishop Richard described the conclusion of the sermon to be a Buddhist chant.

Bishop Duleep de Chickera, Bishop of Colombo, was chosen by the Archbishop of Canterbury to deliver the sermon at the opening Eucharist of the Lambeth Conference. Bishop Duleep actually concluded with a Sinhalese chant reminiscent of St Patrick’s Breastplate inculturated into his context in a way not dissimilar to Charles Wesley:

I take refuge in God the Father
I take refuge in God the Son
I take refuge in God the Holy Spirit
I take refuge in the One Triune God.

Bishop Richard’s email, including this false accusation, has been read out and quoted last Sunday in pulpits beyond his diocese. In Christchurch Diocese the tut-tutting over “syncretism” re-opened old wounds about the magnificent Christchurch cathedral Pentecost altar cloth that incorporated in Sanskrit a variant of the World Peace Prayer.

The Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia includes many different languages, with at least four having significant place in our prayer book. Most people in our church are well used, when we cannot understand a language, to begin from a position of trust and respect and, if we are interested, to ask for a translation.

Bishop Richard lists other bishops who joined him in not receiving communion. There has been significant dyspepsia and uproar amongst the mistrustful about this event on the internet.

That receiving communion in Christ’s unifying gift of the Eucharist is, by some leaders in our church, being used as an indication of the acceptability of a sermon is also cause for grave concern.

photo: Duleep de Chickera, Bishop of Colombo

Google vote of confidence in Liturgy site

Google Page Rank

From time to time Google updates its public page ranking of all pages on the internet. Thanks to the alert reader of this site who emailed me this morning to congratulate me on the site’s moving from page rank 4 to 5.

Page Rank is Google’s positioning of the relative importance of all pages on the internet. It is a logarithmic scale (like the Richter Scale) from 0 to 10 (the best), and is a vote of confidence in what is presented on that page.

Thanks to all of you for your ongoing supporters of this site.
If you have a parish site, website, or blog, and you link as “Liturgy” to www.liturgy.co.nz
and/or as “Liturgy of the Hours” to http://www.liturgy.co.nz/ofthehours/resources.html
please let me know so that I acknowledge that and link back.

Gutenberg’s Bible and The Machine That Made Us

In this BBC Documentary Stephen Fry tells the story of one of the most important machines ever invented – the Gutenberg Press. Its fifteenth century invention changed us all and was central in making the modern world. Without it there would have been no Reformation as we know it.

The Machine that Made Us – Part 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.

Lambeth Conference – the Colbert Report

The Colbert Report highlighted the delicious irony of Anglicanism being a denomination that rejected central authority now having groups of people in it that want a stricter central authority to put their foot down! If you have a sense of humour (you have been warned):

Liturgy of the Hours on iPhone

iPhoneThe Liturgy of the Hours is one of the significant areas on this website (Resources for Liturgy of the Hours). This site attempts to encourage the disciplined praying biblically together ecumenically. People of faith have always been in the forefront of using the latest technology (the scroll, the book, the printing press). Now one can purchase the Liturgy of the Hours as a download onto one’s iPhone or iPod Touch. It is not a cheap application (about $US 42) but it is the equivalent of about 5,000 pages. Universalis, the producer of this application, is not everyone’s cup of tea. They do not have the copyright to authorised Roman Catholic psalm translations, so some Roman Catholics do not accept that this can be used to pray with the church. Pious geeks without a vow of poverty will not be deterred.

Brian McLaren at Lambeth

Brian McLaren, one of my favourite authors and speakers, addressed the Lambeth Conference, challenging the bishops about the “hurricane of change” in our contemporary world. The church needs to catch up and keep up. He used the illustration of a bridge in Honduras which survived Hurricane Mitch in 1998 but the riverbed moved so the bridge was redundant and has become a tourist attraction. Is this, for many, the experience of Christianity and the church?

Brian McClaren describes his experience at the Lambeth Conference:

I know that most people think the “news story” here is about divisive controversies over sexuality, but my sense is that the real news story is very different. There is a humble spirit here, a loving atmosphere, a deep spirituality centered in Bible study, worship, and prayer, and a strong desire to move beyond internal-institutional matters to substantive mission in ouBrian McCLarenr needy world.

In every conversation and gathering I’ve participated in, the spirit has been kind and holy and positive. That sort of good news doesn’t attract the media the way a salacious or pugilistic story does … It will be interesting to see whether the press reports what is actually happening here, or if they need to rewrite the narrative to fit the shape of war-tales they are more accustomed to telling.

Codex Sinaiticus website launched

Codex Sinaiticus

A new website placing Codex Sinaiticus online has been launched today. This uncial manuscript of the Greek Bible, written between 330-350, is one of the most important books in the world. It includes the oldest complete copy of the New Testament. Its heavily corrected text is of outstanding importance for the history of the Bible and the manuscript – the oldest substantial book to survive Antiquity – is of supreme importance for the history of the book.

Lambeth Bible study on John 4

Lambeth Bible Study with Joanna Clegg

A famous poet representing the other party (Alexander Pope), once said ‘know thyself, presume not God to scan; the proper study of mankind is man.’ Do you ‘know’ yourself? Can anyone else ever really ‘know’ you? This clip is an alternative account of the passage we looked at in this morning’s bible study, John chapter 4 verses 1-26, and emphasises the significance of being truly known by another human being.

Continued at my source Ruth Gledhill

Humanae Vitae forty years on

Pope Paul VI

July 25 1968 Pope Paul VI published his Encyclical letter Humanae Vitae.
His commissions, set up in response to the development of oral contraceptives in the 60s, came out more than 2/3 in favour of accepting such contraceptives amongst the bishops, and more than ¾ in favour amongst theologians and other specialists.
Pope Paul VI rejected the advice of his commission because this did not come to the conclusion that he did. In the encyclical Paul VI argues from Natural Law. Natural Law arguments should be able to reach the same conclusion by all – theists or not. The commission had by significant majority rebutted the minority report of four of its 72 members, immediately questioning the Natural Law argument of Paul VI.
If the Natural Law argument is so significantly disputed as holding water, is Humanae Vitae then to be understood as an infallible declaration?

The conditions for an infallible declaration are:

“when the Roman Pontiff speaks ex cathedra, that is, when, in the exercise of his office as shepherd and teacher of all Christians, in virtue of his supreme apostolic authority, he defines a doctrine concerning faith or morals to be held by the whole Church, he possesses, by the divine assistance promised to him in blessed Peter, that infallibility which the divine Redeemer willed his Church to enjoy in defining doctrine concerning faith or morals. Therefore, such definitions of the Roman Pontiff are of themselves, and not by the consent of the Church, irreformable.” (Pastor Aeternus, chap. 4)

Clearly in this encyclical Paul VI regarded himself as exercising his office (”by virtue of the mandate entrusted to Us by Christ” section 6), and it concerns a decision on morals to be held by the whole Church. The reaction to this teaching, including its repudiation in practice in such a high proportion of marriages, has undermined the confidence many Roman Catholics have in other edicts of Roman Catholic teaching authority. Positive references to Humanae Vitae now generally shy away from drawing attention to either its infallible nature, or its attempt at logic following Natural Law, and instead focus on the accuracy of its predictions about deterioration of other sexual moral values, deterioration that cannot be easily causally connected to the neglect of Humanae Vitae’s teaching.

Lambeth and sexual ethics

On this 40th anniversary of Humanae Vitae, the bishops of Anglicanism are meeting at the Lambeth Conference, surrounded also by issues of sexual ethics. In the late 19th and early 20th century Lambeth Conferences also condemned contraception, linking it to prostitution, and still in 1920 calling on governments to ban all availability of contraceptives. By the 1958 Lambeth Conference the bishops had seen contraception as being something positive within marriage, and when they met in 1968 they suggested the pope was mistaken. That was an acknowledgement that Lambeth had been wrong 48 years earlier, or that the times had changed. Both might be true. In any case Anglican bishops have the right to be wrong and to change their mind.

The first significant sexual declaration a Lambeth Conference made was to state that wives in a polygamous marriage might be baptised, but not husbands (1888). Like many other sexual ethical declarations, this would be reversed within a century. That divorced persons could not be remarried in church was overturned later. In 1918 women over 30 years old were allowed to vote in Britain, and in 1920 women gained the vote in USA. The Lambeth Conference that year suggested lay women might hold equal rights to lay men – it took five decades to put that into effect in the United States – and then look how rapidly there women were allowed to be ordained as priests and bishops. In 1978, only thirty years ago, there was still no agreement at Lambeth on the ordination of women.

Sexual teachings and practice within Christianity are changing rapidly. Some see this as a giving in to the increasing depravity of “the world”. Others see it as part of the dynamic of the gospel – an outworking of God’s action in the Hebrew people and through Jesus. Others see it as listening to the Spirit addressing us, including through the new context we find ourselves in.

Praying ecumenically

This Sunday, 27 July, Roman Catholics and Episcopalians and others will essentially pray the same prayer. On Sunday and the week following Roman Catholics pray:

God our Father and protector,
without you nothing is holy,
nothing has value.
Guide us to everlasting life
by helping us to use wisely
the blessings you have given to the world.

Episcopalians (Anglicans) will pray:

O God, the protector of all who trust in you,
without whom nothing is strong, nothing is holy:
Increase and multiply upon us your mercy;
that, with you as our ruler and guide,
we may so pass through things temporal,
that we lose not the things eternal;
through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you
and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.

Essentially, these are two different translations of the same ancient prayer.

Read further reflection and history of this shared prayer.

St Benedict at Lambeth

I have often written about the strong Benedictine threads in Anglicanism. St Benedict sought a meeting of those in the monastery where all voices would be heard. As the Rule of St Benedict states in Chapter 3:” The reason we have said that all should be called for counsel is that the Lord often reveals to the younger what is best.” The Holy Spirit can work through the least as much as through the greatest.

Quaker meetings are not dissimilar. In the Pacific there is Talanoa – meeting to share stories. In Aotearoa-New Zealand decisions are made after long discussions on the Marae. This consultative approach is increasingly a feature of the Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia. Canterbury Cathedral, where the Anglican bishops are currently meeting for the Lambeth Conference, was a Benedictine monastery. They are currently following the Indaba process as outlined by Archbishop Thabo Makgoba.

Indaba is a Zulu word for a gathering for purposeful discussion. It is both a process and method of engagement as we listen to one another concerning challenges that face our community and by extension the Anglican communion.

An Indaba first and foremost acknowledges that there are issues that need to be addressed effectively to foster on-going communal living. Originally, in the Zulu context, these might be stock theft, poor service delivery but in the case of the Anglican communion it might be questions related to the way we handle the Bible, sexuality, post colonialism, autonomy concerns and the many missional challenges. It is these issues that need to be brought to the “table.”

In Indaba, we must be aware of these challenges (issues) without immediately trying to resolve then one way or the other. We meet and converse, ensuring that everyone has a voice and contributes (in our case, praying that it might be under the guidance of the Holy Spirit) and that the issues at hand are fully defined and understood by all.

The purpose of the discussion is to find out the deeper convergence that might hold people together in difference and come to a deeper understanding of the topic or issues discussed. This will be achieved by seeking to understand exactly the thinking behind positions other than my own.

Cautions. Indaba works best when participants do not go nto the discussion with a hidden agenda nor prior solution. When you bring the issues, ohers add with their own voice nd a greater truth is revealed and in the process people grow, learn and understand not only the issue, but each other.

For Indaba to work, Indaba on day 1, day 2, day 3, day 4 etc. must be seen as interrelated even if their themes differ. The whole becomes greater than the sum of the parts.

At the end of each Indaba session the discussion will be summarised seeking to honour each of the different voices that have been heard. These written summaries will help to shape the communications coming out of the Lambeth Conference.

This might be an appropriate process to use in other situations.

Also, remember to continue to pray for the Lambeth Conference. One might light a candle at the virtual chapel.

St Benedict Feast Day

Appropriately on the feast day of St Benedict (for a blog interested in monasticism and liturgy) this is the first post on the new blog using Wordpress for liturgy.co.nz