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Culture Miscellany Writing

A Call For Celebration This June

We hope that you will join us on every Sunday this June as we gather to worship King Jesus. And throughout the month, we also invite you to remember the faithful testimony of saints and martyrs who proclaimed Jesus to the end.

There are many great men and women to remember, honor, and celebrate during this month of June. We aim to be governed by a faith and by a philosophy that spans throughout time and culture, honoring men and women from different ages, with different outlooks on the world, all united by One Spirit in humility before King Jesus.

Today, on this 1st day of June, we remember Justin, Teacher of the Faith and Martyr at Rome, c. 165.

Writing in the late 2nd century, Methodius of Olympus remembered Justin, “Justin of Neapolis, a man who was not far separated from the apostles either in age or excellence.” Rod Bennett comments, “Justin found Christ while still a philosopher and remained a philosopher to the end. For Justin the good news about Jesus was the missing piece of Socrates’ puzzle–and philosophy turned out to be the schoolmaster that brought him to Christ. He took up the ministry pioneered by Paul at Mars Hill, and [quoting early 2nd century historian, Eusebius Pamphilus] “wearing the garb of a philosopher he proclaimed the divine message, and contended by means of his writings on behalf of the Faith.” Not surprisingly, this mission eventually cost Justin his life and earned him that glorious title [“Martyr”] which popular usage has affixed to his own forever as a kind of surname.”

This is the wise philosopher, Justin of Neapolis, “Justin Martyr”, whom we remember on this 1st day of June. After encountering an old Christian man on a walk in the wilderness, a nameless old man who testified of the greatest philosopher who ever lived, Jesus Christ, Justin saw reason, he turned around, and he followed Jesus the rest of his life until his martyrdom in Rome in A.D. 165. Justin wrote,

“When [this old man] had spoken these and many other things, which there is no time for mentioning at present, he went away, bidding me attend to them; and I have not seen him since. But straightaway a flame was kindled in my soul; and a love of the prophets, and of those men who are friends of Christ, possessed me; and whilst revolving his words in my mind, I found this philosophy alone to be safe and profitable. Thus, and for this reason, I am a philosopher. Moreover, I would wish that all, making a resolution similar to my own, do not keep themselves away from the words of the Savior. For they possess a terrible power in themselves, and are sufficient to inspire those who turn aside from the path of rectitude with awe; while the sweetest rest is afforded those who make a diligent practice of them. If, then, you have any concern for yourself, and if you are eagerly looking for salvation, and if you believe in God, you may–since you are not indifferent to the matter–become acquainted with the Christ of God, and, after being initiated, live a happy life.”

Amen and amen.

Won’t you join saints throughout the world and throughout the ages and remember these holy saints and martyrs during this month of June?

I pray that you will.

Yours ever,
Fr Chris+

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Culture Mission Writing

Take, Eat the Bread of Heaven & Drink the Cup of Salvation

by Fr Chris Borah


He took bread. He blessed it. “Take, eat,” Jesus said. “This is my body.”

And then he took a cup. After giving thanks, he said, “Drink of it, all of you, for this is my blood of the new covenant.”

Along with the command to baptize (Mt 28:19), these are the ordinances of Jesus–he said, “Do this, do this, do this.” The bread, the wine, and the water, three physical acts, two “visible signs of grace.” These are the Sacraments ordained by Jesus, Baptism and the Supper of the Lord. Article XXV of our 39 Articles of Religion explains our Sacraments like this:

“Sacraments ordained of Christ be not only badges or tokens of Christian men’s profession, but rather they be certain sure witnesses, and effectual signs of grace, and God’s good will towards us, by the which he doth work invisibly in us, and doth not only quicken, but also strengthen and confirm our Faith in him.”

BCP, p. 781

Sacraments are not about what we do, they are about what God has done to us and for us. They are not our “badges” or simply “tokens of [our] profession.” They are grace. Gifts given to us by God. Sacraments give physical strength. Sacraments “confirm” our capital “F” Faith in Jesus.

An Extravagant Show

Article XXV later goes on to say that the Sacraments are not empty rituals intended to be “gazed upon” or “carried about,” clearly referring to the “superstitious” use of the Lord’s Supper in the late middle ages. Everyone did what was right in their own eyes. The Mass had become a daily performance, when wicked ministers of the gospel flaunted the bread and the wine before the watching laity.

And very often, that’s all the laity did–they watched. “Look, don’t touch.” By the sixteenth century, it had become common practice for lay persons to receive only a morsel of bread (cf 1 Cor 11:21). And all too often, they were not allowed to drink from the common cup. But even amidst this idolatrous pageantry, anyone who came to the Supper with faith and repentance were nourished by God (see Article XXVI).

Physical and Spiritual Eating

The Lord’s Supper was given that “we should duly use” it, not to be gazed upon or carried about.

“The Body of Christ is given, taken, and eaten, in the Supper, only after an heavenly and spiritual manner… [it is eaten by] Faith.”

XXVIII, BCP, p. 783

Every Sunday, we give thanks to God for the “spiritual food of the most precious Body and Blood” that we have just consumed. The Anglican Church has long recognized that the doctrine of “transubstantiation… is repugnant to the plain words of Scripture” (BCP, p. 783), but “spiritual food” must be physically eaten.

Following the Church Fathers, Bishop Thomas Cranmer describes the mystery of the bread and wine that we eat becoming… us! As Fr Ben Sharpe always says, “We are what we eat!” Through the miracle of digestion, bread molecules become a part of me, wine is joined to my body.

“[T]he bread and wine which we do eat be turned into our flesh and blood and be made our very flesh and our very blood, and so be joined and mixed with our flesh and blood that they be made one whole body together, even so be all faithful Christians spiritually turned into the body of Christ, and so be joined unto Christ, and also together among themselves.”

Bp Thomas Cranmer, quoted from, Hughes, Theology of the English Reformers, p. 213

Martin Luther said that Christ “is not digested or transformed but ceaselessly he transforms us.” Luther continues: “[T]he mouth, the throat, the body, which eats Christ’s body, will also have its benefit in that it will live forever and arise on the Last Day to eternal salvation. This is the secret power and benefit which flows from the body of Christ in the Supper into our body.”

With characteristic pastoral sensitivity, John Calvin writes, “[T]his mystery of Christ’s secret union with the devout is by nature incomprehensible, he shows its figure and image in visible signs best adapted to our small capacity… For this very familiar comparison penetrates into even the dullest minds: just as bread and wine sustain physical life, so are souls fed by Christ.” (Kreglinger, The Spirituality of Wine, p. 69)

As St. Paul said, when we eat from the “one bread” and we drink from the “one cup,” we become “one body” (1 Cor 10:16-21). This is spiritual. This is physical. It is mystical. Bp Cranmer concludes,

“[O]ne loaf is given among many men… likewise one cup of wine is distributed unto many persons, whereof every one is partaker, even so our Saviour Christ (whose flesh and blood be represented by the mystical bread and wine of the Lord’s supper) doth give Himself unto all His true members, spiritually to feed them, nourish them, and to give them continual life by Him. And as the branches of a tree or members of a body, if they be dead or cut off, they neither live nor receive any nourishment or sustenance of the body or tree.”

Hughes, Ibid., p. 213

Why Bread and Wine?

In the Christian West, it has long been articulated that Christ cannot be divided in the Sacrament. We receive all of Christ in the bread. We receive all of Christ in the wine. The Sacrament is not half and half–it’s whole and whole. For pastoral reasons (such as gluten allergies or alcoholism), the Church said that communicants who only received in one kind (either only bread or only wine) received the whole Christ (this is the doctrine of concomitance).

But, as so often happens in the history of the church, this theological distinction quickly became a justification for foolish practice. Along with the rest of the Magisterial Reformers, Bp Cranmer gave special attention to the common practice of withholding the Cup of the Lord from the laity in his day.

“The Cup of the Lord is not to be denied to the Lay-people: for both the parts of the Lord’s Sacrament, by Christ’s ordinance and commandment, ought to be ministered to all Christian men alike.”

Article XXX, BCP, p. 784

“Because Jesus said so.” Underneath the authority of Holy Scripture, Bp Cranmer requires that all baptized followers of Jesus be offered both bread to eat and wine to drink. Bread and wine emphasize different and complementary aspects of the gospel.

Eating the bread by Faith, eating the Body of Christ, brings together so much of the story of redemption accomplished in Christ. The fields of grain in the Garden, the bread of Melchizedek, the manna in the wilderness, Jesus the living bread that comes down from heaven, the one loaf is broken, just as Jesus’ body was broken for us. All of this rich biblical imagery and fulfillment in Christ (and so much more) is digested as we eat the bread.

Drink The Cup of the Lord

Likewise, the wine that we bless, the Cup of Salvation that we drink brings together even more of Christ’s redemptive work on our behalf.

The fruit of the Garden (in both feasting and judgment), Noah’s vineyard and his drunkenness, and Melchizedek’s feast with Abram of bread and wine. Wine recalls the “blood of the grape” (Gen 49:11; cfDeut 32:14), Pharaoh’s blood-red river, the Passover lamb’s blood over the doorpost, the countless blood sacrifices in the wilderness tabernacle, and the dried blood caked upon the corners of the altar in the temple.

Wine brings together joy and feasting (Ps 104:15) with sacrifice and atonement. The Nazarite vow in Numbers 6–where both men and women were invited to separate themselves to the Lord–this vow brings these two themes of sacrifice and joy together beautifully.

“Speak to the people of Israel and say to them, When either a man or a woman makes a special vow, the vow of a Nazirite, to separate himself to the LORD, he shall separate himself from wine and strong drink. He shall drink no vinegar made from wine or strong drink and shall not drink any juice of grapes or eat grapes, fresh or dried. All the days of his separation he shall eat nothing that is produced by the grapevine, not even the seeds or the skins.”

Numbers 6:2–4

First, the Lord says, “Don’t drink wine.” Then the Lord gave Moses instructions for the Nazarite to not cut his hair, not go near a dead body, and then detailed instructions for bringing his sacrifice to the tent of meeting: a blood sacrifice, a bread sacrifice, and a wine sacrifice. First, the Nazarite brings his firstfruits to the Lord, and after the rite is complete… the Lord gives wine back to him so that he can feast and give thanks!

“They are a holy portion for the priest, together with the breast that is waved and the thigh that is contributed. And after that the Nazirite may drink wine.”

Numbers 6:20

Esther’s Purim “feasts of wine” (Esther 5:6, 7:8) overthrow Ahasuerus’ banquet (1:7-8). In the ancient world, the cup represented the authority of a king and his judgment. Kings pour out their cup in judgment. Drinking Pharaoh’s cup was damnation. Drinking unjust Ahasuerus’ cup brought judgment upon you. His wine of un-righteousness intoxicates and makes you stumble (Prov 31:2-9). Unjust kings judge with a cup in their hand. But the Lord judges justlywhen he pours out his cup. Peter Leithart explains, according to Jeremiah (49:12), that all these pagan kings “‘will not be acquitted, but you will certainly drink’ from Yahweh’s cup” (Leithart, Blessed are the Hungry, p. 105). This is the “cup of the wine of wrath” of God’s righteous judgment against rebellious sinners (Jer 25:27-28). We either drink the cup of Babylon’s judgment and die (Rev 18), or we drink the cup of the Lamb’s judgment and live (Rev 19).

Jesus, the Nazarene, came to fast and then to feast. He came to die and then to rise again. “When I am with you, we feast!” He drank the cup of the righteous judgment and wrath of God for us, and after he made atonement for sins once for all upon the cross, then he gives us His Cup.

“[T]he drinking of wine in the Lord’s Supper draws us into the world of sacrifice… As we sip from the eucharistic cup, we remember that Christ took upon himself God’s judgment on the world. He stepped into the divine winepress and bore the sins and injustices of the world in order that all people might be reconciled with God.”

Kreglinger, Ibid., p. 75

Why line up and eat from one plate of food? What is the deal with drinking from a cup?

Jesus said, “Eat.”
Jesus said, “Drink.”

We eat because Jesus told us to eat. Likewise, we drink because he told us to drink. These two separate actions (in the one Sacrament of Holy Communion) bring together the fullness of what Jesus accomplished for his beloved. Every Lord’s Day, you are invited to eat and to drink, because Jesus invites us to eat and to drink. Before we come to the table, we pray in the Prayer for Humble Access, that eating “the flesh” of our dear Jesus makes “our sinful bodies… clean by his body.” And we “drink his blood,” so that “our souls [are] washed through his most precious blood.” Bodies made whole by eating. Souls made clean by drinking.

We invite all baptized followers to come and eat and drink. But the Sacrament of Unity is not life-giving for us because “we do it right.”

Everyone who comes forward to receive only the bread, or they eat bread and drink wine, or they only drink the wine, or they come to receive the Body dipped into the Blood (intinction) – everyone who comes with faith and repentance receives all of God’s grace in the Sacrament. Whether you sip or you dip, sinful bodies are made clean by eating bread, and dirty souls are washed by drinking his precious blood. All of God’s grace is available to those who come with faith and repentance. We dwell in him and he in us. There are no class distinctions. We are all on level ground at the foot of the cross.

Leithart perfectly describes the redemption of Christ that we are invited to participate in when we come to the Cup of the Lord.

“We can rise from the table either gladdened or staggering. And we would all fall but for the fact that Jesus Himself has drunk His Father’s cup to its dregs: “If possible, let this cup pass from Me.” But it was not possible, and so He took your portion, staggered, and fell. He drained the cup that the King had given to us and now gives us to drink of His cup, a cup of joy.”

Leithart, Ibid., p. 106

“Jesus Bread is for Bad Guys”

In the famous words of our five year old saint Barnabas, “Jesus bread is for bad guys.” We must come to the table. If we come withouthumility, the cup that we drink will bring condemnation, division, and death. But if we come with humility, the cup that we drink will bring judgment–the judgment of Jesus’s righteousness for our sin, his purity for our filth, his holiness for our disordered loves. Redemption and unity can only be found in Christ, where branches are grafted into the vine–married, redeemed, restored together to feast with everlasting joy.

“The Body of Christ, the bread of heaven.” With these words, the celebrant has the great joy of offering bread to eat. “The Blood of Christ, the cup of salvation.” The deacon has the honor to offer the wine to drink. Every part of the story of God comes together at the table. Every broken member is healed together in one body. Every staggering soul is washed in the blood.


_____

A Concluding Reflection from Fr Chris

I have loved writing these Eucharistic reflections. With every book I’ve read and re-read, with every prayer, with every story and every theme that I have traced through Holy Scripture, with every conversation with all of you–in all these things I have been nourished. But every word still feels “feeble and insufficient” (Schmemann, The Eucharist, p. 209).

Union with Christ is an unsearchable mystery. The grace of the Sacrament of Unity is as deep as the ocean. Because of the cross of Christ, we can find life in Him, we can ascend with Him into heavenly places, and we can share the koinonia of our King on earth as it is in heaven. But we can never simply know all of this. We must eat it. We must drink it to the dregs.

“Though the Eucharist does not bypass the mind and conscious reflection, the effect it has is more in the realm of acquiring a skill than in the realm of learning a new set of facts; the effect is more a matter of “training” than “teaching.” At the Supper, we eat bread and drink wine together with thanksgiving not merely to show the way things really ought to be but to practice the way things really ought to be.”

Leithart, Ibid., p. 184

“Jesus bread is for bad guys.” All baptized followers of our Lord Jesus Christ who come with faith in Jesus and repentance for sin are welcome at His Table. Don’t delay. Gather on the Lord’s Day to feast. Everlasting joy, purchased by blood, is prepared for you. Come to the table. Come and eat. Come and drink, and live. In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

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Culture Mission Writing

Love Made Food: The History & Intimacy of the Eucharist

by Fr Chris Borah


“And God said, “Behold, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is on the face of all the earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit. You shall have them for food.”

Genesis 1:29

In the beginning, God told man to be fruitful and multiply, to fill the earth with goodness and beauty and life and loving rule. People, like God, are called to lovingly reign as kings and priests to God.

Immediately following this “creation mandate,” God does not teach Adam a lesson on kingship. He doesn’t list the laws of serving in the temple-garden. He doesn’t even teach Adam how to pray. God gives Adam a meal. “You shall have them for food.”

In the beginning, God set a table to commune with him, a table filled with grain and fruit. Fr Alexander Schmemman says it simply, “[In the beginning] divine love made food.” In the wilderness, food is either miraculous or it is simple and bland. But when you are at peace in the land, in the garden of the Lord, food is rich–grain is transfigured into bread, fruit into wine.

But from the beginning, we have sought to satisfy our hunger and quench our thirst at the tables of famished gods. We serve the creation rather than the Creator (Rom 1:25). And rather than give us life-giving food, these gods always devour us. Like Adam and Eve at the tree, our god is our belly (Phil 3:19). We turn from our father’s bountiful feast and we wander, perpetually unsatisfied with all our prodigal meals.

Hunger isn’t bad. God created us hungry. What’s more, man was not made to eat alone. God created us with a thirst for intimate relationship: Adam groaned for fellowship at the table (Gen 2:18). He made us to touch, to feel the pleasure of intimate and joyful conversation and embrace. Ask anyone who has lost their sense of taste because of an infection or neurological damage. It is not good. Our loving Father created us with about 10,000 taste buds, and every two weeks, our taste buds are made new. Our tastes literally change with age.

“Our lives are directed by our hungers,” Peter Leithart says, “and we find rest only when we hunger for the One who opens His hand to satisfy the desire of every living thing more than we hunger for the things in His hand.”

Leithart, Blessed are the Hungry, 20

The gospel renews and restores our deep longings to be satisfied, God in Christ quenches our thirst. The Spirit brings new life, he redirects our longings to find true satisfaction at his table, in the fellowship of the Holy Trinity and with all the saints. This was the edenic hope of the prophets fulfilled in Christ (Isa 49:10). Saints wearing white robes washed in red blood, gathered in the throne room of the Father and the Lamb, worshipping and feasting.

“They shall hunger no more, neither thirst anymore; the sun shall not strike them, nor any scorching heat. For the Lamb in the midst of the throne will be their shepherd, and he will guide them to springs of living water, and God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.”

Revelation 7:16–17

We were made to hunger and thirst. Jesus did not come to heal your head and heart alone. He came for all of you. Your stomach is his (1 Cor 6:20). He came to redeem and restore your love for umami. He came to kill drunkenness and gluttony, and raise to life jovial feasting in his presence. Come ye disconsolate, earth has no pleasures heaven cannot heal.

A Wine of the Times

We, modern people, approach food merely as technology. A peace of bread is not simply “bread,” it is the sum of all it’s constituent parts (Nutritional Facts). We don’t buy wine or beer because of flavor or craftsmanship. We look at the price tag and the alcohol content and we consume. We live in a sad and delightless age. Our creed is “live longer, maximize pleasure, never feel pain.”

We use technology–medicine, food, machine learning, phones, etc–to achieve our goal, eternal pleasure. Fasting is no longer a spiritual discipline, it is the newest scientifically-proven health technology. Christian philosopher Peter Kreeft says that “technology has replaced religion at the center of our consciousness and our life. We have a new [highest good]–power–and a new means to it–technology, or technique” (Kreeft, C. S. Lewis for the Third Millennium, 24).

The modern imagination is anemic. We choose either detached spirituality (gnosticism–only the spiritual matters) or soulless materialism (there is nothing transcendent–if I can’t touch it, then it’s not real). These are our only options. We desperately need a renewed biblical and historical imagination. To borrow an image from G. K. Chesterton, we need to be like a tree with roots firmly established on the earth (love and care for creation) and with branches always stretching to the heavens (always recognizing God as Creator and giver of every good gift).

The God of Bread and Wine

In the Old Testament, as in the garden, we should always bring our best animals, our best bread, and our best wine to restore joyful communion with God (Gen 4:1-8; Ex 29:40; Lev 23:12-13; Num 15:5). The Priest-King Melchizedek brought bread and wine to Abram to commune with God (Gen 14:18). Jesus too, the Priest-King after the order Melchizedek, brings bread and wine (Heb 6:20-8:13). Bread and wine are meant to be bring gladness and joy as a gift from the Creator: “wine gladdens life” (Eccl 10:19; see also Eccl 2:24, 8:15; Zech 10:7; Ps 4:7; Ps 104:14-15). King Lemuel says that wine is not a gift for kings and rulers (Prov 31:4-5; see also Prov 23:20-21; Eccl 10:17-19), but it is a gift to the downcast and distressed (Prov 31:6-7; see also 2 Sam 16:2). As God’s people ascend to worship, they sing:

“Blessed is everyone who fears the LORD, who walks in his ways! You shall eat the fruit of the labor of your hands; you shall be blessed, and it shall be well with you. Your wife will be like a fruitful vine within your house; your children will be like olive shoots around your table. Behold, thus shall the man be blessed who fears the LORD. The LORD bless you from Zion! May you see the prosperity of Jerusalem all the days of your life! May you see your children’s children! Peace be upon Israel!”

Psalm 128

Gisela Kreglinger says that in the Old Testament imagination, the “moderate enjoyment of wine in the context of family and community life can become a wonderful event for physical, emotional, and spiritual renewal” (Kreglinger, The Spirituality of Wine, 23). Wine is not necessary to experience this renewal. Indeed, if we use wine as the means to achieve happiness–if we grasp for the fruit of the vine, rather than receive it with an open hand–it always brings destruction (Gen 9:20-21; 1 Cor 11:29). This is why priests are commanded to not drink wine when they bring the sacrifice: God reconciles us first, then we feast (Lev 10:9-13). Wine isn’t required, but the image of flourishing in Holy Scripture–in the land, with family, and joy restored–this is nearly always accompanied by the fruit of the vine.

The New Covenant in My Blood

Jesus, the True Vine (Jn 15:5), talks about wine a lot. In his first miracle, he turns water to wine (Jn 2:1), and not just miraculously; Jesus demonstrates his awareness of how to make wine (Mt 9:17; Mk 2:22; Lk 5:37-38), indeed, aged wine is better than new wine (Lk 5:39). Jesus warns his disciples to stay awake for when he returns, don’t be dissipated and drunk or you’ll miss me (Lk 21:34). But neither does he list drunkenness as the deadliest of sins (Mt 15:19-20).

While Jews feasted for weeks multiple times a year, they were not known for drunkenness. They divided Passover wine into four separate cups to be drunk at for separate times throughout the feast (probably as a sign of temperance). Jesus was regularly accused of being a glutton and a drunkard (Mt 11:19; Lk 7:34), and this for eating and drinking with sinners (eating and drinking like a sinner).

The Apostle Paul, the minister to the Gentiles, started churches among people who drank excessively, especially in their pagan temples. So Paul regularly addressed the sin of drunkenness (Gal 5:19-21; Rom 13:13; 1 Tim 3:3). But his answer to drunkenness was not abstinence but Godward temperance (1 Cor 9-12). It is not what goes into the mouth that defiles someone (Mt 15:11-18). With Jesus, Paul says that wine is a gift (1 Tim 4:3-4), but we must never worship the gift.

A History of the Vine

We live in an age of excess–excess everything. Nearly everything we drink has a drug mixed in: sugar, caffeine, alcohol, you name it, we drink it. And not just a little bit. More energy–fructose becomes high fructose. Stay awake–coffee becomes espresso. Get drunk–beer becomes liquor–fifths become liters become boxes become kegs. We live in a world of gluttons and drunkards, and it’s no wonder that we disdain alcohol. What was once only the temptation of kings and queens of old, drinking excessive alcohol (Prov 31:4-5), is now the vice of every modern person (indeed, the poor are whom we think of first, how sad!). The gift has become a god, and it has destroyed kingdoms and families for generations.

But it was not always this way.

Fourth century church father, St John Chrysostom had a cheerful disposition to wine. He wrote,

“Wine was given to make us cheerful, not to make us behave shamefully; to make us laugh, not a laughing-stock; to make us healthy, not sick; to mend the weakness of the body, not to undermine the soul.”

Kreglinger, Ibid., 37

Chrysostom clearly acknowledges the negative use of wine, but he invites us to view wine not through the distorted lens of human sin, but with the open hands of a creature receiving from a loving Creator. A contemporary of Chrysostom, St Augustine points to the “necessity” of wine.

“In many instances wine is necessary for human beings. Wine strengthens the stomach, renews one’s energy, warms the body of the cold-blooded, poured onto wounds it brings healing. It chases away sadness and weariness of soul. Wine brings joy, and for companions it fuels one’s pleasure for conversations.”

Ibid., 43

Borrowing a metaphor from C. S. Lewis, we can no more go back to the fourth century (in both our medical understanding or our cultural milieu) than a divorcée can go back to virginity. But we can acknowledge, with Lewis, that our age is filled with misery and depression, we worship “the iron works of [our] own hands, cut off from Earth [our] mother and from the Father in heaven” (C. S. Lewis, That Hideous Strength, chpt 13). Alcohol as technology is hellish. Alcohol as gift from the Creator is heavenly.

Fast-forwarding to the Reformation, John Calvin ponders,

“…God created food, we shall find that he meant not only to provide for necessity but also for delight and good cheer… [God] bestows upon them as much as is sufficient for the ordinary purposes of life, but [he also]… in his goodness he deals still more bountifully with them by cheering their hearts with wine and oil.”

Luther delights that “by wine the hearts of men are gladdened, their strength recruited, and the whole man strengthened, so by the blood of our Lord the same benefits are received by our souls” (Ibid., 55-57). Even the Puritans were well known to regularly enjoy drinking wine and beer.

“John Wesley drank wine, was something of an ale expert, and often made sure that his Methodist preachers were paid in one of the vital currencies of the day–rum. His brother, Charles Wesley, was known for the fine port, Madeira, and sherry he often served in his home; the journals of George Whitefield are filled with references to his enjoyment of alcohol.”

Mansfield, The Search for God and Guinness, 32

It was not until the devastations of war, rapid industrialization, and the prevalence of distilled liquors in the earth 20th century that Christians became known teetotalers. It was this cultural excess and the rapid growth of wealth that led to the collapse of the American economy and the completely ineffective (and short) experiment of prohibition. Into this world,

“Thomas Welch, a Methodist minister turned dentist, discovered how to remove yeast bacteria in grape juice that naturally transforms grape juice into wine; that is, by removing or killing yeast bacteria, one can keep grape juice from fermenting.”

Kreglinger, Ibid., 63

Thousands of years of Christian cultivation of wine and beer was discarded in one generation. Comparing the Benedictine vision of the flourishing Christian life, that of working the land and tending to the fields and fruits God has given us to cultivate, Kreglinger concludes,

“… the emerging evangelical culture of the late nineteenth century focused on the salvation of the individual and the pursuit of one’s moral perfection. With the absence of wine from the Eucharist, the antiseptic effect of alcohol disappeared from the communion cup. As a consequence, and for hygienic reasons, grape juice began to be served in individual cups, which helped deepen the emphasis on the formation of the individual. Drinking from the common chalice emphasized the communal nature of the spiritual life and helped symbolize that the believers are one in Christ, and the individual grape juice cups could no longer capture this important aspect of the Lord’s Supper.”

Ibid., 63

From Somber Remembrance to Glad Celebration

Christians began art. Christians created music (as we know it today). Christians have always been new-creational cultivators, sub-creators working with the gifts of God and offering them back to him with thankfulness and worship. But you and I were born into a world that has conceded all of this rich Christian history (and biblical imagination) to the pagans. We have abandoned biblical and historic Christian teaching about food and drink to “health professionals,” beer commercials, and fearful ascetic spirituality.

Christ came to redeem our head, our hearts, our lips, our stomachs, our taste buds, our sexual pleasure, our hands, our feet, our eyes, all of us. Christ came to redeem his entire Creation, the heavens and the earth, field and forest, land and sea, the Lord’s table and our dinner tables, grain and fruit, bread and wine, all of it.

God created fields of grain and fruit trees out of nothing. We take his good creation, grain and fruit, and we re-create it into bread and wine. But we cannot stop there.

Bread and wine, the work of our hands, these gifts are meant to be given back to God as our shared sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving. And by God’s grace, he gives our offering of bread and wine back to us! Such a marvelous and beautiful God we are invited to worship! We are welcomed in to share in the koinonia of Christ. We gather at His table, we eat his body and we drink his blood, “that our sinful bodies may be made clean by his body, and our souls washed through his most precious blood.” And with the saints throughout time, we must respond, “Thanks be to God!”

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Culture Mission Writing

Koinonia: The Movement of the Eucharist

by Fr Chris Borah


There are many words and phrases we use to describe the Holy Eucharist.

  • “Holy Eucharist” simply means “thanksgiving devoted to God.” 
  • Holy Eucharist is also the “Lord’s Supper,” which points back to Jesus’s Last Supper with his disciples (Mt 26, Mk 14, Lk 21), and points forward to the Marriage Supper of the Lamb (with all his disciples from all time; Rev 19). 
  • Holy Eucharist is the “Paschal Feast” (1 Cor 5:7), pointing us back to the Passover Meal (Ex 12) and to Jesus the Lamb of God setting a table that fulfills, completes, and transforms this ancient Jewish festival (Jn 1:29; Jn 6; Rev 19:7, 17).
  • Holy Eucharist is also “Communion” or…

Koinonia

“Communion” (koinonia), points us to the fellowship of all the saints in heaven and on earth, to our participation in Christ, to the mutual indwelling of the members of the Body, because of Christ–“that he may dwell in us and we in him… by him, and with him, and in him”–we participate in the koinonia of the Holy Trinity because we are united to Christ the Son.

In the koinonia of Jesus, we share with someone (a person) in something (a shared, deeply personal participation)–it is both personal and affectionate–it is adoption into the Father’s family as sons and daughters because we share in Christ. We are made one in Christ (Gal 3:28), we are altogether the fullness of Christ (Eph 1:23), we are united to Christ in baptism (Col 2:12), we are raised to walk in newness of life (Rom 6:4), and we are seated with Christ in heavenly places (Eph 2:6). With him we die, and with him we rise. As he ascends, we ascend.

Koinonia Lifts Us Up

There are two broad movements in our worship service that always go together: (1) Word and (2) Sacrament. We begin our service with the Liturgy of the Word, and then we end with the Liturgy of the Table. The word “liturgy” comes straight from the Greek word in Acts 13:2, usually translated as “worship”–it’s a compound word for “people” and “work”–our worship is “the work of the people,” liturgy.

Our liturgy goes all the way back to the early church (see Justin Martyr in A.D. 155). In A.D. 215, in The Apostolic Tradition, Hippolytus described the call and response at the beginning of the Liturgy of the Table:

“The Lord be with you.
And with your spirit.
Lift up your hearts.
We lift them up to the Lord.
Let us give thanks to the Lord our God.
It is right to give him thanks and praise.

Hippolytus, The Apostolic Tradition

At the beginning of our Eucharistic liturgy, we “lift up our hearts” together into the heavenly courts where Jesus–in his physical, resurrected body–sits at the right hand of the Father. St. John Chrysostom exhorts us, “Let us beware that we do not remain on the earth.” Fr Alexander Schmemman explains:

“… if we remain on earth we have no place in this heavenly eucharist… [we must] turn our hearts on high… Thus, when we hear this ultimate summons let us ask ourselves: are our hearts turned to the Lord, is the ultimate treasure of our heart in God, in heaven? If so, then in spite of all our weakness, all our fallenness, we have been received into heaven, we behold now the light and glory of the kingdom.”

Schmemman, The Eucharist, 169

At the Lord’s table, we are lifted up in the Spirit like John (Rev 4:1) to sing praise to God and to the Lamb (Rev 5:8) with “Angels and Archangels and with all the company of heaven, who for ever sing” the heavenly song, “Holy, Holy, Holy” (Rev 4:8). Our worship is heaven-and-earth-united worship.

  • lifted up, Rev 4:1;
  • holy, holy, holy, Rev 4:8;
  • altar, Rev 8:3;
  • white robes, Rev 4:4;
  • candles, Rev 1:12;
  • incense, Rev 5:8;
  • manna, Rev 2:17;
  • I could keep going…

“The Eucharist [is] proof of a koinonia held out to humanity now… [and] a truly human participation in God must happen in a truly human way,” at a table, with the most basic of human acts: a shared meal (Julie Canlis, Calvin’s Ladder, 160-61). Following Calvin, Canlis describes this movement of koinonia as our being…

“…drawn up to God rather than dragging him down to us – whether it be in the Lord’s Supper, idolatry, or carnal ways of conceiving of God. Yet it is not only that we must ascend to Christ (and not he to us), but that our whole lives are now reoriented and repersonalized by our communion [koinonia] with the Son of God.”

Ibid., 119

Calvin asks, “[H]ow could we aspire to what is on high, without Jesus Christ drawing us there?” We cannot unless we are united to Christ. Canlis concludes then that “the Christian life is not response to God but inclusion in God” (Ibid., 125-27).

“And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also… You heard me say to you, ‘I am going away, and I will come to you.’ If you loved me, you would have rejoiced, because I am going to the Father, for the Father is greater than I.”

John 14:3, 28

Why did Christ come down to us? Christ descended…

“… that he might unite us to God; for until we have reached that point, we are, as it were, in the middle of the course. We too imagine to ourselves but a half-Christ, and a mutilated Christ, if he does not lead us to God… Let us therefore learn to behold Christ humbled in the flesh, so that he may conduct us to the fountain of a blessed immortality; for he was not appointed to be our guide, merely to raise us to the sphere of the moon or of the sun, but to make us one with God the Father.”

John Calvin; quoted in Canlis, Ibid., 126

Calvin says that we only have a “half-Christ” if we only imagine Christ as coming down to us. Christ descended so that we might ascend “by him, and with him, and in him” to be one with Father. Jesus is one with the Father. Christ came down to us not because of any want or need in himself (this is God’s aseity). Rather, Christ came down to us in order to display God’s loving character (for God is love), and he desires to multiply love and rejoicing in his presence. “Jesus Christ leads us there and raises us by the graces which He distributes” (Ibid., 130).

The physical, bodily resurrected Christ has ascended to the right hand of God the Father in heaven, and because we are united together in Christ, we are lifted up into his heavenly presence with the saints and the angels. Importantly, this heavenward movement is physically embodied at the Lord’s table, not as individuals having a personal spiritual experience, but as one body, united together with and in Christ. Canlis concludes:

“Communion [koinonia] in the Lord’s Supper is not a human activity but the Spirit’s means of grounding and reconstituting our very being. As such, the Eucharist is an extension of that all-radical, all-transforming communion we share, by invitation, with the Trinity. For communion with the risen Jesus can never be anything but material and mediated by creaturely things.”

Ibid., 171

Koinonia In The New Creation

Holy Scripture begins with Creation. The story begins in a garden, where heaven and earth overlap, where God and man are intimately together. God tells man to guard and keep this place (the work of a priest; Gen 2:15) and to cultivate seeds [bread] and fruit [wine] (Gen 1:12). But man took the fruit of the devil and destroyed this intimate space (Gen 3:6). Heaven and earth were separated. Man continued to plant vineyards (Gen 9:20), but like Adam, the fruit of the vine brought destruction (Gen 9:21).

Holy Scripture ends with New Creation. But before the end, those who live in the city of man, Babylon, drink the cup of destruction (Rev 16:19, 18:6). Their gluttonous feast is demonic and destructive.

“The fruit for which your soul longed has gone from you, and all your delicacies and your splendors are lost to you, never to be found again!”

Revelation 18:14

But the story does not end there. The Lamb of God shed his blood (Rev 5:6), he drank the cup of wrath for us (Lk 22:42), and after this, he gives us a cup, not of judgment, but a cup of life in his kingdom (Mk 10:39). Holy Scripture ends with heaven and earth reunited at the Marriage Feast of the Lamb (Rev 19:9). Heaven and earth restored, spiritual and physical united at the table of the everlasting feast.

When we gather at the Lord’s table, we are not simply looking back (at the Last Supper); we are not simply looking forward (to the Lamb’s Supper); we are participating in Jesus restoring heaven and earth right now. The end has come, heaven has come down in Christ and we are lifted up in Christ. The New Creation is breaking into the present at the table, and this is exactly what we pray before we receive the Supper: “Our Father… in heaven… thy kingdom come… on earth as it is in heaven…give us this day our daily bread.”

“At the Lord’s table, we receive an initial taste of the final heavens and earth, but the Lord’s Supper is not merely a sign of the eschatological feast, as if the two were separate feasts. Instead, the Supper is the early stage of that very feast. Every time we celebrate the Lord’s Supper, we are displaying in history a glimpse of the end of history and anticipating in this world the order of the world to come.”

Leithart, Blessed are the Hungry, 15

From beginning to end, Holy Scripture sets a physical table with bread and wine as the place where God and man meet: in the garden, in the tabernacle and the Temple, at the Passover, at the Last Supper, and at the Supper of the Lamb. “There is no room given to develop a spirituality that defies creation and the importance of the human body for spiritual formation” (Kreglinger, The Spirituality of Wine, 71).

The Lord’s table is the place where heaven and earth is being reunited now, where koinonia in Christ is created and renewed, where intimate and mutual indwelling happens on earth as it is in heaven. Let us therefore keep the feast!

Categories
Culture Mission Writing

One: The Sacrament of Unity

by Fr Chris Borah


Eucharist is just a fancy (Greek) word for thanksgiving. When we think about “the Holy Eucharist,” we generally rush straight to the table–to the meal on the table–to the bread and to the wine. In modern times, we go even smaller, talking about the atoms that make up the bread and the wine (this is the modern discussion about transubstantiation; read Article XXVIII in our BCP, p. 783). We will get to the bread and wine, but eucharist is so much bigger than that.

The Whole Picture

Read just a little bit of pre-modern eucharistic theology and you’ll find very little conversation about questions like “Is the bread bread?” or “grape juice or wine?” Why is that? Because the Lord’s table is a bigger picture. There is Someone seated at the Head of the table, there are many gathered around the table, and the bread is broken and the cup is passed to all to make them one at the table. We zoom in and focus on ourselves and upon the elements to our peril.

“When you come together, it is not the Lord’s supper that you eat. For in eating, each one goes ahead with his own meal. One goes hungry, another gets drunk.”

1 Corinthians 11:20–21

We focus on atoms and yeast bacteria and not on Jesus. We keep our heads down and make the meal about me and myself, when we should lift up our heads and see Jesus and all the saints gathered around the table as one. Eastern Orthodox theologian, Fr Alexander Schmemann laments our present age as being consumed with “utterly individualistic piety,” and this in the Orthodox Church (not the self-declared “independent” churches all around us)!

“The man who says, as is so often the case in our day, “I am deeply faithful, but my faith does not need the Church,” may possibly believe, and even deeply, but his faith is something other than that faith that from the first day of Christianity was the thirst for baptismal entry into the Church and the constant quenching of this thirst in the “unity of faith and love” at Christ’s table in his kingdom.”

Alexander Schmemann, The Eucharist, p. 151

Before we start talking about our practice of drinking from one common cup, before we talk about the one loaf of bread and the Lord’s table–before we get into the smaller details–we must see the big picture, all of us together as one around the table. “In Christ Jesus” we are made “one… in his flesh,” in him we are “one new man,” reconciled together in “one body,” granted access to God in “one Spirit,” “in him” we are built into a single holy place. (Eph 2:13-22) “The cup of blessing that we bless, is it not a participation in the blood of Christ? The bread that we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ? Because there is one bread, we who are many are one body, for we all partake of the one bread” (1 Cor 10:16–17). Peter Leithart answers the Apostle Paul’s question (1 Cor 1:13),

““Has Christ been divided?” The answer is, in a sense, “Yes,” for at the table the bread is broken and distributed to the church, just as at the cross His body was torn for us. But this division of Christ has the goal of uniting the church. On the cross, Christ was broken in the process of breaking down the dividing wall separating Jew and Gentile; in the Supper, Christ is divided so that His one loaf can feed many.”

Peter Leithart, Blessed are the Hungry, p. 136

Schmemann perfectly sums up the fullness of the unity that God has accomplished in Christ:

“The miracle of the church assembly lies in that it is not the “sum” of the sinful and unworthy people who comprise it, but the body of Christ. How often do we say we are going to church…? We forget, meanwhile, that we are the Church, we make it up, that Christ abides in his members and that the Church does not exist outside us or above us, but we are in Christ and Christ is in us.”

Schmemann, Ibid., p. 23

At the beginning, we must get our heads up and see the unity that is pictured, and created, and renewed, and sealed at the Lord’s table. Holy Eucharist is the Sacrament of Unity. We do not go to church, we are the Church (Matt 18:20). We are made one in Christ as we partake of one bread. One Mediator. One Spirit. One loaf. One cup. One body.

Right in the middle of our eucharistic prayer, the celebrant says these words: “We celebrate the memorial of our redemption, O Father, in this sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving [eucharist!], and we offer you these gifts.” (BCP p. 133) What we bring to God every Sunday is very little: our simple songs, our humble prayers, common bread, common wine, maybe a little bit of money–we bring our unified sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving. And the miracle of the Eucharist is that he receives our childlike offerings and then he gives us himself in return. What an exchange!

Our offering of praise and thanksgiving culminates at the Lord’s table, but it begins way before that. On Saturday night, in homes scattered throughout the world, we pray looking forward to our shared eucharist: “Grant that we, putting away all earthly anxieties, may be duly prepared for the service of your sanctuary, and that our rest here upon earth may be a preparation for the eternal rest promised to your people in heaven.” (A Collect for Sabbath Rest, BCP p. 24)

When we wake on Sunday morning, when we scramble to get semi-decent clothes on our children (and on ourselves!) and everyone in the car on time, we are waging war against the world, the flesh, and the devil in our pursuit of God in the assembly (that’s what the word “church” means). The early church called this the “sacrament of the assembly.” If we don’t gather, we are not part of the assembly. The work of preparation, the warfare of going to be the assembly (church!) is sacrifice. This is unseen praise. This is thanksgiving.

Jesus unites our voices together in harmony. He makes us alive together with his word. We proclaim one creed. Jesus makes us one on our knees in confession. He gives us peace. Jesus lifts up our hearts together as one at his table. We are “made one body with him, that he may dwell is us and we in him.” Heaven and earth are united together in one assembly in Christ, “with all your saints into the joy of your heavenly kingdom, where we shall see our Lord face to face.”

“All this we ask through your Son Jesus Christ. By him, and with him, and in him, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, all honor and glory is yours, Almighty Father, now and for ever. Amen.”

Categories
Culture Writing

Individual & Collective Sin – Principles for Action


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by Rev Chris Borah

How should we balance personal (individual) moral responsibility with collective (group) moral responsibility?

Holy Scripture is replete with examples of individuals transgressing God’s law and destroying themselves and others. The law of Moses has many provisions for individuals to bring sacrifice to atone for individual sins. There are also countless examples of people, tribes, nations, collective groups of individuals altogether sinning against God and neighbor. The law of Moses has many provisions for collections of people to bring sacrifice, for one man to intercede for another man, to atone for collective sins. Individual people are torn apart by sin. But tribes are also torn apart, entire nations are destroyed. To read the story of the Bible is to read an intricate dance between individual and collective wickedness crumbling to the ground from Genesis 11 (Babel) to Revelation 18 (Babylon).

You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s eye.

Matthew 7:5

Individually and collectively, the principle of judgment is the same: first, deal with your own personal, internal wickedness. Then you may well be on the path towards possessing the holy and humble posture necessary to see your neighbors folly and bring life.

One humble and devoted person can hold a household together. The principle expands, but always stays the same. One holy family to bless all families. One nation devoted to the Lord in order that they would adopt all nations into the kingdom, all kinds of people united together in humble submission to the King of heaven and earth.

This is not simply a biblical principle. Behavioral psychologists concur. Get your own self in order first. First, order your own room, your own family, your own neighborhood, your own city, your own state, your own nation (I think you get the point); get those things closest to you in order first, so that you might bring life to the larger and wider circles in which you live.

For it is time for judgment to begin at the household of God

1 Peter 4:17a

Still, it is a perennial challenge in every age to balance individual and collective moral responsibility. In present American moment, both Christians and CINOs (over-)emphasize individual moral responsibility. We rightly emphasize the need for personal responsibility, but we forget that collective judgment runs through the whole narrative of the Bible and human history. Our salvation is only possible by our union with Christ, our collective redemption in Him. You cannot have one without the other. All of us together, either collectively in rebellion against God, or collectively righteous together in Christ.

You are Wretched; You are Great

Writing in the mid-seventeenth century, Blaise Pascal wrestled with both the wretchedness and greatness of human beings. People, every person is profoundly wretched. And at the same time, every person is inconceivably great, reflecting the glory of God in innumerable ways. Pascal wrestled with both the broad category of “humanity” and his deeply affectionate and personal struggle to reconcile his own sin with his own greatness.

In seasons of large scale, national, and societal conflict, whether in wartime or civil disobedience (just or unjust), we tend to think in broad categories (“humanity,” “national sin,” us, them). This wide-angle perspective is good to have, but it can also be a diversion. We confess “our” sins, while my sin is never confessed. And we are happy to do just that.

“We are not satisfied with the life we have in ourselves and our own being. We want to lead an imaginary life in the eyes of others, and so we try to make an impression. We strive constantly to embellish and preserve our imaginary being, and neglect the real one. And if we are calm, or generous, or loyal, we are anxious to have it known so that we can attach these virtues to our other existence; we prefer to detach them from our real self so as to unite them with the other. We would cheerfully be cowards if that would acquire us a reputation for bravery. How clear a sign of the nullity of our own being!”

Pensée #806, Peter Kreeft’s Christianity for Modern Pagans, p. 79, emphasis added

We distract ourselves in collective shame so that we don’t have to think of our own sin. Diversion takes many forms and it is always a great danger to us. Know yourself first. Acknowledge your sin first. Then what? How can we begin to personalize our own wretchedness, and, at the same time, act out our own greatness in love and responsibility towards our neighbors?

A Grand Principle & Great Temptation

In C.S. Lewis’ The Screwtape Letters, letter number six, Uncle Screwtape writes to his apprentice demon with a grand principle, a great temptation that cuts through every age–in Pascal’s 1600’s, in Lewis’ war torn 1940’s, and in our contemporary age–it cuts through every human soul, especially in seasons of great unrest. Screwtape opines:

“The great thing is to direct the malice to his immediate neighbours whom he meets every day and to thrust his benevolence out to the remote circumference, to people he does not know. The malice thus becomes wholly real and the benevolence largely imaginary.”

C.S. Lewis, The Screwtape Letters, chapter 6.

We distance our good deeds from our everyday life (making public stands alone). I post wonderful quotes that I read online, and then I let my impatience towards my children go unconfessed. We make “public” stands on social media, and then we grumble all day long in our homes. We are all very good at judging others before we judge ourselves, and even more insidiously, we are all very good at abstracting our righteousness, distancing righteous actions to ideas, groups, society, and the internet, all the while cultivating sinful, soul-crushing and relationship-destroying habits in everyday life. We are personally wicked, but we make ourselves feel better by posts on social media, sending money to poor nations, or forgiving people far from us who have never in any meaningful sense sinned against us.

So what should we actually do?

We must lament, grieve, and repent of my personal sins and our collective sins.

The big question is still: How? Which sins and who says?

Whether we are repenting the collective sin of my family, my church, or my nation, they must be our sin. It is hard for a family to see their collective sin. It is hard for a church to see their sin. We need outside perspective. But even as we need outside perspective, no one but God alone can look into my wicked heart. We need the Spirit of Christ, we must beg God to look in and expose our sins.

“The communal sins which they should be told to repent are those of their own age and class–its contempt for the uneducated, its readiness to suspect evil, its self-righteous provocations [and strong public criticisms], its breaches of the Fifth Commandment. Of these sins I have heard nothing among them. Till I do, I must think their candour towards the [collective] enemy a rather inexpensive virtue.”

C.S. Lewis, God in the Docks, p. 191

As we turn to matters of collective moral responsibility, it is no good (on both an individual and collective level) to repent of sins that are not our own. Not merely our own personally, but also those sins that collectively plague us. They must be our sins. And we need outside perspective to see clearly, both the perspective of people, but chiefly the perspective of white hot presence of the Spirit of Christ.

“The first and fatal charm of [collective] repentance is… the encouragement it gives us to turn from the bitter task of repenting our own sins to the congenial one of bewailing–but, first, of denouncing–the conduct of others.”

Our first point of action is to repent of my and our sin(s). We need outside perspective, whether that be another brother, another culture, or another time period (read old books!). But chiefly, we need the Spirit to cut deeply into our hearts. So we repent first. Then, in the place of humility before God and man, you might be in the proper place to point out someone else’s sin (whether an individual or a group: family, church, nation, etc). With much trembling and with great humility…

Whatever we do, we must not enjoy the rebuke.

With the amount of time we have devoted to digital displays of collective repentance, you might think that we rather enjoy the exercise. At the very least, we enjoy the distraction it gives us from seeing and mortifying our own sin.

“Beware of practicing your righteousness before other people in order to be seen by them, for then you will have no reward from your Father who is in heaven.

Matthew 6:1

Individual or corporate rebuke, to point out the sin of a person or a collective group can only be “profitably discharged” if it is done with reluctance. (C.S. Lewis, Ibid., p. 192)

It should be painful to deny or rebuke someone whom you love deeply. There is a feeling of deep loss when we forsake all of our idols–our family, our class, our race, our nation–those things which we so often love more than Jesus.

Take our present debate as an example. If you worship the United States of America or a fanciful virtuous nation in our past; then you must repent, you must hate your country and follow Jesus. If you have distrusted the government your whole life, then you are far from idolizing this country. The sin of nationalism is not your sin. This wickedness is not the sin that you must mortify.

Imagine a son, who deeply loves his mother, through tears, he comes to her and he tells her of her sin. Now imagine a son who despises his mother doing the same thing. If we enjoy the rebuke, then our display of public rebuke is “disgusting,” like a son who enjoys rebuking his own mother. (C.S. Lewis, Ibid., p. 192) We must not enjoy the rebuke.

We must quickly forgive and continually receive forgiveness.

But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin. If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.

1 John 1:7–8

In recent years, the “light” of social media, the “light” of body cams, this technology has exposed the darkest parts of our personal and collective lives. As followers of the Light of the world, we must walk in the light, our darkness must be exposed. Individual and collective confession of sin is not optional, both spontaneously and personally, both liturgically and corporately.

But Facebook confession is easy. Twitter outrage is cheap. Deep confession, personal mortification is hard. Approaching your brother, or your wife, or your bishop with a lump in your throat to confess your sin… that approach is hard, because our sin actually causes pain and broken relationships. But hiding sin in order to “not hurt someone” doesn’t work.

The “light,” the exposure of social media is good, but it is superficial. And it rarely leads to forgiveness. In the light of the gospel, bringing our sin into the light of Christ will be painful, but it is not shameful, and only there is forgiveness found.

In the presence of the Light of the world, all of our darkness is exposed. Public display of confession on social media is not the “bringing to light” that we need.

Our personal wretchedness, our collective sins have been clearly seen in the last few weeks. Even if someone has falsely accused you of sin, slander all too often exposes my sin, my quickness to return reviling for reviling. We cannot hide our sins in protest marches or in staying at home and condemning protest marches. It’s all fig leaves. We cannot hide our sins.

By God’s grace, we are being made acutely aware of many personal and collective sins. Collectively, the Church has sinned. Collectively, majority ethnicities have sinned. Collectively, minority ethnicities have sinned. Beware of diversions. Beware of indifference. Twitter confessional and Facebook righteousness are dangerous diversions. Dopamine hits instead of broken hearts.

Our personal and collective sins are before our faces, and we are exposed. True repentance feels like raw skin exposed underneath the scales torn away. But in that place of exposure, in the presence of our holy and merciful King, this is the only place that forgiveness is found, sin is exposed, sinners are washed, and raised to walk in newness of life.

Categories
Culture Writing

We Need Oneness, Not Sameness


Artwork by Jordan Goings

This article was originally published at Anglican Compass

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by Rev Chris Borah

“We are all the same.”

This is a rallying cry we see again and again as we sift through the wreckage of our conflicts over differences. It’s a phrase that’s trying to take away pain, but it isn’t telling the truth. Differences are real. Declaring that differences don’t exist doesn’t just erase the beauty of diversity, it also offers the wrong solution to what our problems truly are. We don’t all need to be the same. We need to be one in Christ.

Last week was a rollercoaster, both personally and nationally. Like most folks, I read about and watched some of the pain and violence that has ignited across our nation in recent days. From both those nearest to me (those to whom I spoke face to face), and those furthest from me (those whom I saw in the news), I heard so many differing stories: different concerns, different praises, different fears, griefs, and joys. Countless, different people. Each one unique.

And this difference goes deeper than relationships between people. The Creation can be described as the wedding, the joining together of differents. Heaven and earth, light and dark, land and sea, male and female. Creation is diverse both within and beyond the human community. Even sea monsters and men are held together in a beautifully diverse unity, because the Spirit hovered over the face of the deep.

Here is the sea, great and wide, which teems with creatures innumerable, living things both small and great. There go the ships, and Leviathan, which you formed to play in it.

Psalm 104:25–26

Psalm 104, which we read every year on Pentecost, reminds us that where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom, and there is fullness of life. Innumerable, living things both small and great, sea monsters and ships, dance and play together in the sea. In the psalmist’s imagination, when the Spirit is present, difference is delightful, and man and monster play (Ps 104:26-28, 30). But when the Spirit is hidden, both small and great, man and monster, we are all dismayed (Ps 104:29).

Our Failed, Comfortable Answer: Sameness

The natural human answer to the perceived problem of difference is sameness. For most of human history, we have separated ourselves into groups, building up comfortable walls to protect our sameness, to achieve mastery over others, and to protect ourselves from differences. Other times we have tried to conform everyone around us into the same image, eliminating all distinctions. Like prisoners in a jail, we lose ourselves in the collective.

But sameness cannot resolve our differences. The answer of Holy Scripture to the apparent problem of difference is not sameness; the answer is oneness.

The Pentecostal Answer: Oneness

Last Sunday, many of us gathered together to celebrate the Feast of Pentecost. We remember that fifty days after Jesus’ resurrection on Easter Sunday, the first disciples were gathered together in a house. Suddenly, there was the sound of a mighty rushing wind, and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit. The Spirit of the living, resurrected, and ascended Christ was poured out on all flesh, on all nations. The reverse of Babel happened and what drove us apart, uncommon language, was turned backward, and everyone heard the gospel in his or her own language.

For in one Spirit we were all baptized into one body—Jews or Greeks, slaves or free—and all were made to drink of one Spirit.

1 Corinthians 12:13

Differences abound. Jews and Greeks (things we can’t change). Slave and free (things we can change). When we are ignorant of another culture’s customs it is normal for us to be frightened. The turbulent deep teeming with sea creatures has scared mariners for ages. We are afraid, like the disciples in the storm.

But Jesus calmed the storm. He made peace between people of all nations by his blood. How did Jesus make us one? By the Spirit (Eph 2:18, 22). Jesus has broken down our comfortable dividing walls of sameness. Jesus has killed the hostility, and through him we have access in one Spirit to God. Once we were two; now we are made one.

Once we were different and hostile to one another. Now, we are still different, but Jesus has killed the hostility. You cannot eat at King Jesus’ table together on Sunday and then refuse to eat in one another’s homes on Monday (Galatians 2:11ff.). There is no “live and let live” in the Kingdom of God. Killing our hostility with God requires killing our hostility with one another.

Oneness Requires Difference

The family of God is not a cult drinking the same Kool-Aid, all wearing the same robes and sneakers. Rather, the Body of Christ is a “unity of unlikes” (C. S. Lewis, Membership), a “fellowship of differents” (Scot McKnight). The Church is a community of unique persons.

The answer to the problems that arise from our difference is not to eliminate all distinctions, but to gather at one table. Like various parts in a body, we are not the same. If the body has more than one head, it is a monster. You don’t make an engine by gathering together a bunch of bolts. You need nuts and bolts, pistons and cylinders.

When you look into the face of another person made in the image of God, you don’t say, “I don’t see color.” White sand and rich black soil are different, but both are the dust of the earth. Both are beautiful and different. The skin of man is beautiful and different. Sameness is not oneness.

From Abraham onward, the children of God are more than the sands of sea. When sand goes through the fire it melts together into glass, and with each pane of glass, every curve, every distinct side reflects the light in uniquely beautiful and brightly colorful ways. Every grain of sand reflects the infinite beauty of God in perfectly unique and uncountably beautiful ways. Sameness is not oneness.

In the gospel, Greeks must not become Jewish. Jews must not become pagans. But they must eat together at the same table. In the gospel, mothers are not fathers. Children are not grandparents. Multiple wives don’t make a happy family (ask Solomon). We need all kinds of different and unique persons to make this family. We, the family of God, are a “unity of unlikes.”

Family is hard and difference is challenging. But oneness in the Spirit requires us to live with each other in understanding ways (1 Peter 4). In the gospel, slave and free become family (Philemon). Male and female are wed. The fatherless are given a Father. The childless are given innumerable offspring.

The answer to the problems that arise from our difference is not to make everyone the same. The answer to the problems that arise from our difference is to be united in Christ. Christ the Head, we the Body. In Christ we die, and in Christ we are buried. With Christ we are baptized in one Spirit. This “fellowship of differents” is raised together to walk in newness of life. Oneness requires difference.

What Must We Have in Common?

We try to protect ourselves by surrounding ourselves with sameness, all dressing the same way, separating ourselves by skin color and class and political party. We separate and sing different songs in different keys. We know this is wrong, but our solutions are neither realistic or ideal. Shouldn’t we all just be the same? No. Sameness will never lead to the common good. We need variety, we must have difference if our aim is unity.

Now there are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit; and there are varieties of service, but the same Lord; and there are varieties of activities, but it is the same God who empowers them all in everyone. To each is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good.

1 Corinthians 12:4–7

The song of the gospel is not one note. The song of the gospel is many notes in the same key, in beautiful harmony. Variety, differences of gifts, differences of service, differences of activities produce a common good, a shared good, a beautifully diverse unity. We are one in the Spirit, diverse in our gifts, producing our common good. In the Spirit, variety is in harmony, and we all sing the same song:

…we hear them telling in our own tongues the mighty works of God.

Acts 2:11

The outpouring of the Spirit at Pentecost was made manifest in the common proclamation of the gospel. To be Spirit-filled requires us to proclaim the mighty works of God. And although we proclaim the same message, each person, every mouth will tell the story in different ways, with a different tone of voice, singing different notes in harmony. The message of the gospel throughout Acts is diverse: tell of the mighty works of God in creation, tell of the mighty works of God in the Law and the Prophets, tell of the mighty works of God in the life, ministry, death, and resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth. Many voices, one common proclamation. Different stories, one gospel.

Every time we gather, many different voices harmonize together in one song. On the Feast of Pentecost, on every Lord’s Day, by the Spirit, all nations sing the same song. We share a common liturgy with Nigerians, with Mexicans, with Canadians, with Christians from all nations. We must not fear difference in Christ.

And they sang a new song, saying, “Worthy are you to take the scroll and to open its seals, for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for God from every tribe and language and people and nation

Revelation 5:9

The Creation requires difference. The New Creation in Christ by the Spirit redeems our differences. Come let us return to the Lord. Let us repent of our comfortable sameness. And with many different tongues and with one voice, let us sing of the mighty works of God.

CtK Beckley is a Church that supports church planting in West Virginia through Mission Hope.