Nope,
it's not a typo.
The
pressure is on us, those of us attempting to follow Jesus, and it's a
performance pressure. The World and the Church are watching and both
institutions are all too ready to fire the initial servo at us when
we get it wrong.
I
really enjoy Richard Rohr's daily meditations. Recently,
he argued we have a lot to learn from the twelve step traditions,
especially the way they approach spiritual formation and maturation.
The Church, aligned with the imperial culture of the Western, has
taken a top-view of these issues, rather than a bottom-view. We are
trying to work our way up into spiritual health and wellness, when
dwelling in Christ at the bottom might be more Christ-like in
approach. Rohr muses that it is, “as if Christianity has been
saying, 'We have the perfect medicine for what ails you: grace and
mercy. But the only requirement for receiving it is never to need
it!'” As our former Theologian-in-Residence, Nik Forti, wrote in
our crowd-sourced piece
for ECF's Vestry Papers, “The Church isn't called to serve the
poor. The Church is called to be the poor.”
But
back to “Thnaks.” Giving Thnaks is on mind this season. A few
Thanksgivings ago, a friend of mine sent me a picture of the marquee
sign of a little baptist church just up the road from us. In the
South, we revel in these signs and hope for the best. Occasionally,
we are not disappointed. These signs will have something profound or
funny to impart, like:
Read
the Bible – It Will Scare the Hell Out of You
God
Wants Full Custody, Not Weekend Visitation
Remember,
Even Moses Started Out as a Basket Case
Do
Not Judge Others Because They Sin Differently Than You
God
Expects Spiritual Fruit, Not Religious Nuts
To
Those Who Robbed Us, We Forgive You
There
are Some Questions that Can't Be Answered by Google or Siri
What's
Missing from CH__CH?
Honk
if You Love Jesus. Text While Driving if You Want to Meet Him
But
this little church in the aforementioned picture, had the words on
their marquee: “In All Things, Give Thnaks!” I laughed a little
at first and then I felt bad for doing so. Here is a church giving
thanks as they are able, proclaiming to the world where they are and
where they want to be. How many of us engage in such heartfelt
evangelism? How many of us make ourselves vulnerable to the ridicule
of the world? How many of us take ourselves just a little too
seriously?
I'm
aware that this is a time of year of thanksgiving. Thanksgiving is
central to who we are as Eucharistic people (it's what that word
means after all). We are not called to put on perfect lives for the
benefit of friends and neighbors. We are not called to tacit deeds of
charity to help the so-called “less fortunate.” We are not called
to wear the mask of perfection. We are called to be thankful for our
imperfection.
This
holiday season, I invite you to join me in living a little more
eucharistically, a little more thankful that God chooses such
imperfect ways to reach us – oil, salt, the land, water, bread, and
wine. And as you are shopping, fulfilling your holiday obligations,
and spending time with those you love, those you like, and the
increasingly rare intersection of the two, remember: “In All
Things, Give Thnaks!”
This
post
was
originally published on the
Episcopal
Church Foundation's Vital Practices Vital Posts
blog
on December 17, 2015. It has been reprinted here with permission.
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