The god of the baby boomers

The baby-boomer preoccupation with equality may have served many of them through their careers in the first half of their lives. But it is going to undo that service in the second-half of their lives,  as they themselves become what they never imagined – passive and dependent. All the freedom they took for themselves is going to disappear, for there is no longer enough social capital or social fabric to sustain it. They do not live among their own people. They live among their own elderly age-cohort. For forty years that age cohort has acted as though it were a community of its own, and so has not been concerned to support relationships with the nation outside that cohort. They can enjoy no community-mediated freedom now, because they never bothered to build that community.  They took care to make themselves wealthier than those coming after them. As a result people twenty and thirty and more years younger than they, do not know them. Their children now live far away; they can visit, but they cannot stay, and since they are no part of the neighbourhood, they bring no one new into the house. In the absence of that social fabric, they lapse into immobile old age in a void. Their own friends are losing their ability to travel and disappear into infirmity as they are, all them committed to health appointments, first monthly then weekly until their health becomes their sole preoccupation.

They did not bother to keep family ties strong, because for much of their lives they substituted fake for real relationships. They adopted as their own the relationships and personalities portrayed to them by the media. In the evenings they gaze at these fictional characters presented to them by television with same fondness as though they were gazing at their own grandchildren. But relationships broadcast by the media are without reciprocity, more worship than friendship.  Our elderly baby boomers never worked or worshipped or ate or drank together with anyone who now passes their window. Those who pass them now, do so in cars, not on foot on the pavement, so there can be no exchange of greetings. Dog-walking is the only means of striking new up relationships in England now.  The social changes they started are now going to roll right over them. They are going to live, get old and die alone, in a society that presently consists only of their own cohort.  For each of them, the first of the many lurches down into housebound ill-health will push them overnight into a society of complete aliens, care workers who with whom they have no equal relationship, who owe them nothing and with whom there is no shared culture. The baby-boomers have had their own way. They have built the world in which no lasting ties, obligations or sense of place were acknowledged.

What can they do? They can repent. They can go to church, and spend the remainder of their time there, before the altar, saying morning and evening prayer, keeping the doors open and making welcome all those whom they used to be too busy to acknowledge. There is a choice to be made.  They can spend their last months listening to the secular liturgy of radio and television, sitting alone until the ambulance comes for them for the last time. Or they can kneel before the altar, spend their last year in church with the angels and saints and passers-by, praying for the world, being reconciled with those they once spurned and preparing themselves to meet their Lord. They need to choose to curl up before the altar of God if they do not wish to die before the Moloch they have created.

The Gospel has a cross…

What is wrong with this Church of ours, that it makes no impact, that it is silent, has nothing to say or contribute to the world around us? What is wrong is that this church has muffled the gospel, and concealed from itself that this is what it has done. This suppression has been going on for so long that we are now only very tenuously connected to the true Church, the true Church that is created and sustained by the gospel. But we have to hear and return to that one, holy catholic and apostolic Church, the Church of all places and all ages, if the ‘Church of England’ is to be what its name claims.

We have taken out the cross. We have a gospel without truth and judgement, a message of mere empathy and affirmation, an inoffensive gospel, no longer able to cut through any of the contrary claims it meets. Our church does not see how much trouble our neighbours are in and does not go to their aid. Its ‘gospel’ offers them no diagnosis, and no corrective, no medicine, no surgery. It does not challenge the thugs who hold them captive; it neither warns nor threatens them. It does not even identify what it is that ties people down and holds them captive; it does not point out what our troubles are or who is inflicting them on us.

We have divided the gospel into two gospels of love and of truth, and we have chosen love and given up truth. And the result is that our love is no longer truthful; it has no characteristics at all, and so no staying-power, no ability to form people so that they can continue to love no matter what happens. We have got used to half-truths and falsehoods, and do not notice the damage being inflicted on those around us. Without truth and judgement, there is no true love.

But the Gospel of Jesus Christ reveals what is true. It judges us, so we are able to see that we do not measure up to what is true. It shows this judgement by each, of all; it shows that none of us meets the criterion for a finished human being. It stops and confronts us and tells us that we are going the wrong way and must turn around and go back towards what we were running away from. It brings disagreement and controversy; it stirs up anger and defensiveness and brings hard words. It reveals that we have condemned ourselves and we have condemned one another.

No offence – no cross  – no gospel

No gospel – no Church

But thou art the same Lord whose nature is always to have mercy….

Do not be conformed to the world

The Church is holy, and holy is what it must want to be. Let us put it this way.

Christ is our husband. The Church is his bride. He provides for it and protects it. When it is glad about this and acknowledges him as husband, the Church is a functioning body of witness to Christ, who is the source and the truth of our humanity. When the Church does not acknowledge Christ as its husband, it becomes confused, anxious and divided, and its members are scattered and picked off by other predatory forces.

Now the Church is also the Body of Christ, the Lord’s mode of embodiment here and now, for the world. So in the same way, united to Christ, the Church is husband, and the nation is bride. The Church is here to provide for the nation, to protect it and give it its identity. The Church blesses, that is, talks up the nation, so that the nation can grow up to be a united communion of persons glad to belong to each other. Then each member of the nation recognises every other as a fellow member of this political community. But if the Church does not pass on to the nation what the Lord gives us, then its members will no longer remember why they should be glad to belong to it, the nation will become weak, confused and divided, and the Church will be responsible for this. The state of the nation shows the husbandry of the Church. It reveals when we Christians have not done our job. If the nation despises the Church, it is because the Church has not loved the nation enough to give it what it needs. The nation that despises the Church also despises itself.

For the nation’s sake the Church must remain holy and distinct, so that it always has what the nation does not possess, and so always has something to give it. The worst thing we can do for the nation is to stop being the holy Church, and become afraid of the world and conform ourselves to it. So, do not be afraid. Be holy. Stand out.

Common worship as defiance of the spirit of the age

Common Worship is good, the Lectionary is good and the hymn book is good. They are faithful and they are powerful. With them we can joyfully follow the Lord around the Christian year, and we can take our worship outside the church through the seasons. With them we can worship in church and we can take that worship out with us so its witness is seen and heard in any public space, outside church or any other public building.  When we do this, we are doing the very best for our town and nation we can.

Any and every member of the parish can turn up and lead this worship.  This public prayer is our central unchanging act. By it we may defy the spirit of the age and disarm the powers. Our service to England is to tell it that it is not bound, it need not be afraid, it can keep its hopes as high as ever. We warn it that the nation is full of agencies intending to reduce our options in some way. They all want something from us, all intend to get their suckers into us. The world is full of little power-brokers trying to raise their own status until it is so high that they are no longer accountable to us. Though they will not admit it, they want our worship. They want to be our gods.

Each Christian congregation must spell out in its public worship that only the true God keeps all these fakes and frauds accountable, and so prevents them from acquiring divine status, and turning us into their worshippers. We reject them and withhold from them the worship they want. We publicly re-direct all  worship from the fake gods to the true God. That is the point of Christian worship.

So for you and me, the best thing we can do is to open the Hymn book, Lectionary,  and Common Worship and sing, read and pray our way through them, every day, sometimes in church, sometimes outside church, visible and audible to the world around us, until we become a common sight in town, and our neighbours start to desert their fake gods and follow the only God who will do them any good.

Man & Woman

Christians are witnesses. And one aspect of our witness is that we point to the goodness of creation and of our place in it. We point out that creation is made up of many creatures and persons who are different from ourselves. We acknowledge how different they are, and that we rely on them to be different from ourselves. We do not attempt either to absorb them or to substitute for them. Individually we do not try to be everything. We do not try to replace all others and so do without them. We do not try to make them redundant, or make ourselves entirely autonomous. We do not cut them out of our lives and insist that we will not miss them. We acknowledge that we live in a world made up of many other persons whom we do not determine, and we affirm that they are good, just as they are. So we are witnesses to the independent existence of beings other than ourselves, and we affirm that it is good so.

God loves us.  And God loves those who are not us. We are witnesses to his love. We hope we can love whoever comes our way. We hope for great relationships of love, that over time will blossom out into further great relationships of love. Meanwhile we wait. We do not go to bed with the first man or woman who comes along, and then, bored or fearful, pack them off. We do not glue ourselves to one another only in order to tear ourselves away from one another again. We wait,  sometimes contentedly, sometimes impatiently. Nevertheless, we wait. We are witnesses to what we do not yet have. Hope is our thing.

So a man can wait for a woman. A woman can wait for a man. Perhaps that waiting will stretch out to the end of their lives and they will not meet the woman or man who can become their one and only partner and companion. But in this waiting, they are nonetheless witnesses to love, the love of God they do have and the love of one particular person that they don’t have.

And so it is with women and ministry. They can wait. They can do so because they are Christians. Christians serve and wait and look forward to what they do not yet have. They are witnesses to the future. Hope is our thing, and waiting and looking forward to what we do not yet possess is our distinctive way. If we cannot wait, we do not act as Christians and so are not good models of the Christian life, and the Church cannot choose us to be its ministers for other more particular purposes.  We must be content to watch many people go ahead of us.  We may not see why there should be a difference between them and us, but we can affirm that there always will be, and should be, differences between us. This waiting and pointing to what we do not yet possess is itself the ministry of every Christian. The Christian who does not grasp this, and attempt to be faithful in this way, is certainly not ready for any other ministry.

Men & Women

You are a man or you are woman. You are a witness to the particular charism of being either one or the other.  We are able to live together by giving to one another and by receiving from one another. We are able to receive from others because we do not already have everything. They have what we don’t.  We are able to receive from them whatever they have  and  are able to contribute, because we cannot provide it for ourselves. We need what only they can give us, and so we need them, and they need us. Given differences, of age and of experience and of sex orient us towards one another. Sexual difference brings us together, and make us look to other, appeal to them and wait for them to provide whatever we cannot provide for ourselves. Our need makes us receptive, prompting us to make them  welcome. What is more, we may not know what they have to contribute; they may surprise us, and thus we cannot control them, or insist that they make only the contribution that we demand and allow. What they bring may not be entirely determined by us, and this means that to some degree they are free of us. We are witnesses that differences, and sexual differences in particular, are not subject to our determination. We cannot entirely define and control them. Attempts to deny or reduce differences are untruthful, and in the long term fruitless. Attempts to  expunge sexual difference are futile and an assault on the truth.

God did not intend a unisex human. God does not make everything identical to everything else, for then there would only be one thing, and there would be no one to see it and marvel at it. God brings order, not confusion; God brings what is new, but what is new supplements what is given, it does sweep it aside as though it were all a mistake. God made man, male and female he made them.  God saw that they were good, both individually and together. Christian doctrine says that creation is good, our sexual differences and complementarity are good, and for the health of our society it is the job of Christians to say so.

Christian discipleship makes public service

This faith brings us a discipleship, which brings a self-control and many forms of (public) service. The country lives at second-hand on this self-control and service. The country lives from the virtue it has received, over many centuries, from Christians. It enjoys the rule of law because Christians learned and demonstrated how to live together under the discipleship of the Church. All the education, health and social care that together have formed our welfare state are derived from centuries of love and service of Christians to those around them. All the forms of national public service have been built up by this Christian service to neighbour and neighbourhood. Without it we would constantly be pushing against each other, and the unhealed sources of friction would make us a society of constant rivalries, sectarianism, violence and totalitarianism. It would be a society of feud and retaliation, and consequent poverty and lack of aspiration, just as static as every other culture untouched by the gospel.

The presence and (comparatively) well-ordered lives of Christians are constantly healing wounds that would otherwise stay open and fester. The country lives on the moral credit of the few accumulated over many generations.

The nation owes its existence and its ongoing vitality to the continuing supply of this love that produces this public witness and public service, and the discipleship which produces this self-control so we accept the restraints on our action and live with one another as in mutual respect as a law-abiding society.

Christianity forms us as citizens and members of the nation. Without Christianity, people don’t take on political responsibility, and become fully citizens able to commit themselves to an open mutual accountable form of life. They separate into two classes, one of the managers and controllers, and another of those who are managed and controlled,  who are dominated and passive, who have never learned to express themselves, or to express themselves in any other form than discontent and occasional dangerous outburst of anger.

It is Christianity percolating over many centuries into every relationship  that makes a society of people content to recognise each other as equals under the law and so as members of a shared political community. Only Christianity makes a nation. The Christian political and moral culture that spread from European nations around the world sustains the present worldwide modern regime. But that political unity and culture, and the modern world, are entirely dependent on being renewed by the same gospel that brought them into existence in the first place. Without renewal from the gospel and the political culture which it produces, the present world will break up and disappear.

The Church stands against the Spirit of the Age

There are two alternatives. On the one hand the church has to be brought up to date. The world has moved on but the Church is struggling to keep up. The Church is irrelevant because it is lagging, left behind because people can no longer agree with it.

On the other, the Church stands where it has always stood, while the world is going round in small circles. It is not marching bravely on to a bright new future as it has asserted. It is not going anywhere, but marching and counter-marching and repeating itself in endless confusion. The Church stands where Christ built it. He is its unchanging foundation. It is the lighthouse, beaming out the same light it always has done. It does not adapt or modify, because the truth it shows is fundamental and unchanging, the basis on which any groups of humans may love and live and sustain a society. Anyone who confesses that the Church is ‘one, holy, catholic and apostolic’ is committed to this second view, that the Church must stand where Christ planted it, and never that the Church must leave its station and start running to catch up with the world.

The centralisers and those who take responsibility away from us

The clergy have created over these last decades a ‘gospel’ which is unattractive and inaudible. The British people long since decided that the clergy are saying nothing of any consequence. And they are right. For the clergy are saying nothing that is in any way different from the offering of the media, corporations and governments, with their long determination to remove decisions from us. The corporations know how to delight and entertain, while the government knows how to buy loyalty with jobs and incomes. Only the Church knows that humans must not sell themselves or give up responsibility for themselves and their neighbours. The clergy have not challenged any of the abandonment of responsibility through centralisation or the growth of regulation, or challenged the distractions and compensations offered for them. The have given into to the temptation to commit our all health, education and welfare to the all-centralising powers, and been part of the prejudice against actual people making decisions in their own towns and villages. The clergy themselves are centralisers. They are here to take decisions away from us. They seem ready to amalgamate parishes into oblivion, replace the wide-spectrum gifts and ministries of congregations, parcelling up the various aspects of Christian witness into jobs and careers reserved for a few in a central office. Lucky for them, we are here to oppose them. We insist that all life and wellbeing begins at the altar in the worship of God, and that our refreshment and restoration depends on our manning our station at the altar at every parish church in every place, small as well as large. Only the prayer of Christians can prevent man from surrendering himself to, and being swallowed up by, the overweening Leviathan

It’s a school when it opens the bible

Poor sods, the British, in the grip of a vast cultural pessimism. All diagnosis of this pessimism merely adds to it, unless it is preceded by the original and optimism that bubbles out of Christian worship. This cultural pessimism has been taught in schools from the moment that schools ceased to be witnesses of the gospel, and gave up schooling generations in hope that comes from the gospel. The bible that was once the one and only book of our studies, and then the first step for all other studies has been made the one book that may never be opened in a school in Britain. As long as the book is shut, and Christian worship not sung, these are not schools. They are centres for the indoctrination of the next generation in the delusions of this generation.  The literature and thought that once formed our culture, believed to be too difficult for our children has been withheld from them. Our new leaders believe that they are not worthy of it. In schools, the very place where children should be introduced to the writers and thinkers of our culture, they are given only what is easy and undemanding, and encouraged to dismiss whatever is not contemporary and immediate. They are not introduced to this literature, but they do pick the sense that it is too difficult for them or that is to be sneered at. They are introduced to ‘critical’ thought that despises this great tradition.

All education has to be home education  now, home and church. Give them the optimism that bubbles out of Christian worship