70
worship in the Spirit of justice

Worship in the spirit of justice

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Worship in the spirit of justice

worship in the Spirit of justice

Page 2: Worship in the spirit of justice

What’s missing today is a high-quality discourse on rethinking the design and evolution of the entire system from scratch.

- Otto Scharmer

Page 3: Worship in the spirit of justice

HistoricalDoctrinalSpiritualMissionalEcclesialLiturgical

rethinkingthe whole

system

Page 4: Worship in the spirit of justice

HistoricalDoctrinalSpiritualMissionalEcclesialLiturgical

rethinkingthe whole

system

Page 5: Worship in the spirit of justice

5

public worship: a gathering for liturgy

• liturgy: an orderly succession of public rituals

• rituals: actions involving the body by which people bond to meaning

• ritualism: repeating the actions without meaning

5

Page 6: Worship in the spirit of justice

Liturgy:

the “workout” of the people -

rituals and practices for formation

Page 7: Worship in the spirit of justice

Question:

How do we induct or initiate people into our public worship - so they know the meaning we want them to bond to?

Page 8: Worship in the spirit of justice

Are there unintended “malformations” happening?

-What’s never addressed - poverty, race, ecology, empire/colonialism

-Revelation sermon

-“Give us the lost” & “the nations” songs

-Warfare language, cliches

-Emotional manipulation/hype

-Emotional strangulation

-Racial/Cultural/age exclusion

-Body acknowledgement

-Masculinizing of God

-Intellectual or political messages

Page 9: Worship in the spirit of justice

there are liturgies that foment hostility and reinforce hostility...

Page 10: Worship in the spirit of justice

can we imagine liturgies that inspire kindness?

Page 11: Worship in the spirit of justice

From Follow the Sacredness, by Jonathan Haidt http://campaignstops.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/03/17/forget-the-money-follow-the-sacredness/

Despite what you might have learned in Economics 101, people aren’t always selfish. In politics, they’re more often groupish. When people feel that a group they value — be it racial, religious, regional or ideological — is under attack, they rally to its defense, even at some cost to themselves. We evolved to be tribal, and politics is a competition among coalitions of tribes.

Page 12: Worship in the spirit of justice

... The key to understanding tribal behavior is not money, it’s sacredness. The great trick that humans developed at some point in the last few hundred thousand years is the ability to circle around a tree, rock, ancestor, flag, book or god, and then treat that thing as sacred.

People who worship the same idol can trust one another, work as a team and prevail over less cohesive groups. So if you want to understand politics, and especially our divisive culture wars, you must follow the sacredness.

Page 13: Worship in the spirit of justice

The very act of gathering for worshipcan be “groupish” ritual

of affirming “us-ness”

versus “them-ness.”

Page 14: Worship in the spirit of justice

The Songs We Sing

Page 15: Worship in the spirit of justice

All things bright and beautiful,

All creatures great and small,

All things wise and wonderful:

The Lord God made them all.

- Ms. Cecil Alexander (1848)

Page 16: Worship in the spirit of justice

Each little flower that opens,/ Each little bird that sings,/ He made their glowing colors./ He made their tiny wings.

The purple headed mountains,/ The river running by,/ The sunset and the morning/ That brightens up the sky.

The cold wind in the winter,/ The pleasant summer sun,/ The ripe fruits in the garden,/ He made them every one.

The tall trees in the greenwood,/The meadows where we play,/ The rushes by the water,/ To gather every day.

He gave us eyes to see them,/ And lips that we might tell/ How great is God Almighty,/ Who has made all things well.All things bright and beautiful,/ All creatures great and small,/ All things wise and wonderful:/ The Lord God made them all.

Page 17: Worship in the spirit of justice

The rich man in his castle,

The poor man at his gate,

He made them, high or lowly,

And ordered their estate.

All things bright and beautiful,

All creatures great and small,

All things wise and wonderful:

The Lord God made them all.

Page 18: Worship in the spirit of justice

Onward, Christian soldiers, marching as to war, With the cross of Jesus going on before. Christ, the royal master, leads against the foe; Forward into battle see his banners go!

-Sabine Baring-Gould

Page 19: Worship in the spirit of justice

France, 1847

Placide Clappeau, a French wine merchant, mayor of the French town Roquemaure, writes a poem.

Adolphe Adam sets it to music.

Later the song is translated into English by John S. Dwight –

It is said to have been the first music ever broadcast over radio.

Page 20: Worship in the spirit of justice

O holy night, the stars are brightly shining;

It is the night of the dear Savior’s birth!

Long lay the world in sin and error pining,

Till He appeared and the soul felt its worth.

A thrill of hope, the weary soul rejoices,

For yonder breaks a new and glorious morn.

Fall on your knees, O hear the angel voices!

O night divine, O night when Christ was born!

O night, O holy night, O night divine!

Page 21: Worship in the spirit of justice

Truly He taught us to love one another;

His law is love and His Gospel is peace.

Chains shall He break for the slave is our brother

And in His Name all oppression shall cease.

Sweet hymns of joy in grateful chorus raise we,

Let all within us praise His holy Name!

Christ is the Lord! O praise His name forever!

His pow’r and glory evermore proclaim!

His pow’r and glory evermore proclaim!

1847

Page 22: Worship in the spirit of justice

1. Onward, all disciples, in the path of peace,Just as Jesus taught us, love your enemiesWalk on in the Spirit, seek God’s kingdom first,Let God’s peace and justice be your hunger and your thirst!

Onward, all disciples, in humilityWalk with God, do justice, love wholeheartedly

2. We now face our failures in remorse and tears.We must now build plowshares from our swords and spears, Turn from the broad highway of prejudice and warTo follow Jesus to a place we’ve never been before Onward, all disciples, in humility

Walk with God, do justice, love wholeheartedly

Page 23: Worship in the spirit of justice

3. Like a mighty river, justice, flowing free,Makes our deserts blossom in peace, joy, and beauty,Peace is life’s great treasure, harmony our dream.May justice flow like rivers and an ever flowing stream! Onward, all disciples, in humility

Walk with God, do justice, love wholeheartedly

4. Onward then, all people, reach out open hands, Walk together now, so each child understandsThat the greatest power here or up aboveIs the strength of service and the gentle might of love. Onward, all disciples, in humility

Walk with God, do justice, love wholeheartedly

Page 24: Worship in the spirit of justice

The Sermons We Preach

Page 25: Worship in the spirit of justice

The Sermons We Preach

- Who is scapegoated/condemned? - What virtues are aspired to?- What vices are condemned?

- What Scriptures are emphasized?- What subjects are avoided?

What terms are defined in ways that need rethinking?

Page 26: Worship in the spirit of justice

SinRighteousness

JudgmentSalvation

GospelVictory

The Lost

Page 27: Worship in the spirit of justice

The Rituals We Practice

Page 28: Worship in the spirit of justice

Baptism: A ritual of cleansing

Page 29: Worship in the spirit of justice

Clean - uncleanAcceptance - revulsion

Us - themClean, still water

Certified Gatekeepers

Page 30: Worship in the spirit of justice

Meanwhile in the wilderness:

The Essenes- Hyper-clearn-Hyper-puritan

- Isolated communes- Multiple daily

baptisms

Page 31: Worship in the spirit of justice

What would it mean for John ...- to leave his father’s priestly work

- to leave the Temple- to leave Jerusalem

- to avoid the Essenes- and to baptize ...

Page 32: Worship in the spirit of justice

in the Jordan River?- in public

- in running water- in an “undeveloped”

setting- with a message, not of

cleanliness, but ...

Page 33: Worship in the spirit of justice

rethinking, reformulation, repentance?

Page 34: Worship in the spirit of justice

What does it mean for Jesus to accept

John’s baptism?

Page 35: Worship in the spirit of justice

What would it mean for the

Spirit in the form of a dove

to descend upon Jesus?

Page 36: Worship in the spirit of justice

And what would it mean for Jesus’

disciples to expand John’s “guerrilla

theatre” around the world?

Page 37: Worship in the spirit of justice

Baptism - not into a new “hyper-clean” religion - but into Christ, a new humanity, a new kingdom, a new way of life?

Page 38: Worship in the spirit of justice

Peter, Acts 10:

“God has shown me I should never

call anyone impure or unclean.”

“I now realize ... God does not show favoritism.”

Page 39: Worship in the spirit of justice

Baptism into this new way of being human ...

Born again ...

Given a new identity ...

In the flowing river ...

In solidarity with everyone everywhere.

Page 40: Worship in the spirit of justice

In Christ ...

neither Jew nor Greek ...

male nor female ...

slave nor free ...

Page 41: Worship in the spirit of justice

In Christ ...

neither Jew nor Greek ...

male nor female ...

slave nor free ...

Christian nor nonChristian?Us or them?

Page 42: Worship in the spirit of justice
Page 43: Worship in the spirit of justice

The Eucharist

Page 44: Worship in the spirit of justice

Altar of Sacrifice ... to appease a hostile God?

or

Table of Fellowship ... to celebrate a reconciling

God?

Page 45: Worship in the spirit of justice

A table of elitism and exclusion ...

or a feast of grace and reconciliation?

Page 46: Worship in the spirit of justice

In John’s gospel:

Bread as manna ... God’s self-giving

Food, not sacrifice

Page 47: Worship in the spirit of justice

For Paul ...

Eucharist as passover ... not day of atonement.

Meal of liberation ...

Meal of anticipation ...

Page 48: Worship in the spirit of justice

We don’t need to offer a sacred gift to appease a hostile God ...

Rather, a gracious God offers a sacred gift of love to us ...

so that we will be reconciled to God and to one another.

Page 49: Worship in the spirit of justice

Meal of unity ...

Meal of solidarity ...

Meal of one-anotherness

Page 50: Worship in the spirit of justice
Page 51: Worship in the spirit of justice

how will our liturgies of hostility be

transformed ...

Page 52: Worship in the spirit of justice

into liturgies of harmony?

new identity?peace-making?

Page 53: Worship in the spirit of justice

What’s missing today is a high-quality discourse on rethinking the design and evolution of the entire system from scratch.

- Otto Scharmer

Page 54: Worship in the spirit of justice

Six marks (Bryan Sirchio):-Vertical and horizontal

-Individual and community

-Progressive theology

-Inclusive language

-Emotional authenticity

-Fresh images, ideas, language

Page 55: Worship in the spirit of justice

Six dynamic tensions:-Charismatic and contemplative

-Regularity and intensity

-Familiarity and surprise

-Ancient and Future

-Planned and spontaneous

-Word and image

Page 56: Worship in the spirit of justice

HistoricalDoctrinalSpiritualMissionalEcclesialLiturgical

rethinkingthe whole

system

Page 57: Worship in the spirit of justice
Page 58: Worship in the spirit of justice

a question for pastors and worship leaders:Thanks ... tough job ... I appreciate you

This is not a complaint.I noticed something ... I wanted to offer to help if you’d

like me to.I noticed ...

I think this is an issue that will be growing in importance over the next few years, so if I could help approach it

in a positive way ... I’m eager to help.

Page 59: Worship in the spirit of justice

59

Page 60: Worship in the spirit of justice
Page 61: Worship in the spirit of justice
Page 62: Worship in the spirit of justice

Christ has no body here but ours.

No hands, no feet here on earth but ours.

Ours are the eyes through which he looks

On this world with kindness.

Page 63: Worship in the spirit of justice

Ours are the hands through which he works.

Ours are the feet on which he moves.

Ours are the voices through which he speaks

To this world with kindness.

Page 64: Worship in the spirit of justice

Through our smile, our touch, our listening ear,

Embodied in us,

Jesus is living here.

Page 65: Worship in the spirit of justice

So let us go now

Filled with the Spirit

Into this world

With kindness.

Page 66: Worship in the spirit of justice

Christ has no body here but ours.

No hands, no feet here on earth but ours.

Ours are the eyes through which he looks

On this world with kindness.

Page 67: Worship in the spirit of justice

Ours are the hands through which he works.

Ours are the feet on which he moves.

Ours are the voices through which he speaks

To this world with kindness.

Page 68: Worship in the spirit of justice

Through our smile, our touch, our listening ear,

Embodied in us,

Jesus is living here.

Page 69: Worship in the spirit of justice

So let us go now

Filled with the Spirit

Into this world

With kindness.

Page 70: Worship in the spirit of justice