I can well appreciate the concern that Edward Dowler articulates in his article on 18 December (subscription link though may become available after a few weeks). I think, however, that the ideas to reform canon law which he fears are not to individualise to a particular incumbent but rather to give churches the possibility of determining what might be suitable, including not to use traditional surplice, alb, stole or scarf. I suspect a reformed canon would have caveats about accountability to the wider church through the bishop. Let's have some realism -unimpeded licence is very unlikely to be granted. Concern for denim jackets is almost certainly to be dismissed as unworthy rhetoric. On the other hand, it seems to me that an appropriate sort of denim garment (jacket or otherwise) could be very appropriate for a presider at a biker Eucharist, perhaps.
It is worth looking at what actually goes on before forgetting that the straw men aren't real. We could look at practices in other than Anglican churches like the Methodists or Lutherans. We could also look at those CofE churches where traditional liturgical garb is not used for services where it is currently canonically specified. These, in actual fact, tend to have a dress code replacing late Roman gentleman's wear with late modernity's equivalent. I further note that quite often clergy who do this may wear a dog collar when in everyday mode they might not. Clearly, they are trying to be 'loving and faithful servants' of the rites in context. While the title of the piece suggested that we might get beyond the cultural, the reality is that we can't do so; we live in and through culture and retaining artefacts of previous cultures doesn't retain their original meanings.
The concern for maintaining traditional symbolic attire doesn't address the difficulty of the historical contingency of the adoption of these items of clothing and thus their symbolism. And it slides over the disconnectedness of the symbolism for 21st century Westerners. Cranmer wanted liturgy 'understanded of the people' and we got as far as changing words from Latin to Tudor and then to contemporary English. We didn't really get round to properly sorting out what ceremonial and vesturely language would be truly understanded of the people. Mr Dowler, if I read aright, would have us remain symbolically in the medieval period speaking a visual-ceremonial 'Latin' to symbolically late moderns.
The argument about standing in a line of continuity and history leaves out the many modifications and changes that have already gone on. It also gives too much importance to post-hoc rationalisations of accidents of history. Let's get past spats about tat and denim jackets and try to have a conversation about what contemporary gestural, ceremonial and visual cultures could offer to the renewal of our 'corporate body language' as we worship together.
Nous like scouse or French -oui? We wee whee all the way ... to mind us a bunch of thunks. Too much information? How could that be?
Showing posts with label symbols. Show all posts
Showing posts with label symbols. Show all posts
24 December 2015
24 October 2007
Disturbing: the noose -new symbol of race hate
I fear that this is likely to be replicated in Britain sometime. "Nooses have been looped over a tree at the University of Maryland, knotted to the end of stage ropes at a suburban Memphis theater, slung on the doorknob of a black professor’s office at Columbia University in New York, tossed in a janitor’s closet at a Long Island police station, stuffed in the duffel bag of a black Coast Guard cadet aboard an historic ship and even draped around the neck of a black Barbie doll in a Pittsburgh suburb. The hangman’s rope is so prolific, some say, that it threatens to replace the Nazi swastika and the Ku Klux Klan cross as the nation’s reigning symbol of hate"
It 'feels' much more chilling. I think that's because it is more explicitly a death-threat than a burning cross ever was or the swastika.
Expert says the noose could become the new burning cross:
It 'feels' much more chilling. I think that's because it is more explicitly a death-threat than a burning cross ever was or the swastika.
Expert says the noose could become the new burning cross:
24 June 2007
Christian religious 'rights' and the fandom instinct
This has been a few years in the making: ever since EU legislation gave the right for people to manifest their religion, some Christians have been itching to find a way to express their allegiance to Christ in comparable ways to other faith bodies. But it's difficult: we don't have set prayer times like Muslims that are integral to Christianity; we are told to pray but there is a lot of lassitude on just how. We don't have special clothes like a Sikh Turban, just commands to consider others and to be modest. And so, when the girl at the heart of this case made a chastity vow out of Christian convictions and sealed it with a ring. Well, commendable though her stance is, it was always going to be hard to claim it was integral, somehow, to Christain faith.
This can seem disappointing to keen Christians, who feel the urge to fandom that others express by wearing team colours or putting up pix of singers but direct it to Christ (no necessarily bad thing there, but let's be honest that some zeal is, at least in part, tapping into the 'fandom' instinct) but let's take some satisfaction from knowing that our faith is flexible and responsive in cultural terms and that we are charged with dismantling 'sacred' and 'secular' divides, and not creating arbitrary ones just to be part of the religious burdens club.
School's chastity ring ban 'violated religious freedom'
authorities claim the band, which is engraved with a Biblical verse, is not an integral part of the Christian faith and contravenes its uniform policy
This can seem disappointing to keen Christians, who feel the urge to fandom that others express by wearing team colours or putting up pix of singers but direct it to Christ (no necessarily bad thing there, but let's be honest that some zeal is, at least in part, tapping into the 'fandom' instinct) but let's take some satisfaction from knowing that our faith is flexible and responsive in cultural terms and that we are charged with dismantling 'sacred' and 'secular' divides, and not creating arbitrary ones just to be part of the religious burdens club.
Come to me all who are weary and burdened ... and I will give you rest.Let's exalt in not having religious manifestations to parade; save, perhaps those of love, joy, and peace in the Holy Spirit?
School's chastity ring ban 'violated religious freedom'
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