Ascension

Just and true are Thy ways, Thou King of Saints! No sacrifice of personal ease, no work of charity, no word of the heart, no answer to the plea of sorrow, no a cup of cold water in the name of a disciple, shall fail of its reward.

Blessed be Thou, O righteous Father, for the merciful mission of the Redeemer; and blessed be the Redeemer who came to do Thy will, � through lowliness to exalt humanity, through poverty to enrich the world.

Deeper than words was the joy set before him, and higher than the dominion of the earth is the honor of his name. They valley of humility was consecrated by hs shining footsteps; and the path he trod, though solemn and lonely, led upward through the gates of day, from the cross to the crown.

O God the King of Glory, who hast exalted the Lord of Life to the right hand of power: Grant us the indwelling of his spirit, that we may faithfully follow him in the regeneration, be more than conquerers through him who loved us, and gain the empire of souls.

Inspire our thoughts of a higher life, that we may feel how divine a thing it is to rise above ourselves, by outgrowing selfish aims � and how we may be lifted into peace through sharpest suffering � and how the kingdom of heaven comes down into the heart, when the affections are set on things above.

Thou art continually exalting the Saviour in all willing minds, and art ever calling upon Thy redeemed one to honor him as they honor Thee. Make us entirely Thine, we beseech Thee, that in all our thoughts and ways, in life, and in death, and in the life beyond, we may truth acknowledge the Lord of All, to the glory of Thy holy name, world without end. Amen.

  • “Ascension – Exaltation” in Gospel Liturgy, p, 68-69. The liturgy suggests using [psalm] selection 5, “The earth is the Lord’s and the fulness there of” (from Psalm 24) and Ephesians i. 3-23, or iv. 1-16 as the scripture lesson.

Cramming jargon into mission

There’s a new church getting startes in Chicago, the Lincoln Park Church Plant, and its website is at www.thechurchplant.org/.

I like what the leadership is trying to accomplish. Saturday early evening is a great time, and because it is under the care of the the Evangelical Covenant Church, it will probably be well suppored in prayer and resources.

But there’s something to jargon-y about the church that just turns me off.

An example, from their question and answer section:

What if I do not live in Lincoln Park?
No worries. We have chosen the Lincoln Park neighborhood because the greatest concentration of the target population lives there. Given that we aim to keep church meetings to a minimum, geography should not present too great a challenge. While living in the ministrys neighborhood provides many advantages, we encourage you to focus primarily upon the prompting of the Holy Spirit or a burden for the vision.

“Target populations?” Boy that makes me feel all warm and welcomed, and the document is full so such bon mot.

I wish them well (really) but in our work it is worth remembering that the language we use, say, to get funding mightn’t ne the same as what we would use with the people we welcome. The gospel, after all, cries out for the right word with which to be spoken.

Deep in the spleen of Texas

My friend Hope at Appalachia Alumni Association writes about how the Texas Comptroller denied tax-exempt status to the newish Unitarian Universalist congregation in Denison.

I smell rat, and perhaps political punishment for a religious group that must cause the powers-that-be in Austin a rash.

So gang, we’re going to be in Fort Worth for General Assembly next year. (That’s within a reasonable drive to Denison, by the way.) How should be respond?

What a Puritan can teach

I’m watching the PBS “reality show” Colonial House with deep interest as its 1628 reproduction setting has something to say about social footing of American Protestantism, including Universalism, but particularly Unitarianism.

The producers tried to create a generic English settlement – neither Anglican nor Puritan – and so its religion consultant, Charles Hambrick-Stowe, produced a resource that tried to program “Sabbath meetings” (worship) as broadly as possible.

His task was daunting.

Some [colonists] might be extremely zealous about their faith; some might be just nominal members of a church. Of course, it also seemed likely that some of the colonists would not be religious at all in their real lives. Of these, some might be secular people entirely nave — clueless — about religion. They might be apathetic about spiritual matters or they might be curious and willing to give it a try — in the same way that the participants would be giving everything else in the 17th century a try. In addition to such individuals, COLONIAL HOUSE could also include some inhabitants with negative real-life religious baggage, perhaps outright antagonism toward spiritual things or anything smacking of “church.” How to create a religious structure that would be not only a realistic historical exercise for all these colonists but also meaningful to them personally? How to imagine a religious environment with both kinds of integrity — historical and personal?

Of course, in a way, that’s the curriculum of any today religious group that inherits any traditions, but perhaps ours most of all. Its easy for me to imagine the worship services in the Governor’s house developing into the First Parish, and thenceforth, to the funny Unitarian church on the green.

Back to the show: in short order, some members of the colony were unwilling to “pretend” to have anything like a Puritan faith, and weren’t going to be subject to the reconstructed mores of the colony. (It makes me wonder why they bothered to participate. Was it just a game? A Romantic dream?) In response, the mores fell apart and so you get is a notion of the twenty-first century is really about, more than what the seventeenth was. The more I watched, the more I could see how New England liberalism, whatever its theological and philosophical foundations, was driven by those who wanted to choose “none of the above.” (For what its worth, I wouldn’t want to live in neolithic Wales, on the Montana frontier, in an Edwardian manor house, or in war-bombed London, either.)

The difference is one of choice (something real colonists wouldn’t have had) and in the end twenty-first century notions of religious choice won out. But today, we treat confuse the Governor’s coersive state-power with the choices we make, for our benefit, that nevertheless limit our options. We give up the option of some possible freedoms to enjoy real freedoms. Take marriage, for instance. I vowed to give up the option of the “freedom” of sexual promiscuity to establish the mutual and faithful relationship.

The matter that really bites me today is that some people enter congregational life and think that, once they enter, they have the same full set of choices they had in secular life. That’s one of the places I think that an emphasis on “freedom” in Unitarian Universalist congregation betrays our Puritan roots: we’re always like the adolescent trying to get away with as little religion as possible, and seeing any enrichment as a burden, and a socially-pressured burden at that. This “escape from limitations” plan won’t work in a society that cares little for religious obligations, and is undergoing a rapid transformation towards personal atomization. In a word, the classic liberalism-from-Puritanism isn’t speaking about the trajectory our culture is going, and trying to form institutions to support it, begs common sense.

Perhaps these ideas are why we study and relive history?

From the show’s site: Religion in the Colony

Gospel Liturgy's Wednesday morning

In his 1871 manifesto Our New Departure E. G. Brooks dourfully noted that the Universalists were not “a praying people” (more about that later) so I doubt this 1861 service or its week of companions were often used as intended. Still, after I type in all the mornings and evening, I hope to see a pattern and how this cycle of morning and evening family prayer does or does not tie into the general scheme of worship

The day, O Lord, is Thine: the night also is Thine. Unto whom shall we come, but unto Thee? And where shall we begin, or where shall we end, if we attempt to number the praises of the Lord? Thy mercies are new every morning, and fresh every evening; and whoso most gracefully enjoys them, the best obeys Thy will.

Lord, sanctify to us Thy perpetual loving-kindness. Help us to estimate it justly, to feel it constantly, and to acknowledge it continually.

Enable us to glorify Thee in all our thoughts and way, knowing that we are not our own. May our bodies be kept in honor and purity, our souls be in fellowship with all that is lovely and of good report, and our whole being acceptably hymn Thy Praise.

¶ All united in the Lord’s Prayer. ¶ Scripture Lesson. ¶ One of the Prayers on pages 60-62.

  • From Gospel Liturgy (1861), p. 143-44.

We need a good hymnal

Do Universalist Christians need a new common liturgy? Despite my obvious interests and opinions, I think the answer is no. The 1790 Philadelphia Convention, called in part to adopt a common communion liturgy, didn’t. Universalist practice has included well-formed trinitarian liturgy, worship as window-dressing for platform speaking, the polite hymn sandwich, and praise in the “frontier” mode (save for the “anxious bench”.) No one form tried to dominate the others, and local variation ran through each “school”. There seems little reason to try and adopt a uniform style now.

I would like to see liturgical renewal, and I would like to be in a church which local custom was mature and jubilant liturgical worship, but what we need first and formost is a common hymnal, or a commonly-held hymnal, both for congregational worship, and as a basis for a spiritual renewal.

Earlier, I quoted hymnologist Erik Routley as to the uses of hymnals. In Protestant hands, they serve a second function as a lay devotional and a way of learning church teaching. (Little wonder that one of the earliest Universalist items in print was a denominational hymnal.) Unlike today, hymnals were once personal property, with perhaps a few copies kept for visitors. I used to see this as evidence of cheapness; now I see it as an endorsement of the affection people had (and some have today) for the word which is both read and sung. And more than that: the hymnal is really a book with the laity in mind. In this age of tradition-combing and lay-empowerrment, it strikes me as a bitter irony that the status of the American hymnal is so low, especially in the post-War generations. I don’t think the reasons for this unfortunate situation are all that mysterious.

First, hymnals today usually belong to churches, not individuals, and so literally “aren’t ours.” Unless you own one, there’s little opportunity to browse through it, much less learn from it. Second, in churches with a backwards orientation, the hymnody (with the rest of the worship) is so “protected” that it ends up ossified and completely out of the living concern of new Christians. Third, and on the flip side, language reformers have been so keen to change the language, settings, and selections of those hymns which do have a freehold on the worshipers’ hearts that they feel abandonded by the hymnal compliers. I’m glad to see that the “language wars” are about over, with a truce and compromize in evidence.

So, what do we do now? How do we get a hymnal back into the hands of the faithful, to be used at home as well as church. We need to select one. Let’s not pretend we have the strength, skill, or money to make our own. “Custom” hymnals, far too often cheap-looking and tacky, are prey to local quirks. And, though it might seem like a small point, most hymnals are physically too large. They look and feel more like encyclopedia volumes more than handy guides. An English Unitarian minister asked me asked how the elderly and arthritic were expected to hold Singing the Living Tradition, the 1993 Unitarian Universalist Association hymnal. He had a point; his church used the small words-only Hymns of Faith and Freedom, and it is small enough to keep in a handback, and cheap enough for everyone to own. (Get one if you’re in London; the indicies are worth the GBP 8.50 alone.) By contrast, the SLT was at its publication the most expensive hymnal on the American market, and is still nearly twice as expensive as parallel editions in other denominations.

Plus (and need I say it?) the SLT has so little for Christians that I never refer to it anymore; I also don’t think it has very much musical merit.

I want a hymnal that draws from good, ecumenical hymnody but also has a number of familiar favorites, has a working selection of psalms (and, ideally, other service texts), is easy to carry, and ideally comes in a large-type edition for those with poor eyesight.

I can’t say I’ve found a single suitable work in the United States under these criteria.

The Hymns of Faith and Freedom comes close as its single edition is better for the pooer-sighted than most American hymnals, but there are no psalms. The United Refomed Church’s Rejoice and Sing is very close to the mark, but it may not be sold in the United States. (I got mine when last in London.) Unfortunately, there’s no information about it online.

So far, the best contender is the 1973 Church Hymnary, Third Edition which is used all over the world in Reformed churches, but is most identifed with the Church of Scotland. It doesn’t have many prose psalms (but a good selection of metrical psalms) and enough service elements to hold a Sunday service, and particularly a communion service without a printed order of worship.

The good news is that a new edition is in the works, so I hope to get a copy when it appears.

If it follows in the track of the third edition and the revised (second) edition, this will be hard to beat, and will come in a number of formats. (I treasure my paperback revised edition copy; 728 hymns and liturgical elements, but no tunes, and small enough to slip into a jacket pocket.)

And I’m looking at Voices United, the hymnal of the United Church of Canada. Sooner rather than later I hope to get a copy, and will report back then. (A Canadian friends gives it the thumbs’ up.) Until then, note that three indices can be downloaded at the information site.

Routley on hymnals

This quote from the famous hymnologist Erik Routley will put my later posting into context.

It is one thing – and a not unpleasurable thing – to confine the hymnal to church, and to sing from it there without much thought. It is far better to have a copy at home and either occasionally or regularly to read from it, or to play from it (if you can play), and to become personally familiar with what it contains. It is, I think, a generation that has almost passed away that regularly did this; but I did in my own youth know seniors who kept their hymnal next to their Bible, read from both at their prayers, and snatched both if they were suddenly taken into hospital.

Thankfulness today

I couldn’t find any other wedding-related historic Universalist collects (family illness and travelling seem to be a more pressing concern) to celebrate the weddings beginning today in Massachusetts, but I did find this lovely prayer to share.

We praise and bless Thee, O Lord, for the joy of thankfulness and devotion, and for the peace which ever flows through patience and comfort of Thy holy word.

The earth is full of the riches of Thy goodness: the gospel is full of the riches of Thy grace: and all Thy perfectoins, and all our blesings, meet in the commandment to love Thee with all our heart.

O let Thy mighty power descend and inspire us, that our spirits may become emblems of Thine; and endue us, we beseech Thee, with wisdom from above, that we may turn many to righteousness, and shine as the stars of the firmament for ever and ever. Amen.

  • From “Prayers after Sermon” in Gospel Liturgy (New York: Henry Lyon, 1861), p. 61.

Friendship is . . .

. . . when a friend and colleague thinks enough of you to call from Cambridge, Massachusetts to tell you that the marriage license forms were being passed out.

Wish I was there