Peace be with you, and Welcome to Grace Episcopal Church
We would love to have you join us!
By Canon Bill Lewellis
"I'm not a member of any organized religion, " someone
once quipped. "I'm an Episcopalian!" I'm allowed to say that because
I am an Episcopalian
I apologize in advance if anyone considers this
reflection too sectarian. I don't intend it as such. I trust that
those who read this might find a few parallel lines that lead also
to your own experience in your own churches.
The Episcopal Church in the United States is one
of nearly 40 independent, National churches of the worldwide Anglican
Communion. In the tradition of the Church of England, we are involved
in a 400-year experiment of being at once Catholic (universal) and reformed,
high and low, doctrinal and pastoral, apostolic and contemporary,
rooted and winged. We don't yet know that it will work.
In our contemporary context, the experiment means
that folks in the Episcopal Church should be able to pray in the
same pew even if one carries a National Rifle Association card
while the other is a radical pacifist (I suppose one can be both),
if one calls himself pro-life while the other calls herself pro
choice, if one is an advocate for traditionalist values while the
other is an advocate for the blessing of same-sex unions, if one
understands his relationship with God through the lens of salvation
while the other does so through the lens of Incarnation.
The solution of Queen Elizabeth I, centuries ago,
was to focus on common worship rather than trying to determine
and judge what every person believes.
That is possible, in my opinion, only if we steer
clear of the common presumption that a church must be a "confessing" church,
where the criterion for determining whether someone is "in" or "out" is
whether they believe this or that.
The general reality today, I think, is that many
presume a church must be a "confessing" church. As long as we begin
with that presumption, we will focus on and be anxious to the depths
of our souls about all the issues, beliefs and non-beliefs that
can tear a church apart. And if that is where we begin, every question
we ask will be the wrong question, i.e., an irrelevant question
that we, nevertheless, will think goes to the heart of the matter...
until we finally shout at the other person in our pew: DO YOU BELIEVE
THIS OR NOT? IF YOU DON'T, YOU SHOULDN'T BE HERE.
The deeper reality, of course, is what determines
whether or not we are Christian. Only to our peril, I think, can
the criterion be belief. Faith and worship, yes, and a lifestyle
that witnesses to our deep faith in God through Jesus Christ and
our love for one another, but not belief. Perhaps we need most
of all to focus on being windows for one another into the heart
of God's love and mercy and forgiveness, of God's loving embrace,
God reaching out to all of us sinners through the outstretched
arms of Jesus Christ.
"This is a little messy", as Archbishop Desmond
Tutu has described the Anglican Communion, but might we not also
say most enduring and deep relationships are messy? Even the derivation
of the word, religion, is not about statements but about relationships.
Canon Bill Lewellis, Communication Minister/Editor,
Diocese of Bethlehem 333 Wyandotte Street, Bethlehem, PA 18015
Be attentive. Be intelligent. Be reasonable. Be responsible. Be in love. And,
if necessary, change. --Bernard Lonergan