Tags
buzz, church, comsume, details, dust, God, journey, Lent, neighbor, rejoice, repair, repent, self
Oftentimes, I think are two version of church: the version that is consumed and the version that is fully knowledgeable of all the details and intricacies that it takes to create the consumable experience. In the former, one comes to church, prays prayers, sings beautifully written songs, hears scripture, engages with a sermon, consumes communion, and is commissioned to go out and live the Gospel. Of course, there may also be the juggling of children, the scramble to get there on time, and the focus needed to fully engage all that is “church,” and not be distracted by life whispering in the background.
For the latter – the version of church that is fully knowledgeable, the experience of church happens through a filter. In that experience, you are juggling the personnel details (did the lector show up, how the procession should line up based on who is serving, whether a choir member is late and didn’t get to rehearse fully), you are painfully aware of the hours of planning that went into the bulletin (the liturgical and musical decisions that were made to create a seamless experience), and you are mindful of all the administrative details (did the altar book get marked, which cruet has wine and which has water, do we have enough wafers for the number of people in church, did we remember all the announcements, and on and on). People in both categories consume church in equal amounts, but the buzz behind the experiences may be different.
As someone who falls in that latter category, I have been especially grateful for Lent this year. Our staff worked really hard to have all the liturgy planning completed early this year. That is a fantastic feat, but it also means this winter has been extremely busy and detail-filled. Even the start of Lent was chaotic. On Shrove Tuesday, you are eating and merrymaking, and less than 24 hours later, you are spreading ash on people’s foreheads and making sure they have a meaningful Ash Wednesday. By that Sunday, you are chanting or saying the very long Great Litany on the first Sunday of Lent, and by that Monday, you take a gulp of air once you realize you have done it – Lent has begun.
What all that preplanning has meant for me this year is that gulp of air is an invitation to trust the planning and to now live into Lent. Instead of my head being abuzz with details, now I can sit down and clear out space to be with God – to do a meaningful assessment of my relationships with God, self, and neighbor, and see what invitations arise about what in those relationships needs repentance, repair, or rejoicing. In essence, I suppose I shift now to being a consumer of church for a time. I get to do the prayer, fasting, and alms giving that Lent invites without all the intricacies that began the season.
I wonder where you are finding yourself at the beginning of this second week in Lent. How are you creating spaces where the buzz of life, the swirl of life’s details, and the burdens of the everyday can be set aside to connect with God, self, and neighbor? How are you finding meaningful ways to repent, repair, and rejoice? I cannot wait to hear how this Lent is reigniting your faith journey!