
Last week at our church we discovered a leak in our parish house that necessitated saws, hammers, and very loud industrial fans. By Friday, the constant noise broke my patience and I decided I needed to find an alternate place to work remotely – maybe not a place of silence, but certainly a change of scenery. I landed in two different eateries/coffeehouses and decided to publicize my “remote office.”
What I found was people visiting from out-of-town I did not know were here, parishioners running errands, happy for an open ear, and lots of gratitude for being invited into the shared experience – both from church members and non-members alike. The experience reminded me why Episcopal Churches are often referred to as “parishes.” Once upon a time, Episcopal churches served a geographic region, or a parish, and the priest was sort of the neighborhood priest. Doing my work and meeting people where they are – whether they are from my actual church or not, reminded me of the original intention or churches: that their priests were for the good of the entire community, not just the members.
Archbishop William Temple is attributed with having once said, “The Church is the only institution that exists primarily for the benefit of those who are not its members.” At our church, we often talk about our mission being simultaneously about those inside our walls and those outside our walls. That’s why we are doing some big things of late: developing a third worship service designed specifically for people who are not a part of our community; forming a team who will look at alternative uses of our property that are missional and community-facing; and establishing small groups for spiritual formation that meet off campus – in homes and places of everyday “parish” life. If we truly believe Archbishop Temple, then our clergy sitting in coffeehouses and eateries should more often be the norm than the crisis-driven exception.
Being out in the “parish” is not just the role of the priest. I wonder how you are taking your faith, your worship community, your church out into the world. When was the last time you asked a friend about their spiritual health (in the same way you would ask them about their physical or emotional health)? When was the last time you were listening deeply to another person’s story and were willing to offer where you saw God in their story? When was the last time you invited someone to church – not necessarily to the building on Sunday at a certain time, but into the experience of “church” that has been so transformative for you? I cannot wait to hear about how you can envision taking your church out into the parish!
